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Glory in the Bible

The writers of the Old Testament did not know, nor could they have imagined the fullness of the message, work, power, wisdom, majesty, authority, deity, his role as the Messiah of Israel—the Christ, nor any of Christ’s specific miracles, prior to his coming. But they did write about him.

The sacrificial lamb of Genesis 22:8 cannot be fully understood until the New Testament identifies Christ as the “lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world” (cf. John 1:29, 36). The New Testament draws the connection of Christ to Abraham (as his descendent). The New Testament interprets    Aaron the priest, Zechariah’s man with the measuring rod, the son of man in Daniel, the Passover, the Serpent in the wilderness, and much more, as representative, in a typological, symbolical, or theological sense, of Christ’s person and work.

Even the Law of God as a display of the moral nature of God, is communicated through a very direct means to God’s people. It was written the first time by the finger of God. Yet, God is a spirit, and does not have a body. But we are told that there was a physical interaction with the tables of Moses. The Law of God itself is declarative of the nature of God, the requirement of holiness, the obedience of God’s people, the separation of sin and the need for a Redeemer. But the role of the Son is much more than a physical condescension of the Divine Person to express himself across the reaches of eternity and infinity to the specific, time-limited epoch of human history and within the confines of human language, in tangible writing in physical stone tablets.

The Law, by our reading, was mediated by Christ—as all revelation of the Father’s nature and glory are thus interpreted by him alone—thus he, as God is the Giver of the Law, as a measure of the nature of God, was fulfilled by Christ’s perfect obedience in his incarnation and life of perfect holiness and submission to the Father’s will and purposes. The revelation of the sacrifice, the atonement, the promise of Messiah, the promises of providence and covenant, the coming redemption and forgiveness of sins by the Cross, and all that comprises the Gospel of Christ, came whether in Old Testament or New, by Christ’s revelatory work and are therefore rightly the subjects for believers in Christ to search and to seek in the both Testaments.

Our task is to search throughout the Bible and to seek to understand the ways in which God has revealed his glory by means of the revelation of the Son. We must first understand the various ways that glory is presented to us in the Biblical text and seek to understand the grander themes after we have reviewed the scope of the subject. What follows is an analysis of the Biblical theology of glory. It is an attempt at comprehensiveness, but each of us should do our own study of the subject.

Types of glory

The text of Scripture has been studied using concordances and digital search engines. The following arrangement sets out the major uses of glory in the Bible.

  1. Glory of man.
  2. The honor, fame, reputation, and accomplishments of man are referred to as glory.
  3. A nation’s domain, riches, influence, military power, extent of borders, and control of other nations, constitute national glory.
  4. The glory of man is often presented as reason to praise, to take note of, or to compare a great man with a defeated foe or
    1. The glory of man can be compared to the glory of God. See Exodus 14:4; 14:17–18; 16:7; Psalms 3:3; 7:5; Isaiah 60:13; 61:6.
  5. The glory of Israel: Ezekiel 28:22.
  6. The glory of an earthly ruler:  Genesis 49:6. See also Daniel 2:37; 4:30, 36; 5:18, 20; Luke 12:27.
  7. The glory of a rich man: Job 19:9; 29:20.
  8. The glory of a king’s court: Psalms 108:1. The glory of a nation:  Isaiah 60:13; 61:13; Ezekiel 25:9.
  9. The glory of a military stronghold: Ezekiel 24:25.
  10. The glory of a nation’s reputation: Hosea 10:5; Zechariah 2:8.
  11. More on the glory of man:  Judges 4:9; Daniel 2:37; 2 Samuel 1:19; 2 Kings 14:10; Esther 1:4; Job 19:9; 29:20; Psalms 3:3; 7:5; 8:5; 16:9; 49:16; 57:5; 106:5; 108:1; Jeremiah 48:18; Ezekiel 24:25; 25:9; Daniel 2:37; 4:30; 4:36; 5:18; 5:20; 7:14; John 12:43; 2 Corinthians 8:23.
  12. Glory as the splendor of a created thing or being.
    1. 1 Corinthians 11:15; 15:40; 2 Corinthians 3:7 (Moses’ face);
  13. Glory of the ministry of the Spirit/the Law/Grace.
    1. 2 Corinthians 3:8 (Spirit’s ministry).
    2. 2 Corinthians 3:9–11 (glory of law and grace)
  14. The glory of the Lord.
    1. The display of the glory of the Lord, not so much so that God may be praised, but so that his activity may be noted.[1]
    2. The demonstration of God’s character by various actions, activities, and declarations. These acts of God are the record of God’s exposition of his holy and glorious nature by deeds that propound and demonstrate those characteristics and properties within the Divine Person.
      1. See: Exodus 16:7; 24:16; 24:17; Numbers 14:21; 1 Samuel 4:21, 22;1 Kings 8:11; 1 Chronicles 22:5; 2 Chronicles 5:14; 7:2; Psalms 8:1; 19:1; 21:5; 26:8; 57:5; 102:16; 138:5; Isaiah 28:5; Ezekiel 1:28; 3:23; 8:4; 10:4;  John 12:43; Romans 1:23; 1 Corinthians 10:31; 11:7; 2 Corinthians 1:20.
  15. Glory as a record of God displaying and demonstrating his nature by his deeds
    1. See Exodus 16:7, 10; 24:16, 17; Numbers 14:21.
  16. The glory of God can depart from those who once received it, through their faithlessness.
    1. See 1 Samuel 4:21, 22.
  17. Glory as beauty.
    1. There is a beauty in the nature of glory that is shown in and upon those who engage in the true worship of God.
    2. There is a manifestation of the nature of glory that is recognized as a grand beauty in the God who is worshipped and, by extension, to those who worship him (as Moses shone with the Shekinah glory after being in the presence of God on Mt. Horeb).
    3. The beauty of God’s glory is spread over his worshippers.
      1. See Exodus 28:2, 40. The physical display of glory is recounted by the apostle in John 12:43;
      2. Compare Romans 1:23; 1 Corinthians 10:31; 11:7; 2 Corinthians 1:20.
      3. Compare beauty as a thing in itself apart from the consideration of the topic of divine glory:
        1. See 1 Corinthians 11:15; 15:40, 43; 2 Corinthians 3:7, 8, 10, 11.
        2. This glory is viewed as brightness and manifestation of physical outshining in a special display of bright shining found specifically in the prophet Ezekiel.
          1. See Ezekiel 11:22; 43:2, 4, 5; 44:4.
  18. Glory as expressive of the holiness of God. And holiness as expressive of glory.
    1. Holiness and glory are representative of the divine nature and they are “super-qualities” subsuming all the divine nature into the summary themes of holiness and the display of this holiness by glory. Glory also is a sanctifying quality, nearly equivalent to holiness in its work and
    2. See Exodus 29:43; 2 Corinthians 3:18; Ephesians 4:15
    1. Glory as summative of the entire person of God.
      1. The revelation of his nature, especially his nature as he is revealed to people
      2. His honor as God as he is duly
      3. See Exodus 33:18–22; 40:34–35; Leviticus 9:6, 23; Numbers 14:10, 22; 16:9, 42; 20:6; Deuteronomy 5:24; Psalms 57:11; and 108:5.
  19. Glory is expressive of all that God is.
    1. See Isaiah 66:
    2. His infinite rule over everyone and everything.See Daniel 7:14; Habakkuk 2:14; Zechariah 2:5; Matthew 25:31; Luke 2:9; 9:\
    3. To give God glory is to make him glorious.
    4. See 1Samuel 6:5; 1 Chronicles 16:24, 28, 29; Psalms 6:5; 66:2; 96:7, 8; and Romans 4:20.
  20. God is known as the Glory of God.
    1. The greatness of Israel related to the God of the nation. Trees of Eden=glory. See Ezekiel 31:18; glory of the church, 2 Corinthians 8:23 church as glory of
  21. Glory as a name of God of Israel, 1 Samuel 15:29
  22. God’s name is Glory
    1. The King of Glory, see Psalms 24:8, 9,
    2. The God of Glory, see Psalms 29:3
  23. The Glorious God
    1. See Psalms 72:19
  24. Glory in his holy name
    1. See 1 Chronicles 16:10; Psalms 79:9
  25. Glory is God’s name
    1. See Ezekiel 39:13, 21; 43:2 (cf. Psalms 78:6)
  26. Glory as an individual attribute praised by men.
    1. See 1 Chronicles 29:11; Psalms 29:1, 2; 62:7; 71:8; 1 Thessalonians 2:6, 20.
  27. Glory as equivalent to Heaven or joy.
    1. See Psalms 73:21; Ezekiel 3:12; 9:3; 10:18, 19; Mark 10:37; Philippians 4:19 (cf. Colossians 1:27); Colossians 3:4; 1 Thessalonians 2:12; Hebrews 2:10; 1 Peter 5:10.
  28. Glory as equivalent to joy. See Isaiah 41:16; 1 Peter 5:10.
  29. Honor and glory of God. See Hebrews 2:7, 9; 1 Peter 1:7.
  30. Majestic glory. See 2 Peter 1:17; Revelation 1:6; 4:9, 11 (cf. 7:12); 11:13; 14:7; 19:1, 7; 21:11, 23.
  31. Glory as equivalent to salvation.
    1. See Psalms 85:9; 106:47; Isaiah 46:13.
  32. Glory as representative of strength, authority, and conquering power.
    1. See Psalms 89:17; Matthew 24:30; Mark 13:26; Romans 6:4.
  33. Glory as equivalent to marvelous works, accomplishments, miracles, and praise.
    1. See Psalms 96:3; Haggai 2:3, 7, 9; Matthew 4:8; John 11:4; Romans 3:7; 11:36; 16:27; 2 Corinthians 4:15, 17; 8:19.
  34. Glory as God’s righteousness.
    1. See Psalms 97:6; Isaiah 58:8; Isaiah 62:2.
  35. Glory as the Name of the Lord (name, praise, glory).
    1. See Psalms 102:15; 105:3; 115:1;
    2. See Isaiah 42:8, 12; 43:7; 48:11 (name implied in Hebrew text);
    3. See Isaiah 59:19; Jeremiah 13:11 (people, name, praise, glory);
    4. See Jeremiah 13:16 (name of joy, praise, glory);
    5. See Matthew 5:16; Luke 19:38 (peace in heaven and glory in the highest); Romans 8:18, 21; 15:7.
  36. Glory as holiness in judgments.
    1. See Ezekiel 28:22; Acts 12:23.
  37. Glory negatively compared to idolatry.
    1. See Psalms 106:20 ( “exchange the glory of God for an ox,” cf. Romans 1);
    2. Cf. Habakkuk 2:16 (shame instead of glory).
  38. Glory as God’s “height” (heaven, throne, character/perfection).
    1. See Psalms 113:4 (cf. majesty in Habakkuk 2:16).
  39. Glory of the kingdom, equivalent with power, authority, rule.
    1. See Psalms 145:11, cf. Luke 4:6 (Satan’s offer of a kingdom, authority and glory).
    2. See Luke 24:26.
  40. Glory equivalent to majesty (of God or of a nation), presence (as in evidence) and manifestation of character.
    1. See Isaiah 35:2; Ezekiel 11:23 cf. Luke 9:32; Luke 21:27; Philippians 4:20.
  41. Glory of the Lord especially in Christ (Edwards, Works, Vol. 1., 118).
    1. See 1 Peter 4:13, Christ’s glory revealed.
    2. See Isaiah 40: 5; Micah 1:15 (glory of Israel shall come—future); Zechariah 12:7 (glory of house of David.
    3. Zechariah 2:8, “his glory sent me”; John 12:41; Revelation 21:23.
    4. Christ the Lord of glory. See 1 Corinthians 2:8.
  42. The praise of his glory. See Ephesians 1:12, 14
  43. Christ in you as glorious. See Colossians 1:27
    1. The glory of the Lord Jesus Christ 2 Thessalonians 2:15; 2 Timothy 2:110; Titus 2:13; 2 Peter 1:17;
  44. Glory to God. See Revelation 5:12 (cf. Revelation 4:11 honor to the Lamb, and again in 5:13).
    1. Christ brings glory to the Father
    2. See Philippians 2:11; 1 Peter 1:7; Jude 1:25; Revelation 7:12.
    3. Glory in the justification of sinners. Isaiah 45:25.
    4. God’s glory displayed in believers. See Philippians 1:11, 26; 2 Peter 1:3.
  45. Negatively, did not display glory.
    1. See Revelation 16:9.
    2. “The glory is in their shame.” See Philippians 3:19.
  46. Glory as the Light of God (Shekinah, clouds, smoke).
    1. See Isaiah 60:1, 2 (the Lord arise=Sun=Light; Isaiah 60:19.
    2. See Jeremiah 13:16, cf. Ezekiel 1:28 (brightness=glory=God’s nature).
    3. See Ezekiel 10:4 (brightness).
    4. See Luke 2:32 (light and glory).
    5. See Luke 9:31–32 (Moses and Elijah appear in glorious light).
    6. See John 1:14 (have seen his glory=light at transfiguration).
    7. Romans 9:4 (ref to Shekinah); 2 Corinthians 4:4 light of the gospel of the glory of Christ.
      1. See 1 Timothy 3:16; Revelation 15:8 (smoke revealing and signifying glory, cf. Revelation 18:1, angel’s light signifying God’s glory).
  47. Glory as Peace (shalom).
    1. See Isaiah 66:12.
  48. Glory in what is falsely worshiped
    1. See Jeremiah 2:11 (their glory=gods of the people).
  49. Glory representing all the divine perfections,
    1. See Romans 3:23.
  50. Glory equivalent to Covenantal Blessing,
    1. See Jeremiah 4:2, cf. Genesis 12:3 “be blessed”.
  51. Glory as God’s kingdom and rule.
    1. See Daniel 7:14 (kingdom shall not be destroyed).
  52. Glory as grace and truth (aspects of the divine Person).
    1. See John 1:14.
  53. Glory representative of divinity or the rights of Godhood.
    1. See John 2:11; 17:5; 24; 1 Peter 5:4 (cf. Hebrews 2:7, 9).
  54. Glory not received from men.
    1. See John 5:41; 8:50 (do not seek my own approval, cf. 1 Thessalonians 2:6).
  55. Glory as God’s approval of men (their pleasure to God) Cf. men’s achievements above.
    1. See John 5:44; 7:18, 22 (Jesus seeking the Father’s glory/approval; giving his glory/approval to others); Acts 7:55; Romans 2:7, 10; 3:23; 5:2; 1 Corinthians 2:7.
  56. Glory as self-praise.
    1. See John 8:54 “if I glorify myself …” = idolatry; yet Christ is glorious and he is the glorifier of the Father.
  57. Glory as the majestic nature of God’s character and divinity.
    1. See Ephesians 3:16 (riches of his glory).
    2. See 2 Thessalonians 1:9, glory of his might (cf. 1 Peter 5:4).
    3. See 1 Timothy 1:11, Glory as the gospel of Christ.
  58. Miscellaneous/exceptional uses.
    1. “The Spirit of Glory.” See 1 Peter 4:14.
    2. “To glory in Jesus Christ.” Glory as a verb. See Philippians 3:3,

[1] See Barrett, John. “[John 11:3] shows that the meaning is not in order that God may be glorified; here as elsewhere the glory of God is not his praise but his activity.” Cited in Morris, John, 538.

