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Daily Devotion June 16, 2023

“Therefore, just as your heavenly Father is complete in showing love to everyone, so also you must be complete” (Matthew 5:48, NIV).

     One of the questions to which I responded when ordained as an elder in the United Methodist Church was this: Are you going on to perfection? Sanctification or holiness is one of the three theological strands that tied together what John Wesley called the “way of salvation.” Wesley believed that through the work of the Holy Spirit, God is reforming the human spirit into the image of Christ, the author and perfecter of the Christian faith (see Hebrews 12:2).

                                        C. S. Lewis once wrote:
                                       “The command ‘Be ye perfect’ is not idealistic gas.
                                         Nor is it a command to do the impossible. [God] is
                                         going to make us into creatures that can obey
                                         that command.…He meant what he said. Those
                                         who put themselves in His hands will become
                                         perfect, as He is perfect—perfect in love,
                                         wisdom, joy, beauty, and immortality.”


Our character matters to God. Yet given our human limitations, the ideal of Christian perfection can only be realized by each of us putting ourselves into God’s hands by way of the spiritual disciplines of prayer, fasting, worship, Holy Communion, as well as the reading and meditation of the Scriptures.

     After thirty-six years of ministry, my wife can assure you that I am far from perfect. God has much more work to do. My primary job is to place my heart daily on the altar of God’s grace, so that the Great Physician can perform the surgery necessary to remove every unholy habit, thought, attitude, and action. God’s goal for me is that I do the kinds of spiritual activities that continue to move me along the trajectory of Christian perfection.

     So, from where I stand today I can confidently reaffirm my initial response to the bishop: “Yes, by the grace of God.” Now, I ask the same question of you. Are you going on to perfection?