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My kids are obsessed with surprise eggs. These overpriced trinkets promise to house a priceless treasure within. In reality, you find a ten-cent gum-ball machine prize wrapped in—I kid you not—900 layers of plastic.
Dashing out of Walmart as if it was on fire, my kids run to the car and frantically open them before we even make it home. Hoping to discover a precious gem, every time they’re disappointed! The toy is spotted several days later in the backseat along with the hardened Mc’Donald’s fry, crushed under the car mat.
We feel this way about life sometimes. We frantically anticipate a new season, a relationship, a school, a job—only to be let down. It turns out, the experience wasn’t all we had imagined it to be.
I encountered this phenomena as a new mom. I still remember the long, silent car ride home from Margaret William’s Developmental Center. Like storm clouds looming up ahead, I saw the diagnosis coming. I hoped by some act of God, we could escape the downpour. To no avail, my three-year-old son was diagnosed with severe autism.
The worst part? My husband and I had driven this same highway once before. We had endured the same swell of emotions and the same silent car ride home. We had witness the same storm clouds hanging over our life four years earlier when my daughter was diagnosed with severe autism.
My introduction to motherhood had been the worst eight years of my life.
It’s hard to write this down for the world to read. Yet like my kids disenchantment after unwrapping their “treasures”, I felt as if I had been ripped off.
For a season of time, I was angry at God. I knew God had not caused my little ones to struggle with a neurological disorder, yet I could not understand why He hadn’t prevent it. I believed that children were a blessing from the Lord—but at the time—my life felt more like a curse.
Yet God is less concerned with our lives being neatly packaged product and more concerned with the prize inside.
God allowed the pain in my life to humble me. And that’s when His strength became apparent—when I got out of the way. The death of my dreams, somehow quickened His life within me. I stopped boasting about my success and began sharing my failures. And when I did, something amazing happened: people began to witness God shining through my broken, messed up, stressed-to-the-max, dysfunctional life.
2 Corinthians 4:6-7 states, “We now have this light shining in our hearts, but we ourselves are like fragile clay jars containing this GREAT TREASURE. This makes it clear that our great power is from God, not from ourselves.”
Did you catch that? God was the original mystery egg creator! The prize inside our fragile, ordinary lives is His power, His glory, His love. The Bible says, the Holy Spirit dwells in us. This great treasure is not kept under lock and key in a museum or a bank vault. Instead, the God of the universe, parks his car and hangs his hat in my heart!?
And how is this prize revealed to the world? It is through the unadorned clay pot of my ordinary life. Clay pots and jars were common and used daily in Biblical times. The Greek word for clay is ostrakinos, which meant pottery shards. The fragile, brittle nature of clay utensils caused them to break easily. Oftentimes, a potter’s floor was covered in shards of clay. But rather than sweeping them aside and throwing them in the trash, the potter carefully collected the broken pieces one-by-one. He crushed them and mixed them with water, and was able to reuse these shards again and again.
You're never too broken to be used by God.
The Christian life is a paradox. The “treasure” of God’s glory within us becomes increasingly brighter, as our external life remains an ordinary clay pot.
And it’s the broken areas of our lives that display his glorious light the brightest.