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Competitors of Glory

A state of nature is a state of enmity against God. Man is naturally an enemy of the sovereignty and dominion of God. Not subject to the law of God.[1]

Sometimes a soul thinks or hopes that it may through grace be utterly free from this troublesome inmate. Upon some secret enjoyment of God, some full supply of grace, some return from wandering, some deep affliction, some thorough humiliations, the poor soul begins to hope that it shall be freed from the law of sin. But after a while … sin acts again, makes good its old station.[2]

The one who has seen something of the glory of Christ will count everything else as “rubbish,” that he might know Christ better and see more of his glory (Philippians 3:8–10).[3]

The glory of God is locked in a mortal conflict with the glory of man. Christ was insistent to reject any glory men offered him. He said, “I do not receive glory from people,” John 5:41 (cf. vs. 44). Sin insults the majesty of God. If we are to become true worshippers, our insult to God’s glory must not masquerade as an offering of praise to him. Christ was hostile to the glory offered to him by men. He wanted nothing to do with it. Christian worship must not embrace what Christ categorically, angrily rejected. Worship is not an invention of men. It is our response to God, ordered by who he is, and how he desires to be adored and praised.

God is not in need of anything man can give him. There is in the attempt to “glorify God” from the inventions and imagi-nations of men, a diminution of the honor that is truly due to God. For the sake of his true nature and holiness, worship must be limited to what God has permitted and omit what he has forbidden. When we attempt to worship God with the glory of men, there is in this effort a terrible falling, and in that very act that was called “worship,” an audacious act of God-offending idolatry.

Instead, though his excellencies are seen by us in shadows and understood by us incompletely, still, God can be worshipped. We study the glory of God in all its manifold displays and we are immensely changed by this knowledge. By grace, we offer these excellencies of the divine person back to God as a pleasant and acceptable act of praise to him. In this way God is glorified.

Throughout all eternity, the Son has acted as the Revelator, the Mediator of God’s Presence, the Communicator of God’s character and words, and the One who has displayed all the glory of the Father. Men’s glory is an affront to the redeeming work of the Son. When men act to create praise to God from themselves, every aspect of that offering is polluted with their sin, their poor thinking, misuse of words and concepts, and omissions and additions that make their affirmations about God incomplete or errant. But the Son has perfectly displayed the character of the Father. He has accurately, fully, and sinlessly explained and demonstrated the perfections of the Father and he made known the wisdom, glory, and honor of his person. The Son has infallibly communicated who the Father is and has completely defended his beauty, his perfections, and his holiness, by his own moral excellencies, his absolute wisdom, and ultimate obedience. These qualities in the Son are possessed by no sinful man.

God is dangerously jealous of his glory. Men cannot invent, create, or enlarge upon God’s glory. Men cannot possess the glory of God; they cannot manufacture, invent, or create more of it; from within themselves they do not know it, nor can they fathom its nature, qualities, or depth; and they are repeatedly forbidden to give their glory to God and are rejected by God in the attempt to glorify him by their efforts or concoctions. The glory of men is not God’s glory in the least degree. God hates and is repelled by the glory of men.

Both Jesus and Paul steadfastly refused to accept glory from men.

I do not receive glory from people. (John 5:41)

I do not seek my own glory. (John 8:50)

So also Christ did not exalt himself to be made a high priest, but was appointed by him who said to him, ‘You are my Son, today I have begotten you.’” (Hebrews 5:5)

But far be it from me to boast [NIV “glory”] except in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world. (Galatians 6:14)

Nor did we seek glory from people, whether from you or from others, though we could have made demands as apostles of Christ. (1 Thessalonians 2:6)

Sinful man desires to separate the glory of God from his holiness. We seek our glory with all our hearts. We long to be high in reputation, regarded as wise, beautiful, or successful. But we do not desire holiness nor to be arrested by the moral purity true holiness would form within us. Sinful man hates holiness and he is an enemy of it.

Separating holiness from glory, we follow Adam and Eve in the way of sin (cf. Psalm 1:1). When we separate holiness from glory, instead of a glory that reflects the true nature of God and rehearses his accomplishments and celebrates his moral perfections, we create an alien, ugly glory that originates from man and is only about man and only results in a great offense offered to God, and is separated from his true holiness. Edwards describes the life of man separated from holiness:

They never gave God the honor of one of his attributes. They never gave him the honor of his authority by obeying him. They never gave him the honor of his sovereignty by submitting to him. They never gave him the honor of his holiness and mercy by loving him. They never gave him the honor of his sufficiency and faithfulness by trusting in him, but have looked upon God as one not fit to be believed, and have treated him as if he were a liar. 1 John 5:10, “He that believeth not God hath made him a liar.” They never so much as heartily thanked God for one mercy they have received in their whole lives, though God has always maintained them, and they have always lived upon his bounty. They did not so much as even once heartily thank Christ for coming into the world. They never would show him so much gratitude as to receive him when he was knocking at their door, but have always shut the door against him, though he has come to knock at their door upon no other ground but only to offer himself to be their Savior.[4]

Glory and holiness are eternally married and they must not be torn asunder. A glory without holiness would be about fame but not about purity; about effulgence but separated from integrity; about the praise of men separated from the character of God. Holiness is the power and life of glory. In God’s life or in a man’s, holiness provides the substance, the themes, and it defines the extent of glory. When glory is pulled apart from holiness, God becomes a buffoon demanding worship or man believes in his arrogance that he is deserving of every blessing and gift God gives him. Apart from holiness, glory never resolves conflicts within God’s nature. Wrath and love are forever vying for supremacy and grace and justice are locked in an unending war.

In a man, glory separated from holiness equals sin, pride, jealousy, human arrogance, and spiritual death. Pascal writes about man’s condition after he has separated holiness from glory:

Man’s eye then beheld the majesty of God. He was not then in the darkness that now blinds his sight, not subject to death and the measures that afflict him.

But he could not bear such great glory without falling into presumption. He wanted to make himself his own center and do without [God’s] help ….

Pascal writes further:

That is the state in which men are today. They retain some feeble instinct from the happiness of their first nature, and are plunged into wretchedness of their blindness and concupiscence, which has become their second nature.[5]

The rejection of the glory of men was crucially important for both Jesus and Paul. A virulent hostility to the glory of man is essential for living the Christian life.

The Lord Jesus knew well the difference between the glory of God and the glory of man. We are taken aback by the vehemence with which Christ rejects the glory of men. One might suppose given the opposition Jesus faced and the paucity of success of his ministry of found among men, that he might welcome the affirmation of men. But he never received even the smallest token of the glory of men.[6]

Such praise and honor would seem to be especially encouraging when Christ was building his ministry, teaching the crowds, and riding to Jerusalem to the shout of “Hosanna!” But Christ knew that man’s glory was fickle, self-serving, and sin-motivated. Man’s glory comes from “within man”[7] not from God. Charles Spurgeon writes:

If the Master’s head had been turned by the hosannas of the multitude, then his heart would have sunk within him when they cried, “Crucify him, crucify him.” But he was neither lifted up nor cast down by men: he committed himself unto no man because he knew what was in man.

The innermost reason for this quiet heart [of Jesus] was his unbroken communion with the Father. Jesus dwelt apart, for he lived with God: the Son of man who came down from heaven still dwelt in heaven, serenely patient because he was raised above earthly things in the holy contemplations of his perfect mind. Because his heart was with the Father, the Father made him strong to bear anything that might come from men.[8]

The failure of man’s glory

Do nothing from rivalry or conceit, but in humility count others more significant than yourselves. (Philippians 2:3)

The warning to live in humility would be unnecessary if we didn’t wage war against rivalry and conceit. If those qualities were rare in us, pride and jealousy would not be so challenging.

Conceit in this passage comes from two Greek words, kenoV (kenos), “empty, vain,” and the familiar term, doxoV (doxos), “glory.” The word kenodoxoV (kenodoxos) means, “conceited” and “vain,” or “worthless” and “cheap.”

Let us not become conceited, provoking one another, envying one another. (Galatians 5:26)

Man’s glory is not acceptable to God because man does not honor God as God. God has directed how he wants to be honored. The presumptuousness within the human heart is so expansive that the mendacious and corrupting qualities of false glory offered to God can be justified, excused, and even lauded. Worship of God is a dangerous occupation. We are so familiar with themes of love and mercy in our modern worship that to approach God as holy and just is alien to our sensibilities. In our sin we can bring an anthem of praise to God that is no less offensive to him than a wooden idol carved in our own image, while believing that God is praised by our neglect of his person and work. We would create a novel experience filled with sights and sounds of this world and of men’s works, rather than create an accurate and beautiful reflection of the divine person and work from which God has shown us of his glory.

Worship has been captured by the self-focused, driven by the praises of men, filled with the machinations of sinful people, and it collapses infinitely short of the measure of the height, the content, the wonder, the divine dignity, and the redeeming splendor of Glory and Majesty. But what we do in public worship, we also do in private. Our prayers devolve into demands of God; our thanksgivings turn into self-congratulations; our confessions sink into complaints; our study erupts into spiritual pride; our man-made god is worshipped when we seek to fulfill our desires. When glory is lost, we fall back into ourselves and become idolaters yet again and all the more.

Man’s glory cannot illuminate the perfections and virtues of God. Deriving only from man, it can only be about the accomplishments and values of man. It is impossible for man in himself to lay aside his own words about God. Though he may think he is praising God, his self-conceived ideas or his self-invented psalms and hymns and spiritual songs rise only to the level of man. When he seeks to worship God, and performs worshipful actions, he depends not upon God for his acts of worship and the God-filled attitudes that should attend such a beautiful and rich experience, but he falls short of the rich Biblical content of true praise. All he says, all he does, is drawn only from within himself, and it is the very opposite of worship. Jesus knows what is within man and he does not receive glory from men. He was rejecting of it, dismissive of it, resistant to it, and kept himself removed or disassociated from it his entire life and in every moment of his ministry.

Injury to God’s holiness

From his vain heart, man injures the holiness of God by ascribing to God qualities that are inferior to the divine person. Charnock writes:

The holiness of God is injured, in the unworthy representations of God, and imaginations of him in our own minds.

The holiness of God is injured in charging our sin upon God.[9]

God’s holiness is not benefited when we create content out of the air for use in the praise of God. It is immensely offensive to God to create a fiction about him and then to ascribe it to his character, and especially so, in an act of worship. Ascribing to God some endorsement of our actions, choices, or aspirations, or ascribing to God motives or desires that he has not revealed, are some examples. Sinful men put words in God’s mouth.

Saying something about God that is rooted only in human imagination may appear clever, it may move deep and stirring emotions, but it would always be extremely offensive to the holiness of God and results not in glory to God but in a diminution of his glory.

Instead of learning from the inspired record the nature and qualities of God that should be praised and aligning our worship with the patterns of praise and adoration that God approves, man creates inferior content that would seek to bind God in the service of man (making God our slave), that dismisses his Sovereignty (making man the sovereign), and that seeks an experience over the presence of God (dismissing the glory and holiness of the true God over a moment of ecstatic emotion). We are infected with “vanity,” and on that account we are apt to say things about God that are flatly wrong as to the facts. We are inclined to be imbalanced in the doctrines we ascribe to him and in the manner in which we practice our faith in him in practical terms (prayer, service, humility, sacrifice for others, and the like). Vain men place primary importance on matters that are of secondary significance. We neglect the content that makes worship true and essential, reflective of the character and affections of God and we substitute a language in worship that is inferior in content and it lacks the comprehensiveness of a Biblical view of God. This human language of praise is an incomplete, inferior, imaginary, and speculative set of divine qualities and attributes. It is dismissive of hard or offensive aspects of the divine person. The moral demands of God are softened to make God indifferent to sin and nonreactive to what sinners do. The teaching is plainly errant when it declares what is not true of God and declares as the oracles of God that which is out of accord with the revelation of Christ. When the creeds are soiled and the meaning of words and doctrines redefined, God is not glorified.

From those insufficient stones modern man erects a building of vapid, paltry, insipient praise to God. It is not God who is praised by these words or by these actions in the least degree. We have exchanged the worship of the glorious God for the worst form of idolatry—the worship of man (see Romans 1:25).

Holiness is injured when we charge God as the responsible agent for our sin. The holiness of God is offensive to sinful man. He stands against us when we desire to sin. He speaks by Law and against our sinful longings and actions. When we sin, our passions must overcome the fact of God’s holy presence. We do not sin in isolation from God. Everything we do is done before God, in his presence. Sinful man may place blame for his temptations on God’s account. Holiness is not, by that insult, lessened.

Let no one say when he is tempted, “I am being temp-ted by God,” for God cannot be tempted with evil, and he himself tempts no one. (James 1:13)

It is within the hearts of men to place blame for our sins at the foot of God. As sinful men we refuse to accept responsibility for our actions. But when holiness is established in our praise, we experience a conflict between what is within us (our sin) and what is within God (his holiness). Jesus’ holiness caused his opponents not only to argue with him but to hate him.

Holiness is not a benign quality of polite religious inquiry. It is offensive to sinful men; it is the chief enemy of sinful men. As sinful men, we detest the holiness of God. When holiness is displayed, rather than confessing our failures to be holy, we desire to accuse others as the agents and catalysts of our sins. We deflect accountability for our actions upon others or upon God. We react to holiness not by declaring our failure to measure up to God’s standard of purity and moral rectitude, but we react to holiness by growing angry with God, as if it were not for him, we would not be guilty of the least offense. The holiness of God is the chief enemy of men.

We react to holiness by seeking to make God guilty for our sin. If God tempted us, caused us to be tempted, did not intervene to prevent our sin, or did not remove the occasion for our sin, then it is not we who are guilty. It is God. How we hate holiness!

The glory of God is revealed by his powerful oversight and rule over all things on one account, and in our accountability to God for our actions, on the other. The sovereignty of God places God neither as the author of sin nor as the cause of any temptation. But Scripture also presents God as directing the affairs of men, their comings and goings, the events of providence and nature, determining the days of their births and deaths, and God’s personal working in “all things” (Romans 8:28) that touch their lives.

God controls all things by his sovereignty. Yet men are personally responsible for their actions. The holiness of God is praised as these two principles (God’s sovereignty and man’s responsibility) are held together in perfect tension and balance. But these qualities are not equal in importance. The sovereignty of God is primary. The believer’s heart yields in submission and love to God’s sovereignty, it agrees with the holiness of God, and then accepts responsibility for actions lived out before the holy God.

We believe God is working, active, and directing the affairs of men. We also believe that men are accountable to God as moral agents who will give answer before the tribune of the Holy God who will judge the world.

