Nobody Is Perfect
By Auta Cornelius Kanaty (@kannygospel1)
Greetings everyone
This is my first post in this great community
I’m @kannygospel1 and happy to share this with us
I feel Perfection is the nature of God, exhibited in His acts and doings. Nothing He has done or is doing is a flop or limited. In all ramifications, no man or being can evaluate His acts and point out choices that were unnecessary, wrong, or lacking. He is not gifted in one aspect and deficient in another—He lacks nothing and possesses every good quality to the highest degree. He is complete, flawless, and without error, sin, or limitation.
In all this, He urges us to understand this truth and stand as His sons, because He said in the book of Psalms that we are the sons of the Most High. We possess His DNA. His character and traits dwell within us. We are supposed to show forth His nature to humanity.
We are supposed to know that the son of a lion is a lion. Not just that—He gave us an open hand: that if we believe and understand, we can do greater things than He has done. That is, we have the high tendency to be the evolved species of Him, if we choose to. As He is, so can we be. We can make our ways perfect the way His way is perfect. His Word is flawless; He shields all who take refuge in Him. So, our words can also be trusted—with truth and power.
When we speak, the devil should know that God has spoken, and we will do everything in our power make it fulfilled, so he flees. But we—the men of this age—build our hearts on the scripture that says “no one is perfect,” and we stage our lives on the belief that “we are human, we are not God.” We say only God has the attribute or tendency of perfection. We excuse our life to rising and falling lifestyles, matching up today and matching down tomorrow.
The true nature of God embedded in us is no longer demonstrated. And because of this, God does not entrust the true mysteries of the Kingdom and the true power of God to us. Men have regimented their lives to a pattern that limits the functionality of God. We feed on grace as a license to sin—rising today, returning to our vomit tomorrow—because we believe perfection is unattainable within our circle.
Though grace is made available, God's ways are not subject to any man. He sees us as children, not to be entrusted with serious matters. When He fills out our profile of life, it shows a cycle of rising and falling. He says as long as we, the heirs and sons of the Kingdom, are still babes, the secret things of the Kingdom will not be given to us. Food for children is not given to dogs, or they will trample on it and play with it—because they don’t value it. Strange and extraordinary outcomes are not obtainable in our generation because life is staged in the realm of God. Until a man maintains a track record of purity, heaven won’t confirm or entrust anything to him.
Heaven needs consistency. That’s why Paul said, “I buffet myself that in all I do, I do not lose out.” Let our lives amount to more—an example showing that what we teach, we also live. For him, perfection was a quest.
Some say Jesus came and died so we could have His perfection. Yes, it’s true—He died, and grace is available. But in our pursuit of perfection, grace is meant to help us on our journey, not become the yardstick for imperfection. When little shift in our path comes grace give a little touch yo corrections and fix us, we must not fall back on the excuse that "no one is perfect."
God seeks to correct this notion. Since from Every human He sent on assignment—from prophets to patriarchs, kings to judges—He tested, to see if perfection could be exhibited by man. Then He, who is God, dropped His glory and took the form of man to prove us wrong. He lived an exemplary life so that no man should ever say or believe that imperfection is acceptable.
Grace is made available to all. But we must know—it is an aid to perfection. Our hearts may get wounded, but His perfect love says:
"Get back up. Let Me show you who you are."
Let us not say, “There’s no such thing as good enough.”
Let it be said: “Though I may be far from perfect, I am loved by Your perfect love.”
Let us understand—it is mercy that completes the steps we miss and the gaps we didn’t see.
The more I live, the less I understand why any accuser would have a reason—because the nails and scars in His hands already gave that reason. So that when my script is marked, I will be qualified.
I do not live like a slave, but like a free man—with the mindset of God. I know I owe no one a price. I live without flop, limitations, or weakness. Dominion to rules in me. I live like my forefathers, with pass glory that what whatever they declared “ God said is perfect.” It will remain so until now.
Let us work toward perfection—until we are transformed into the living image we behold. Jesus is our example. He is the firstborn among many brothers. Let His power and dominion radiate through us until we walk in His fullness, to the glory of God forever and ever.