On The Wheel: In the Hands of the Master Craftsman
It's Pentecost Sunday, and I thought it fitting to write about the work of the Holy Spirt.
But why? Shouldn't the church know The Spirit? Shouldn't they already be living and worshipping in the Spirit? Why are some (probably many or most) confused and uncertain when we talk about the Holy Spirit?
What I've learned is it all boils down to assurance. Assurance of His presence, assurance of our salvation. Assurance about a lot of things. People want assurances. So, it's only natural to feel uncertain, vague, or even anxious when the Holy Spirit is mentioned. We are living in the natural and talking about a supernatural power. We live by sight, by feelings, by what we can measure and control. The Holy Spirit is personal, invisible, and sovereign. He cannot be tamed or fully explained by our natural reasoning.
Yet the beauty of the gospel is this; God has not left us without assurance in the middle of the natural. While we live in these earthly bodies we can receive the assurance that we will inherit the kingdom. And have already received the Holy Spirit. This is the bridge between the natural and the supernatural. The Holy Spirit is not a distant force we must somehow reach. He is the guarantee already given. He is the down payment living inside every believer.
2 Corinthians 5:4-5
"While we live in these earthly bodies, we groan and sigh, but it’s not that we want to die and get rid of these bodies that clothe us. Rather, we want to put on our new bodies so that these dying bodies will be swallowed up by life. God himself has prepared us for this, and as a guarantee he has given us his Holy Spirit."
Why do I believe these things?
Because of the apostle's witness. Their doctrine comes by way of direct action on the part of our Lord Jesus Christ, and sealed in them by the work of the Holy Spirit. because of the apostles’ witness. Men who walked with Jesus, heard Him, saw Him, touched Him, and were personally commissioned by Him. Their message wasn’t clever myths or second-hand ideas. It was direct revelation from the risen Lord, confirmed by the Holy Spirit.
Why is this sometimes difficult for some to accept?
It is because they have eyes and ears. They can look around themselves and see many examples of wickedness and ignorance in the world and even within the church. Violence, corruption, injustice, and cruelty. You look at the church; the scandals, hypocrisy, divisions, moral failures, and ignorance. And you get to thinking, "If this message is true, and if the Holy Spirit is really at work, why does everything look so broken?"
The answer is, we are living in an unrefined world. And that's by design. God has not yet finished His refining work. The full purification, the complete removal of all evil, the final separation of wheat from weeds, and the total renewal of creation are reserved for the day of Christ’s return and the new heavens and new earth. Until then, we remain in this present age. A mixture of glory and groaning, beauty and brokenness, faith and failure.
Jesus had a few things to say about this tension. First he said the kingdom is at hand. And then he said, the kingdom is like a field where the enemy has sown weeds among the wheat. The servants want to pull the weeds immediately, but the Master says: "No…let both grow together until the harvest." Pulling them up too soon would damage the wheat. The refining and separation come at the end, not in the middle.
And the apostles learned this from Him.
2 Peter 3:9 "The Lord is not slow in keeping his promise…Instead he is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance."
But their eyes were fixed on the guarantee (the Holy Spirit) rather than the current appearance of things. The visible mess down here does not disprove the gospel. It actually validates the apostles’ diagnosis. The world is fallen, the church is still being sanctified, and only Christ can ultimately make all things new.
Like the work of a master craftsman creating fine porcelain. It takes time, planning, patience and dedication. Just as a skilled potter takes raw, unrefined clay; dirty, shapeless, full of impurities, and subjects it to intentional pressure, shaping, glazing, and intense heat in the kiln, so the Lord is at work in this unrefined world and in His people. The process is not quick. It requires time, vision, patience, and fire. What looks like mess and brokenness in the middle stages is actually part of the craftsman’s deliberate design. The clay doesn’t look like the finished vase while it’s still on the wheel or in the kiln. But the Master knows exactly what He is forming.