Sinful men buck against the holiness and sovereignty of God. They resist holy person and his superseding authority in all things and over all events. They cry out against his law. They resent his intrusion into their lives. They do not delight in God’s overarching and undefeatable power, but resist his rule and resent his dominion and power to completely. Men left to themselves prefer Hell to Heaven.

The glory of God is displayed in his patience with men, even the worst sort of men who blame their sin on God, by giving them time to repent (2 Peter 3:9). Men have every reason to believe that God is glorious. But they find every reason not to believe him. Charnock:

God loseth his glory by us. It is an unreasonable thing, if we do not believe him for his word, yet not to believe him for his work’s sake (John 14:11).[10]

Man breaks against the sovereignty of God. He resists the fact of God’s existence and his moral nature. Man usurps God’s place as the center of praise and glory and puts himself in the place of God, judging God instead of worshipping him. He then ascribes to God the most horrid acts: holding that God is the cause of his sin, and accusing God of being unjust in his wrath. Sinful man isolates himself from the person of God.

Whoever isolates himself seeks his own desire; he breaks out against all sound judgment. (Proverbs 18:1)

Does this not explain why Christ was so averse to the glory of men? It is a glory that debases God. It is a glory that complains of God’s injustice. It is a glory that assumes no responsibility. It is a glory that challenges God’s truthfulness, justice, and honesty. Harrison writes:

[Esteem and honor of men are] incompatible with faith. Paul, following the example of Jesus (John 15:41, 8:50; cf. Hebrews 5:4f; 2 Peter 1:17), did not seek glory from men (1 Thessalonians 2:6). He voluntarily accepted dishonor (2 Corinthians 6:8, 4:10), strove to carry out his service to the honor of the Lord (2 Corinthians 8:19ff.), and looked to the honor and praise which Christ would give him as a reward on his day (1 Thessalonians 2:19f), Philippians 2:16). Paul’s statement that in the final judgment the righteous will receive ‘glory and honor and immortality’ refers to eternal life itself (Romans 2:7, 10; 5:2).[11]

Solomon gave a kind of fame to God, but not glory to his nature and to his divine perfections. He spent seven years building the Temple in Jerusalem (1 Kings 7:1, 8; cf. 5:5; 6:38, 11:1-7), but he took 13 years to build his personal dwelling, his palace. It was when he was building the Temple that Solomon took Pharaoh’s daughter as his wife. He was acting for his own fame and pleasure, but not for the honor of God in obeying his Word or in living by his Law. Calvin writes:

To sum up, man cannot without sacrilege claim for himself even a crumb of righteousness, for just so much is plucked and taken away from the glory of God’s righteousness.[12]

We see this in Cornelius (Acts 10:25). He was not advanced so ill in godliness as not to pay God alone the highest reverence. Therefore, when he prostrated himself before Peter, undoubtedly he did not intend to worship Peter in place of God, yet Peter earnestly forbade him to do it. Why, unless because men never so articulately discern between the honoring of God and of creatures without indiscriminately transferring to the creature what belongs to God. Thus, if we wish to have one God, we should remember that we must not pluck away even a particle of his glory and that he must retain what is his own.[13]

We must regain a hatred for man’s glory and a love for God’s. Only then can we worship God as he requires us to worship. To love the glory of man is to hate the glory of God. To love the glory of God is to hate the glory of man.

Added from Facebook post 12.13.12

From More Glory.

“Christ was always the sort of Person who would lay his life down for his own.  If you could journey to the most distant point in past eternity and there meet with Jesus, you would have seen him to be the same Person and to be just as glorious then as when he died; and just as glorious when he died as he is now. He was always and eternally glorious; never less glorious; nor more so, but always fully and infinitely glorious.

For you see, the Cross did not create his glory. The Cross is a point in history in which his glory, rich, fully resplendent, and majestic, is demonstrated for all to see. It is the place and time when he, Perfect Man and Glorious God, died for sin to redeem his own. The Cross showed us what he has always been and always will be: Glorious Redeemer.”

[1] Charnock, Works: Truth and Life, Vol. 5, 462.

[2] Owen, The Works of John Owen: The Work of the Spirit, Vol. 4, 204.

[3] Owen, The Glory of Christ, 117.

[4] Edwards, The Wrath of Almighty God, 7.

[5] Pascal, Penseés, [writing for “The Wisdom of God”] 149, p. 76ff.

[6] “I tell you, he will give justice to them speedily. Nevertheless, when the Son of Man comes, will he find faith on earth?” Luke 18:8. “So Jesus said to the Twelve, ‘Do you want to go away as well?’” John 6:67.

[7]“But Jesus on his part did not entrust himself to them, because he knew all people and needed no one to bear witness about man, for he himself knew what was in man” (italics added). John 2:25. Greek:  tiv h\n ejn twÆ÷ ajnqrwvpw÷.

[8] Spurgeon, The Miracles of Our Lord: Part One, 234.

[9] Charnock, The Existence and Attributes of God, Vol. 2, 172, 174.

[10] Charnock, Truth and Life, Vol. 5, 213.

[11] Harrison, “Glory,” International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, Vol. 2, 47.

[12] Calvin, Institutes, Vol. 1, 3, 13, 2, p. 764.

[13] Ibid, 1, 12, 3, pp. 119–120.

Standard
Bible Study

Holiness and Glory

 

“Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts; the whole earth is full of his glory!”  Isaiah 6:3

 

“I am the Lord; that is my name! I will not give my glory to another or my praise to idols.” Isaiah 42:8 9 (KJV)

 

“Glorify me with the glory I had with Thee before the world was.” John 17:5 (KJV)

 

Nothing do men act for more than their glory.[1]

 

Those that never had a sense of their own vileness, were always destitute of a sense of God’s holiness.[2]

Holiness and glory are summary attributes of the divine person. God’s holiness is the self-defining quality of deity. Glory is the way in which God communicates everywhere—sometimes in creation, sometimes in redemption—the specific qualities of the divine person so that God may be known as God.

Other attributes express aspects of the divine person, speak of the desires within God’s heart, detail his purposes, and display sovereignty. But all the attributes of God are united under the banner of the holiness of God. God twice swears by his holiness (Psalms 89:35; Amos 4:2), once he swears by his power (Isaiah 62:8), and once he swears by his name, which is equivalent to his entire person (Jeremiah 22:5).[3]

Glory is the means by which holiness is made known throughout all creation and finally revealed in ultimate clarity and public display by Jesus Christ. Glory is derived from God’s holiness. There is a morality, a virtue to holiness that directs the divine person to act, to speak, and to show his character and dimensions most gloriously. A glorious God who displays his character and will in what has been made renders sinful men accountable before God’s moral excellencies. A purely rational sinful man will know his sin because God exists. But a sinful man, despite the existence of God, will utterly and foolishly reject what can be known of God by the evidence of all that has been made by him (the argument of Romans 1:18-32). Scripture says men know about God and they know that he is glorious. But they are repelled by God’s holiness revealed through his outshining glory, and they act very foolishly against what they know of God’s moral character.

People are not drawn to God’s glory nor are they attracted by God’s holiness. They are repelled from it by their sin; they are driven by their consciences to deny his indictment or to escape his wrath, and they are separated from God by their disobedience to his holy Law.

Holiness is first of all an aspect of God’s character as he exists in his divinity uniquely distinguished from all else in his creation. Holiness in this sense is an attribute, a characteristic of God—a quality similar in class to wisdom, eternity, grace, or mercy. Holiness and glory are also used in a much grander sense as summative qualities of all the excellencies of God’s nature. These qualities are exalted beyond the individual attributes (qualities such as wisdom, eternality, and, love). Holiness and glory are sublime, summative qualities that display the essential person of God in all he does. There is none else like him in Heaven or on the Earth. The nature of glory and holiness points to the essential being of God as God. He not only possesses holiness; he is the ground and source of all holiness. Not only does God display his glory; glory flows from his entire nature because he is God, and he is therefore the glorious God. Holiness and glory (in the sense we are exploring) are incomprehensible if considered apart from the person of God.

Holiness is essential to God’s simplicity (his unity, purposefulness, will, and sovereignty) expressed by his ultimate and pervasive desire to be glorious in all that he does. Glory is central to the display of God’s character as God, especially in the redemption of the Cross of Christ and in his electing mercies bringing his people to the knowledge of God through grace alone (see Romans 9:23).

Essential holiness

Charnock writes about the essential and necessary nature of the holiness of God:

In particular, this property of the Divine nature is an essential and necessary perfection: he is essentially and necessarily holy. It is the essential glory of his nature: his holiness is as necessary as his being; as necessary as his omniscience: as he cannot but know what is right, so he cannot but do what is just …. He is as necessarily holy, as he is necessarily God; as necessarily without sin, as without change. As he was God from eternity, so he was holy from eternity ….

Charnock leaps to the higher topic of holiness in this summative sense:

[God] is not only holy, but holiness; holiness in the highest degree, is his sole prerogative. As the highest heaven is called the heaven of heavens because it embraces in its circle all the heavens, and contains the magnitude of them, and has a greater vastness all that it encloses, so is God the Holy of holiness; he contains the holiness of all creatures, so is together, and infinitely more.[4]

Some have seen that holiness is “a coordinating relationship between other qualities” within the divine person. In Dutch this is Verhältnissbegriff,[5] the coordination of the divine attributes within the divine person, working together for a common purpose: The glory of God. Each of the attributes of God coordinates with one another, never competing, limiting, or hindering the ultimate outcome of each individual attribute, but each attribute of God propounding and protecting aspects of the divine person relevant to each, accomplishing together and ultimately all that is within the divine will. Holiness is the means by which this coordination of every divine attribute within the attributes of the divine person is established and expressed.

Wrath and love might be first thought to be competing qualities seeking different ends, just as grace might be viewed as waging war against justice. These qualities are coordinated by means of God’s overarching, holy intention to work all things together for his own glory in everything he does and says (cf. Romans 8:28, “we know that God causes everything to work together for the good …” NLT), satisfying the demands that every quality within the divine person be glorified because they are God’s.

This coordination and purposefulness within the divine person, especially seen in his holiness and glory, is most definitively displayed in the Cross of Christ.[6] No quality within the Godhead is usurped. No aspect of God’s nature is diminished. God is wrathful toward sin and yet he loves his elect people. Certainly the most glorious aspect of the Cross is that every attribute of God is displayed without confusion, competition, or diminution; all are displayed gloriously, yet the redemption of Christ fulfilled God’s intention to save the sinful and to punish sin, thus God honored his own nature as the Holy God while magnificently displaying his love and electing grace. God acted as One to redeem (Deuteronomy 6:4; Mark 12:29). There is a wondrous singularity in the purpose of God to save. This especially is the display of his holiness.

Holiness may be studied as a particular attribute of God, along with God’s other attributes, e.g. wisdom, eternity, goodness, patience, and the like. Holiness also may be studied as a Verhältnissbegriff, by which God coordinates all his qualities and attributes in the accomplishment of his holy will. But it must be said that there is much about these matters that begin to touch the inner economy of the divine person that is necessarily, rightly, protectively, graciously, and forever hidden from our view. Some things within the divine person are unknown to us, not only because God so values our humility as creatures, but much more because he so greatly prizes within himself the glory of his divinity. He has determined that much of this divine economy has been shielded from our knowledge simply because he is God. We should study what we can and love what God has revealed, but the end of this inquiry of the economy within the divine person must be worship, not philosophy.

But in spite of our limitations regarding these great themes from our perspective, we can assert with confidence that the holiness of God is an essential and overarching, even a “definitional,” quality of God. We can observe how God’s essential simplicity assures his unity of purpose and will, as well as protecting that this unity of will extends across every attribute without confusion or competition. These are qualities of a kind that are preserved solely, uniquely, and eternally for divinity, and thus they make him glorious.

No decision, no action, no communication of his will or purposes, no act of creation or miracle, resides outside of the influence of God’s essential holiness. Lloyd-Jones writes in praise of God’s holy character:

I can say it with reverence that before I begin to think and consider the love of God and the mercy and compassion of God, I must start with the holiness of God. I go further; unless I start with the holiness of God, my whole conception of the love of God is going to be false …. essentially [holiness] is the character of God, and the character of God is His holiness.

I suggest that if you do not start with the holiness of God you will never understand God’s plan of salvation, which is that salvation is only possible to us through the death of our Lord Jesus Christ on the Cross of Calvary’s hill … If God is only love and compassion and mercy, then the Cross is surely meaningless: for if God is love alone, then all he needs to do when man sins is to forgive him. But the whole message is that the Cross is at the center, and without that death God … cannot forgive …. But if I start with the holiness of God I see that the incarnation must take place; the Cross is absolutely essential, and the resurrection and the coming of the Holy Spirit and every other part of the great plan as well.[7]  

Charnock celebrates the grandeur of God’s holiness as the “crown of his attributes”:

The nature of God cannot rationally be conceived without [holiness].

Holiness is the crown of all his attributes, the life of all his decrees, the brightness of all his actions: nothing is decreed by him, nothing is acted by him, but what is worthy of the dignity, and becoming the honor, of this attribute.

…[Holiness] seems to challenge an excellence above all other perfections, so it is the glory of all the rest. As it is the glory of the God-head, so it is the glory of every perfection in the Godhead.

Without a due sense of it, we can never exalt God in our hearts; and the more distinct conceptions we have of this, and the rest of his attributes, the more we glorify him.[8]

Holiness stands as the eminent perfection in the divine person. Holiness “has an excellency above his other perfections.”[9] Glory, therefore, must flow out of his holiness. His glory is the display of his holiness. Glory is therefore contentful and completely focused on holiness. If glory is claimed as the subject of some declaration about God but the statement fails to articulate the content, the affirmations, the acts of God, the historic displays of God’s holiness, it fails to be God’s glory at all. Glory must have holiness as its subject, always. Glory is about God, not about what we invent, create, concoct, imagine, or emote in God’s name. Glory is substantive, historic, and displayed in revelation, centered in Christ, and rooted in redemption.

The marriage of glory and holiness

When the holiness of God is revealed, glory must accompany the display. In Exodus 40:34f. the glorious cloud of God’s Presence descended upon the tabernacle. The entrance to that place was blocked by the display of God’s presence; the cloud was the sign of God’s holy splendor. It was the holiness of God that prevented entry, not the outshining of glory. Glory might kill a human being, but it doesn’t create a categorical and unbridgeable barrier between sinful man and a holy God. Holiness drives sinful man away from God’s infinite fury and it makes standing in the presence of God impossible for every sinful man. Holiness protects all of God’s excellencies and it labors eternally to rectify every offense to his purity to the glorious measure and to the infinite fullness of his justice. By unmitigated wrath, every insult to God’s purity and perfections will be judged in acts of holy justice and in the protection and declaration of his holy nature. Holiness protects God’s separateness from his fallen creation and from the insulting, corrupting, self-exalting, idolatrous nature of human sin, and from the alienating effects resulting from offenses against God and his Law. By his holiness, God is at ultimate and infinite enmity with all of sin and with all who commit them.

