Every man knows himself to have come short of moral perfection, and, in proportion to his experience of the world, recognizes the fact that every other man has come short of it also.
The principle of reverence finds its only adequate gratification in the contemplation of moral perfection.
Moral perfection is inconceivable where personality and volition are not.
He has attained the highest degree of moral perfection, and is nevertheless without pride, knowing that what he is, is the necessary result, of the place which he must occupy in the chain.
Moral certainty, then, is predicable only of moral perfection, and predicable in degrees according to the dignity and excellency of the being.
If infinite wisdom and goodness are the highest form of moral perfection, as indeed their very names imply, then all the necessary consequences of these must partake of their nature.
God could have made Euclid a farrago of lies, and Satan a model of moral perfection.
Moral perfection can be attained, but cannot be created; God can make a being capable of moral action, but not a being with all the fruits of moral action garnered within him.
Of all the attributes which the understanding assigns to God, that which in religion, and especially in the Christian religion, has the pre-eminence, is moral perfection.
But I cannot have the idea of moral perfection without at the same time being conscious of it as a law for me.
On the whole, it admonishes a system of moral perfection.
To a man like Winthrop, the heart of his creed was that man's true aim is moral perfection and a living relation with a Divine Lover.
After a few vagaries and some wholesome buffeting, he determined that "moral perfection" was the only satisfying aim.
What distinguished and dignified the Jewish belief was that it attributed all such interventions to a single deity who embodied the highest moral perfection, instead of to a mixed multitude representing evil as well as good impulses.
The thirst for "moral perfection" inspired and ruled his life.
It was about this time that Franklin formed the bold and difficult project of arriving at moral perfection.
It would have been well for the moralist of later years to have remembered this statement when he made up his mind to contract the habit of moral perfection.
If men are under moral obligation, and God is a being of moral perfection, he must regard their unfaithfulness with disapproval.
I conceive of it, then, as manifesting the last degree of moral perfection in the Holy One of God; and believe that, in thus being an expression of character, it has its primary and everlasting value.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "moral perfection" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.