Monday, December 9, 2019

Ordinary into Extraordinary

Have you ever had a thought so fascinating that it consumes your mind and leaves you in awe? Last week I posted a link on Facebook about snowflakes. The website was loaded with micro images of delicate snowflakes. Marveling at the intricate details of the “frozen fractals”, I was left in awe and wonder. Breathtaking. Unique. Beautiful.



God takes ordinary things and does extraordinary things through them, for His glory.

This Christmas season, I have been reflecting on God’s use of ordinary objects, places, and people, to bring attention to His power. A girl. A carpenter. A small town. A stable. A feeding trough. A couple socially award outcasts called shepherds. A star.

God trusted mankind to raise His Son in a small town, with a humble family, and a common occupation of wood working. When Jesus was 30 years old, he began his public ministry (30 doesn’t seem so bad anymore, Hallelujah!). John baptized him in the river and proclaimed Jesus was the Messiah everyone was waiting for! (Since John and Jesus were cousins, I wonder if they had met each other before this?) Once in the womb, John leapt for joy when his mother Elizabeth heard Mary’s voice. Elizabeth was filled with the Holy Spirit and prophesied to Mary:

Blessed are you among women and blessed is the fruit in your womb! But who am I that the mother of my Lord would come to me? As soon as I heard your voice, the baby leapt inside my womb for joy. Blessed is she who believed that there would be a fulfillment of what was spoken to her from the Lord!

How kind of God to give Mary a sign to confirm what was spoken to her from the angel! She found her cousin Elizabeth pregnant with John, just like the angel Gabriel had told her! John was also a part of the fulfillment of prophecy. I can’t help but wonder what was going through John’s mind when Jesus came walking into the Jordan River to greet him to request his baptism.

After being baptized by John, Jesus began inviting ordinary men to follow him. Fishmen. A tax collector. A thief. He walked with them through life, taking intentional moments to teach them about the Kingdom of Heaven and what was to come. On his last night with his followers, he took bread and a cup from an ordinary meal and made it something the followers of Jesus partake in today. The bread now symbolizes Jesus’ body that was given for us, and the wine symbolizes his blood that was to be poured out for the sake of the world.

Then they took an ordinary tree and formed it into a cross. This cross, that used to be a symbol of fear and death, now stands for mercy and unconditional love.

God took an ordinary man and made him new. God now takes ordinary people and transforms them into extraordinary vessels that He empowers to bring His name glory.

“But we have this treasure in jars of clay, to show that the surpassing power belongs to God and not to us.” – 2 Corinthians 4:7


Jars of clay were used as common household items that can be easily disposed of if rendered useless. The could hold anything from important family documents to food waste. We are ordinary people and He is an extraordinary God. Who are we that He would entrust this message of hope and salvation for all of the world? 

This Christmas I encourage you to not give material things to others that will collect dust, but give a gift that you will not receive back. Give you time, attention, and love to those around you. After all, the greatest gift that God has given us is Himself.



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