
The
Holy Kiss
by Michael McDaniel
When we began to seriously consider worshipping with a Christian
fellowship, my wife and I acquired a copy of the Charity
Christian Fellowship Statement of Faith. We wanted to see
if we were “like-minded” in key areas of worship. Item 17,
“Christian Ordinances”, states—
We believe and confess that ordinances were instituted by
Divine authority for the purpose of expressing Heavenly thoughts
and meanings, given to draw our attention toward spiritual
pictures of Divine truth. These ordinances are as follows:
Baptism, communion, feet washing, holy kiss, anointing with
oil.
Most of the religious world today teaches that these are
all merely “cultural” and that it is not necessary to practice
a physical observance of them. The majority of the commentaries
will acknowledge that these were practiced in Bible days,
but will say that they are not binding in our time and culture.
We could also mention things like: the head covering, lifting
up holy hands, not limiting the number of children in the
family, modest dress, adornment, women keeping silent in
the churches, and not dating…all just cultural. Men will
explain away 1900 years of Biblical teaching based on “new
light” and new translations. They will pander to their own
preferences, and preach things that tickle the ears of their
parishioners. So, things that were written for us in the
Spirit-inspired Scriptures will give way to the ways of men.
Recall how Jeroboam fashioned the golden calves for worship
in Bethel, rather than in Jerusalem. This was an abomination
to God. It’s no different when we selectively choose to add
and discard the commands of the Bible to suit us. What should
be our desire? Our goal should be “proving what is
acceptable unto the Lord” (Eph 5:10).
What then, is acceptable to God regarding
the Holy Kiss? We read of the practice of the kiss in the Old Testament.
“And Esau ran to meet him, and embraced him,
and fell on his neck, and kissed him: and they wept” Genesis 33:4. The
Early Church practiced a holy kiss, as reported by Justin Martyr (2nd
Century) and
also Origen, Cyprian and Tertullian. From history we can establish the
practice of the holy kiss. But, again, the scholars will tell us this
is merely cultural.
Commentators say that a handshake is commensurate to a holy kiss in the
culture of today. I disagree. The word “holy” clearly distinguishes
this greeting from
the casual handshake. Have you not seen enemies shake hands? Do not political
opponents shake hands before a debate…then proceed to ridicule and denigrate
one another? Likewise, have you not seen brethren shake hands, even though
there is bitterness and strife between them? This is not to say that
the casual handshake of today and even warm embrace cannot be very
effectual and heartfelt…they
indeed can be…but they do not constitute that which is “holy.” I believe
the Lord intended more than what our society associates with the common
handshake
or hug.
I suppose it depends upon your religious
background, or even the present congregation where you assemble…but
from my observation, I see the holy
kiss as an ordinance
which we profess to believe, but which fewer and fewer practice today.
Typically, only a few of the older members greet with a holy kiss.
Sadly, seldom do the
younger greet with a kiss of charity. Truthfully, I am concerned about
this. Does this stem from embarrassment? Have we become so culturally
adapted that
we use the world’s yardstick to determine what makes us comfortable
or uneasy?If we don’t feel comfortable with it, or we don’t think that
is
proper…we will
refrain from practicing it. Brethren, all it takes is one generation
to lose something precious. If many of the older members don’t greet
with the holy
kiss, rest assured that the older youth will not. And, if the older
youth do not, the younger ones will not because they look to the older
siblings
for
example. In one generation, this blessed practice of the holy kiss
could be gone from our group. Then what will follow? Lifting up holy
hands?
Feet washing?
The covering? I ask the question, regarding the holy kiss, are we proving
what is acceptable to God…or to us?
There are five passages in the New Testament
which address this subject:
- Romans 16:16: Salute one another with an holy
kiss. The
churches of Christ salute you.
-
1 Cor. 16:20: All the brethren greet
you. Greet ye one another with an holy kiss.
-
2 Cor. 13:12: Greet one another with
an holy kiss.
-
1 Thes. 5:26: Greet all the brethren
with an holy kiss.
-
1 Peter 5:14: Greet ye one another with
a kiss of charity.
Let’s examine the key words employed in these passages.
1. Salute (and greet)
Aspazomai (as-pad’-zom-ahee);
(figuratively) to welcome:—embrace, greet. “To pay respect
to or to give honor to.” A gesture of love.
2. One Another (brethren)
The kiss is for the members
of Christ’s body. It is a salutation, a holy greeting and
an outpouring of love. This is an overflow of the love
in our hearts
for one another! Who is this “one another?” I believe that this
pertains to brothers with brothers and sisters with sisters.
We once attended a congregation
of a worldly denomination which claimed to practice the holy
kiss. But, we noticed something in this congregation that
I believe is a perversion of
the Scriptures—brothers would kiss sisters, and they would kiss
sisters on the mouth. I firmly believe this is not “holy”
but opens the door for inappropriate
passions and desires. This is not the “one another” intended
in Scripture.
