Our Daily Bread: Lead Like the ShepherdChikamu
From Broken to Beautiful
We ourselves are like fragile clay jars containing this great treasure. -2 Corinthians 4:7
I stood in line at the market, noting all the other exhausted moms around me.
For the past few weeks, I’d been pondering an invitation to apply for a leadership role in an international ministry for moms. At first, I had laughed at the thought. I’d never even been pregnant. Our kids came through adoption. Besides that, I’d grown up in a dysfunctional family.
Surely, I wasn’t qualified.
As I prayed, however, God reminded me that every mom struggles with inadequacy. Then I sensed Him nudging me to offer up my broken deficits, allowing Him to transform them into His offering of beauty. Through God’s redemptive work, my brokenness could make me a better leader.
God understands the sense of disqualification that comes from brokenness.
Writing to the church in Corinth, the apostle Paul rearranges our thinking about who’s responsible for transforming lives. “We don’t go around preaching about ourselves. We preach that Jesus Christ is Lord, and we ourselves are your servants for Jesus’ sake,” he said (2 Corinthians 4:5). He noted, “We now have this light shining in our hearts, but we ourselves are like fragile clay jars containing this great treasure” (v. 7).
God reveals His light, hope, and power through the cracks of our brokenness and invites us to steward His redemptive work in our lives into the lives of others—including those we lead.
Elisa Morgan
What tempts you to believe you’re disqualified from God’s service? How has He redeemed your negative experiences?
Dear God, please take my broken deficits and make them an offering of beauty to reveal Your power and purposes.
Rugwaro
About this Plan
Discover timeless truths about life and leadership with 10 devotions from Our Daily Bread so you can serve God well in whatever He has called you to do. Grow in your leadership with more related resources from Our Daily Bread Ministries.
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