Meaning of Holy in The Old Testament
Meaning of Holy in The Old Testament
Meaning of Holy in The Old Testament
T he M
e a n in g o f
H o l y
IN THE O l H T e s t a m e n t
Peter j . Gentry
Translations of Scripture in this article are the writers, unless noted otherwise.
2 Connections between the term holy and the events of the Exodus are explored
below in sections about the calling of Moses in Exodus 3 and the calling of Israel in
Exodus 19.
3 Richard A. Muller, Post-Reformation Reformed Dogmatics: The Rise and Deuelopment af Reformed Orthodoxy, ca. 1520 ca. 1725. Volume 3: The Divine Essence
and Attributes (Grand Rapids: Baker, 2003), 499.
402
B ib l io t h e c a S a c r a
/ October-December 2013
This explanation, however, does not account for all the facts given
in the text. God does not forbid Moses from approaching the holy
ground b u t only from coming near the b u s h - t h e place from which
He speaks. The ground designated as holy includes th e precise
place where Moses stands, not ju st the bush where Yahw eh speaks.
In th e n a rra tiv e of Exodus 3:1-6 Moses is given two distinct and
separate commands: (1) Dont come n e a r here! and (2) Remove
The Meaning
your sandals because the place where you are standing is holy
ground.9 The holy ground, then, is much larger th a n th e bush
where Yahweh speaks. It follows th a t the comm and th a t forbids
,Moses to approach does not apply to the ground declared holy
b u t only to the precise spot where ah w eh speaks. The causal
clause inform ing Moses th a t he is standing on holy ground gives
the reason for rem oving his sandals and is not connected to the
.comm and to stay away from the b u sh
The holy ground (v. 5) encompasses a larger space th a n ju st
the bush from which God speaks and is, in fact, equivalent to the
area designated as the m ountain of God (v. 1). Moses is standing
on a -place; th ere is nothing inaccessible or restricted about ap
proaching there. The m ountain of God is not taboo or a forbidden
,place. Moreover, it does not inspire fear any more th a n the b u sh
which ra th e r provokes curiosity. The fear th a t seizes Moses in the
n arrativ e does not spring from the sacrosanct character of the
-m ountain; it is provoked by the shock of the vision of God. This u n
expected m eeting w ith God seizes Moses w ith fright. Verse 6 shows
clearly the difference betw een fear and holy, because the fear is
-inspired by th e vision of God, not by th e holy m ountain. It is th e re
fore im proper to speak of holy fear if language is to be genuinely
.tru e to S cripture
As already noted, holy ground appears as a synonym of the
m ountain of God. From the culture of th a t tim e there is nothing
astonishing about th is because a t U garit, in the fourteenth century
before Jesu s Christ, Baal dwells on a m ountain and the m ountain
of B aal is also called a place qds.10 The m ountain in E xodus 3:1,
however, is called -because of the presence of the God of A bra
ham , Isaac, and Jacob upon it and not because of a holy character
inherent in or proper to the place where Moses stands. In the
course of Moses vision, it is not so much the place as such th a t is
-valued, b u t the presence of God on it. This is when it becomes re
m arkable: the m ountain is .because it is the m ountain of God
Exodus 3, then, provides a m eaning for a derivative of the root
cu rren t in the fourteenth century before Jesus Christ, where
the ,ground is not the place of distance or radical separation
b u t of m eeting and of presence, the m eeting of God and m an. In
404
B ib l io t h e c a S a c r a
/ October-December 2013
E. Dhorme, L volution Religieuse d I sral. Yol. 1: La Religion des Hbreux Homades (Brussels: Nouvelle Socit (!Editions, 193?), 309.