The Apostolic Constitutions state:
Then let the men apart, and the women apart, salute each
other with a kiss in the Lord.”
The Catholic Encyclopedia states:
From a very early date, also, the abuses to which this form
of salutation might lead were very carefully guarded against.
Both in the East and in the West, women and men were separated
in the assemblies of the faithful, and the kiss of peace
was given only by women to women and men to men.”
Lenski’s Commentary of the New Testament:
The word “holy” guards against misconceptions. Bestowing
a kiss upon a brow or cheek as a sign of friendly accord,
affection and honor dates very far back among Oriental people.
This meaning of the public kiss makes the act of Judas who
betrayed Christ with such a kiss so unutterably base.
The use of the word holy here serves to denote that Paul
intended it as an expression of Christian affection; and
to guard against all improper familiarity and scandal.
I believe Scripture provides sufficient reasons why brothers
should not kiss sisters:
-
1 Cor. 7:1
Now concerning the things whereof ye wrote unto me: It
is good for a man
not to touch a woman.
-
Ro 13:14
But put ye on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make not provision
for the flesh,
to fulfil the lusts thereof.
-
Ro 14:13
“… that no man put a stumblingblock or an occasion to
fall in his brother’s
way.”
3. Holy
Hagios (hag’-ee-os); sacred
(physically, pure, morally blameless or religious, ceremonially,
consecrated).
What makes a kiss holy? A pure heart filled with unfeigned
love of the brethren. A holy kiss comes fromsomeone who is
right with God, walking in the light, and that genuinely
desires your fellowship. A holy kiss comes from a heart that
honestly cares about your walk with God. Otherwise, it’s
just a dead ordinance. Judas feigned a kiss of charity with
Jesus at Gethsemane; it was a dead ordinance. If there is
no sanctified and pure heart behind the kiss, the kiss is
just an empty gesture. It is just like the common handshake
of today’s culture. When a brother or sister is Holy (hagios) he is set apart and different from the world. He is consecrated,
and his kiss is different from the world’s greeting. There
is another aspect that makes the kiss holy. In his commentary,
John MacArthur notes:
…the early Church was comprised mostly of Jews, and that
new believers were made outcasts by their biological families.
To them, the spiritual kinship became very dear and was manifested
with what came to be called a holy kiss.
Praise God for our spiritual family! The kiss is a beautiful
expression of love for members in God’s family!
4. Kiss
Philema (fil’-ay-mah)—simply
means “kiss.”
It’s at this point that many brethren derail the train.
We’re okay with the salutation, and the overflow of love,
but the thought of actually kissing another man? Sisters
kissing sisters? Well, it just doesn’t feel right somehow.
“O Lord, this is a hard saying…I cannot do this thing.”
“I am not comfortable with
this!!”
“What will people think of
me?”
We wrestle with the Lord, and
the same answer keeps coming back time and again: Greet
one another with an holy kiss. It
does not say: “Salute one another with an holy
handshake.”
Nor does it say, “Greet ye one another
with an hearty
bear hug!” Kiss means kiss. I do
not believe the Holy Spirit made a mistake,
and certainly not five times in Scripture.
The Greek word philema (fil’-ay-mah)
has the same root word as phileo
(brotherly love). In other words,
“kiss with the expression of brotherly
love.” Peter
said, “Greet ye one another with a kiss of charity” (1
Pet 5:14). If my heart is washed by
the blood and your heart is washed by the
blood, then we both
have love toward Jesus and toward each other—Jesus is
our common bond. "Seeing ye have purified
your souls in obeying the truth through
the Spirit unto unfeigned
love of the brethren, see that ye love one another with
a pure heart fervently” (1 Pet
1:22). A pure heart is behind the holy
kiss!
Grace is a great equalizer,
in that all are sinners saved by grace, and
are only righteous based upon their
standing in Christ’s finished work
at Calvary.
Similarly, the Holy Kiss brings all men to the same
level. Therich and the poor, the boss and
employee, the leader and the followers
meet on level ground
and share their hearts in the philema—the kiss of charity.
Is This Really Binding On Us?
How do we determine what we are required to do? There are
four primary rules of Scripture interpretation: statement,
command, example, and necessary inference. Here is when we
know to practice something:
-
Statement: If something is clearly stated in Scripture,
-
Command: If something is clearly commanded by Scripture,
-
Example: If we have a clear cut example of how the Early Church
practiced it, and/or
-
Necessary
Inference: If the sense is necessarily implied or inferred
by the context
of the passages.
For us to be required to observe some practice, it doesn’t
take all four of these, as only one is binding. Concerning
the practice of the Holy Kiss, let us examine this in light
of these four factors.