 The holiness of God requires a glorious display of God’s majesty. Glory does not create God’s holiness. It seeks to honor the holiness of God displayed in all cases by the person and work of the Son of God. Whether by his mediating the Father’s character and will through the dispensation of the Law of God, by prophetic word and miracle in establishing the Old Testament covenants and promises, or in foretastes of Messianic appearance in prophetic visions and future grace, Christ displays the holiness of God for all to see. In Christ, both the holiness and love of God are displayed and they are satisfied (cf. Psalms 85:10). This is glorious.

Holiness in conflict with sin

Moses’ request to look upon God’s glory was answered by God with a very limited display of God’s nature and person (“you shall see my back, but my face shall not be seen,” Exodus 33:20, 23). This display of God’s glory to Moses was not merely associated with a partial shining forth of his glory for him to see and to be changed by it, but also with the expression of his infinite and his essential and life-threatening holiness.

But,” he said, “you cannot see my face, for man shall not see me and live.”  (Exodus 33:20)

Then I will take away my hand, and you shall see my back, but my face shall not be seen.” (Exodus 33:23)

No one has ever seen God. (John 1:18a)

Holiness and glory also must stand against the charge that they conflict with the presence of sin in the world. They must be able to stand against the heart-wrenching questions raised by great physical or moral suffering, horrific sin, and unspeakable evil—even when those experiences conflict with the presence and the majesty of God, the glory of his person, and the holiness of his Nature. Stephen Charnock argues strenuously that neither glory nor holiness necessitates the elimination of evil or contravenes the exercise of sin. He holds that such evil is permissible by God and does no violence either to glory or to holiness. In a universe in which a glorious and holy God exists, terrible evil can be expressed, woeful sorrows experienced, and catastrophic sins permitted. Charnock calls this the God’s “permission of sin.” Addressing sin and evil as it relates to God’s glory, he says:

Therefore, God did not permit sin, as sin, but as it was an occasion for the manifestation of his own glory.[10]

Regarding God’s holiness and the evil acts of men, Charnock says:

[Though the natural virtue required to commit a sinful action may be given to a person by] God, and supported [“allowed”] by him yet this doth not blemish the holiness of God; while God concurs with them in the act [“permits their occurrence”], he instills no evil into men.[11]

Charnock holds that God allows man to sin and he grants him life and the ability to use this permission against the purposes and will of God (so man may think). But God is not culpable for man’s actions. God did not restrict man to do only that which was God’s declared will. Even in the breaking of the Law of God, his purposes and character are established, his holiness is extolled, his mercy is praised, and he will be given ultimate praise either by establishing an overcoming victory of the faithful believer, though tried as with fire, or in the just judgment of the wicked inflicted upon them for the sake of their actions. No sinful act will escape the ultimate judgment of God. No suffering will escape God’s consolation or restitution. And because God is holy, no sinful act will ever be laid at God’s charge. His glory and his holiness will never be assailed as failing, wanting of power or majesty, or failing to accomplish the ultimate and greater glory of God in defense of his perfect holiness.

Charnock sounded a theme common in the Puritan writers but less commonly spoken today. They did not blush at laying the sin of men, the problem of evil, and the sufferings of the innocent, in tension with the glory and the holiness of God without conflict, confusion, or contradiction. They saw even in great moral evil God’s purposes being worked out, God’s grander plans being fulfilled, and God’s ultimate praise being brought into focus in the midst of true evil, the sinful choices of men, painful sorrows, and the horrors that men inflict upon one another. The Puritans saw the glory and holiness of God as unassailable, undefeatable, and incorruptible. Any challenge the problem of evil brings against God’s benevolent Providence or his loving grace is answered by the holiness of God.

In measuring how holiness is manifested in our fallen world, we have a finite point of view and are very limited as men in our perspective. We do not always see the outcome of an event or the ultimate end of men’s actions. We are not given a vantage point from which we can see the resolution, the corrective justice, or the conclusion of matters from God’s point of view while we are still living on Earth. We have assurance that wherever real evil expresses itself, the Holy God is working to direct the outcome and limit the extent of it, to protect his holiness and defend his moral integrity, to resolve the event toward a grander good, and to cinematically demonstrate by the Cross and Resurrection that this mortal life is not the end and sum of our living. God assures us that the presence of sin and evil and the certainty of death do not corrupt the holiness of God, but rather they establish it.

A full and Biblical doctrine of the glory and holiness of God presents the person of God who not only fully understands the problem of evil, but is actively engaged in making every sinful act and every fearful event result in greater praise to his Name. Even when that praise flows from a sin-filled world when it is rightly judged and a corrupt people justly punished, and out of horrific evil confronted and rectified by holy justice, God worked and is still working for his greater glory. On the Day of Judgment, no one will doubt the holiness of God.

The self-sufficient and the arrogant wage war against a doctrine that permits evil in the presence of holiness and glory. They declare that if God could stop evil, he must stop it now; that suffering is unnecessary if God is powerful; that misery must be avoided if God is to be praised; and that evil must always be conquered if people are wounded under a wicked command. But the God of revelation and redemption looks at evil squarely. Holiness is not defeated by a dark storm of evil expressed through powerful misery. The God of Scripture overcomes every evil, every sin, every sorrow, and is never diminished by the worst design of demons and evil men.

Such doctrine is hard for the arrogant soul. This is the weight of glory, the majesty of God’s true character, the grandeur of God’s providence and power: God’s glory and God’s holiness stand unassailed by every challenge. And we bear these doctrines rejoicing and look upon such monumental truths with wonder and praise to the holy and glorious God whose will cannot be thwarted, diverted, or diminished, and whose purposes are always established even in the worst events of human life.

God’s holiness and glory are most sharply displayed in the ministry and life of the Son of God. When the Son was murdered, the Father was glorified. When wickedness struck the Son, holiness confirmed his perfections and declared him not victim, but Sin-Bearing Sacrifice. In the greatest sin of all, the salvation of God was established, the glory of God was publicly displayed and the holiness of God was enthroned. Out of his victory all future judgment flows.

Seeing God’s glory by the Son

The glory of God finds ultimate, radical, and most startling display in the mediating work of the Son of God. Whether in the Old Testament or the New, it is by the Son that God’s glory is displayed.[12] By the Son alone God’s holy nature and his hidden glory are made known. We speak of the Son who gives all glory to the Father, who in the Old Testament was not yet known by the name of Jesus. But his work was the same—then, in shadows and type—now, in substance and fulfillment. Describing the Son, John writes:

“… the only God, who is at the Father’s side, he has made him known.” (John 1:18b)  

When God displayed his glory to Moses, that outshining of his Shekinah was mediated by the Son to make the Father’s glory known in that display of Light. The Son’s work was always to satisfy and protect the Father’s holiness, which no sinful man can ever approach. Christ’s work as Mediator and Redeemer made the Father’s glory known (see 1 Timothy 2:5; Hebrews 9:15; 12:24). Salvation by Christ in the New Testament is therefore most glorious (see 2 Corinthians 3:10, 18; 4:4 and 6) because it is the most articulate declaration of God’s holiness, seen in the salvation of sinners.[13]

Holiness brings judgment and fierce violence against those who are enemies of God because of their sin against his holy person and his perfect virtues. Glory displays the splendor of God’s person and his works of salvation. God will give his holiness and glory consummate honor for all humanity to see. When we are all gathered at a single point in coming history, at the Final Judgment (see Isaiah 66:15; 2 Corinthians 5:10; Matthew 25:31; and compare Revelation 1:7). There holiness and glory will be wed in both the gracious salvation of the righteous and the just and unsparing judgment of the wicked. This pairing of holiness and glory is seen in Ezekiel 28:20–22. 

The word of the Lord came to me: “Son of man, set your face toward Sidon, and prophesy against herand say, Thus says the Lord God:

“Behold, I am against you, O Sidon, and I will manifest my glory in your midst.
And they shall know that I am the Lord
     when I execute judgments in her and manifest
        my holiness in her;[14]

Future glory

The glory of God is now eclipsed until God’s holiness is fully displayed in salvation of all the elect and in the final judgment. God chooses to manifest, declare, and extol his own glory as God. Glory is the song of God’s holiness. God must praise his own nature and virtues. God delights in his holiness and he protects it to the extreme. We do not now see God’s glory in its fullness. It is “eclipsed” in shadows and withheld from our full view because of the limits of our finitude and, more, because our sin has alloyed our nature, our perceptions, and our reasoning. We see now only “in part” (1 Corinthians 13:9, 12; 2 Timothy 1:12; and 2 Peter 1:7). Jeremiah Burroughs writes of this eclipse and the future fullness of glory, and the tension between the two:

God does not so much stand upon appearing to be a strong God, appearing to be a powerful God, or to be a God of patience and long-suffering. God does not so much stand to be an omniscient God, though these attributes are dear to God, but that he may appear to be a holy God, that it stands upon.

Whatever glory of the name of God that God shall be content to have eclipsed in this world for a while, yet he is resolved that he shall have the glory of his holiness above all things.[15]

Holiness is “the essential glory of his nature.”[16] The Son of God is the singular means by which all of God’s glory that either has been or ever will be communicated from God, whether by creation, redemption, or judgment—whether in eternity past or future or in this current moment of time—is known. The Son displays the glory of the Father. In his work the Father is truly known, his works are clearly seen, his will and Law are perfectly obeyed and fulfilled, and his saving intentions are all accomplished. Christ makes the Father known. Christ makes the holiness of God known and so reveals the nature of the Father by honoring and fulfilling his righteousness (cf. Matthew 3:15). Charnock writes:

In honoring [holiness], which is the soul and spirit of all the [divine attributes], we give a glory to all the perfections which constitute and beautify his nature: and without the glorifying this, we glorify nothing of them, though we should extol every other single attribute a thousand times ….”[17]

This is why God is so rejecting of any glory given to him by men.

 

[1] Charnock, The Existence and Attributes of God, Vol. 2, 119.

[2] Ibid, 192.

[3] Ibid, 112.

[4] Charnock, The Existence and Attributes of God, Vol. 2, 115, 116.

[5] Bavinck, The Doctrine of God, 209–210, citing Diestel [no reference].

[6] Cf. Romans 3:26, “It was to show his righteousness at the present time, so that he might be just and the justifier of the one who has faith in Jesus.”

 

[7] Lloyd-Jones, Studies in 1 John, Vol. 1, 107–108.

[8] Charnock, The Existence and Attributes of God, Vol. 2, 111, 113–114, and 191.

[9] Ibid, 112.

[10] Charnock, The Existence and Attributes of God, Vol. 2, 155.

[11] Ibid, 157.

[12] Owen, The Glory of Christ, 69–73. The chapter, “The Glory of Christ under the Old Testament,” and passim. Cf. Edwards, Works, Vol. 1, “The End for Which God Created the World,” 94–121, also in Piper, God’s Passion for His Glory, where  Edwards’ dissertation is reprinted with commentary and notes by Piper. Edwards’ establishes Christ’s role in every display of the Father’s glory in the Old Testament and in the New.

[13] Morris, The Cross in the New Testament, 225.

[14] Italics added. See also Psalms 29:2 and the parallel in 1 Chronicles 16:29.

[15] Burroughs, Gospel Worship, 30.

[16] Charnock, Existence and Attributes of God, 115.

[17] Ibid, 196.

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More Glory Chapter 2: The Vocabulary of Glory

The Vocabulary of Glory

So glory is another word used for the sum total of all divine excellencies. It refers to the internal as well as the manifestative glory.[1]

There is nothing like seeing what God is to make men sensible what they are.[2]

It is confessed, that there is a degree of obscurity in these definitions; but perhaps an obscurity which is unavoidable, through the imperfection of language to express things of so sublime a nature.[3]

 

 

 

When a man sees the glory of God, it changes him. God’s glory is impossibly great and our finitude and fallenness become at that moment crushingly clear to us. Looking at God’s glory in Scripture, we soon discover one of the brightest visions recorded in Isaiah Chapter 6:

In the year that King Uzziah died I saw the Lord sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up; and the train of his robe filled the temple. (6:1a)

This is one of the loftiest pictures, one of the clearest images of the glory of God. The passage takes us from the vision of glory to the impact that vision has on the prophet Isaiah. He is undone by what he sees and is immediately overwhelmed by a new awareness of his personal sin and of the sin of his people. He was rendered speechless. Edwards reflects on how glory affects the men who see it:

Therefore this begets in those who behold [God’s glory] a hatred of sin and an abhorrence of it. But he who abhors sin most will be most sensible of it in himself. So there is nothing like the knowledge of God to make a man sensible of sin and to see how much there is of it …. Thus there is nothing that will make men more sensible of what they are than a sight of the glory of God.[4]

The glory of God is a grace-built, brilliant door that opens with dazzling brightness and unfathomable depth to draw us deeper into the nature and character of God. The study of glory, therefore, becomes a quest to understand the whole of God and it must, in this quest, focus the student with ever greater sharpness, upon the holiness of God.

The glory of God apart from the holiness of God is quite impossible. In Isaiah 6 the glory of God filled the temple and the angels cried, “Holy, Holy, Holy.” Any one of God’s virtues is necessarily tied to his other attributes. The simplicity of God is the term used to describe the essential unity and non-competitive nature of God’s many attributes working in concert one with the other. God’s love is not at war within himself, working against his justice; nor does his holy anger at sin compete with the riches of his grace. God’s simplicity means that within God all his attributes work together to bring glory to his name, to declare his nature, to shout his victory, to declare and display his sovereignty and his eternal purposes in all things. Packer writes about God’s simplicity:

… the fact that there are in Him no elements that can conflict, so that, unlike man, He cannot be torn different ways by divergent thoughts and desires.[5]

The more we understand any one quality within the Godhead, the more we are helped to learn more about the others. We begin to see what motivates God to act, to speak, to save, or to judge, and in that study we begin to perceive the evidence of his majesty, his power, his wisdom and his justice. This is especially so in Christ’s person and work. Christ is absolutely, uniquely, and ultimately central to the glory of God. He is the content of God’s glory and the fullness of it.

The glory of God illuminates all of God’s work. As this light is shined, it exposes the nature of man and his sin-devastated, helpless, and hopeless condition. It also illumines the immeasurable greatest of God’s glory in his person and the absolute holiness of his character. The glory and holiness of God are at ultimate enmity with sinful human beings but those same qualities in God work by means of his grace to save people who are alienated from God. So both man’s salvation and the coming judgment are inextricably bound up with God’s holiness and glory. The Cross displays both God’s gracious love for his redeemed people and his holy wrath against their sin. In this way, the Cross of Christ defends the simplicity and essential unity of God. No qualities of God’s nature were working at cross-purposes. Wrath did not wage war against mercy. God’s love was not exercised so that his justice would be defeated.

In the Cross, no principle or attribute within the Godhead was derogated beneath a competing quality (e.g. wrath against love, justice against mercy, grace against judgment, and the like) in order to fulfill the plan of redemption. Every attribute of God worked without contradiction or diminution, in the unity of God’s overarching will in the fulfilling of his purposes, in order that our salvation might be completely supremely and most gloriously by the Cross of Christ alone. Our salvation is for the glory of God and it was accomplished to establish, to defend, and to publicly declare his absolute holiness to save (see Psalms 98:1).

