The Problem with Living Clay
The Bible compares us to living clay and states the Lord is our Potter. But unfortunately, living clay has desires and opinions. The Lord gave us intelligence and free will. But because He generally won’t force us to go His way—sorry Jonah—we often successfully resist His fingers. It’s impossible to know what Jesus wants to shape us into and sometimes the process is uncomfortable.
Trust in the Potter’s goodness has to develop within our hearts before we become soft living clay in His hands.
Making Your Own Clay
The clay that potters use is a type of soil often found by rivers. Most artists buy all their pottery supplies, but a few purists like to grab a shovel and dig out their own clay…
Refining the clay into a usable form takes several days. First, damp clay is dried in the sun. Next, the potter crushes all the dirt clots into fine powder. Using plenty of water, he or she creates a slurry with the clay and pours it through a series of screens to remove twigs, small stones and bits of grass. Afterwards the excess water is gently evaporated by the sun. This process creates clay of the right texture and softness to mold objects by hand or throw pots on the potter’s wheel.
The Divine Potter
The Scriptures often use the analogy of a potter and his clay, to talk about how God shapes and molds His people.
Yet you, Lord, are our Father. We are the clay, you are the potter; we are all the work of your hand. (Isaiah 64:8 NIV)
The Holy Spirit’s goal for each of us is Christ-likeness. He wants us to mirror Jesus’ response toward every person and in every situation. Of course, because we are “living clay,” we can either help or hinder the divine Potter’s work.
In fact, if we are truly determined to, we can remain ugly, unhappy, shapeless “lumps of clay” for years.
But I wouldn’t recommend it; God’s plans for me have always been better than my own.
He Shapes “Living Clay”
There is nothing mystical about how God heals old emotional wounds, confronts our sin, and changes us into true godly servants. As we walk with Him, He’ll address every scar, sin and character flaw we have. Our part in the process is to be obedient to the Holy Spirit’s commands and promptings.
Reluctantly Obedient
I’ve found the Holy Spirit to be very practical. When I came to know Jesus as my Savior and Lord, my life reflected a horrible mixture of arrogance and low self-esteem. The Holy Spirit immediately started addressing both issues. For instance, He started convicting me to go and apologize to people I’d hurt and admit I was wrong. Aggggggh! Talk about painful! I’d stomp off, irritated and reluctant and mumble, “I’m sorry” several times a week.
Luckily, grumpy, bad-tempered obedience is still…obedience. Even though my fleshly nature pitched an emotional fit each time, I still reaped the benefits God intended.
Freed From a Stronghold of Pride
Apologizing is terribly humbling. If you’ve never suffered from the sin of pride, you might not be aware that proud people don’t apologize—ever! Yet just obeying God in that small way started to break me free of a lifelong sin
And I soon discovered having a humbler heart and mind brought new freedom and peace to my soul. So, am I a humble person now, totally free of the sin of pride? Nope. But I am light-years ahead of where I was. At least now when the ugly sin of pride starts rising up, I recognize it.
The healing of my bad self-image came a different way; through meditating on the Word of God.
The Hidden Power of God’s Word
Looking back, I had a key advantage as a young Christian. From the beginning, I was taught that the Holy Scriptures were divinely inspired. So I took what the Bible said very seriously.
Over the years, the Holy Spirit has used bible passages to give me a deeper understanding of God’s nature. He has guided, corrected, comforted and rebuked me with scripture too.
In fact, the author of Hebrews speaks of the inherent power of God’s written Word.
For the word of God is alive and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, it penetrates even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow; it judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart. (Hebrews 4:12 NIV)
The Potter’s Healing Touch
Did I mention my damaged self-worth? My parents often affirmed me—but the kids at school seldom did. I was socially awkward. Unpopular. One of the last people to get picked for anything.
So when I came to Christ, I had no sense of being valued by the Lord. I truly believed I was just part of the “Michigan quota to get saved” that year.
Two years after I came to know Christ, I lived in Minneapolis one summer, studying biblical doctrines at a Navigator Christian training program. My team leader, Jan, saw my wounded self-image and began having me meditate on certain scriptural verses about God’s love. One verse in particular stood out and I memorized it.
Because you are precious in my eyes,
and honored, and I love you,
I give men in return for you,
peoples in exchange for your life. (Isaiah 43:4 RSV)
Let me share with you the understanding the Holy Spirit gave me about this verse.
“Because you are precious in my eyes…”
I am special in God’s eyes, just because He decided to count me as special.
“…and honored, and I love you…”
The Lord loves me—because He decided to.
“…I give men in return for you, peoples in exchange for your life.”
Jesus didn’t exchange other people for me. Instead He gave Himself to ransom me back from the enemy.
The wounds in my soul healed because I did something very simple and very biblical.
Meditating on the Holy Scriptures is Life-Changing
When I soaked my mind with the scriptures about my worth in God’s eyes, I changed inwardly. Over time, the Holy Spirit moved that truth from my head down into my heart. Instead of bland mental agreement,
I’m now cemented in the certainty that God loves me personally.
And He enjoys me too.
Today, I deeply understand how precious I am to God. I’ve been handpicked to spend eternity as His daughter. I didn’t do anything to earn His love and I can’t ever do anything to lose it.
Three Types of “Living Clay”
There are three types of “living clay” and each category of believer has a different working relationship with the Potter. The good news is because we are “living clay,” we can change our response to the Potter’s shaping hand.
1) Stiff Living Clay-The fewer experiences you have with God, the more you struggle to trust Him. I believe almost all baby Christians start out as “stiff living clay;” I certainly did. Using the scriptures, the Holy Spirit often challenged me to move outside my comfort zone and step out in faith. At first, I tended to be self-protective. When negative emotions flared up, I responded to my fears and anxieties. So I often resisted the Potter’s attempts to mold me.
2) Soft Living Clay-These believers are very soft in the Potter’s hands; He can sculpt these Christians easily, in new ways. Christ-followers who are “soft clay” often have come to trust the Lord in a deeper way, because they’ve experienced His goodness. They’ve blindly obeyed the Holy Spirit’s promptings before, and found Him be faithful. There’s a trust in the Lord which has deepened and grown, out of the believer’s personal experience.
3) Gravel Filled Clay-These believers tend to be very nice people. But they refuse to be “sifted” by the Word of God. Unfortunately, having dismissed the Bible as “just another book, written by men,” they reject any verse or spiritual truth they don’t understand or agree with.
So the lies planted within our culture by the enemy—the gravel, bits of grass and stray twigs—remain embedded in this third type of “living clay.”
Because there is no divine standard of truth to measure themselves by, these believers are left to determine what’s good or evil and how they should live their lives.
This living clay “shapes” itself and the image it comes up with frequently resembles whatever the current culture proclaims is “good.”
Sometimes they even seek to shape God in their own image, proclaiming that He approves of everything they do. Unfortunately they’ve forgotten a key truth.
He’s the Potter.
We are the clay.
All Images from Pixabay.com.