SLIP
AND SLURRY
by Christine Grierson, BPed
Anyone
familiar with the art of pottery will recognize these
terms as being materials with which the potter fashions
and forms his work. The water and clay mixture produces
a malleable substance which when turned on a wheel becomes
a useful and often beautiful vessel. Clay is not a productive
material in itself, as it does not accept seed as would
a growing medium, but when formed and shaped by the skilled
and loving hands of the potter, becomes a creation essential
to carry water and food or whatever the user wants it
to do to serve his needs.
This familiar and easily understood allegory is often
used in scripture to remind us that we too are shaped
and formed to become useful and beautiful creatures of
our Creator/Father, God.
The word slip has several meanings as we all know. To
the phrase “slip of the lip,” I have added
for my computer, “slip of the finger,” and
for my memory, “slip of the mind!” One occasion
for regret is the unintentional slip we may make in conversation,
for the Lord warns us that we will be held accountable
for every idle word (Matthew 12:36). We may bitterly deplore
a mistaken word or phrase hastily or carelessly uttered,
or perhaps misconstrued by our listeners. We may deeply
repent of a harsh tone or outburst to hurt or scold a
fellow Christian or to chide a child. The Lord tells us
that the indignation of man does not accomplish the will
of God (James 1:20).
But to return to the slip and slurry of the potter. In
Jeremiah 18, we find a potter at the wheel, marring a
vessel he was working. He was able to reform the same
clay to remedy the error, making it good. This was a parallel
to God’s work with His nation Israel, marred, but
reformable. Jeremiah tells us that God instantly speaks
His intention to build, to plant or to destroy.
The scenario is then moved to God’s dealings with
Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem, who were a mixture
of many races and languages, as confirmed and illustrated
when the Holy Spirit gave the disciples the power to speak,
or to be heard, in many diverse languages by those gathered
in Jerusalem. Now we read of a very different plan, where
they are told to turn from their wicked ways but refuse
to do so, leaving and forsaking God and pursuing idol-worship.
Not liking the message of Jeremiah, they devise plots
against him, and ignore his advice. Jeremiah’s strong
pleading for justice is outlined in verses 10–23.
Chapter 19 begins with God’s command to Jeremiah
to get a potter’s bottle and take it to the kings
of Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem. After a tirade
of condemnation against their wickedness, he is told to
break the bottle before them and say “…I will
break this People and this city, as one breaks a potter’s
vessel that cannot be made whole again, and they shall
bury them in Tophet (Gehenna) …because of all the
houses upon whose roofs they have burned incense unto
all the host of heaven and have poured out drink offerings
unto other gods.”
The following chapter relates the resulting capture of
Judah to be carried into Babylon, and many to suffer and
die there. We are told that only 43,000 returned from
that captivity with Ezra and Nehemiah. Mary’s ancestors
must have returned then. Many of the descendants of that
faithful remnant were welcoming Jesus as He rode into
Jerusalem on Palm Sunday, weeping as He trod the Via Dolorosa,
and at the foot of the cross.
Those who persecuted Him, flogged Him and plotted His
Crucifixion forever blotted and stained their escutcheon
by crying “His blood be upon us and our children!”
They were and are that bottle that can never be mended.
Israel, though marred in the making, was and is reformed
by the acceptance of Redemption by Jesus Christ’s
shed blood. After the sins and transgressions of both
Houses of Israel, only the blood of Jesus could atone
and save them.
So the “clay pots” can be useful and beautiful,
and used by the Lord to convey His wonderful Word. It
is a glorious heritage that we can be brought to perfection,
to be used in His service by the Master Potter. We are
not to reproach nor complain against the Potter, but to
be sweetly submissive as was Mary when she accepted her
role as the vessel to form and nurture our precious Lord
and Savior. Remembering also that Christians are told
to submit to each other, not only wives to their own husbands.
This is oftentimes forgotten in the heat and argument
when we disagree with another.
Let us thank Him for forming us from the lowly clay and
using us for His Divine purpose, praying always that we
are fit vessels to be filled with His Holy Spirit from
above, and for His continual guidance and blessing upon
us, Amen.