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Monday, February 3, 2014

Brown's Daily Word 2-3-14

Good morning and praise the Lord.  For our friends around the globe, the famous and historic Super Bowl between the Denver Broncos and the Seattle Seahawks was played here in America the Beautiful.  It is an historic occasion.  The national anthem was sung by Renee Fleming, who often sings in Handel's Messiah.  Her rendition of the National Anthem was outstanding and superb.  The underdog Seahawks trounced the usually formidable Broncos.   Yesterday, an outstanding Oscar winning actor was found dead.. dying a tragic death.   The formidable  and almost unbeatable football team was trounced. 
    I am reflecting that we are all  earthen vessels...  Often the Godless culture thinks that we humans are made of steel, but in 2 Corinthians 4, Paul began verse 7 by claiming, "we have this treasure in jars of clay."  Instead of "jars of clay," some translations read "clay pots" or "earthenware vessels."  When I was growing up in India we used pottery for common household use.  Clay pottery was the most common material for cookware, dishes, washbasins, and storage in the first century.  Clay pots kept liquid cool and slowed the evaporation process.  Clay was easy to obtain and work with.  If a pot broke, you could make or buy another cheaply and easily.  Sometimes people stored their valuables in jars of clay, assuming that nobody would think of looking in something so ordinary to find anything of value.  If you've ever stuck cash in a sock drawer, you get the idea.

    In reality we Christians like jars of clay.  First of all, clay pots were very ordinary, in common usage everywhere, especially in the homes of peasants and common people.  Wealthy people used more exotic materials, such as ivory, marble, glass, or fine wood, but regular people used clay pots.  I suppose it would be like saying today, "we have this treasure in baggies."  Second, jars of clay were fragile. Compared to marble, ivory, or even wood, clay didn't last.  Since it was so cheap, no one really expected it to.  People used a pot for a while, and when it got too chipped or cracked to use, or when it fell and shattered, they simply got another one.

    Paul created a great juxtaposition of ideas.  God has taken this great treasure, the life of Christ, and placed it in people like you and me, who are as common and fragile as clay pots.  God stores his treasure in fragile containers—like us—to display his life-giving power.  That way, it is clear that whatever we accomplish is done only by God's power.  Paul was often on the receiving end of criticism, slander, rejection, and persecution, yet somehow the gospel was spread through him so that the church was established throughout the known world.  The only explanation was that God must have been working through him!

    It is written "We are hard-pressed on every side, but not crushed... We're perplexed, but not in despair."  We are reminded that the Lord never promised us immunity from the hurts and hardships of life.  If anything, following Christ makes things more complicated and leaves us more vulnerable to hostility and heartache. The most obvious evidence of the presence of God in our lives isn't that we escape hardship, but that we overcome hardship.  If we are feeling hard pressed, perplexed, picked on, or knocked down, it doesn't necessarily mean that we are doing something wrong.  On the contrary, it probably means we are right where we are supposed to be.  God doesn't take pleasure in our hardship, nor does he afflict us with pain simply to see how we will handle it.  However, it is true that every time we get knocked around without breaking, we show the world we have something special inside us—the life of Christ.  As long as that's true, we're unbreakable.

In Christ,

 Brown

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