Day 9 Perfect as the Father
"For this reason you will be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect." Matt.
5: 48.
Perfect before God, perfect with God, perfect towards God: these are the
expressions we find in the Old Testament. They all indicate a relationship: the
choice or purpose of the heart set upon God, the wholehearted desire to trust
and obey Him. The first word of the New Testament at once lifts us to a very
different level, and opens to us what Christ has brought for us. Not only
perfect towards God, but perfect as God; this is the wonderful prospect it holds
out to us. It reveals the infinite fulness of meaning the word perfect has in
God's mind. It gives us at once the only standard we are to aim at and to judge
by. It casts down all hopes of perfection as a human attainment; but awakens
hope in Him who, as God, has the power, as Father has the will, to make us like
Himself.
A young child may be the perfect image of his father. There may be a great
difference in age, in stature, in power, and yet the resemblance may be so
striking that every one notices it. And so a child of God, though infinitely
less, may yet bear the image of the Father so markedly, may have such a striking
likeness to his Father, that in his creaturely life he will be perfect ,as the
Father is in His Divine life. This is possible. It is what Jesus here commands.
It is what each one should aim at. "Perfect as your Father in heaven is
perfect," must become one of the first articles of our creed, one of the guiding
lights of our Christian life.
Wherein this perfection of the Father consists is evident from the context:
"Love your enemies, that you may be sons of your Father which is in heaven; for
He makes His sun to shine on the evil and the good: Be therefore perfect, as
your Father in heaven is perfect." Or as it is in Luke 6: 36: "Be merciful, even
as your Father is merciful." The perfection of God is His love; His will to
communicate His own blessedness to all around Him. His compassion and mercy are
the glory of His being. He created us in His image and after His likeness, to
find our glory in a life of love and mercy and beneficence. It is in love we are
to be perfect, even as our Father is perfect.
The thought that comes up at once, and that ever returns again, is this: But is
it possible? And if so, how? Certainly not as a fruit of man's efforts. But the
words themselves contain the answer: "perfect as your Father is perfect." It is
because the little child has received his life from his father, and because the
father watches over his training and development, that there can be such a
striking and ever-increasing resemblance between him in his feebleness and his
father in his strength. It is because the sons of God are partakers of the
Divine nature, have God's life, and spirit, and love within them, that the
command is reasonable, and its obedience in ever-increasing measure possible: Be
perfect, as your Father is. The perfection is our Father's: we have its seed in
us; He delights to give the increase. The words that first appear to cast us
down in utter helplessness now become our hope and strength. Be perfect, as your
Father is perfect. Claim your child's heritage; give up yourself to be wholly a
son of God; yield yourself to the Father to do in you all He is able.
And then, remember too, who it is gives this message from the Father. It is the
Son, who Himself was, by the Father, perfected through suffering; who learned
obedience and was made perfect; and who has perfected us forever. The message,
"Be perfect," comes to us from Him, our elder Brother, as a promise of infinite
hope. What Jesus asks of us, the Father gives. What Jesus speaks, He does. To
"present every man perfect in Christ Jesus," is the one aim of Christ and His
gospel. Let us accept the command from Him; in yielding ourselves to obey it,
let us yield ourselves to Him: let our expectation be from Him in whom we have
been perfected. Through faith in Him we receive the Holy Ghost, by whom the love
of God is shed abroad in our hearts. Through faith in Him, that love becomes in
us a fountain of love springing up without ceasing. In union with Him, the love
of God is perfected in us, and we are perfected in love. Let us not fear to
accept and obey the command, "Be perfect, as your Father is perfect."