The Surprising Meaning of Holiness
How an ancient Hebrew word frees us from the burden of moral superiority.
How an ancient Hebrew word frees us from the burden of moral superiority.
By Dr. Eli Lizorkin-Girzhel (read bio)
Reading time: 7 min. Impact: Eternity.
The word “holy” makes many people cringe. It conjures images of pious posturing—the “holier than thou” attitude of those who look down on others with moral superiority. We use it to characterize individuals who appear judgmental or “excessively positive.”
But this modern understanding has drifted remarkably far from the word’s original meaning. The Bible doesn’t say that being holy means being perfect in the modern sense of the word. It means being different in a fundamental way. And hidden within that powerful idea is an invitation that could change your life.
In contemporary language, “holiness” has become an ethical term. People who act “holier than thou” believe they are morally superior to others. But this modern framework—measuring holiness by morality—is entirely different from the ancient Hebrew understanding.
The biblical word for “holy” is qadosh (קָדוֹשׁ). It doesn’t primarily mean morally perfect. It means “set apart.” Separated. Different.
This distinction matters enormously. When we misunderstand holiness as moral flawlessness, we burden ourselves with an impossible standard. We either become prideful, believing we’ve achieved it, or despairing, knowing we never can. Neither response reflects what the biblical authors intended.
Incidentally, in Matthew 5:48, Christ says, “Be perfect as your Father is perfect.” Like qadosh (קָדוֹשׁ), teleios (a Greek word translated as “perfect”) doesn’t primarily mean “morally flawless.” It means “complete, whole, fully developed, mature, or reaching its intended purpose.” The same word describes mature adults versus infants (1 Cor 14:20) and the “full-grown” plants in a field (Mat 13:33 in the Septuagint).
The most famous call to holiness appears in Leviticus:
“You shall be holy (qedoshim; קְדֹשִׁים), for I the Lord your God am holy (qadosh; קָדוֹשׁ)” (Lev 19:2).
Think about that statement for a moment. Is God really commanding Israel to be as morally perfect as the Creator of the universe? That seems not just difficult but impossible—and the wider context of the Torah acknowledges this very reality. The entire sacrificial system, detailed earlier in Leviticus, was established to atone for sin and provide a means of restoration because God knew that the people would fall short. The system existed to confront the reality that Israel wouldn’t be perfect. So what does “holy” mean in this context? Not sinless perfection, but being set apart.
Understanding the distinctiveness of Israel’s God illuminates the whole concept. When God tells Israel to be holy because “I, the Lord your God, am holy,” this statement clarifies that the God of Israel was set apart—unique and different—from the gods of other nations.
Consider the first of the Ten Commandments (actually called the “Ten Words” in Hebrew):
“You shall have no other gods before me” (Exo 20:3).
The Hebrew phrase al-panai (עַל-פָּנָי), often translated as “before me,” more literally means “in my presence” or “in addition to me.” The command, then, is one of exclusive allegiance. While the ancient Near Eastern context acknowledged the existence of other claimed deities, Israel was to have nothing to do with them. The God of Israel was “holy”—uniquely set apart—and demanded the same exclusive loyalty from His people.
Here’s where the biblical text directly challenges our modern assumptions. Deuteronomy calls Israel “a people holy (qadosh; קָדוֹשׁ) to the Lord” (7:6). But the same book explicitly states that Israel isn’t morally superior to anyone else.
Moses tells his people,
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“Do not say to yourselves, ‘The Lord brought me here to possess this land because of my righteousness (tsedakah; צְדָקָה).’ … It is not because of your righteousness or your upright heart that you are going in to possess their land, but because of the wickedness of these nations” (Deut 9:4–5).
The original Hebrew meaning of “holy” has nothing to do with the “holier than thou” attitude that people use today. Israel was set apart by God’s choice and for God’s purpose, not because of their inherent goodness.
The same dynamic applies to the Hebrew words for “clean” (tahor; טָהוֹר) and “unclean” (tame; טָמֵא). In the Torah, these terms primarily refer to ritual purity, not moral failure.
Leviticus states that if someone develops a skin disease, “the priest shall pronounce him unclean (tame; טָמֵא)” (Lev 13:11). This condition doesn’t imply any misconduct by the patient. It’s about ritual contamination, not sin.
And ritual uncleanness wasn’t permanent. For example, once a sick person recovered and was examined by a priest, they could simply “wash his clothes and be clean (taher; טָהֵר)” (Lev 13:6). Cleanness meant returning to a state of ritual purity, not achieving internal righteousness. The same word for “pure” describes the oil for the tabernacle’s lamps (tehorah; טְהוֹרָה)—oil obviously isn’t morally pure, but it is set apart for sacred use.
Leviticus itself makes the distinction clear when God tells Aaron to “distinguish between the holy (qadosh; קָדוֹשׁ) and the common (chol; חֹל), and between the unclean (tame; טָמֵא) and the clean (tahor; טָהוֹר)” (Lev 10:10). This verse draws a clear line: what is holy is set apart from what is common, and what is clean is separated from what is unclean. Neither category is inherently about personal morality.
This ancient understanding of holiness—being “set apart for a purpose”—finds its ultimate expression in Jesus. The Gospels present Him as the qadosh par excellence, the Holy One of God (Mark 1:24). Yet He constantly shattered the moralistic expectations of the religious elite because He embodied what holiness was always meant to be: not separation from people, but separation for God’s redemptive purpose.