-Moses m ust place boundaries there and order the people not to ap
.proach it
U nlike Exodus 3, w here God orders the fulfillm ent of a ritu a l
-on a consecrated place, here in Exodus 19 it is Moses who conse
crates the people (19:10). Thus th ere is in th is text a progression
in comparison w ith the passage in Exodus 3. Moses is no longer a
-w itness of consecration; he actively participates in th is consecra
tion. He does not ju st touch consecrated ground; he consecrates the
.people in the one case and th e delim ited m ountain in th e o th er
The m eaning of th is consecration is defined by th e context. In
,Exodus 3 the consecrated m ountain appears as a place prepared
-having become for a tim e a divine possession. In chapter 19 a con
secrated people are a people ready ,meet God, as verse 11 sta te s
th a t they may be ready for the th ird day. The o n se c ra tio n of the
people is a preparation. For M o se s-w h o is clearly the subject of
the verb in verse 1 0 -co n se c ra tin g th e people is to put them in
-a sta te to approach God.16 This preparation is effected by the prac
tice of a ritual: w ashing the cloaks, which takes two days ( w . 10and 1415). According to the sequence of volitives, the w ashing 11
-follows the consecration and appears as a result. An elem ent of p u
rification is certainly present in this text, b u t one cannot equate
consecration and purification in strict term s, and the root ) -p u
.rify) is not used
-Are the people consecrated in the sam e m anner as the conse
-crated m ountain? A consecrated peopleare they a people who be
long to God? It seems th a t th e context confirms this, likewise th a t
the elem ent of preparation predom inates. Moses m ust declare to
.the people: Be ready in th ree days. Dont come n e a r your wives (v
-This order is certainly given for a precise reason. In not com .)15
.ing near th eir wives, the Israelites are ready to come n e a r God
-God w ants to prepare the people for a very special m eeting. Cer
tainly Moses is not establishing a taboo; the text does not say th a t
-to have sexual relations is to move aw ay from God. B ut God de
sires, for a special occasion, a special consecration. This abstinence
is also found in 1 Sam uel 21:5 .
One discovers th e idea of belonging and devotion connected to
the notion of consecration a t the beginning of Exodus 19, where
verses 5-6 affirm clearly the purpose of God, less evident perhaps
in verses 10-15 and 22-24. ^ o u will be my personal tre a su re
1 Leenhardt, La Notion de Saintet dans l A ncien Testament, 19-231 Franh Michaeli, Le Livre de lExode (Neuchtel: Delachaux et Niestl, 1974),
166.
408
B ib l io t h e c a S a c r a
/ October-December 2013
C ertain aspects of th is text depict God as awesome and transcendent. Isaiah begins by saying th a t he saw te e Lord (), sitting upon a throne high and lifted up. God is exalted; He is te e High King;
te e edges of His robe filled te e tem ple (6:1). This not only expresses
the awesome greatness of God bu t also clearly indicates th a t Isaiah
was pro strate on te e ground; th is is why he could see only the edges or hem of Gods robe. This vision of God is sim ilar to the teeophany granted to the nobles of Israel w hen te e covenant w ith Israel w as ratified on M ount Sinai in Exodus 24. The nobles saw the
God of Israel, but all th a t they reported seeing is bright blue lapis
lazuli bricks under His feet (v. 10). They, too, were flat on te e
ground and were so aw estruck th a t th eir eyes were raised no higher th a n the paving stones under Gods feet.
Isaiah 6:3 says fu rth e r th a t the glory of te e Lord filled the
earth. W hen the tabernacle was completed in Exodus 40, a bright
cloud designated as te e glory of te e Lord filled te e tabernacle (vv.
3435). Likewise, w hen Solomon built and dedicated te e tem ple,
21 Dorian G. Coover-Cox, Exodus, in HCSB Study Bible, ed. Edwin A. Blum and
Jeremy Royal Howard (Nashville: Holman, 2010), 131.
