Oh friend… now you’re stepping right into the holy astonishment that makes prophets tremble, psalmists sing, angels cover their faces, and redeemed sinners fall to their knees in adoration.
Let’s walk into that wonder together.
🌟 1 — God’s Perfection Isn’t Cold; It’s Personal
When we say God is “perfect,” we’re not saying:
- flawless like a diamond
- precise like a machine
- consistent like a formula
We’re saying something far more overwhelming:
Every attribute in Him is infinitely whole, harmonized, and active in love toward His people — even when they are wayward.
That’s what melts the mind.
He isn’t perfect despite dealing with sinners.
He’s perfect in the way He deals with sinners.
🔥 2 — Scripture Itself Responds to This Question With Awe
Look at Moses, Jeremiah, Paul… none of them can describe this without exploding in praise.
Moses
Right after Israel worships a golden calf:
“The Lord, the Lord God, merciful and gracious,
long-suffering, and abounding in goodness and truth…”
Exodus 34:6
Moses is stunned because God reveals mercy at the moment Israel deserved annihilation.
Jeremiah
To a rebellious nation:
“His compassions fail not.
They are new every morning.
Great is Your faithfulness.”
Lamentations 3:22–23
Great is Your faithfulness —
not ours.
Jeremiah is blown away by the contrast.
Paul
After tracing Israel’s stubbornness and God’s patience for three chapters:
“Oh, the depth of the riches
both of the wisdom and knowledge of God!”
Romans 11:33
Paul’s brain breaks.
It’s too glorious.
💔 3 — Why Is God So Perfect in His Ways With a Wayward People?
Here’s the secret Scripture unveils:
❤️ 1. Because His love is not reactive
Human love responds.
God’s love initiates.
“I have loved you with an everlasting love.”
Jeremiah 31:3
Everlasting means:
before you sinned, before you fell, before you wandered —
I had already decided to love you.
🕊️ 2. Because His mercy outweighs your madness
Your rebellion is real.
His compassion is greater.
“He will not forsake His people,
for His great name’s sake.”
1 Samuel 12:22
He ties His reputation to your restoration.
🔥 3. Because His perfection includes patience
We think perfection means efficiency.
God reveals it as long-suffering.
“The Lord is slow to anger and great in mercy.”
Numbers 14:18
Only a perfect Being can endure an imperfect people with unwavering gentleness.
🌈 4. Because He is more committed to transformation than condemnation
Sin provokes discipline —
but discipline is not destruction.
“For the Lord disciplines the one He loves.”
Proverbs 3:12
Love doesn’t abandon the wounded.
Love kneels down and heals.
🤯 4 — The Real Explosion Comes Here:
God’s ways are perfect not because His people are obedient,
but because His character never changes.
Israel changes a thousand times.
God doesn’t move one inch.
David says it like he’s gasping:
“As for God, His way is perfect.”
Psalm 18:30
When?
Right after recounting his failures, fears, and enemies.
God’s perfection is not fragile.
It shines brightest when His people are messiest.
✨ 5 — The Cross Is the Final Answer to Your Amazement
If Israel’s history makes you wonder,
Jesus will undo you completely.
Because at the Cross:
- God’s holiness and mercy kiss (Psalm 85:10)
- Justice and compassion unite
- Wrath and forgiveness meet
- Judgment falls and salvation rises
Only a perfect God could use human rebellion as the stage
on which to display the greatest act of love the universe has ever witnessed.
Paul says this is God’s masterpiece:
“That He might demonstrate the riches of His grace
in His kindness toward us in Christ Jesus.”
Ephesians 2:7
Not in His kindness toward the righteous.
Toward us.
💥 6 — So Yes: Your Awe Is Exactly Right
How can God be so perfect?
Because He cannot be otherwise.
His perfection is not fragile.
It absorbs human weakness and transforms it into mercy’s victory.
And how can His ways be perfect with a wayward people?
Because His way is not dictated by their waywardness
but by His eternal love, His unchanging nature, and His unstoppable purpose.
That’s why you ended with 🤯
Because the only proper response is worship.