234 William Street, Stayner, ON L0M 1S0
We played with playdough this past Sunday at church. It was cool and smooth and soft. I’m sure you’ve played with playdough at some time or other during your life--if not during church. But because we had just read Jeremiah 18:1-11 it seemed like a good idea for Neelah and I to make playdough Friday night and bring it to church Sunday morning so that everyone could spend some time pretending they were like the potter in that passage, shaping the clay. I encouraged everyone to shape the playclay into some symbol of love or faith while I was talking—hoping they wouldn’t get too distracted! There was a lot of shaping and re-shaping that went on in those pews (and up at the pulpit!).
I think a lot of times, we get it into our heads that as a creation of God’s, we aren’t holding up our end of the bargain and becoming as perfect a creation as we are supposed to be as faithful followers of Jesus. We know we are making mistakes no matter how closely we try to follow! We start to wonder if, someday soon, we will be tossed out like the clay cups my friend Ted told me he witnessed being tossed out the windows of a crowded train in India just like we might throw out a paper cup. (well, not out the window of course—into the proper recycling bin I would hope!) Given the state of our lives, our church, our world, we wonder if perhaps, God will just throw us out.
It’s easy to understand why we might start to think things like that. Because of the way time works, we know that we can’t go back and change things that have already happened—they are set in stone—I can’t go back and change the fact that I practically dragged my prone to motion sickness cousin Penny onto the Viking Ship the minute we arrived on her first trip to Canada’s Wonderland thus ruining her entire day! No one can go back to say good-bye now that you know it will be the last time.
And the opposite is true too—none of us can stay frozen in a perfect place—as much as I might like the day of my confirmation to have made me “good” forever, after that I still fought with my sisters and made mistakes. We know we can’t just put an hour in on a Sunday morning and call it good—we have to keep making loving choices.
But in this text from Jeremiah we can hear “Like the clay in the hand of the potter, so are you in my hand.”
And that can give us the courage we need to never give up on ourselves, or on each other. Just like play dough we are not a finished product—marred and unworthy—not even close. In fact, none of us are ever finished as long as we are living—all of us are forever on the potter’s wheel, soft and pliable and being ever shaped and formed in God’s hands. God’s hands are all over every minute and every second of our lives and they are covered with the everyday grime of what it is to be human. Ever since Jesus came into the world we have known this about God. We are chosen and loved and worthy of being worked and reworked on the potter’s wheel.
And, so, we can find hope and love and compassion and forgiveness in the words of Jeremiah—the doomiest and gloomiest of all prophets.
Some of you may know this already and other’s of you may not—but I have a tattoo just over my heart on my back—it flowed out of the tattoo I had gotten almost 20 years ago know when I was finishing my Masters of Divinity. The first tattoo was of a descending dove to remind me that it was the Holy Spirit within me that inspired my ministry. But the second tattoo was of a potter’s wheel to remind me that I am loved, chosen and whole as I am shaped by that holy spirit into a holy child of God.
Now, I’m sure most of you won’t need a tattoo to remind you of this truth of our faith. But I hope as we gather back after a summer apart to begin a new year together as a church we will remember the love of God that shapes us in every moment of our living. May that love inspire us to follow wherever it may lead. Amen.
p.s. if you find yourself forgetting, think about getting your hands on some play dough... I’d love to see pictures of your creations in the comments!
Centennial United Church
234 William St.,
Stayner, ON
L0M 1S0
Office Hours:
Tues. & Thurs. 9:00 am – 1:00 pm
Office Email:
[email protected]
Office Phone: 705-428-3711
© Copyright
Centennial United Church, Stayner