the glory of the Lord filled the tem ple ) Kings 8:10-11). H ere in
Isaiah s vision, the glory of the Lord fills the earth. This indicates
th a t the entire e a rth is His sanctuary, or tem ple, and th a t He rules
the whole world. The seraphim describe Him, and w hatever they
are, th eir nam e m eans burning ones. They are beings of fire. In
addition, the foundations of the door-posts shake and the place is
filled w ith smoke. E arthquake, fire, and smoke clearly speak of the
-God of Sinai. In A bram s vision in Genesis 15:17 God reveals H im
self by m eans of a smoking firepot and blazing torch. In Exodus
which is a foretaste and precursor to Sinai, He reveals Him self ,3:2
to Moses in the burning bush. According to Exodus 19:16-19 God
.came on M ount Sinai accompanied by earthquake, fire, and sm oke
He appeared sim ilarly to Ezekiel in chapter 1 in clouds and fire. In
Daniel 7:910, his throne was flam ing w ith fire and its wheels
were all ablaze. A river of fire was flowing, coming out from before
him (NIV). There is no question th a t the lord whom Isaiah saw is
.the God who m ade the covenant w ith Israel at S inai
GOD IS HOLY
The concept th a t God is holy is not new. This idea is found before
Isaiah s tim e (Lev. 11:44-45; 20:3, 7, 26; Josh. 24:19; 1 Sam . 6:20 ;
Ps. 22:4). Nonetheless, Isa ia h s favorite term for God is the Holy
One of Israel/Jacob. He uses th is term some 26 tim es; outside of
-the Book of Isaiah it is found only six tim es. The vision of God giv
en to Isaiah a t the beginning of his life and m inistry as a prophet
profoundly affected his life and radically shaped his m essage and
,m inistry. Though recognition of Yahweh as a Holy God is not new
w hat is new is the particu lar m essage th a t God gives to Isaiah in
verses 8 -1 3 .
In Isaiah 6 it is when God appears to the prophet th a t Isaiah
h ears the voice of the seraphim proclaim ing the holiness of the
Lord. This declaration accom panies the coming of God among men
.in the tem ple and a tte sts His presence in the place of consecration
God appears in the place th a t belongs to Him, the sanctuary, but
-He does not stay in the holy of holies, the place th a t is m ost con
secrated. Instead He lets H im self be seen by m en in the front room
of the tem ple, the g reat hall. This is evident from two or th ree facts
in the text. The Hebrew word used here is . In 1 Kings 6-8, the
passage describing the construction of the tem ple, the word or
house is used for the tem ple as a whole, which is divided into two
rooms: th e front room or great hall is called the and elsew here
the holy place; the back room is called the and later the holy of
410
B ib l io t h e c a S a c r a
/ October-December 2013
In addition, Isaiah sees the seraphim in his vision. It is as imp o rtan t to note w hat he does not see as to note w hat he does see.
He sees seraphim and not cherubim . Norm ally im ages of the cherubim y a r d e d access to the presence of God in the garden and the
tem ple. Their wings protected the mercy seat of th e ark, and they
were on th e curtains guarding the holy of holies. W hat is intended
by the fact th a t Isaiah sees seraphim in stead of cherubim ? The
English word seraphim is, in fact, not of English origin, but rath er a loanword from Hebrew based on a rough tran sliteratio n of
the p lural form of the word '.
The word sarap h is rare in the Hebrew Bible. It occurs in
N um bers 21:6 and 8 and refers to fiery snakes, or serpents, th a t
struck th e Israelites. It also refers to a fiery snake in Deuteronom y
8:15, Isaiah 14:29, and 30:6. In the occurrences in Isaiah 14 and 30
the seraphim are specifically designated as winged serpents, which
clearly connects them to the instances in Isaiah 6.23 Finally we
have the two occurrences in Isaiah 6 for a total of seven instances
in the entire Hebrew Bible. Probably the word was tra n slite ra te d
instead of tra n sla ted because the tra n sla to rs did not see how the
22 For see 1 Kings 6:5, 17; 7:50; and in 1 Kings 6:3. For see
Kings 6:5, 16, 19-23, 31; 7:49, 8:6, 8. The term for the whole, , occurs approximately 46 times in 1 Kings 6-8. The is also designated as the holy of holies in
1 Kings 6:16, 8:6. The is designated as the holy place in 1 Kings 8:8, 10.
23 Annals from King Esarhaddon of Assyria describe his journey across the desert,
and in the same spot where Israel encountered the fiery snakes, he mentions
strange creatures with batting wings (James B. Pritchard, ed., Ancient Near Eastern Texts: Relating to the Old Testament [Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1955], 292b).
412
B ib l io t h e c a S a c r a
/ October-December 2 1 3
was not devoted to His justice and so im pugned His hoiiness. Thus
there is a clear parallel betw een the people of Isa ia h s tim e and the
people who journeyed through the desert.
