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Đức Chúa Trời thánh khiết, thánh khiết, thánh khiết có nghĩa là gì?

Bốn con sanh vật ấy mỗi con có sáu cánh, chung quanh mình và trong mình đều có mắt; ngày đêm lúc nào cũng nói luôn không dứt: Thánh thay, thánh thay, thánh thay là Chúa, là Đức Chúa Trời, Đấng Toàn năng, Trước Đã Có, Nay Hiện Có, Sau Còn Đến!
Khải-huyền 4:8
The phrase “holy, holy, holy” appears twice in the Bible, once in the Old Testament (Isaiah 6:3) and once in the New (Revelation 4:8). Both times, the phrase is spoken or sung by heavenly creatures, and both times it occurs in the vision of a man who was transported to the throne of God: first by the prophet Isaiah and then by the apostle John. Before addressing the three-fold repetition of God’s holiness, it’s important to understand what exactly is meant by God’s holiness.
Đức Chúa Trời đã làm cho Đấng vốn chẳng biết tội lỗi trở nên tội lỗi vì chúng ta, hầu cho chúng ta nhờ Đấng đó mà được trở nên sự công bình của Đức Chúa Trời.
II Cô-rinh-tô 5:21
The holiness of God is the most difficult of all God’s attributes to explain, partly because it is one of His essential attributes that is not shared, inherently, by man. We are created in God’s image, and we can share many of His attributes, to a much lesser extent, of course—love, mercy, faithfulness, etc. But some of God’s attributes, such as omnipresence, omniscience, and omnipotence, will never be shared by created beings. Similarly, holiness is not something that we will possess as an inherent part of our nature; we only become holy in relationship to Christ. It is an imputed holiness. Only in Christ do we “become the righteousness of God” (2 Corinthians 5:21). God’s holiness is what separates Him from all other beings, what makes Him separate and distinct from everything else. God’s holiness is more than just His perfection or sinless purity; it is the essence of His “other-ness,” His transcendence. God’s holiness embodies the mystery of His awesomeness and causes us to gaze in wonder at Him as we begin to comprehend just a little of His majesty.
Đức Giê-hô-va thấy người tẻ bước lại xem, Đức Chúa Trời bèn ở giữa bụi gai gọi rằng: Hỡi Môi-se, hỡi Môi-se! Người thưa rằng: Có tôi đây!
Xuất Ê-díp-tô Ký 3:4
Isaiah was a firsthand witness of God’s holiness in his vision described in Isaiah 6. Even though Isaiah was a prophet of God and a righteous man, his reaction to the vision of God’s holiness was to be aware of his own sinfulness and to despair for his life (Isaiah 6:5). Even the angels in God’s presence, those who were crying, “Holy, holy, holy is the LORD Almighty,” covered their faces and feet with four of their six wings. Covering the face and feet no doubt denotes the reverence and awe inspired by the immediate presence of God (Exodus 3:4–5). The seraphim stood covered, as if concealing themselves as much as possible, in recognition of their unworthiness in the presence of the Holy One. And if the pure and holy seraphim exhibit such reverence in the presence of the Lord, with what profound awe should we, polluted and sinful creatures, presume to draw near to Him! The reverence shown to God by the angels should remind us of our own presumption when we rush thoughtlessly and irreverently into His presence, as we often do because we do not understand His holiness.
John’s vision of the throne of God in Revelation 4 was similar to that of Isaiah. Again, there were living creatures around the throne crying, “Holy, holy, holy is the Lord God Almighty” (Revelation 4:8) in reverence and awe of the Holy One. John goes on to describe these creatures giving glory and honor and reverence to God continually around His throne. Interestingly, John’s reaction to the vision of God in His throne is different from Isaiah’s. There is no record of John falling down in terror and awareness of his own sinful state, perhaps because John had already encountered the risen Christ at the beginning of his vision (Revelation 1:17). Christ had placed His hand upon John and told him not to be afraid. In the same way, we can approach the throne of grace if we have the hand of Christ upon us in the form of His righteousness, exchanged for our sin at the cross (2 Corinthians 5:21).