 The desire to see God’s glory with our own eyes is the prayer not only of Moses on Mt. Horeb (see Exodus 33:18; Deuteronomy 5:24; and Ezekiel 39:13), it is the longing of every believer, and the promise of God to every redeemed person (“we shall see him,” 1 John 3:2). It is also the most devastating dread of anyone who does not know God. Gerstner writes:

The glory of God is the happiness of all those who love him. Nevertheless, it is the glory of God at which the Christian aims, not at his own happiness. But his happiness comes as a by-product when he is not seeking self-interest any longer.[6]

Beginning to understand glory

God’s glory brings admiration from us as part of his creation. We observe the grandeur of the heavens, the complexity of life, the protection and mysteries of providence, as well as the limits to our conquests that God imposes upon us without our permission, and we conclude that the greatness of God is a facet of his glory that must be honored. We are moved to bow before the grandeur of God’s creative power when we look through a telescope and see a galaxy that is millions of light-years away, and know that there are millions and millions of these star-clusters, some so far away that we are just beginning to find them in what we used to think were “dark” regions of the sky. The immensity of what we discover is astounding. The further we look, the more we find. The tremendous scope and orderliness of the creation, all sing the “heavens declare the glory of God” (Psalms 19). We respond by declaring the greatness of God. This is giving God glory.

God has revealed himself through miracles; through his Word written; through prophets; through promise and covenant; through worship and sacrifice; through his election of Israel; through the Messianic promise and prophetic words; and supremely through the divine person and saving work of Jesus Christ. We can read his Word and understand more about God’s character and nature. We can see evidence of his salvation, his miracles “in time and space and history” (quoting Francis A. Schaeffer’s famous phrase). And these glorious actions give us occasions for gratitude and praise to God. This is a second kind of glory we offer to God.

A third kind of glory is derived from the absolute nature of God’s character. His perfect purity, his unassailable holiness, his boundless grace, and much more, give us many reasons to extol not only what God does, but who God is. His righteousness, justice, and truth are established from before time. In response to these qualities in God, we bow before the majesty of God as God. Knowing the kind of God he is, we disavow any presumption in his Presence, and only cry out for mercy before him. This is to know the majesty of God that is found in “his absolute dignity, demanding subjection of every creature.”[7]

God’s glory is created within God and by God. It is connected to who God is and what he has done and said. It is declared by God for his own exaltation. Glory is connected to the character of God, the purposes of God, and the will of God. The glory of God is contained in all of creation, in the Word of God, the works of redemption, and especially in the Cross of Christ. But God’s glory is utterly and absolutely alien to and at extreme hostility to sinful man.

Glory and joy

Why would God reveal his glory to people who are so alienated from him and hostile to it? Why would God spread his glory in splendor upon heavens to be seen by all and then to be rejected by sinful men after they beheld it (cf. Romans 1:18–23)? Why would God record it in prophetic ecstasies, only to have men kill his prophets as they spoke the Word of God? Why would God choose to use the Cross, the most unjust murder in history, to declare his glory? How can the death of Jesus be the glory of God? To what purpose does God go to such detail, such extremes of content, to such complexity in design, over vast epochs of time extending to eternity past and then to eternity future, to make his glory known to people?

Edwards considered this question perhaps more than any other, and he was more capable than almost all others to explain this mystery. He answered this puzzle first by saying that all the means God uses to extol his name and bring him glory create this symphony of praise to God because he created them for that very purpose. God must glorify himself as God. Everything, everywhere, from every epoch, all things, in every circumstance, bring praise to the glory of God. “All things.” The creation brings glory to God, Edwards says, “Because it is a thing meet and suitable in itself.” That is to say that there is a purposefulness and an intelligent reason for all things that exist—creation has implicit design contained in it all that ends in a single purpose, to bring God glory. Creation gives resplendent evidences of God’s immensity, wisdom, love, justice, and wrath, and these are to be praised because God displayed them for us to see. These qualities are displayed so that God would receive more glory for what he has done.

We have stated that God possesses all the glory there is. God has everything he needs. He is not desperate, desirous, or needy for anything outside of himself. He does not require anything his creatures might give to him or ascribe to him in praise with words of honor or adulation. Neither does he need any approval from them for anything he does. He makes no apology for being God. He is not completed by anything or anyone outside himself.

The beneficiary of the glory of God displayed so resplendently is not God. God has had from eternity all glory. He will possess in the future no additional glory. Giving him more glory is impossible. It is not for God that his glory is praised, remembered, celebrated, and honored. He is not the beneficiary. He has all beneficence, every good and perfect gift, in himself. Who benefits when God is given glorious praise? God’s people are the beneficiaries of his glorious display when the Most High is extolled. God is not the beneficiary of this display because he already possesses all the glory there is. Edwards writes:

The one who benefits by the manifestation of his glory is not God, who cannot be benefited by anything. He possesses all things, all the time. Who does benefit? The elect creatures. Why then does God do all things “for” his own glory? Not for his sake but for their sake.[8]

The glory of God is revealed not so that God may know more of himself or that God may declare the immensity of his glory to expand his glory. He knows all there is to know. He possesses all glory within himself. There is no addition that can be made to the sum of God’s glorious nature.

When God shares the knowledge of his glory with his people, he is not made more glorious. When we glorify God, we are not giving him “our” glory. We are giving him back his own glory. We are reflecting his true nature through our understanding and praise of his character and works. In loving God as God, we are participating in the glory of God. This is so because people have no glory of their own to bring to God. Man’s glory is alien to God and hostile to his nature and it is the object of his fiercest wrath.

He declares his glory for our sake that men might know more of God. He does not need man to add to his own self-glorification—he has absolutely no interest in that. It is his expansive and incredible grace that works to invite us to come and see his glory and thus to be changed by it and then to take his glory upon our hearts, minds, and lips. As worshippers of God, we know and reflect his glory back to him. As he has glorified himself always and only, we are invited into this most intimate and personal act by which God glorifies himself through us.

His glory is declared in what he has done, not so that God may know more of his own power and majesty, his wisdom and justice, but that men might know of them. The display of the glory of God is, at its center, a display of God’s gracious nature to invite us to a more immediate, direct, personal knowledge of the glorious God. One who studies nature is examining a bit of the content of God’s glory. By studying the evidence of God’s hand in all that he has made, one can directly observe the result of God’s genius and can infer from that evidence much about his character. The order in nature declares the glory of God to any who take the time to open their eyes and examine the evidence of God’s creative genius and life-creating power in everything, everywhere (“the firmament shows his handiwork” Psalms 19).

The glory of God is displayed and extolled for our happiness. Jonathan Edwards’ son summarized the centerpiece of his father’s theology:

Mr. Edwards was the first, who clearly showed, that both [the happiness of his creatures and the declarative glory of the Creator] were the ultimate end of the creation, taken, not distributively, but collectively, as a system raised to a high degree of happiness. The creation, thus raised and preserved, is the declarative glory of God. In other words, it is the exhibition of his essential glory.[9]

The glory of God is declared for the benefit of his people for their happiness. As God is ultimately happy in himself, he desires that we who contemplate him would enjoy him forever. His purpose in glory is that his dearly loved children might have complete, full, overflowing joy in him. If the understanding and perception of God’s glory is to create great benefit and happiness of his children, then to neglect the glory of God in all things is to lose those benefits and to reside within our own misery and unhappiness. How could one who contemplates the glory of God be sad? Or how could they who know the glory of God as he has declared it ever feel in the least bereft? This helps us understand the answer to the famous first question of the Westminster Shorter Catechism, “to glorify … and enjoy” God forever. God’s glory and redeemed man’s joy are inseparable.[10]

Glory and hope

Of the 160 or so references to hope in the Bible (ESV version), only six of them link hope with glory: Romans 5:2; Ephesians 1:12; 1:18; Colossians 1:27; Titus 2:13; and 1 Peter 1:21. Glory and hope only occur together in the context of the person and work of Jesus Christ. Christ’s work on the Cross is the greatest expression of God’s glory and the source of our hope.

Glory and hope never occur together in any Old Testament verse. Hope derives from glory in the New Testament. The glory of the Work of Christ; the grace of God; the promise of heaven; the reality of Christ’s indwelling presence; the return of Jesus Christ to rule and reign forever; and the resurrection of Christ from the dead are all components of our hope.

There are about 89 Old Testament verses (using the ESV) that refer to hope. The Old Testament writers proclaim hope in the person of God (see Psalms 33:22, 39:7, 42:5, 42:11, 43:5, 62:5, 69:6, 71:5, 71:14, and the many more). Hope also resides in God’s Word or in his promises (Psalms 119, passim, especially 119:43). Hope drives the prayer of God’s people for deliverance from enemies or to seek provision for the future (see Ruth 1:12, Ezra 10:2; Job 3:9; 4:6, 30:26; Isaiah 20:6, 59:9, 59:11; Jeremiah 14:22, 17:13, and 29:11; Zechariah 9:12). Proverbs presents one’s offspring as a hope for the future (see Proverbs 11:7, 13:12, 19:18, 23:18, and 24:14). Thomas Brooks explains that New Testament hope is exercised about the glory and felicity, the happiness and blessedness, that is at God’s right hand …. So hope is put for the glorious things hoped for, Ephesians 1:17. And thus you see those precious and glorious objects, about which that hope that accompanies salvation is exercised.[11]

New Testament hope is about salvation in Christ and the benefits and joys that are associated with his finished work of redemption. Hope in the Old Testament can rest upon God’s person and promises, but the promised salvation is only dimly illuminated in the shadows of Law and Prophets. In Christ’s finished work, hope shines out of glory, bringing future promises and fulfillment into the full light of the Cross and resurrection of Christ.

Yet the hope that we experience now is not yet fulfilled. The glory that shall be revealed will be the fulfillment of promise, the completed rescue, covenant promises made sure, the consummation of all things in Christ. Hope is made substantive through glory. Glory insures, applies, and displays hope as a certainty to be fulfilled in the future (“the blessed hope” Titus 2:13).

Dyads, triads, quadrads, and heptads of glory

Glory is paired with many other words that illuminate the meaning, extent, influence, and power of it. Reading theological treatises on glory, it is interesting how many pairs are identified by the different writers as they seek to define the scope and nuance in glory. Harrison identifies dyads of glory formed with these words:  pneuma pneuma, Spirit[12] and joy; holiness; plhrwma plērōma, fullness and sanctification.[13] We could add greatness, hope, majesty, power, honor, and many others.

Some of these terms have a causal relationship like joy springing from hope when glory is displayed. Some of these pairs are “reflexive.” Glory is defined or explained by the other term in the pair. For example, “glory and praise”; “glory and the name” (1 Chronicles 16:10, 35), “glory and majesty,” “glory and holiness,” “glory and fullness.” “Glory” and ascendant words of praise like “on high,” “upward,” “toward heaven,” reflect particular aspects of glory by means of the other term that defines an aspect of glory that the writer has in view. So, “glory and praise” could mean that glory is expressed by praise; “glory and majesty” could mean that glory is “majestic,” related to the nobility, regal nature, or reign of the King who is glorious.

Glory appears in many places in Scripture ascribing greatness, majesty, holiness, wisdom, strength, and like qualities, to God. Verses that give adulation to God are notable where they omit “glory” in their litany of praise.[14]  This is the language of praise.

Some of these groupings may be used with glory interchangeably or reflexively. E.g., the glory of God and the name of God seem to point to the same excellency within the divine person.[15]

Here is a listing of all the groupings, bearing in mind that “glory” occurs almost 400 times in the Biblical text, these word-sets are a small set of the total. The order of the words in the text is preserved.

Dyads, sets of 2

Glory and beauty: Exodus 28:2, 40; Isaiah 28:5

My glory and my signs: Number 14:22

Glory and greatness: Deuteronomy 5:24

Glory and strength: 1 Chronicles 16:28; Psalms  29:1; and 96:7 

The power and the glory [|| the victory and the majesty] 1 Chronicles 19:11

Glory and splendor [|| majesty and dignity]: Job 40:10

Crown of glory, and a diadem of beauty: Isaiah 28:5

Righteousness and glory: Isaiah 62:2

My fame, my glory: Isaiah 66:19

In glory and in greatness: Ezekiel 31:18

Glory and joy: 1 Thessalonians 2:20

Glory and praise: Philippians 1:11

Glory and dominion: 1 Peter 4:11; and Revelation 1:6 (cf. Daniel 7:14 Triad)

Glory and honor: Revelation 21:26 (cf. Romans 2:7; 2:10; 4:9; 4:11 Triads)

Triads, groups of 3

Dominion, glory, and a kingdom: Daniel 7:14

Glory, honor, and immortality: Romans 2:7

Glory, honor, and peace: Romans 2:10

Praise, glory, and honor: 1 Peter 1:7 (cf. Philippians 1:1 Dyad)

Glory, honor, and thanks: Revelation 4:9

Glory, honor, and power:  Revelation 4:11

Salvation, glory, and power: Revelation 19:1

Quadrads, groups of 4

Power, glory, victory, and majesty: 1 Chronicles 29:11

Kingship, greatness, glory, and majesty: Daniel 5:18 (referring to Nebuchadnezzar)

Blessing, honor, glory, and might: Revelation 5:13

Heptads, groups of 7

Power, wealth, wisdom, might, honor, glory, and blessing: Revelation 5:2

Blessing, glory, wisdom, thanksgiving, honor, power, and might: Revelation 7:12 (cf. Revelation 5:13 Quadrad)

 

It is just here that the complexity of this study can be overwhelming. The glory of God is a study for eternity. We can gaze in wonder at these linguistic relationships and try to build sound theology out of it all, but the fact remains that we cannot master this subject. A student of glory must bow in wonder before the grandeur and beauty of the subject. We can know more of God’s glory as we wrestle with this subject, but this is a study that leads into the very nature of God as God and it necessarily leads to unanswered questions about God’s inner life and his yet-to-be-revealed virtues that can only point us to greater worship, not simply to more knowledge about the divine Person.

Glory, praise, and name

The Septuagint (the early Greek translation of the Hebrew Old Testament) commonly translated the Hebrew for “glory” dwbk (kabod) by the Greek doxa (doxa), from dokeo (dokeo) which means “to think, to seem.”

The New Testament followed the Septuagint using doxa for God’s glory. This was a “striking departure” from “accepted Greek meanings of doxa in translating the Hebrew term kabod when applied to God.”[16] Doxa was tied closely to thought, opinion, and reputation, in passages outside the Biblical text. The choice of doxa for kabod is striking because this word did not carry a theological sense prior to its selection in the Septuagint. Doxa became uniquely identified with “the revealed being of the character of God,”[17] by this selection by the translators of the Hebrew text into the Greek of the Septuagint. The writers of the New Testament were uniformly aware of and often quoted from the Septuagint. Accordingly, doxa apparently was carried into the New Testament from this usage in the Greek Old Testament.

