Subject: Encountering God's Holiness<br><br>Dear [churchname],<br><br>I hope my email finds you reflecting on the transformative power of God's holiness in our lives.<br><br>Last Sunday, we explored Isaiah 6:1-8, where Isaiah's profound encounter with God

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From splendor to significance, we all, on some level or another, have a desire, we have a hunger, we have a longing for two things. I want to submit to you today what those two things are. The first is we want to encounter something or someone that is bigger than who we are. [00:34:25] (21 seconds)


I'm convinced that this encounter with God's holiness was not specially and specifically designed by God for me and for no one else. Rather, this is something He desires for you and for you and for every person that is hungry to encounter something or someone who is bigger than you are. [00:39:40] (22 seconds)


While mourning an apparently successful king, who ultimately, in his imperfection, died of leprosy, a defiling disease in antiquity. As he was mourning this guy's death, Isaiah had a life-transforming encounter with the king, the Lord Almighty, in whom there is no defilement, no impurity, nothing unclean. [00:42:49] (25 seconds)


And while mourning Uzziah's death, Isaiah encounters the holy God who, in his perfection, is already set apart, who's like no other, who is undefiled in every way. Yet even in his undefiled, perfect, altogether otherness, God's holy presence turns this temple, the place of Isaiah's painful period of mourning, into a powerful palace. [00:43:28] (28 seconds)


And this makes sense to me because encountering God's holiness not only brings you into contact with his matchless majesty, but it also leaves you completely and utterly exposed. And in it, God offers to Isaiah and to us the opportunity to also encounter his transformation. [00:48:53] (21 seconds)

No one or nothing else can give us true purpose and meaning in life. In fact, his voice alone awakens our deepest desire and purpose by first calling us to himself before he launches us into any assignment we may have in life. He calls us to himself first before launching us into anything else. [00:52:28] (23 seconds)


I believe Isaiah was ready to say, Here am I. Send me because his significance wasn't found in the assignment. His significance was found in God and in him alone. 17. Sitting in that restaurant. Ready to contemplate. Taking my life. And I had a transforming encounter with the holiness of God. [00:54:38] (26 seconds)


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