“Then I went down to the potter’s house, and, behold, he wrought a work on the wheels. And the vessel that he made of clay was marred in the hand of the potter: so he made it again another vessel, as seemed good to the potter to make [it].” (Jer 18:3-4 AV)
I know this passage refers to the reconciliation of Israel to Jehovah God at the start of the millennial reign of Christ. But it is a good picture of what happens to the believer upon receiving Christ as Savior. We do have to be careful here in that we don’t over-apply the details. God made everything and called it good. It was because of man’s sin that the clay is marred. From Cain and Abel to every person created, we were made in the image of God and in the image of Adam. We have a nature to sin which we inherited from Adam. This does not suggest God is accountable for our wickedness. Or, putting it another way, that we are marred. We are sinners by nature and by choice. The LORD may have made us with the capacity to choose sin, but we are the ones who choose it. Because of our human nature, we are flawed. We are a lump of clay on the Potter’s wheel that is flawed by default. Yet the Potter who created a flawed lump of clay can reform it unto perfection. In short, what we once were we no longer are. The Potter makes what is bad into something that is good.
Watching a potter is fascinating. Many years ago, I would watch pottery classes from afar. During the summer, our city had day camps for children. I attended one as a student, but then as a worker. It was held at a large recreation center. The center had an ice rink, tennis courts, and extensive fields. At the top of the property was a repurposed playhouse. That was what we called a building that was used as a small theater for live plays. On the bottom floor, there were several studios. There was one for painting. Another for yarn work. Then there was the pottery studio. It was on the backside of the building and on the first floor. So, a few summer afternoons would find me sitting under a locust tree and watching the potters work their clay projects. I was fascinated by how they manually turned their table. It was more than interesting how they spun the clay and shaped it with their fingers and added water to keep the clay pliable. Every once is a while the potter didn’t like the results so he or she would reduce the project to a lump and begin anew. It was intriguing how the potter could take a clay project that had succumbed to kinetic energy and became disfigured and reshape it into a masterpiece. The potter may have had to restart a few times, but in the end it was a piece worthy of display.
God doesn’t have to restart us more than once. When Jesus is our Savior and the Holy Spirit resides within, the project is well on its way to perfection. The old lump is transformed. The old project no longer exists. The touch of the Master Potter reshapes the clay into something beyond comprehension. The Bible promises us that we will be like Christ. We will be transformed into His holy image. We may not possess the physical attributes of our Savior, but we will possess His moral attributes. We will be a mirror image of our Savior, perfect and without sin! When the lump is thrown back on the table and spun once again, what comes forth will not resemble what once was. Praise the LORD that you and I are not the same lump, nor will we be ever again!