Such a m eaning for holy is entirely consonant w ith uses of
the word connected to Israels journey through the desert. N um bers
20:10-13 is an example: So Moses took the staff from th e L ord s
presence, ju st as he comm anded him. He and Aaron gathered the
assem bly together in front of the rock and Moses said to them , Listen, you rebels, m ust we bring you w ater out of th is rock? Then
Moses raised his arm and struck the rock twice w ith his staff. Water gushed out, and the com m unity and th eir livestock drank. B ut
the L ord said to Moses and Aaron, Because you did not tru s t in
^ enough to honor me as holy in the sight of the Israelites, you
will not bring th is com m unity into the land I give them . These
were the w aters of M eribah, where the Israelites quarreled w ith
the L ord and w here he was proved holy am ong them (NHO.
Moses and A arons act of disobedience did not tre a t Y ahw eh as
h o ly - a s completely devoted to the job of bringing the people out of
Egypt and into the Prom ised Land. Even so, the actions of Yahweh
did dem onstrate precisely the fact th a t He was fully consecrated
and devoted to His promise and task.
A nother example sim ilar to th is is Isaiah 63:10, which recalls
th a t during the journey through the w ilderness the people of Israel
grieved Gods holy spirit. The term sp irit speaks of someone as he
or she is em pow ered,^ and in the context, it is the m essenger of
His presence who m ediated Gods care for the people in providing
protection from cold and h eat through th e cloud and also food and
w ater. Yet the people constantly questioned th a t God was devoted
to His prom ise to bring them through and complained about His
care and provisions for them .
In the vision of Isaiah, the seraphim cover them selves as a
sign of respect and subm ission, and Isaiah is conscious of his impurity. He is not ready to m eet God: he is a m an of unclean lips, and
he dwells in the m idst of a people of unclean lips; he ought not to
see the King, the Lord of Armies. The fear th a t inspires Isaiah is
not a fear of holiness. He does not say, My eyes have seen the Holy
One, bu t rath er, My eyes have seen the King, Yahweh of Arm ies.
As in Exodus 3, it is not the holiness of God th a t inspires fear, but
the vision of God Himself. In seeing God, the prophet dreads to be
Hans Walter Wolff, Anthropology of the Old Testament (Philadelphia: Fortress,
1974), 32-39; James M. Hamilton Jr., G ods Indwelling Presence (Nashville: ^ H
Academic, 2006), 39-40; and idem, God with Men in the Torah, Westminster Theological Journal 65 (2003): 113-33.
27 See Peter j . Gentry, Isaiah and Secial Justice, Journal of Midwestern B aptist
Theological Seminary 12 (Spring 2013): 1-15.
Transiation that of H. G. M. Williamson, A Critical and Exegetical Commentary
on Isaiah 1-27 (New York: T & T Clark, 2000), 1:356-57.
414
B ib l io t h e c a S a c r a /
October-December 2 0 1 3
67
19- >) s . v. 1 and III .
is like saying, in the year th a t P resident O bam a finished his secend term of office I saw the real president, th e Lord of A rm ies.
COMMISSION
fsaiah h eard th e voice of the Lord saying, Whom shall I send? And
who will go for us? (Isa. 6:8). Why did the Lord use the plural?
Why did He say, Who will go for us? W hat does this m ean? This
does not m ean th a t the faith of Israel was in m any gods, nor is it a
rem n an t of an old polytheism . It is not even an indication of the
Trinity, which is not clearly revealed un til the coming of Jesu s
Christ. It is an expression th a t would have been understood in the
ancient N ear E ast to refer to the fact th a t the heavenly King was
speaking in the divine court or council and Isaiah the prophet was
given access to th a t council. It indicates th a t Isaiah was an authorized agent who really did know the m ind and will of God and was
commissioned to bring it to the people.
The commission Isaiah w as given seems strange. The people
will really h e a r but not gain insight. They will really see b u t not
know a t all. Their h eart, th e center of the place where they feel,
think, and m ake decisions will not be granted insight or understanding. It seem s crazy to send a person on a m ission th a t will
fail. It seem s cold and h ard-hearted to prevent repentance and restoration. Y ahw eh is, however, describing for Isaiah not th e content
of his m essage but (by way of metonymy) th e effect and resu lts of
his preaching. It will h arden h e a rts (vv. 9-10), and it will lead to
th e devastation of the land and the people (vv. 11-12). The reason
for th is is clear. The people have already rejected the divine message. The first five chapters of Isaiah detail th eir arrogance and
indifference. The result of Isa ia h s preaching will be to confirm the
response they have already m ade and to bring about the judgm ent
th a t has already been predicted. These verses, then, show th a t
judgm ent is certain and inevitable and th ere will be no situation
like Jo n a h s preaching to Nineveh, w here the people repented and
God reversed the judgm ent. These verses are also a rem inder th a t
the results of preaching and w itness are in Gods hands, and not
the m essengers.
