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If at First You Don't Succeed, Stop Trying so Hard

The self-conscious pursuit of holiness leaves us despairing over (inevitable) failures or gloating pridefully over (illusory) successes.

If at First You Don't Succeed, Stop Trying so Hard

The Hole in our Holiness is a fine book that makes a good argument that all devout Christians should read and inwardly digest. And then, as soon as possible, we should forget about it.

It's a fine book because Kevin DeYoung makes as good a case as can be made for pursuing holiness. Holiness is never formally defined in the book, but what he apparently means by it is righteous behavior motivated purely by a desire to obey Christ. Being familiar with DeYoung's writings, I know he is aware that holiness embraces more than this, but here he uses the term in its more ethical sense.

The case for holiness is not hard to make, as the Bible is full of injunctions to that end. There is no better summary than that of Ephesians 1, wherein we are told that from before the foundation of the world God chose us to live holy and blameless lives (v. 4), and then in chapter 2, that we have been saved by grace so that we might do good works (v. 10). Put in the perspective of salvation history, every other biblical admonition to holy living seems like mere commentary.

In pursuing the life of holiness there are many land mines to avoid, and DeYoung warns us about most of them. For example, he rightly notes the temptation to think that good works are something owed to God because of all the love he has lavished upon us. He also reminds us that "holy" is not something we become as much as a reality we live into, since by Christ's death and resurrection, we are already holy in the most important sense. Because of many such nuances, the book avoids many of the dead ends that one finds in other pleas for righteous living.

Inevitable Self-Righteousness

I believe, however, DeYoung fails to take some of his own advice as seriously as he might. Three examples will have to suffice.

First, he rightly argues that, as Scripture enjoins, we should "examine ourselves," but also wisely says we shouldn't "take our spiritual temperature every day." He devotes one paragraph to the latter exhortation, but in my experience, the temptation to spiritual narcissism is so powerful, it requires a chapter or more to think it through. Whenever I've made a priority of examining myself, it's pretty near impossible not to take my spiritual temperature every day. I've come to conclude that I, at least, cannot vigorously pursue holiness without becoming preoccupied with my progress or lack thereof. I don't think DeYoung appreciates the full power of this temptation.

Second, he rightly notes that in the pursuit of holiness, repentance is "a way of life"—meaning we should not expect perfection in this life, and that we'll always need to repent of something. But he creates an impression that repentance is the gut check on the way to something else, a mere means to the life of holiness. Again, what I've discovered is this: The older I've grown, the more I realize how layered and subtle is my sin; the more spiritually mature I am, the more I realize, along with Jeremiah, how desperately wicked my heart is. In that sense, as I run the last laps of life, I'm much less impressed with my outward progress, and more aware than ever of my sin, and more and more in a constant state of repentance. Others compliment me on my "progress"—I no longer have a temper, I'm more considerate of my wife, more compassionate toward others, and so on and so forth. But they cannot see my heart, and if they did, they'd run in fear, repelled by the cauldron evil that remains. Perhaps I've simply failed in the pursuit of holiness. Or maybe the pursuit of holiness is not so much a striving to adopt a life of habitual virtue but learning how to live a life of constant repentance.


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Comments

Displaying 1–3 of 5 comments

J S

December 08, 2012  9:16pm

Mark, I am pretty confused about your review. I am not sure you read the book very thoroughly. You paint this picture of people concerned with pursuing holiness as being narcissistic time/life-wasters. I can appreciate your anecdotal inductions of your own experience with your "spiritual temperature checks", but you injected so much of "your" negative experiences with your own pursuit of holiness, that it was difficult to decide if what I was reading (from your review) was actually a review, or if it was just a sweeping dismissal of pious living because you don't think it's a worthy pursuit. You injected so much of yourself (count the number of "I's and "my's" in your article) into the review of DeYoung's book that one has to logically conclude that you read it and, not so subtly, missed the gold by concluding (with prejudiced conjecture, mind you) that it is an unworthy use of time to live in a way which resists (and to quote Owen, "mortifies") sin in one's life. Blessings, Jeff

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Claire Guest

December 01, 2012  12:14pm

RE: "Better than examining ourselves and trying to be holy is to stop looking at yourself in the first place, and to start looking for the neighbor, moving toward him with the rhythm of grace." This is true. It is equally true that we are to remove the log from our own eye before attempting to help another believer remove a plank from his. I refer to this teaching by Christ Jesus in an attempt to bring a Scriptural balance here to this issue. I especially love and appreciate Galatians 6:1, in which the Lord admonishes us to always deal with a brother who has sinned with the same grace we want others to extend toward us, realizing how dependent we all are on the Grace of God, which is THE only thing which can effectively transform our lives, molding us into the image of His own dear Son who gave His life for us that we might become the righteousness of God in Christ Jesus.

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Mark Galli

November 29, 2012  3:22pm

Jeffrey, thanks for those quotes. I wish I would have had them for the review! --Mark

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