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“God resists the proud but gives grace to the humble.” ~James 4:6
I have spent most of my life trying to be the best. I call it the curse of a perfectionist.
The best child.
The best student.
The best friend.
The best wife.
The best mom.
As a perfectionist you have one competitor: yourself. You set an unrealistic standard that you must achieve. To onlookers, it appears noble at first glance. A “spirit of excellence”, they call it. But it is actually rooted in pride.
As a Christian, the curse of a perfectionist translates into my relationship with God.
The best Christian.
The best leader.
The best Bible reader.
The problem remained, the goal just shifted a little. The onlookers don’t just think my goals are noble, now they appear righteous!
Yet isn’t this the very thing Jesus hated about the religious leaders of his day? He called them white-washed tombs! Squeaky clean and sparkling on the outside, but on the inside they are filled with dead bones.
This is the terrifying part about being a perfectionist.
WE SHINE ON THE OUTSIDE BUT WE ARE DEAD ON THE INSIDE.
I believed that if I wanted to make God proud, I had a lot of work to do! If I wanted to receive the best gifts from God, the first place ribbon needed to be pinned to my shirt!
Yet the Kingdom of God is backward. Jesus said if you want to be the greatest, you must become the least. If you want to be first, you must be last. If you want to find life, you must die.
Perfectionists don’t like to be the least, or to be last, and we definitely don’t like to die!
But the truth is, God’s greatest gifts are reserved for those who climb down the ladder of success, not those to strive and fight their way up it.
“I used to thing that God’s gifts were on shelves one above the other, and that the taller we grew in Christian character the easier we could reach them. I now find that God’s gifts are on shelves one beneath the other. It’s not a question of growing taller, but of stooping down, to get His best gifts.”
~FB Meyer