We can groan honestly, yet hope confidently, because we know the Craftsman is faithful and His design is perfect. 👌🏼
If you've ever watched a master craftsman create fine porcelain, such a fragile thing, you'd be amazed at the amount of detail that goes into it. He gathers ingredients from all around the natural world. Agates, clays, rice husks, feldspar, water and wood ash; and he meticulously cleans and removes the imperfections until he has the refined ingredients needed to BEGIN the process of shaping these things into something beautiful.
For me, this paints such a clear picture of how the Lord works in this unrefined world and in us. He doesn’t simply take us as we are and instantly make us flawless. He gathers the raw materials of our lives (our personalities, our backgrounds, our weaknesses, even the broken things of this fallen world) and begins the long, patient process of refining. Impurities are removed. What is useless or harmful is sifted out. Only then does the real forming begin. On the wheel, through pressure, through the fire of the kiln.
This mirrors so much of the Holy Spirit’s work in us. He convicts and cleanses (John 16:8). He sanctifies and shapes us into the image of Christ (2 Corinthians 3:18). And yet, like fine porcelain, the end result is fragile in appearance but remarkably strong once properly fired. What looks delicate carries a refined beauty and durability that raw clay could never have.
But understand this; the master craftsman does not casually throw the formed piece of clay into the kiln and walk away. He knows the fire can be unforgiving. Too hot, and the piece can crack, warp, blister, or even explode from internal pressure. Too fast, and thermal shock shatters what looked promising. Too cool or too short, and the porcelain remains weak, porous, and unable to hold its intended beauty or function.
The temperature must be raised with precision, slowly, thoughtfully. Depending on the recipe (depending on what gifts he is imparting) held at peak heat, then cooled with equal care. Some clays need higher heat to achieve strength and translucence, others require gentler treatment to preserve delicate features. The craftsman knows the unique composition of what he is forming.
It is the same with us. No two Christians living in the Spirit are fashioned and formed exactly alike. God’s refining is deeply personal. Some believers are taken through intense, prolonged heat; fiery trials that build rare strength, endurance, and translucence so the light of Christ shines clearly through them. Others receive gentler, more gradual refinement to preserve delicate features; perhaps a sensitive conscience, a quiet intercessory gift, or a tender compassion that would be damaged by overly harsh treatment.
Two preachers can preach the same message, the same exact words, yet the delivery makes the message something different, unique, maybe timely and sensitive, or maybe fireworks and energetic. Even when the content is the same (the unchanging truth of the gospel), the Holy Spirit shapes the vessel differently so the message lands in a way that fits the unique design and calling of that person.
Both are valid. Both are formed by the same Craftsman. Neither is a mistake. The difference is not error, but the intentional recipe of the Holy Spirit. This is why the church can sometimes feel confused about the Holy Spirit. We expect uniformity; same experiences, same intensity, same style, instead of recognizing the beautiful diversity of His work. The same Spirit who empowered Peter to preach with boldness on Pentecost also empowered others with wisdom, healing, prophecy, or quiet faithfulness (1 Corinthians 12:4-11). He distributes "to each one, just as he determines."
This is the thing, right here.
It's His work.
He determines.
He's the craftsman.
That’s the release. That’s the assurance. When we finally rest in the truth that the Holy Spirit is the Craftsman, the pressure lifts. We stop trying to control the temperature, judge other vessels, or demand uniformity. We simply surrender to the One who knows exactly what He is doing.
Both the bold preacher and the gentle one are valid.
Both the fiery trial and the quiet shaping are valid.
Both the loud expression and the tender whisper are valid.
The difference is not error or deficiency; it is the intentional recipe of the Holy Spirit.
Full Circle:
While we live in these earthly bodies, we can have full assurance that we will inherit the kingdom; not because we understand every stage of the process, but because the Holy Spirit Himself has been given to us as the guarantee. He is not just present in the fire. He is the Craftsman in the fire. And He is faithful. He will complete what He began in you and in me.