It is now possible to explain why the encounter opens w ith a
vision of Gods transcendence. Why is it th a t a t the beginning Isaiah sees Yahw eh as exalted and awesome? He sees Yahweh as high
and exalted because He is beyond m anipulation. He sees Yahweh
sitting on His throne for judgm ent, and th ere will be no possibility
for influencing th is to anyones advantage. It is clear from the outset th a t no one is in a palsy-walsy situation w ith th is judge, and no
one has th e m eans to reach Him and influence His m ind on the
verdict. Ail m ust aw ait His sentence. He is tru iy abeve and beyend
everyone. Sentence has been passed on th e nation in heaven; Isaiahs preaching wiii p u t it into effect on earth.
And yet th ere is a hope, even though it is extrem ely slender.
This is expressed in verse 13. At first the picture of judgm ent is
bleak. After the devastation and death only a te n th will rem ain.
And even th is surviving te n th will be subjected to fu rth e r judgm ent. There are a num ber of problem s in th is verse and scholars
differ greatly on the details. The general picture, however, is
roughly th e same. It m ay refer to two great trees ju st outside one of
the gates of Jeru salem which were burned. All th a t was left was
the blackened tru n k and branches stripped bare. It seem ed th a t
the tree was dead and could only be cut down and th e stum p tak en
out. And yet th ere was life and new grow th came. In the Old Testam ent, kings or kingdoms are pictured as m ajestic, tall, stately
trees (for example, Ezek. 31; Dan. 9). The Davidic dynasty seem s to
be a tree th a t is dead. And yet, somehow, out of th is tru n k will
spring new life and th e prom ises of God will be fulfilled. We see
here th e m essianic hope of Isaiah. It m ay be th a t tru e Israel will be
reduced to one faithful person before the rebuilding process beginsC o n c l u s io n
30 For a thorough treatment of the problems in the text, see Dominique Barthlemy. Critique Textuelle de lA ncien Testament, 2, Isae, Jrmie, Lamentations, Orbis
Bihlicus et Orientalis 50/2 (Gttingen: v ^ d en h o eek & Rupreeht, 1986), 41-44.
31 H. G. Liddell, R. Scott, and H. s. Jones, A Greek-English Lexicon, 9th ed. with
revised supplement (Oxford: Oxford University Fress, 1996), s.v. .
32 Wayne Grudem, Systematic Theology: An Introduction to Biblical Doctrine
(Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1994), 203.
:Copyright and U se
As an ATLAS user, you may print, download, or send articles for individual use
according to fair use as defined by U.S. and international copyright law and as
.otherw ise authorized under your resp ective ATLAS subscriber agreement
No content may be copied or emailed to multiple sites or publicly posted without the
,copyright holder(s) express written permission. Any use, decompiling
reproduction, or distribution of this journal in excess of fair use provisions may be a
.violation of copyright law
This journal is made av^lable to you through the ATLAS collection with permission
from the copyright holder(s). The copyright holder for an entire issue of a jouirai
,typically is the journal owner, who also may own the copyright in each article. However
.for certain articles, the author o fth e article may maintain the copyright in the article
Please contact the copyright holder($) to request permission to use an article or specific
work for any use covered by the fair use provisions o fth e copyright laws or covered
by your respective ATLAS subscriber agreement. For information regarding the
,copyright holder(s), please refer to the copyright infonnation in the journal, if available
.)$(or contact ATLA to request contact information for the copyright holder
:About ATLAS
The ATLA Serials (ATLAS) collection contains electronic versions of previously
published religion and theology journals reproduced with permission. The ATLAS
collection is owned and managed by the American Theological Library Association
.ATLA) and received initial funding from Lilly Endowment Inc (
The design and final form ofthis electronic document is the property o fthe American
Theological Library Association .