The difference between the biblical and extra-biblical uses of doxa are important to keep in mind as we study this subject. The glory of God is not what people think or imagine about God’s nature and actions, as the root (dokeo, dokeo, “to think, to seem”) might suggest. It is not what one thinks about God or what seems to a person to be glorious about him that matters. What is central to our understanding of this term is what God has revealed about his very nature, person, character, actions, and attributes. Glory goes far beyond human reputation or opinion as it is used in the Bible.

The New Testament is written in the shadow of the person and work of Jesus Christ. While the Bible has a broad range of uses of the word glory, it is its use in describing the divine person that is our interest. When glory is used to describe God’s nature, it rises to the highest expression of human language. It points to ideas and concepts that are beyond human understanding yet are grounded in history, language, and miracles done in the open for all to see. Glory touches on action, work, words and miracle, but then it rises to the zenith as it cries “Glory” to the praise of God’s ineffable and infinite person. Glory is a word that we use in worship, but its content needs to be refined around the whole of the divine person, not just the lifting of our hands, or the untranslatable emotion of transcendent ecstasy. To the contrary, the glory of God is focused, specific, and it is derived from defined qualities within the Godhead that God himself has made known. Worshipping the glory of God is to worship God. Idolatry lies near every attempt that falls short of this high mark.

Carl Henry follows Everett Harrison[18] in summarizing the broad range of meanings of “glory” in the Bible that point to the whole of the divine person, not merely the attribute of glory considered alone, or some lesser use of the term. Henry writes:

The glory of God may be comprehended, says Harrison, as the absolute uniqueness of his person in view of the completeness and perfection of his attributes.

The New Testament not only uses the term glory of one or more of God’s perfections (Romans 1:23, 3:23, 6:4; Colossians 1:11) but also declares God to be “the Father of glory” (Ephesians 1:17). When it refers to the panoply of God’s attributes, we may consider the term glory to be the preferred biblical equivalent for the term infinitude or infinity in respect to the divine nature.[19]

Glory often occurs in the biblical text in connection alongside other qualities within the divine person. For example, Edwards writes that glory and praise are “often equivalent”, and that God’s name and his glory “very often signify the same thing in Scripture.”[20] Henry also understands that glory is more than a single attribute of God’s nature. He explains:

In respect to God the Bible routinely and impressively translates kabod by doxa [as noted above, is the way the Hebrew word for glory was translated in the  Septuagint, and carried over into the New Testament] to convey the meaning of glory, honor, excellency, majesty, splendor, power and beauty, as well as holiness and mercy. Yahweh is the God of glory (Psalms 28:3) and the King of glory (Psalms 24:7).[21]

There is some debate about the era to which glory points in the New Testament. Some hold that glory in the New Testament hearkens back to the Old Testament theophanies (“God’s appearance” in visible, physical form before the Incarnation of Christ). But Piper observes that doxa refers “in only one place in the New Testament (2 Corinthians 3:1–11) to an Old Testament theophany.”[22] Piper expands:

The absolute use of doxa without modifier (as in Romans 9:4b) refers regularly in Paul not to a past, but to a future eschatological glory (Romans 2:7, 10; 8:18; 9:23; Colossians 1:27; 3:4; 2 Timothy 2:10; and 2 Corinthians 4:17).[23]

Glory appears to have a future referent in mind when he makes promises to Israel through the Covenant. Those promises are completely fulfilled and when the Kingdom of God is fully manifested on Earth with the appearance of Jesus the Christ, the Son of God.

But if glory, as Edwards explains it, is about the work of the Son of God making the glory of God manifest both in Old Testament types and theophanies and in New Testament fullness, the question of glory primarily in the future or essentially in the past is less important. What matters is the out-shining of the glory of God, the display of the glory of God, as the Son made God known in every era and from eternity past, and extending through to eternity future (John 1:18). Everywhere glory is revealed, it is by the Son of God.

There is no need to create an either/or dilemma between past or future glory, if Christ’s mediation of the Father’s glory is the essential, even the definitional point of clarity regarding the nature and the source of all glory, mediated by the Son in every epoch. All past glory was mediated by the Son. All future glory will be demonstrated by the Son. Edwards, in his typically convoluted grammar, points to the superlative role of the Son giving glory to God in the crucial verse, Romans 9:4, cited by Piper above:

The same glory is doubtless here meant whose departure was lamented when the ark was taken, when it was cried by the true friends of Israel, “The glory is departed from Israel” meaning the ark and the cloud of glory in which appeared above upon it, or rather, Jesus Christ, with respect to these tokens of his friendly presence.[24]

Edwards saw every manifestation of the Father’s glory in the Old Testament story as mediated through the “friendly presence” of the Son (who had not yet taken on human flesh). The glory of the Father was revealed in the Old Testament dispensation and in the New by the Son of God. There was no essential difference in the role of the Son as the glorifier of the Father in eternity past, the Old Testament era, the present age, or in eternity future, except that in the Old Testament the clarity was less fully presented, was more in shadows; and in the New it is clear and articulate, full and absolutely profound because God has spoken in his Son for all to hear. The exaltation of the Father was, is, and shall be the primary occupation of the “only begotten God” (o{ monogenhvV qeo;V) who has made the Father known (John 1:18).[25]

Yet, many people heard the voice of God on Mt. Moriah (Isaac’s sacrifice), during Angel visitation, at the Burning Bush, from Mt. Sinai, Mt. Carmel, and the like. Then, whose voice did they hear and who did they see in those events? Was it not the Son who spoke the Father’s word and revealed the Father’s glory? Yes, the Father was revealed, but it was the work of the Son to make him known in every epoch.

The Son spoke only what the Father said. He did only what the Father chose for him to do. But the Father remained and remains hidden: “No one has seen God ….” (John 1:18, 6:46; 1 Timothy 6:16; and 1 John 4:20). It was always and only the Son who has made him known. This is how God can be invisible, hidden, silent, and unknown, and very much seen, revealed, heard, and known on the most personal of terms, by Jesus Christ. Christ reveals the very name of God, so he may be known by those who see the Son and hear his voice.

The revelation of glory is the revelation of the very nature and character of God. To reveal God’s glory is to do more than to rehearse his attributes, it is to make God known. This is reported as “making the name of God known” (Exodus 6:3;  Psalms 105:1; Ezekiel 39:7; and especially John 17:26).  The manifestation of the name of God is said by Jesus to have been his primary work, and the focus of his earthly ministry (in John 17:26). The name of God is closely associated with revelation of the glory of God especially in the display of his mercy and in his dispensing of it to whom he will (especially in Romans 9:15ff) . Piper writes:

… God’s glory and his name consist fundamentally in his propensity to show mercy and his sovereign freedom in its distribution. Or to put it more precisely, it is the glory of God and his essential nature mainly to dispense mercy on whomever he pleases apart from any constraint originating outside his own will. This is the essence of what it means to be God. This is his name.[26]

The glory of God is closely related to God’s electing grace. This is so because his sovereignty in election is an act of God’s essential nature; election is not arbitrary, but is an act of his whole person, derived from before eternity and borne from the very heart and center of God’s nature. Glory is the outshining of the divine person, and it is seen no more clearly than in his electing mercy. His grace to the redeemed and his election of his own people are expressive of the nature and glory of God. He elected his people from before the foundation of the world because he willed to do so. Christ’s redemption of his people is (by this eternal and glorious election) the most glorious action ever taken by God. In redemption Christ has made God known, heard, and seen, and all focused on the glorious redemption of his people, to the praise of the glory of his grace (see Ephesians 1:6).

The range of glory in the Bible

The range of the term “glory” is broad, extending from ideas as paltry as a person’s “human reputation” (see Genesis 49:6, 2 Samuel 1:19, 1 Chronicles 22:5, Job 40:10, Psalms 7:5, et al.); extending to a promise to tell the truth in an oath, “Give glory to God” (see Joshua 7:19 and John 9:24); escalating up to a single attribute of God (Psalms 66:2, 78:61, et al.); and culminating as a summary term identifying the whole of the divine person as glorious with a view especially to his character, attributes, words, and works, redemption and judgment (cf. Matthew 16:27; Acts 7:2; Romans 6:4; and Ephesians 1:17).

There is an important economy within the divine person relative to glory. The glory of God is eternally revealed by the work of the Son. The display of the glory of the Father is the primary work of the Second person of the Trinity, Jesus Christ. Every work wherein God is glorified in all of history necessarily flows through the mediatorial and revelational work of the Son. By divine choice, the glory of God was given its greatest display in the death of Christ for sinners. The glory of the Cross is the greatest display of the glory of God. He is most glorified in the Cross of the Son of God. That was his purpose in coming to Earth from the Throne of Heaven (see John 12:27 and 18:37; Philippians 2:9; and Ephesians 4:10). He came to seek and to save that which is lost (Luke 19:10).  

Furthermore, glory is made known by the Holy Spirit’s person and work (see Acts 7:55; Ephesians 3:16; Philippians 3:3; 2 Corinthians 3:18; and 1 Peter 4:14 et al.). The Spirit applies the work of Christ to the lives of God’s elect. God’s people are so affected by this glory within them that they can now bring to God the “glory due his name.”[27]

Glory in the Bible is inseparable from the work of Christ—both as Jesus reveals the nature of the Father’s glory in the Old Testament and by his work of redemption in which he gives content and explanation of God’s by coming to make God plain (John 1:18). The concert of all God’s attributes work together to accomplish his will and purposes, and they do this most publicly, and in demonstration of his glory most clearly, in the Cross of Jesus Christ. Christ reveals the glory of God in all of creation and redemption, providence and revelation. Christ is the highest expression of God’s character and the richest display of his purpose to bring God glory in everything (Colossians 1:19, 2:9). The Cross of Christ is the consummate expression of the glory of God.

 


[1] Gerstner, The Rational Biblical Theology of Jonathan Edwards, Vol. 2, 34.

[2] Edwards, The Puritan Pulpit, on Isaiah 6:5, 131ff.  

[3] Edwards, The End for Which God Created the World, on the definition of “the glory of God,” Works, Vol. 1, 119; and in Piper, God’s Passion for His Glory, 242.

[4] Edwards, The Puritan Pulpit,140–141.

[5] Packer, Knowing God, 89.

[6] Gerstner, The Rational Biblical Theology of Jonathan Edwards, Vol. 3, 12.

[7] Bavinck, The Doctrine of God, 251. Greatness, glory, and majesty as used in this section are his categories.

[8] Edwards, unpublished sermon on “Exodus 28:22,” in Gerstner, The Rational Biblical Theology of Jonathan Edwards, Vol. 2, 35.

[9] Edwards, Jr., Jonathan, in Edwards, Works, Vol. 1., cxcii. Cited also in Gerstner, The Rational Biblical Theology of Jonathan Edwards, Vol. 2, 34.

[10] See Romans 5:2, “we rejoice in hope of the glory of God”; 1 Peter 1:8 “you believe in him and rejoice with joy that is inexpressible and filled with glory”; and, 1 Peter 4:13 “that you may also rejoice and be glad when his glory is revealed.”

[11] Brooks, Heaven on Earth, 278.

[12] Harrison, “Glory,” International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, ed. Bromiley, 481. He writes concerning the Spirit and glory, “The severely limited use of doxa in connection with the Spirit can be explained in the light of His customary role of subordination both to the Father and to the Son. Even so, the dispensation of the Spirit involves glory and His operation within the believer likewise (2 Corinthians 3:18).”

[13] Ibid., 481–483,

[14] E.g. an ESV word search for “power” and “God” finds 70 or so verses of praise to God with no inclusion of “glory;” only nine verses have “glory,” “power,” and “God” appearing together (five of those appearing in Revelation).

[15] Edwards, The End for Which God Created the World, ed. Piper, Part Two of Section Six, “What is meant in Scripture by the name of God?”,  239–241; and in Edwards, Works, Vol. 1, 116–119.

[16] Henry, Revelation and Authority, Vol. 5, 232–233.

[17] A.M. Ramsey, cited in Henry, op cit.

[18] Harrison, The Use of DOXA in Greek Literature with Special Reference to the New Testament, PhD dissertation, 1950, University of Pennsylvania. This work was summarized by Harrison in the International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, ed. Geoffrey W. Bromiley, 1976, in his article “Glory,” 477–483.

[19] Henry, Revelation and Authority, Vol. 5, 232–233.

[20] Edwards, Works, Vol. 1, 118. In support of this assertion he lists these references in this order: Exodus 33:18, 19; Psalms 8:1; 79:9; 102:15; 148:13; Isaiah 48:9, 11; 49:19; Jeremiah 13:11; Genesis 11:4; and Deuteronomy 26:19.

[21] Henry, Carl F.H., Revelation and Authority, Vol. 5, 232–233. (Psalms 24:7 is a correction of Henry’s citation.)

[22] Piper, The Justification of God, 33.

[23] Ibid.

[24] Edwards, The Works of Jonathan Edwards: The “Blank Bible,” Vol. 24, Part 2, on Romans 9:4, 1022.

[25] Ad loc., Westcott and Hort, The New Testament in the Original Greek, Cambridge: Macmillan, 1885.

[26] Piper, The Justification of God, 88–89.

[27] This section, “The range of glory in the Bible,” follows the broad outline of Harrison in the International Standard Bible Encyclopedia (1976), “Glory,” 477–483. “The glory due his name,” is used in 1 Chronicles 16:29 and in Psalms 29:2 and 96:8; see also 2 Corinthians 8:23 and Ephesians 3:21.

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The Glory of God in Human Hearts

I am not forgetting how horribly this most innocent desire [a beast before men, a child before its father, a pupil before his teacher, a creature before its Creator] is parodied in our human ambitions, or how very quickly, in my own experience, the lawful pleasure of praise from those whom it was my pleasure to please turns into the deadly poison of self-admiration.[1]

The glory of God is the primary motive driving God to reveal himself, to create all that is, and for wanting people to live with him forever.. All that exists, every molecule and all the galaxies, every person and drop of water is for God’s glory. Even evil and death become, under his sovereignty and overarching power, difficult and humbling expressions of God’s glory when justice is satisfied, wrath is poured out, and Hell is filled full.

The glory of God is written upon everything, everywhere. The heavens declare it. People are created in God’s glorious image. Animals in their complexity and purpose, or their simplicity and elegance, mirror it. Every star is positioned by and for the glory of God. Every flower and animal, all the floating clouds and every acts of men and angels, are correlated into a grand chorus under the baton of  Providence, to extol, defend, and declare the glory of God. Even the moments of our own deaths, are resolved under the reign and realm of the glory of God. Everything that is or shall be, exists is for the glory of God, so that all of it, all and everything, shall give praise to God. Even the most evil of men will bow their knees one day before his Majesty, to the praise of his glory and justice; the best and most godly, will bow in worship of the God who is glorious. Nothing can be by-passed, nothing and not one can be exempt from the power, the purpose, or the grandeur of his glory. In the end, everything is accountable to the glory of God, because nothing is more important. Nothing is equal to it. Nothing can overthrow it and it cannot be minimized nor can it be marginalized. The glory of God is the supreme fact of all facts, because it is the chief aspect of the Person of God.

