Limitations frustrate. But they also bear a reminder that sets free. Before I’m anything else, before I’m a doctor, a daughter, a friend, I am dust. Shaped of mud, a Hand-spun clay jar at once unique and easily broken. I am not built to carry the weight of the world. Another does that. I am made only to bear the light that is placed within me.
I’m dust. But not just any dust. Loved dust. The Heart that dreamed you, the Hand that shaped me, doesn’t forget our Breath-filled-clay beginnings. He doesn't forget that though we bear the dignity and glory of Image-bearers, we still wear the frailty of dust. He carries his fragile treasure gently, care-fully. In my transience and vulnerability, I discover myself loved. Forever.
This morning the reminder of my loved-ness came through a changed class schedule which fits my body’s current demands. Thank you, Gentle Potter, for loving these bits of dust in such tender and practical ways!
As a father has compassion for his children,
so the LORD has compassion for
those who fear him.
For he knows how we were made;
he remembers that we
are dust.(Psalm 103:13-14 NRSV)
Our days on earth are like grass;like wildflowers, we bloom and die.The wind blows, and we are gone—as though we had never been here.But the love of the Lord remains(Ps 103:15-17 NLT)
forever with those who fear him.
May you, too, in the midst of today’s challenges, be reminded that you are loved dust.
Carolyn
(You may also appreciate the echoes of God's faithfulness in our very evident vulnerability in Psalm 102)