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Water color by
Jacqueline Gnott

There was a couple who took a trip to England to
shop in a beautiful antique store to celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary.
They both liked antiques and pottery, and especially teacups. Spotting an
exceptional cup, they asked, "May we see that? We've never seen a cup quite so
beautiful."
As the lady handed it to them, suddenly the teacup spoke, "You don't understand.
I have not always been a teacup. There was a time when I was just a lump of red
clay. My master took me and rolled me pounded and patted me over and over and I
yelled out, "Don't do that." "I don't like it! Let me alone." But he only
smiled, and gently said, "Not yet!"
Then WHAM! I was placed on a spinning wheel and suddenly I was spun around and
around and around. "Stop it! I'm getting so dizzy! I'm going to be sick!" I
screamed. But the master only nodded and said, quietly, 'Not yet.' He spun me
and poked and prodded and bent me out of shape to suit himself and then he put
me in the oven. I never felt such heat. I yelled and knocked and pounded at the
door. "Help! Get me out of here!" I could see him through the opening and I
could read his lips as he shook his head from side to side, saying, 'Not yet.'

When I thought I couldn't bear it another minute, the door opened. He carefully
took me out and put me on he shelf, and I began to cool. Oh, that felt so good!
"Ah, this is much better," I thought. But, after I cooled, he picked me up and
he brushed and painted me all over. The fumes were horrible. I thought I would
gag. 'Oh, please, Stop it, Stop, I cried.' He only shook his head and said, 'Not
yet!'
Then suddenly he put me back into the oven. Only it was not like the first one.
This was twice as hot and I just knew that I would suffocate. I begged. I
pleaded. I screamed. I cried. I was convinced I would never make it. I was ready
to give up. Just then the door opened, and he took me out and again placed me on
the shelf, where I cooled and waited and waited, wondering "What's he going to
do to me next?

An hour later he handed me a mirror and said, 'Look at yourself.' And I did. I
said, 'That's not me; that couldn't be me. It's beautiful. I'm beautiful!!!'
Quietly he spoke: "I want you to remember," he said, "I know it hurt to be
rolled and pounded and patted, but had I just left you alone, you'd have dried
up. I know it made you dizzy to spin around on the wheel, but if I had stopped,
you would have crumbled. I know it hurt and it was hot and disagreeable in the
oven, but if I hadn't put you there, you would have cracked. I know the fumes
were bad when I brushed and painted you all over, but if I hadn't done that, you
never would have hardened. You would not have had any color in your life. If I
hadn't put you back in that second oven, you wouldn't have survived for long
because the hardness would not have held. Now you are a finished product. Now
you are what I had in mind when I first began with you."

The moral of this story is this: God knows what He's doing for each of us. He is
the potter, and we are His clay. He will mold us and make us and expose us to
just enough pressures of just the right kinds, that we may be made into a
flawless piece of work to fulfill His good, pleasing and perfect will.
So when life seems hard, and you are being pounded and patted and pushed almost
beyond endurance; when your world seems to be spinning out of control; when you
feel like you are in a fiery furnace of trials; when life seems to "stink", try
this.
Brew a cup of your favorite tea in your prettiest tea cup, sit down and think on
this story and then, have a little talk with the Potter.
Author Unknown
It is the desire of this website to give accurate credit
to those whose work is shared.
If you are the author of the above story, kindly contact
LED
Thanks for sharing, Sue.
  



Midi playing ~ "His Precious Love Medley"
Performed by Margi Harrell
Used with permission

Watercolor of teacup by
Jacqueline Gnott
Used with permission

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