But why the three-fold repetition “holy, holy, holy” (called the trihagion)? The repetition of a name or an expression three times was quite common among the Jews. In Jeremiah 7:4, the Jews are represented by the prophet as saying, “The temple of the Lord” three times, expressing their intense confidence in their own worship, even though it was hypocritical and corrupt. Jeremiah 22:29, Ezekiel 21:27, and 2 Samuel 18:33 contain similar three-fold expressions of intensity. Therefore, when the angels around the throne call or cry to one another, “Holy, holy, holy,” they are expressing with force and passion the truth of the supreme holiness of God, that essential characteristic which expresses His awesome and majestic nature.
In addition, the trihagion expresses the triune nature of God, the three Persons of the Godhead, each equal in holiness and majesty. Jesus Christ is the Holy One who would not “see decay” in the grave, but would be resurrected to be exalted at the right hand of God (Acts 2:26; 13:33-35). Jesus is the “Holy and Righteous One” (Acts 3:14) whose death on the cross allows us to stand before the throne of our holy God unashamed. The third Person of the trinity—the Holy Spirit—by His very name denotes the importance of holiness in the essence of the Godhead.
Finally, the two visions of the angels around the throne crying, “Holy, holy, holy,” clearly indicates that God is the same in both testaments. Often we think of the God of the Old Testament as a God of wrath and the God of the New Testament as a God of love. But Isaiah and John present a unified picture of our holy, majestic, awesome God who does not change (Malachi 3:6), who is the same yesterday, today and forever (Hebrews 13:8), and “with whom is no variableness nor shadow of turning” (James 1:17). God’s holiness is eternal, just as He is eternal.
* Kinh Thánh Tham Khảo:
Khải-huyền 4:8 - Bốn con sanh vật ấy mỗi con có sáu cánh, chung quanh mình và trong mình đều có mắt; ngày đêm lúc nào cũng nói luôn không dứt: Thánh thay, thánh thay, thánh thay là Chúa, là Đức Chúa Trời, Đấng Toàn năng, Trước Đã Có, Nay Hiện Có, Sau Còn Đến!
II Cô-rinh-tô 5:21 - Đức Chúa Trời đã làm cho Đấng vốn chẳng biết tội lỗi trở nên tội lỗi vì chúng ta, hầu cho chúng ta nhờ Đấng đó mà được trở nên sự công bình của Đức Chúa Trời.
Xuất Ê-díp-tô Ký 3:4 - Đức Giê-hô-va thấy người tẻ bước lại xem, Đức Chúa Trời bèn ở giữa bụi gai gọi rằng: Hỡi Môi-se, hỡi Môi-se! Người thưa rằng: Có tôi đây!
II Cô-rinh-tô 5:21 - Đức Chúa Trời đã làm cho Đấng vốn chẳng biết tội lỗi trở nên tội lỗi vì chúng ta, hầu cho chúng ta nhờ Đấng đó mà được trở nên sự công bình của Đức Chúa Trời.
II Sa-mu-ên 18:33 - Vua rất cảm thương, bèn lên lầu cửa thành và khóc. Người vừa đi vừa nói rằng: Oâi, Aùp-sa-lôm, con trai ta! Aùp-sa-lôm, con trai ta! con trai ta! Ước chi chính ta chết thế cho con! Oâi, Aùp-sa-lôm! con trai ta! con trai ta!
Công-vụ 3:14 - Các ngươi đã chối bỏ Đấng Thánh và Đấng Công bình mà xin tha một kẻ giết người cho mình;
Gia-cơ 1:17 - mọi ân điển tốt lành cùng sự ban cho trọn vẹn đều đến từ nơi cao và bởi Cha sáng láng mà xuống, trong Ngài chẳng có một sự thay đổi, cũng chẳng có bóng của sự biến cải nào.

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