Tweet This

Cracked Pots


Preamble


God chooses to use women like you and me, who are imperfect broken vessels - cracked pots. This is not His default position when the 'right', more faultless person for the job just isn't available - it's His recruitment method of choice. He seeks out the broken, the least likely, the imperfect, and says "Yes, you are perfect for what I have in mind".

Introduction

There is an often-told anecdote of a poor farmer in a small village who each day would carry pots of water to his field to water it. One of the pots had a crack in it, so that when the farmer arrived at his field, the cracked pot would have lost all of its water. A well-meaning missionary watched with sad concern at this daily ritual, and commented on the futility of the farmer's efforts to get water to his crops. The farmer replied that the cracked pot was just perfect, for he had planted corn beside the path on which he walked, and as he walked each day the cracked pot would deliver just the right amount of water to the corn, and he would soon have corn growing beside the path.

Our brokenness may be seen or unseen. It may be physical, psychological, emotional, spiritual. It may be in relationships, or in a past of regrets or sadness or abuse. But God says to us "Yes, you are just perfect for what I have in mind".

4 'Pot' snapshots

We're going to consider a brief snapshot of four women in the Scriptures who were broken and imperfect pots. But firstly, so as not to be gender-exclusive, we can't ignore some men of the Scriptures whom God chose to use mightily in all their brokenness as well:
1) Sarah and her story may be in Gen 12-23. She was the wife of Abraham, the patriarch of the nation  of Israel. Her brokenness lay in her ofttimes faithlessness - she lacked trust in God, and lacked grace, kindness and godliness. She also bore the pain of childlessness.

God had made a covenant with Abraham, promising that his descendants would be more numerous than the stars in  the sky. However his wife, Sarah, was unable to have children. So in not truly believing that God was a God of miracles, Sarah told Abraham to sleep with her maidservant. In this way, in this human way, Abraham could have descendants. However when her maidservant, Hagar, fell pregnant she began treating Sarah with disrespect. Sarah's response was to treat Hagar so badly that Hagar fled into the desert to die, while all the time telling her husband that it was his fault this situation had arisen!

At a later time, angels came to their tent to give the good news that within a year Sarah would bear a child. Inside the tent Sarah laughed to herself. When confronted by the angels, who enquired why she had laughed (and disbelieved the God of miracles) Sarah denied laughing. So Sarah disbelieved God, and also lied to protect herself.

After their miracle child (Isaac) was born, Sarah again forced Abraham against his will to send Hagar and her son out into the desert to die, because she was concerned that Hagar's son was treating Isaac with scorn.

Can we see any elements of Sarah in ourselves? The jealousy; the doubting of a good and powerful God of miracles; the desperation; feeling threatened? Yet God chose Sarah to be the mother of Abraham's children, the mother of the nation of Israel. He blessed her with a miracle child, countless descendants and a special place in His salvation history.

2) Abigail's story can be found in 1 Kings 25. Her brokenness was a difficult marriage. This account is a great study in dealing with difficult people! Her husband, Nabal, is described in the Scriptures as surly and mean in his dealings; he hurls insults; no one can talk to him because he is such a wicked man; he pays back evil for good; he is a fool and folly goes with him.

Abigail is a woman of godliness and faith, who deals with Nabal with respect, courage, wisdom and integrity. She finds herself in a situation where she has to take courageous and dangerous action. She recognises the limitations of her husband, she discerns his character, and puts her life on the line to save him. She maintains her integrity and righteousness in a difficult relationship......and the ending is a fairy tale one! Read the Biblical account!

3) Hannah and her story can be found in 1 Samuel 1. Hannah's brokenness and despair are centred around her inability to have children, and the merciless way her husband's other wife deals with her. Hannah eventually became the mother of Samuel, the prophet who was the overseer of the transition from judges to kings in Israel's history. Through her experience of intense despair and cruelty she learned to hold on to God even when His blessings were not evident. She learned to worship Him in the valleys as well as on the mountain tops. She poured out her passion, her grief, her anguish to the God who hears and answers prayer. He meets her there, and she is changed. She is blessed with a child, and she offers this blessing back to God.

4) The woman of Samaria (John 4) met Jesus at the well. After a brief discussion Jesus discloses to her that he knows her story - five husbands already, and the current partner is not actually her husband. There is a story of great sadness and brokenness there, and Jesus is attuned to it. But her life profoundly changed at this point of encounter with Jesus, and she went back to her village and told everyone about this man at the well. She was the reason why many people of her village had their lives turned around - they too encountered Jesus.

Conclusion

Why does God choose to use cracked pots? When we recognise our brokenness, then we come to God empty. We know our own competence, skills, experience, and knowledge are totally inadequate, and so we throw ourselves on the adequacy of God. When we know our brokenness, our 'crackedness', we come empty and humble. God treasures a broken and contrite heart, for this is the cracked pot He can use and mould for His glory. It does not fight for its own glory.

God wants us to come to Him as a child, in total dependence and thankfulness.

Our trap is to rely on our own wisdom, competence and skills. The problem is that we then do not rely on God. Pride and self-sufficiency are blocks to an intimate relationship with God, and blocks to Him using us mightily.

God accepts us as we are - cracked pots, brokenness and all. We are unconditionally loved and accepted as we are.

God uses the brokenness of our lives to touch others, for out of our greatest pain and brokenness will come our greatest ministry.

So let's not allow our brokenness to prevent us from coming to God, but let it drive us into the arms of our Father who loves us in all our brokenness and wants to use that brokenness to honour Him, to bless us, and to bless others. Remember, the cracked pot serves a mighty purpose if it allows the Master to carry it on its path.