’ve been asking the Holy Spirit to come and fill me, to form me, and that I would increasingly become more open to what He has to offer. I’d like to share some of my thoughts in the hope that they would be an encouragement to us all to let God form and fill us.
2 Corinthians 4:7 says
“But we have this treasure in jars of clay to show that this all surpassing power is from God and not from us.”
The treasure that Paul is referring to in this verse is our faith in Jesus and the eternal hope we find in Him. The all surpassing power belongs to and is God, not fragile clay jars. Later in verse 16, Paul writes, “Therefore we do not lose heart. Though outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being renewed day by day.”
It is our internal renewal through our faith in Jesus and our perpetual willingness to receive and encounter more of the Holy Spirit that is our treasure.
I want to be very clear that I am not an expert in ceramics, but I’ve seen movies and I know how to use Google. From limited research, pottery pieces all start as wet formless lump of clay. The potter “throws” it on their wheel, molding it, stretching, and pressing the clay until it takes shape. Then the piece is cooked in a kiln that is very very hot so that the clay is strengthened. I’ve often heard this compared to how God forms us and how our trials strengthen us like how the kiln hardens the clay. I think the risk in this analogy is that it can lead us to hardened hearts and a fixed structure.
What if we were meant to stay wet and moldable? What if we let God continue to form us in every season?
If we agree with Paul that we’re being renewed day by day, then our formation comes from the molding of the clay by our Father, and the filling of the internal space by the Holy Spirit. When we invite the Holy Spirit into our lives, it’s not a measuring contest of how much Holy Spirit you have, It’s a reflective question of how are you and where are you inviting the Holy Spirit to fill your life?
The image that has been dwelling in my mind is that of a loving Father shaping the clay on the throwing wheel while the Holy Spirit fills the jar forming the inside space. The end result is a clay jar that when gazed upon, looks increasingly more like Jesus.
My prayer for all of us is that we become more aware of the Great Potter and the ways he is uniquely forming us. And with that formation, we allow and invite the Holy Spirit to come and fill the internal space so that when we encounter others, they may encounter Christ in us and that He would be glorified.
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