He was set apart not to condemn the unclean but to make them clean. When the bleeding woman touched Him, His holiness went out to heal her (Mark 5:25–34). In Christ, holiness wasn’t a barrier to the impure; it was the power that transformed impurity.
Jesus prayed, “For their sakes I sanctify myself, that they also might be sanctified” (John 17:19). He set Himself apart for God’s mission so that we—the imperfect—could be made holy too. And He accomplished this not through repeated sacrifices, but through the once-for-all offering of Himself (Hebrews 10:10).
The liberating truth is that you don’t need to be perfect to be holy. The heavy burden of “holier than thou” is lifted as soon as we realize that holiness has nothing to do with our moral resume and everything to do with who we are. To be qadosh is to be set apart—not because we are flawless, but because we belong to the One who is.
In a world that demands conformity, the call to holiness is an invitation to stop pretending. It is permission to stop measuring yourself against others and instead rest in the reality that you are distinct by design. You are set apart, not to look down, but to be a bridge. Just as Jesus touched the untouchable and made them clean, your distinct life is meant to draw others in, not keep them out.
Therefore, let go of the performance. Embrace your place as someone chosen and set apart. Let your life be a sanctuary—not of sterile perfection, but of radical welcome, grounded in the Holy One who makes you whole.
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Comments (32)
Thank You Brother Eli. Clarity on a misunderstood subject. Perhaps in the 2nd last paragraph You could have as easily said "radical love". Many Blessings, Love, Grace, Joy, Peace and more to You and those dear to Your Heart, IN JESUS CHRIST AMEN!
indeed, William. Indeed.
As a Catholic, I have always been troubled with the saying “So be perfect, just as your heavenly Father is perfect” (Mt 5 5:48) or Luke’s parallel passage “Be merciful, just as your Father is merciful” (6:36). Based on your writing, I now look at these verses to mean to be qadosh, to be set apart because we belong to God, even amidst our imperfections.
Dear Bob, shalom! I will perhaps write on it in the future. Thank you for sharing.
Love this study!
Years ago I did one on Evil vs Good. One interesting definition of those terms I discovered was that evil could be defined as ‘disfunction’ like a broken bowl that can no longer serve it’s purpose is now evil. A murdered is an extremely evil case what a functional human is supposed to be. Good is that which serves its’ purpose. God didn’t call the creation good until it could begin to sustain life.
Thank you for sharing, Kim! May the LORD bless you!
Thank you. So many people don’t understand that difference of moral perfection instead of set apart.
I was brought up in a very judgemental way in my church and had to re learn that concept of set apart.
I agree.
I know I am Set Apart it was one of ghe first changes that God rewuired when I became botn again.
I didn't do it petfectly but I allowed God to separate me which made me stand out not because I wanted the spotlight
This was by His design.
Thank you for sharing!
God bless your service all the time! I love you very much!
God bless you and thank you!
I am so grateful to those of you who have decided to help me grow this ministry! May God bless you and keep you! If you are interested in making a contribution of any size, whether one- time or ongoing, please click here.
Shalom Dr. Eli, wouldn't you agree that biblical holiness is a much more dynamic concept than simply being set apart to Hashem? Doesn't holiness establish boundaries? Doesn't holiness in the scheme of redemption restore and elevate man to the lofty heights he had prior to the fall. A Jewish sage once stated that man without holiness is a mere ape. I totally agree that holiness as a gift is never a platform for self exaltation or moral superiority but a springboard for service to Hashem and our fellowman. Holiness without humility is like a stench of rotten corpse.
I agree, my brother.
Dr. Eli. through you, I have learnt many Hebrew word interpretations.
You are welcome Eli
You bear my father's name...
It is an honor.
Julius, I am glad to help! Blessings!
Additional: I also looked at דָּתִי dati, 'devout', 'orthodox' from dat דָּת 'religion, custom, decree, law'; I take that as less Biblical and more contemporary having to do with Zionism. {❓}
corrent.
A provocative essay, sent me on a two day dive into the Hebrew. :^) Your quote: "(Jesus) embodied what holiness was always meant to be: not separation from people, but separation for God’s redemptive purpose" was a good start. “You shall be holy (qedoshim; קְדֹשִׁים), for I the Lord your God am holy (qadosh; קָדוֹשׁ)” (Lev 19:2); 'qedoshim' is plural which I interpret as 'be a holy people', which fits your theme. Israel was selected by the Lord because they are a 'stiff necked' people. You discuss 'qadosh' as 'set apart. You mention 'righteousness' (tsedakah}; the root 'tzadiq' means 'cleanse, to clear oneself', as under the law, again not 'perfect'. I thought of Ḥasīd (the Hasidim) "pious", "saintly", which derives from chesed "kindness", i.e.: to go beyond normal practice - still not perfection. An interesting exercise.
Thank you for this wonderful insight about to be holy means to be set apart (1 Peter 2:9). To be set apart means to covenant with God to be different and to promise God to live a life according to His commandments - baptism, receiving the gift of the Holy Ghost by laying on of hands (John 3:5, Heb 6:1-2) and endure to the end (oath and covenant of Abraham, Heb 6:10-17) and showing our love for our Savior by loving Him with all our heart and mind and to love our neighbors as ourselves. (Matth 22:37-40)
Thank you for your comment, Louis.
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