Day 15 Not Perfected, Yet Perfect
"Not that I have already obtained, or am already perfected; but I
press on. . . . One thing I do, I press on towards the goal. Let us therefore,
as many as be perfect, be thus minded." Phil.3: 12-15.
In perfection there are degrees. We have perfect, more perfect, most perfect. We
have perfect, waiting to be perfected. So it was with our Lord Jesus. In Hebrews
we read thrice of Him that He was perfected or made perfect. Of sinful
imperfection there was not the faintest shadow in Him. At each moment of His
life He was perfect — just what He should be. And yet He needed, and it became
God to perfect Him through suffering and the obedience He learned in it. As He
conquered temptation, and maintained His allegiance to God, and amid strong
crying and tears gave up His will to God's will, His human nature was perfected,
and He became High Priest, "the Son perfected forevermore." Jesus during His
life on earth was perfect, but not yet perfected.
The perfected disciple shall be as his Master. What is true of Him is true, in
our measure, of us too. Paul wrote to the Corinthians of speaking wisdom among
the perfect, a wisdom carnal Christians could not understand. Here in our text
he classes himself with the perfect, and expects and enjoins them to be of the
same mind with himself. He sees no difficulty either in speaking of himself and
others as perfect, or in regarding the perfect as needing to be yet further and
fully perfected.
And what is now this perfection which has yet to be perfected? And who are these
perfect ones? The man who has made the highest perfection his choice, and who
has given his whole heart and life to attain to it, is counted by God a perfect
man. "The kingdom of heaven is like a seed." Where God sees in the heart the
single purpose to be all that God wills, He sees the divine seed of all
perfection. And as He counts faith for righteousness, so He counts this
wholehearted purpose to be perfect as incipient perfection. The man with a
perfect heart is accepted by God, amid all imperfection of attainment, as a
perfect man. Paul could look upon the Church and unhesitatingly say, "As many of
us as be perfect, let us be thus minded."
We know how among the Corinthians he describes two classes. The one, the large
majority, carnal and content to live in strife; the other, the spiritual, the
perfect. In the Church of our day it is to be feared that the great majority of
believers have no conception of their calling to be perfect. They have not the
slightest idea that it is their duty not only to be religious, but to be as
eminently religious, as full of grace and holiness, as it is possible for God to
make them. Even where there is some measure of earnest purpose in the pursuit of
holiness, there is such a want of faith in the earnestness of God's purpose when
He speaks: "Be perfect," and in the sufficiency of His grace to meet the demand,
that the appeal meets with no response. In no real sense do they understand or
accept Paul's invitation: "Let us, as many as be perfect, be thus minded."
But, thank God! it is not so with all. There is an ever-increasing number who
cannot forget that God means what He says when He speaks: "Be perfect," and who
regard themselves as under the most solemn obligation to obey the command. The
words of Christ: "Be perfect," are to them a revelation of what Christ is come
to give and to work, a promise of the blessing to which His teaching and leading
will bring them. They have joined the band of like-minded ones whom Paul would
associate with himself; they seek God with their whole heart; they serve Him
with a perfect heart; their one aim in life is to be made perfect, even as the
Master.
My reader! as in the presence of God, who has said to you: "Be perfect!" and of
Christ Jesus, who gave Himself that you might obey this command of your God, I
charge you that you do not refuse the call of God's servant, but enrol yourself
among those who accept it: "Let us, as many as be perfect, be thus minded." Fear
not to take your place before God with Paul among the perfect in heart. So far
will it be from causing self-complacency, that you will learn from him how the
perfect has yet to be perfected, and how the one mark of the perfect is that he
counts all things loss as he presses on unto the prize of the high calling of
God in Jesus Christ.