Zyph, you ask an extremely important question. Which is great. It means you are willing to let truth be truth, and that you truly seek to understand it. Too often we try to force truth to agree with our view of it, instead of changing our view to agree with the truth.
As I understand it, moral perfection is a gift we receive the moment we completely surrrender ourselves to Jesus. Depending on the person it might take many months to many years to make this commitment. Many never do.
Once we come to the place where we would rather die than to knowingly cling to some pet sin we receive the gift of moral perfection. It's not something we work at until we finally get it right. It's a free gift, as free as salvation itself.
Since it is a free gift it in no way depends on our ability to achieve it. It has nothing to with our individual weaknesses or former imperfections. Being perfect has nothing to do with who we were before we received it as a gift. We don't achieve moral perfection, rather we receive it as a free gift.
Although we are born again morally perfect we not born again morally mature. We are babes in Christ. We begin at conversion where Christ began at conception. And just as Jesus matured from childhood to manhood, so to we must grow in grace, maturing in the fruit of the Spirit.
As long as we are walking in the Spirit and mind of the new man we are just as morally perfect as was Jesus. All of the promises of perfection are true of the new man. As long as we are in the mind of the new man we are experiencing the gift of moral perfection.
But should we resurrect the mind of the old man and revert back to sin we are no longer experiencing the promises of moral perfection. At this point, we must accept the gift of repentance which empowers us to confess and forsake our sin, which in turn gives Jesus the legal right to pardon us and to restore us back to the mind of the new man.
The mind of the new man does not die every time we revert back to the mind of the old man. As long as we quickly return to the new man mind very little is lost. We pick back up right where we left off. We are not reconverted everytime we bounce back and forth between the new and old man mind.
Conversion happens when we receive the sinless mind of the new man. This conversion deepens as we mature in the fruit of the Spirit, but we are not literally converted anew every day. When Ellen White says we must be converted every day, I take it to mean we must maintain our conversion every day. Which is similar to Paul's - "I die daily."
We do not mature evenly across the board. Each person is different. One might mature more rapidly in this gift, and another in that. But all of us when we are converted receive all the fruit of the Spirit. It's just that some mature faster than others.
Again, we are not born again morally mature. Yes, we are born again morally perfect, that is, morally complete, which is to say we possess all the fruit of the Spirit at the moment we receive the sinless seed of the new man. From that moment on we must grow and mature in same manner Jesus did.
We may find ourselves in and out of the old man, back and forth between sin and righteousness, but this doesn't prove us unconverted. People who have never been born again do not have the option of bouncing between the new and old man because they haven't ever received the gift of the new man mind.
Christians who struggle with wondering if they have ever been born again need only ask themselves - Am I clinging to any known moral defect of character? Am I making excuses for my failures, or am I claiming the promises of God? Am I consumed with my failures, or am I keeping my eyes on Jesus?
If a person can answer these kinds of questions in harmony with the Word of God, then they have every right to claim 1 John 5:13. Walking in the Spirit and mind of the new man means keeping our eyes on Jesus while claiming the promises of God. So long as we do this we are morally perfect in the fullest sense of the promise.
What do you think?