
There is a story about a potter who shaped clay vessels. One day a young boy visited the potter’s workshop and watched in confusion as the potter placed a beautifully shaped pot into a burning kiln.
The boy cried, “Why are you hurting it? You spent so much time forming it!”
The potter smiled gently and replied, “Without the fire, it will never be strong enough to hold anything valuable. The fire doesn’t destroy it—it completes it.”
Many times, we are like that pot in the kiln. We feel the heat of trials, the pain of disappointment, or the weight of waiting, and we wonder why God allows it. Romans 8:28 reminds us that God is not wasteful.
He uses all things—the joyful, the painful, the confusing, and the unexpected—to shape us into something stronger, wiser, and more fruitful.
Joseph’s life is a powerful example. Betrayed by his brothers, falsely accused, forgotten in prison—yet through every painful moment, God was weaving purpose. In the end, Joseph could say, “You meant evil against me, but God meant it for good.”
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