Glory has been the chief occupation of God from before time and until eternity never-ending. It will be the chief, the sole occupation of all God’s people one day. Until that glory breaks forth in unimaginable splendor—the unending brightness of majesty and unparalleled, inexpressible beauty from God for all to see—there is much to learn about his glory and there is much we can do to proclaim all God’s excellencies with greater clarity and purpose. This requires our attention, our study, our devotion, and the illumination of the Spirit of God. Glory captivates our worship and it becomes the great theme of the Church. Worship exists primarily for the glory of God and it is, therefore, essential for the church.

Can there be anything more worthy of our attention than God’s glory? The other attributes of God all echo the shout that God is glorious. All that he has done is to display his glory. Redemption, holiness, justice, eternity, veracity, impeccability, and all the other attributes of God, are glorious displays of the nature and character of God. But glory, in this world tainted with sin, and with our minds and hearts so tarnished by our fallenness, causes the sinful man to react, to withdraw, and to grow angry with God. Sin has fractured our hearts so, glory is now alien to us – alien because we are now alienated from him. The sinful heart resents the glory of God and seeks glory unto itself. We see this even in Christian worship, when glory to God is stolen from God and claimed, stolen for men. Because glory is essential to God it is hostile to our self-interest, self-reward, and self-worship. It is perhaps when we are engaged in the worship of God who is most glorious that our warfare is most severe and the battle most difficult. Our sin creates odium toward the beauty of holiness and the goodness of God. We can find ourselves warring against God even when we are praying to him. We struggle in our brokenness with giving deference to the honor of God and engage in battle with him, that we may be praised and honor stripped from him and given to us instead. We rob God of glory at the very instant when we should be most grieved by our failures and desperate to relinquish to him all our crowns, our achievements, intellect, and accomplishments, it light of the majesty of his glory. We may, in our sinful selves, find that we are growing angry at the glory of God when we suffer in our weaknesses, are stricken by diseases, or know the pain of broken hearts. Yet when that same glory of God is rightly focused upon in our prayers, and by redemption’s power it accedes to its rightful place in our minds and hearts, where it is established as the delight of our souls and the deepest longing of all our affections, this then is redemption’s work that calls us to worship God alone. Then it is in this life that we begin to experience and with these eyes to see, just as Jesus promised we would, the glory of God (see John 11:40).

Glory does not automatically pour out of our veins. It doesn’t come to us naturally. We do not possess it within ourselves. We must teach our hearts what glory is, or what it ought to be—then we drive, exhort, and severely prod our hearts into singing about this majesty that begins with fleeting glimpses of understanding and ends in unspeakable praise and intimate, deep, soul-worship before the Face of God (see 2 Corinthians 4:6). When that praise is offered in worship by the angelic host and at the celebration of all creation with the new song of Heaven-and-Earth-made-new is sung by the guardians of glory and holiness, we understand the reach and span of glory. It is an excellency unlike any other. The more we praise God for his glory, the more glorious he becomes in us. The grander our praise becomes and the more we think about him, the deeper we go peering into the light of this same glory, and we find that there, as in no other place, is more to know, to learn, to adore, and to worship. Glory will be entered into, by every person who shall know God. In Heaven they say:

…“Amen! Blessing and glory and thanksgiving and power and might be to our God forever and ever! Amen.” 
(Revelation 7:12)

Christian worship is so very imperfectly done in this life. But though we struggle with our inabilities, sins, and poor understanding, our worship becomes glorious worship to God and absolutely acceptable to him through the mediation and redemption of Jesus Christ. By Christ sinful people are declared righteous. Our imperfect praise, out-of-tune songs, our misplaced need for praise, and even the remnants of our sins of greed and pride are covered, conquered, and cancelled by the work of our Savior, to the praise of his glorious grace. Our worship will never be perfect in this life, but it is reckoned to be perfect before the Father through the work of Jesus Christ. But this should not invite sloppiness and casuality in worship because Jesus has made it acceptable. We must do our best. But we know it is not our best efforts that makes our worship acceptable to God. It is Christ. Christ presents our praises to God the Father and it is Christ alone who qualifies them for access to the mind of God. He makes them sufficient (though they are very imperfect). He makes them adequate, when measured by God’s standards they would be anything but adequate. But most of all, he makes them glorious, for his Name’s sake, our praises bring honor to God by Jesus Christ.

God wonderfully desires that we experience him, live with him, and know him. By the Spirit of Christ we personally connect with God.  We come into the very glory that before was impossibly out of reach – it was God’s glory and infinitely beyond human comprehension. That glory of God now becomes our grandest theme and our deepest passion – the glory of God becomes our life and it is held out to us as our incredible future. “We rejoice in hope of the glory of God” (Romans 5:2).

God now gives us the message of his glory. It is the duty of those who know God to tell others about his nature, his actions, his wisdom, and his love. The honor that God demands of us, because of his immense glory, would be absurd even comedic for any person to claim for himself. But God boldly claims all glory as his own, and he is perfect and right for establishing his ownership of it all. God would not be God if he were not deserving of such praise – the praise that God deserves as God. Such praise, if is were offered to a man from men, would be a staggering embarrassment. All glory is God’s alone. Such honor is “the glory due his Name” (see 1 Chronicles 16:29; Psalms 29:2 and 96:8). The glory of man always fails, but to claim God’s glory for ourselves is blasphemous.  The glory of man, our praise for accomplishments and our power over others, always results in disappointment and ultimately, in our abject failure. But the glory of God is forever, unfailing, and unfading forever.

Men will always “fall short of the glory of God” because of their status as creature, their limitations as human beings and finitude and distance from divinity (they are finite not infinite), their short lives, their condition of dependency upon the Creator, and most horribly because of their sin (Romans 3:23). God is glorious within himself, forever glorious, perfectly glorious, and glorious in holiness. There is no one like God (see Exodus 8:10).

Such boastings about glory in human beings would be outrageous, but not in God. God can take credit for creating everything for his glory, because he is God. It is not sinful boasting for God to demand that his name be glorified in all the earth. He is glorious because of who he is and for what he has done. He possesses no pride or sin whatsoever in his demand to be worshipped in the splendor of holiness (see 1 Chronicles 16:29; Psalms 29:2; and 96:9).

But he is utterly without sin even when he demands all glory that is or ever shall be directed toward himself and to no one else. He is perfect and he is holy when he commands that all the worship be given only to God. He is right to defend his glory and to command all worship and praise from his creation as only God must receive. For a human being to receive an ounce of glory that is rightly deserved by God and that is defended by God’s command and his holy wrath would be grotesque idolatry and the most appalling sacrilege for any human being to claim any of the glory and honor  that God alone deserves.

But God is perfectly right to demand and to desire to receive all the honor and glory that God alone deserves as God. He is utterly without sin in this desire for worship and glory. His motives are completely holy when he defends his perfections by his holiness and wrath. He establishes his reputation by his holy actions, his punishment of sin, his righteousness discipline of those who are his, and he can sustain any objection to his righteous deeds, with his holy jealousy against any who would accuse God of injustice or attempt to fault his wisdom or his infinite goodness.

God defends his glory and holiness with his righteous might and by infinitely fierce wrath. “My glory I give to no other” (Isaiah 42:8 and 48:11). This is the true picture of God that needs to be recovered. Such a God is demanding of our praise and all our worship. He is worthy of every praise we can offer him. There is nothing he lacks in himself, but he has commanded his praises and it is right and proper for his creation and his children to offer him praise and thanksgiving for being God. ***

There is neither any fault or sin within God, nor in his demand that we worship him. He is due the honor we bring to his name. He and no other, is perfectly deserving of all praise and honor and glory. His wisdom and every action are perfect in the extreme and holy in the absolute. He never fails to keep his word. His promises are sure and eternally valid. His love is predictable and solid. His loyalty and patience are from everlasting to everlasting. His grace is infinite. His mercy is from before time.  This God is absolutely glorious in all he is and in everything he does. There is nothing we add to him when we praise him. There is nothing that we praise or extol that he hasn’t already make abundantly clear and repeatedly made known in history, by prophets, by his Son, of his own decisions and desires to make himself known to people for all to see. There is no out-shining of his glory that we must bring into existence or cause to be seen by our effort which he has not already clearly articulately, beautifully, powerfully communicated and shown publicly in miracle, promise, covenant, and redemption. Most clearly and most undeniably God has spoken to humankind by his Son (see Hebrews 1:2).

The Cross is the most glorious display of the nature and holiness of God. His justice and love are there shined forth with undeniable, unmistakable clarity. By the Cross of Jesus, in the most robust and articulate display of the glory of God, we see God.  We marvel at this eternal and startling brightness of this Light of God (see John 8:12, “I am the light of the world”). We see the wisdom and mind of God. There is the power of God in resurrection and victory over death. There is love and justice balanced perfectly and judgment is just where holiness is assaulted and severe where rebellion was lawless or cruel. We worship at the foot of the Mountain of God (wherever he makes himself known) and tremble at his glory. And we know that he is God and conclude: How very different he is from us. He is glorious and we are not.

Nothing is more offensive than a human being who demands attention and seeks to be noticed for what he has accomplished. It is unseemly for a singer to command applause from his audience or a preacher to solicit praise for a sermon. When glory is demanded by others, we are repelled by the demand precisely because we are familiar with this lust for praise within. The arrogant desire for praise, the demand to be appreciated in others is repellant to good taste, but we must be honest and say that it also exposes within our hearts the very same desires—our desires for praise for our performance and congratulations for our relative goodness. Such self-congratulations are audaciously selfish and utterly contrary to true humility and godly contrition.

But God is deserving and demanding of his own glory and he expends absolute wrath in defense of it. We find it obnoxious for a human being to demand praise for his deeds. But God’s demand for glory is to be received with sober humility as we bow before the One who Rules-over-All.[2] God’s glory and man’s are completely different operations. One is generated from within the divine person and is absolutely justified, perfect, and wholly deserved. The other is stolen from God and imitative of his glory and is essentially and completely false.

Even that demand by God for the declaration of his glory and of his jealousy of it, puts us at enmity with him. We cannot know glory in the way that God knows it. Glory doesn’t belong to us. It is God’s.

The praise of people is forbidden because it is in every way hostile to God and forbidden by God’s command. All we do falls short of the glory of God (Romans 3:23). Sin is alien and hostile to God and repellant of his glory. That fact doesn’t slow down our parade of self-congratulations, attempts at usurping God’s honors, or our efforts to steal glory that originated in God and are intended for God and should be rightly given only to God. Glories’ praises and honors are rightly and solely for deity, and this is true in spite of our agonizing struggles to focus on God and to give God alone the glory due his name. People are competitors of God’s glory. We want it and lay claim to it.

Inasmuch as people should never be the recipients of praises that belong to God, even so God cannot be made more glorious by anything that people do. For people to aspire to praise is idolatry. Praise is God’s alone. How do people “glorify God”? How do we who are not to steal it, offer it to God? Can we glorify God and enjoy him forever? We will explore how glory is to be expressed, and how we are to give glory to God in the chapters to follow.

God doesn’t need our praises. When we sing about him, he is not helped, made happier, more delighted, more pleased, or more encouraged by our songs than he would have been had we remained silent. God is infinitely happy and completely satisfied in himself apart from anything we do. His greatest efforts extending from before time and projecting into eternity future are to glorify himself. Our additions to his own chorus of praise regarding his mighty acts are completely eclipsed by what God has done in display of his own character and by what he has said to reveal his nature and holiness. It is not God who is benefited by our praises. God is not more glorious because we glorify him. The benefit rests elsewhere. God is not helped when we bring glory to God. We are.

Contemporary Christian worship often fails because people think they have something to bring to God, something to invent or to create to offer to God as an act of praise. They seem to need to experience some new emotion or repeat old ones in order to feel about God in some way which they mistake for worship, as they offer him what they mistake for his glory.

But if all glory comes from God and already resides in God, then it is our privilege to see his power and learn about what God has done, to hear and read what God has said, and to study what God has purposed for human life and to study the end that God has designed for the universe at large. It is our blessing to hear his wondrous stories, to contemplate his self-revelation, and to study his works of promise and fulfillment that accomplished our salvation.

It is God’s most glorious gift to us to give us the message of the Cross. The Cross is God’s greatest glory and the subject of our highest praise and our most precious and enduring hope (see Galatians 6:14; 1 Corinthians 2:2).[3]

God’s people know the glory of God. Those who worship in Spirit and truth understand the glory of God and when they worship they participate in God’s glory personally. We study his works and words. Those astounding events tell who God is. His inspired words were spoken and written for us, and they are more precious than life to us.

Participating in the glory of God must begin with the confession of our ingloriousness. We cannot generate the smallest measure of glory to God. We cannot add to the glory of God. We cannot improve the glory of God. God’s glory is God-determined, God-defined, and God-defended. It is displayed resplendently in all that has been made. It is independent of the praises of men. God himself has declared, proclaimed, and exalted his own glory. We are invited to experience it. We are called by God to understand more of his glory and to be immersed in it by contemplating its cause, purpose, and end, and then to be changed by the ineffable and superlative display of God’s glory, forever.

God delights in displaying his glory in us and to us. The only reason God would have us participate in his glory is as an act of his grace, to benefit us. God does not increase his glory by revealing it to us. God doesn’t need to promote his own glory. It is our benefit alone when God shares it with us. God’s glory doesn’t require our acknowledgement or we do not make it greater by studying it or by praising God’s glory. The glory of God is comprehensive in itself and it is complete within God. Our inclusion in the knowledge and participation in God’s glory is all the more astonishing. That God would share his glory with his people can only be understood when we grasp the greatness of his grace towards us who have been redeemed. His most precious quality and one of his most jealously protect quality (along with holiness) is shared with us. We are made to be a glorious body (see Ephesians 3:21; and Philippians 3:21).

But out of his love for us, he desires to include us in the display of his glory. We have seen his glory (John 1:14). We have beheld his glory in what God has done. We have heard his glory in what he has said. We have known God’s glory in who God is in himself. His glory has been portrayed before the whole world in creation and in redemption, in revelation and in providence (to name a few). We are helped by seeing, knowing, hearing about his glory, his work, his words, his redemption, his power and moral perfections. Sharing God’s glory with us doesn’t make God any better. It doesn’t help God in any way, when we praise him or offer him glory. We are the ones who benefit. By merely telling God who God is, he is pleased and we are benefited. God desires to share his glory with us. In that expansive expression of his love for us, we see his glory.

His glory is complete and displayed in a multitude of ways for all to see. His glory is not discovered or made clearer by the poet’s line. It is not made less mysterious by the psalmist’s ecstatic verse. But those efforts are an attempt to see, to experience, and to honor God for being glorious. Those offerings add nothing to his glory but they seek to experience it. Offerings of praise, done right, declare what already exists and has existed forever. We are invited to observe and to understand, to recount and retell, to describe and to celebrate the God who is, essentially, eternally, and personally glorious.