1. Command
Commands are not optional,
but are clearly defined directives. For example, Eph 5:25,
“Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved
the church,
and gave himself for it.” We are to
obey cheerfully. From our five key passages,
we clearly have
Statement and also
Command. There is an understood “YOU”
in three of the statements, and YE in the other two.
-
[YOU] salute
one another with an holy kiss.
-
Greet YE
one another with an holy kiss.
-
[YOU] greet
one another with an holy kiss.
-
[YOU] greet
all the brethren with an holy kiss.
Greet YE one another with a kiss of charity.
2. Example
Luke 15:20 tells of the Prodigal’s
Father “And he arose, and came to his father. But when
he was yet a great way off, his father saw him, and had
compassion,
and ran, and fell on his neck, and kissed
him.”
In Acts 20:37—When Paul told the elders
at Ephesus, who came out to meet him at
Miletus, that they would “see his face
no more” it says “they all wept sore,
and fell on Paul’s neck, and kissed him.”
3. Necessary Inference
In Luke 7:36-39 and 44-46,
we read the account of the sinner woman who washed the
feet of Jesus with her tears, wiped them with her hair,
and anointed
him with precious ointment. Simon was critical
of this association. Jesus not only approved of the woman’s
actions, but he reminds Simon that he had
not kissed him. We can infer from this
that a kiss was both appropriate and also expected for
an honored guest. Therefore, we have Necessary Inference
regarding the Holy Kiss.
From examination of scriptures,
I must conclude that the Holy Kiss is binding
today. It is what is acceptable to
the Lord! It is commanded, whether we like
it or not. When we read commands, our response
is to obey. God will give us grace to
obey His commands. He will grant us grace to
overcome our inhibitions,
awkwardness, and shyness. Truly there is
a hidden blessing in obeying this command;
a hidden treasure for those who trust
and obey.
What Will People Think?
Worrying about what others will think is an indication
that we need to die to self and consider God’s reputation,
not ours. Granted, people may draw the wrong conclusions
if they see a man kissing a man. We may be perceived as effeminate,
or perverted by those unfamiliar with the Scripture. We want
to be sensitive about these matters. We want our testimony
to be above reproach. So, we briefly address this matter
of perception. Peter wrote, “Dearly
beloved, I beseech you as strangers
and pilgrims, abstain from fleshly
lusts, which
war against the soul; 12 Having your
conversation honest among
the Gentiles: that, whereas they speak against
you
as evildoers, they may by your good
works, which they shall behold, glorify
God in the day of visitation” (1 Pet. 2:11).
We know that people are watching, and we want a clear testimony,
that God may receive the glory. I believe the manner in which
we live our lives and in which we walk before men will send
the right message. John MacArthur noted:
In our day, there is also a danger of certain physical signs
of affection being misunderstood and abused. Those dangers
have always existed and will continue until the Lord returns.
But, if practiced with sensible
discretion, a loving embrace
and a truly holy kiss that reflect genuine,
heartfelt love between Christians should not be [rejected] simply because
of possible misunderstanding or misuse.
Amen. If we have the aroma
of Christ, and people can tell that we are walking with
God every day, there should be no
uncertain testimony. No one should
misconstrue a show of brotherly or sisterly affection as
improper, if we are letting
our light shine. When we have visitors
in our assembly, should we refrain out of deference to
them? No. What a powerful
testimony to the unfeigned love
of the brethren it is when they behold brethren greeting
one another with a kiss of
charity, in all sincerity. This
is not a negative message but a positive one. “By this
shall all men know that ye are
my disciples, if ye have love one
to another” (John 13:35). One verse to keep in mind regarding
these matters is Proverbs
29:25, “The fear of man bringeth
a snare: but whoso putteth his trust in the LORD shall
be safe.”
Brothers, let me attempt to
put this in perspective. We ask our wives and daughters
to go out in public with a covering on their heads…knowing
that the world makes comments and judgments. My wife has
been called “Amish” “Hutterite” and “Sister.”
One man even knelt and made the sign of the cross
before her. If a sister was not raised in a faith that
practices the covering, and does not have the support
of the other sisters…it’s hard initially to wear
a covering. “What will people say or think?” For nearly
two years, my wife was the only sister who covered
in a large denominational congregation that did
not believe in the veiling. She wanted to obey and please
God, not man. The Pharisees were guilty of binding
things on people that they themselves would not
do. Are we being Pharisaical by asking our wives to do
something difficult, while we shrink back regarding
the holy kiss—fearful of our manly reputation?
Brethren, let me repeat…just one generation is all that
it will take to lose this precious blessing of the
holy kiss. I pray that my grandchildren will be
blessed to worship where the simple ordinances are observed.
Let’s overcome our inhibitions. Let us have
hearts that are pure and holy, and then greet one
another in a biblical fashion. Let us prove what is acceptable
to the Lord.
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