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God Wants His Best for You
E.A. Johnston
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0:00 7:41
E.A. Johnston

God Wants His Best for You

E.A. Johnston · 7:41

E.A. Johnston teaches that God desires to shape and transform believers into His best vessels through surrender and yielding to His will.
In this devotional sermon, E.A. Johnston explores the biblical metaphor of the potter and the clay from Jeremiah 18, emphasizing God's desire to shape believers into vessels fit for His glory. Through personal stories and the testimony of F.B. Meyer, Johnston challenges listeners to fully surrender to God's will, trusting Him to transform their lives despite past marredness. This message encourages a heartfelt commitment to spiritual yielding and growth in Christ.

Full Transcript

Many years ago, when I was a younger man, my wife and I were married in the small mountain town of Hot Springs, Arkansas. And while we were there on our honeymoon, we visited an old-fashioned pottery store where you'd pick out a coffee mug or a bowl that you liked in the gift shop. Then you would be taken to the back of the store to a workshop where the owner of the shop would sit at a pottery wheel.

And you would stand there and watch him make that item as he formed it out of a lump of clay. He would stretch it and smooth it and shape it as that wheel turned round and round, making a new thing. For years, I had my morning coffee out of that mug made by the potter that special, memorable day.

In the book of Jeremiah, in chapter 18, we read about the potter and the clay. The word which came to Jeremiah from the Lord saying, Arise and go down to the potter's house, and there I will cause thee to hear my words. Then I went down to the potter's house, and behold, he wrought a work on the wheels, and the vessel that he made of clay was marred in the hand of the potter.

So he made it again. Another vessel has seemed good to the potter to make it. I will stop there, friends.

As a parent, you want the very best for your children. Why, you'll sacrifice just about anything to ensure you can help them to become the best they can be in life. God the Father wants us to be the best we can be for our usefulness and for his glory.

But life happens. Sin happens. Events happen that shape us and bend us in the wrong way and tries we may to straighten ourselves out.

Often it's a lost cause. It's beyond us. But what we cannot do, God can.

He can make us better if we truly desire for that change. It is when we stop fighting him in his will for us, and we get to the place in our life where we are willing to yield ourselves to his perfect will for us, and we submit to those potter's hands for our own good and for his own glory. A lump of clay can often be too stiff to work with or you could have a stone in it that needs to be removed before it can be placed back on the wheel to be made again.

I want to share a story with you, friends, that's always meant a lot to me. It's about the British minister F.B. Meyer where he told of an event in his life that changed his entire ministry. He'd been an average pastor until he met C.T. Studd and he saw something in the young man that he didn't have.

It was the reality of Christ in the life. And he asked C.T. Studd how to get what he had and he asked F.B. Meyer a question. He said, have you given yourself right up to God? And F.B. Meyer winced for there was an area in his life he had kept back from God.

Well, here now, friends, are the words of F.B. Meyer relating his experience. There was one point where my will was entrenched. I thought I would do something with Christ that night which would settle it one way or the other.

I knelt in my room and gave Christ the ring of my will with the keys on it but kept one little key back, the key of a closet in my heart, in one back story in my heart. And he said to me, are they all here? And I said, all but one. What is that, said he.

It is the key of a little cupboard, said I, in which I've got something which thou needest not interfere with. It is mine. Then, as he put the keys back into my hand, he seemed to be gliding away to the door.

He said, my child, if you cannot trust me with all, you do not trust me at all. I cried, stop, and he seemed to come back. And holding the little key in my hand, in thought I said, I cannot give it, but if thou will take it, thou shall have it.

He took it, and within a month from that time he had cleared out that little cupboard of things. Well, that's the end of his story, friends, and that brings us back to our text of the potter and the clay. Am I ready to ask God to put me upon his will and make me again? Am I ready to yield myself to him? He does the work.

I do the yielding. Let me ask you, friend, are you ready to get serious with God and turn yourself entirely over to him in his will for your life? God wants only his very best for us. Let us pray.

Oh, great God in heaven, I come to you now in the name of the dear son, Jesus, who shed his blood on Calvary for a sinner like me. My life has come short of what I wanted to be in you, Lord. I want you to be the best.

I want to be the best. I can be all the time for you, Lord. Jesus, make me the best I can be so you can use me more.

Oh, Lord, I want to do great things for you. I want you to do great things through me. I'm a marred piece of clay, marred by sin, scarred by life, spoiled by self.

Put me upon your potter's wheel and smooth out the rough areas of my life that hinder my usefulness to thee. Bend me, shape me, and fashion me into a fit instrument that you can use for your glory. I pray these things in the strong name of Jesus.

Amen.

Sermon Outline

  1. I. The Potter and the Clay Illustration
    • Personal story of pottery and its symbolism
    • Jeremiah's vision of the potter shaping the clay
    • God's desire to remake and restore
  2. II. God's Desire for Our Best
    • God as a loving Father wanting our best
    • Life's hardships can mar us but God can restore
    • The importance of yielding to God's will
  3. III. The Story of F.B. Meyer and Surrender
    • F.B. Meyer's encounter with C.T. Studd
    • The struggle of giving God full control
    • The breakthrough in total surrender
  4. IV. Call to Personal Commitment
    • Self-examination of readiness to yield
    • Prayer of surrender and transformation
    • Invitation to trust God with all areas of life

Key Quotes

“God the Father wants us to be the best we can be for our usefulness and for his glory.” — E.A. Johnston
“If you cannot trust me with all, you do not trust me at all.” — E.A. Johnston
“Put me upon your potter's wheel and smooth out the rough areas of my life that hinder my usefulness to thee.” — E.A. Johnston

Application Points

  • Examine your heart and identify any areas you are withholding from God.
  • Pray daily for God to shape and use you according to His will.
  • Trust God’s process even when life’s challenges seem to mar your progress.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does the potter and clay metaphor mean?
It symbolizes God's sovereign power to shape and mold believers into vessels fit for His purpose.
Why is surrender important in the Christian life?
Surrender allows God to work in us, removing obstacles and shaping us according to His perfect will.
Who was F.B. Meyer and why is his story relevant?
F.B. Meyer was a British minister whose story illustrates the struggle and blessing of fully yielding to God.
How can I know if I am ready to yield to God?
By honestly examining your heart and willingness to trust God with every part of your life and submitting to His will.
What practical steps can I take to be shaped by God?
Pray for God’s guidance, confess areas of resistance, and actively seek to obey His leading daily.

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