By glory we see God.  Giving God the praise due his holy Name changes us and it gives us unspeakable joy in pondering it. By studying glory and loving it, our hearts are expanded to love God more, and our minds are set upon God to know him better.

Jonathan Edwards reminds us that God is not in the least “rewardable” with reference to our praises for his glory. As well-intentioned our praises may be, God is not helped or assisted, made more worthy of praise, nor is he more precious or deserving of worship and absolute trust. Edwards writes:

… [God is] infinitely above all capacity of receiving any reward or benefit from the creature; he is already infinitely and unchangeably happy, and we cannot be profitable to him.

The Scripture everywhere represents God as the highest object of all these:  there we read of the soul’s magnifying the Lord, of loving him, with all the heart, with all the soul, with all the mind, and with all the strength; admitting him, and his righteous acts, or greatly regarding them as marvelous and wonderful, honoring, glorifying, exalting, extolling, blessing, thanking and praising of him giving unto him all the glory of the good which is done or received, rather than unto men; that no flesh should glory in his presence; but that he should be regarded as the Being to whom all glory is due.

His works communicate everything we know about God. We learn of his character (who he is determines what he does and why he does it), his amazing knowledge (he knows everything, extensively and inclusively), his purposes (everything is for him, to him, and through him), and his grand plan for all things and all people (he rules over everyone and everything, forever), are all made clear by what God chooses to do or not to do. If we are to study the glory of God we must understand something of the scope of it. God glory is by the very nature it is derived from and displayed from the divine Person. It is vast, expansive, all-encompassing, and essential to the nature of God’s character and beauty, his wisdom and truth. And so God’s glory has unlimited scope, to measure it would be to crush the instruments of measurement, it would expend every measure that sought to grasp the lengths and depth, height, and width of it. No mortal can understand the vastness and depth of his wisdom. Studying the grandeur of glory would drive us through the extent of his works of creation, it would study the light of revelation but never own it or fully grasp its message. It would fall down in praise of the redemption of God as well as his righteous and ominous judgment.  In every event where God is active, in every act of redemption, in all he has said, God is most glorious and he stands in every measure beyond our comprehension.

Everything that exists is about the glory of God. Everything that has happened or will occur in the future either is or will be about the glory of God. Glory is the greatest thought we can have as creatures. Nothing exceeds the glory of God. Nothing is higher. Nothing is more worthy of honor or more deserving to capture our affections.

To praise God as glorious is a response of the worshipper that is not only right for us to do, it is commanded by him that we worship him this way. Lewis observes:

It is written that we shall “stand before” Him, shall appear, shall be inspected. The promise of glory is the promise, almost incredible and only possible by the work of Christ, that some of us, that any of us who really chooses, shall actually survive that examination, shall find approval, shall please God. To please God … to be a real ingredient in the divine happiness … to be loved by God, not merely pitied, but delighted in as an artist delights in his work or a father in a son—it seems impossible, a weight or burden of glory which our thoughts can hardly sustain. But so it is.[5]

From glory to worship

And Jesus answered him, “It is written, ‘You shall worship the Lord your God, and him only shall you serve.’” (Luke 4:8)

Jesus’ command is very hard to bear. The exclusionary command to worship and serve only God sweeps away human (or demonic) ambition, pride, and our insatiable hunger to be first. Jesus didn’t say, “Worship God alongside other people and all your possessions and ambitions.” His words point to a new, a greater ambition for believers in Christ: to place God first with no second in view; to have him and no other (cf. Luke 14:33); to have him with nothing of equivalent value—and there to learn that God’s glorious presence in our lives defines, evaluates, judges, and potentially redeems, every other love and longing we have. To know God is to gain everything we had longed for and to lose everything we had cherished in place of him (cf. Matthew 13:46).

 When we understand that God is the sole focus of worship—the only one we serve regardless of the cost of our service to him—his glory measures every other longing we possess against the weight and value of that ultimate treasure. By studying God, we learn about his character, life, heart, wisdom, desires, abilities, capacities, and his silences and hiddenness. We personally experience God’s glory.

As we study God’s glory, our understanding of ourselves is clarified. When we look closely at our hands or examine a leaf through a microscope or a star through a telescope and we see the expressions of God’s creative power, as redeemed people, we are profoundly moved by these evidences of God’s glory in his splendor, majesty, wisdom, and power. Studying the expressions of God’s glory is to study God. In studying this holy subject, we are warned and instructed so that we can keep clear of the many forms of idolatry in the way we love things and worship ourselves, instead of God alone. This idolatry extends back to our greatest flaw. God’s glory exposes our sin and wages war against it.   

Not to us, O Lord, not to us, but to your name give glory, for the sake of your steadfast love and your faithfulness! (Psalms 115:1)

God’s glory stands supreme and inviolate. God defends his nature against all rivals. He acts with unmitigated power to defend his glory when it has been assaulted or diminished in the least degree. Though men and demons seek to destroy it, God demonstrates his jealousy, his passion for his glory, and his protection of it, to ultimate extremes. This glory is established, declared, defended, and promised by God. Nothing and no one can stand against it. After all, glory will stand unassailed.

God is not inviting us to share Heaven’s Throne with him (see Matthew 20:21). Our fallenness confuses our understanding of God’s glory and attempts to usurp it, to overthrow it. It works to change glory into forms and expressions that are alien to God’s life. Sinful man fails to give God glory. He cannot glorify God. He has no glory to give him, and what he perceives to be honor to God is rejected completely by God. Though he may use the vocabulary of glory and speak much of God, sinful man can only worship himself. He will infallibly, invariably, always draw glory away from God and give it to himself. Only by faith can we bring glory to God and give him the honor that he will receive and take joy in.

When man’s sinful robbery of God’s glory covertly takes over a worship service purported to be for God’s honor, nothing could be more grotesque, and nothing moves God more to act in defense and protection of himself.

To profess to give God glory, to speak and sing using words of praise to God, to employ the language of praise, in the house of praise, among the people who are called to worship, and to do everything in the name of God, but yet, to actually do all of it for man, to receive praises from men, to exalt men, to use the words invented by men, to create our substitute concepts of glory and to consider no inspired text on the subject, to recount no act of holy majesty, to speak of no blazing fire, to repeat no redemptive promise, to feel no heat from the fire of the prophet’s ecstasy, and to neglect the very words of the Savior, but only to hear men’s inventions, men’s ideas about God, men’s paltry rhymes and empty doctrines, is to fall short of the glory of God.

Giving God glorious praise must contain the content of God’s glorious nature and it must redound in praise for who he is and what he has made known about himself. To neglect so great a mountain of content that explains, exalts, describes, honors, repeats, and applies the glory of God to all that exists, to every human soul, and across every moment of history — to neglect so rich a resource of unending riches, is not merely laziness and pride, but it is idolatry. To praise God with our words and in our language, in our offerings concocted with inferior thought, inferior content, inferior purpose, and inferior presentation, is to put ourselves in the place of God as those who determine how he is to be worshipped and by what means he is to be exalted. God never intended it to be so. Worship is to enter into the praise of the glory of God. To substitute our words, our ideas, our understandings, our silly rhymes and pointless repetitions, is to do an intolerable injustice to the glory of God. We should not extend our grasp so high. By finding our place as worshippers who stand before the glorious God, we are able to give him that glory that he is due by faith, and by faith alone.

In the worst of cases, our true agenda in “worship” seeks only to praise ourselves. Using the words of God or the praises of God as a vehicle to display our talents and desire for self-praise, we fail at any true worship whatsoever. Such “worship” fails at every point. Worse, it puts us at a very dangerous place where we become not worshippers of God at all but violators of the command that God alone is to be worshipped, becoming competitors for God’s glory. We cannot worship both God and man.

When we have stolen worship from God in this way, we have diminished God’s honor and his rightful praise and adoration. We who fail in this way know full well when we stand before an assembly, eager for applause or praise—speaking the words of praise to God, but heaping up the reward for ourselves, we know when the words we speak or sing about God, are merely means of our own self-aggrandizing. Our hearts betray us in these moments of theft.

We know in our hearts when we have used glory as a vessel to make ourselves seem great or worthy of much praise, instead of being awestruck by God’s excellencies, his works, his redemption, his self-disclosure. When we “reward” God with our paltry praise, imagining in our delusion that God was made better, happier by our ditties, by our audacious display of senseless, silly, emotions, or by our attention-getting performances, that is no worship at all. It is pure, horrid, and disgusting idolatry. How easily our sinful selves extol our greatness and become consumed with our praise, uplifting our gifts, extoling our importance, or delighting in the praise we are so desperate for from men. Jesus said, “You shall worship the Lord your God and him only shall you serve,” (see Deuteronomy 6:13; 1 Samuel 7:3; Matthew 4:10; and Luke 4:8). We must place the worship of God at the center of our affections and aspirations. God’s glory must possess us deeply inside our heart and in our will, at the most profound and unalterable place within our loves and passions. We distinguish between the glory of God and the glory of a human being. We know they are entirely different realities.

It can be said with great sadness that today we have largely lost this essential distinction between God and us and the differential between the glory of God and the glory of man. Especially is this the case in our modern corporate worship. God’s glory should be the privilege of knowing, seeing, studying, handling with our greatest attention, and receiving to our complete transformation, the glory of God. And we come to understand the utter failure of the worship of God when we substitute the worship of God for something that wholly comes from within ourselves. As sinful people, we are betrayed by our desire to worship ourselves and, despite the horrific consequences of such an action, to use God and his glory for our benefit or as a way for us to be praised.

Those who give praise to God experience his transforming presence. They enter into the thoughts of God, the things of God, the Words of God, the mighty acts of God, the providence of God, the creation of God, and supremely, the redemption of God in the Cross of Christ.

Those who praise themselves as they stumblingly attempt to ascribe glory to God are perhaps attempting to give God some gift he is missing or trying to delight him in some way that would benefit him. And in that quest they miss glory altogether. And they grotesquely offend God. They turn the worship and service of God into negotiations for reward, believing somehow that God can be rewarded by their offering, made richer or happier by their praise, or that they can give to God something he is lacking within himself or that he needed from them. This blasphemous idolatry has confused God with man. How strongly can we say this? God needs nothing from man. Man needs everything from God. Glory is not from man to God. It is God’s display of his nature and works to man.

Self-admiration at enmity with God’s glory

The highest act of worship—giving glory to God—can be twisted into the most arrogant and sin-filled display of human sin and selfishness imaginable. Our sin has done this. Stephen Charnock writes:

Every sin is a defacing our own souls, which, as they are the prime creatures in the sensible world, had greater characters of God’s wisdom in the fabric of them. But this image of God is ruined and broken by sin.

… God has shown infinite art in the creation of man, but sin unbeautifies man, and bereaves him of his excellency.[6]

Man, bereft of his holiness, is also bereft of beauty and excellency. Beauty and excellence are essential qualities of the glory of God. Holiness, therefore, is required of those who rightly give God glory. So if man is to glorify God, his holiness must first be restored. Holiness and glory are causally related to one another: holiness is the interaction, the interplay, the self-consistent expression of those elements of the divine character, balancing and supporting each one (love and justice, mercy and wrath, e.g.); glory is the demonstration of God’s holy character.

God desires to be merciful and redemptive, just as he is critical and rejecting of every human virtue. Every characteristic of God is bound by his nature to act with all the power and holiness of divinity in defense of his glory.  As we long for the beauty and excellencies of the nature of God—as we desire to abandon our ambitions and hopes so that we may be consumed, lost in those qualities for which we so deeply yearn, from the best parts of our redeemed human souls—we begin to know God.

Our desire as restored man is not merely to observe God’s beauty and wonders; it is to be identified with those excellencies and to know them in a way that knowing is not sufficient to describe. We need more profound and better words, more beautiful songs, more splendid paintings, deeper and more transformative friendships, more courageous experiences, and higher, grander, clearer insights in order to declare the greatness of his glory. Our tools of speech and human language, our arts and sciences, do not give us the sufficient vocabulary or rich enough understanding to express what we know of God. We cannot even pray to him adequately. The longing we have in our souls about God cannot be contained within us. It spills over into all we do, everything we know, and into every relationship we have. Neither does our world seem very substantive to us in comparison to the solidity, the eternity, the profundity of God who made it all for his glory. Something more real has come to us and now is in us. We have seen his glory.

So worship is to participate in the holy; it is to know God’s glory face to face; and it is to find our longings and aspirations fulfilled in his presence. Lewis wrote lyrically about this longing, not only to understand but to be joined with God’s glory:

Ah, but we want so much more—something the books on aesthetics take little notice of. But the poets and the mythologies know all about it. We do not want merely to see beauty, though God knows, even that is bounty enough. We want something else which can hardly be put into words—to be united with the beauty we see, to pass into it, to receive it into ourselves, to bathe in it, to become part of it.[7]

By engaging in a direct quest to know and to extol the virtues, the words,  and actions of God, we find true and abundant life and a glimpse of the life that is ahead. Then we will see clearly and can say exactly what we mean and we begin to praise God without omission, delusion, or distraction. We are stirred by his gracious invitation to examine his glory without shadow or cloud, engaging these themes with all our faculties and with all our affections. All of these realities flow from his loving heart and result in our greatest good. There is no greater blessing that to know and to experience the glory of God.

How liberating and delightful it is to know that whether we give God glory or not, he will never need us or our praises in any way. To say it so plainly seems harsh. But it is really the most tender way to say it. The complete competency of God, his God-ness, is our greatest delight. His independence from us and his complete delight in himself give him such great solidity, such inalterability, that he is most strong, most powerful, most able to keep his promises, and therefore he is most glorious. And our worship of him is the worship directed to the One who alone deserves all the praises of his creation.

God is not contingent on us for anything. He is self-defining, self-existing, and self-affirming. It brings us to our knees to declare that we cannot contribute to God’s happiness, though we sometimes grotesquely imagine God pining after our praises. God pining after us? May it never be!

He is infinitely happy in himself. Our worship of God is properly established only when we accept that he is completely satisfied in himself apart from us altogether. Only this kind of God is worthy of worship. His glory is established, therefore, not by us, but by God alone. And the grace and miracle of this is that we are most benefited when we know, by faith and through his grace, that he is God alone. After that, we can settle in our minds and hearts, with deepest humility, upon the corollary to this greatest truth of all: We are not God.

God’s decision to reveal his glory to his people rests behind every other gracious act he has ever done or ever will do. Therefore, God is not and cannot be, helped by us when we give him glory. He cannot get more glory from us. He already possesses it all in himself. When we give glory to God, it does not help God at all. It helps us.

 


[1] Lewis, The Weight of Glory, 9.

[2] pantokrator, “ruler over all.” See 2 Corinthians 6:18; Revelation 1:8; 4:8; 11:17; 16:7, 14; 19:6, 15; 21:22.

[3] Remember the hymn by John Bowring (1825), “In the Cross of Christ I Glory.”

[4] Ibid, 155.

[5] Lewis, The Weight of Glory, 9.

[6] Charnock, Truth and Life, Vol. 5, 490.

[7] Lewis, The Weight of Glory, 12–13.

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