CitySalt Church

Celebrate Goodness
  • Upcoming
  • About
    • Services
    • Directions
    • CS Staff
    • What is Co-Pastoring
    • Contact
    • History
    • Affiliation
  • Media
    • Sunday Sermon Library
    • Salt Blog
    • Facebook
  • Ministries
    • Kids
    • Prayer
    • Kindness Fund
    • Serving
  • Give
  • Facility Rental
  • Upcoming
    • Services
    • Directions
    • CS Staff
    • What is Co-Pastoring
    • Contact
    • History
    • Affiliation
    • Sunday Sermon Library
    • Salt Blog
    • Facebook
    • Kids
    • Prayer
    • Kindness Fund
    • Serving
  • Give
  • Facility Rental

Salt Blog

  • Sunday Sermon Library
  • Salt Blog
  • Facebook
  • All
  • Aaron Friesen
  • Allie Hymas
  • Betty Fletcher
  • BibleProject
  • Britni D'Eliso
  • Chris Carter
  • Darla Beardsley
  • Denise Jubber
  • Dusty Johnson
  • Isaac Komolafe
  • Jessie Carter
  • Jessie Johnson
  • John Rice
  • Joseph Scheyer
  • Kayla Erickson
  • Kaylee Luna
  • Kim Phelps
  • Laura Rice
  • Lauren Watson
  • Lee Schnabel
  • Leona Abrahao
  • Mark Beardsley
  • Mike D'Eliso
  • Mike Wilday
  • Mollie Havens
  • Music
  • Pam Sand
  • Randi Nelson
  • Resources
  • Ruth Vettrus
  • Sara Gore
  • Sara-Etha Schnieder
  • Sarah Moorhead
  • Sarah Withrow King
  • Shelby Tucker
  • Special Announcement
  • Steve Mickel
  • Sunday Service
  • Tenisha Tinsley
  • Terry Sheldon
  • Ursula Crawford
  • Zeke Wilday

Loving Our Enemies Within | God’s Grace is Our Superpower

John Rice July 18, 2025

Imagine yourself as a beautiful, unique clay bowl when you were born. You were one of a kind. Your shape, your color, your size were all very special and you were deeply loved, appreciated and cared for by your parents. As you started to grow older you noticed that you were different from all the other kids. A few of those kids didn’t like your different qualities and they seemed jealous or afraid of you, so they called you names and excluded you from their games. This hurt. You might have started to think that they had good reason to not like you, like maybe you were unworthy of their admiration. This all had the effect of knocking a chip out of the beautiful pottery bowl that was yourself.

Sometime later, you were frustrated because you needed something that you couldn’t afford, but someone you knew had this thing and you figured that they didn’t really need it like you needed it. So you stole it. Your conscience felt a little bad about it, but you were able to push those thoughts down in your mind…at least mostly. You noticed something like a small crack in the side of your bowl.

Then someone you loved moved far away or even died. This was like a big crack in your bowl, so big that a part of your bowl broke off and shattered. Because of this loss, you felt so bad that you tried taking drugs to ease the pain and before you knew it, you felt you couldn’t live without these drugs. You were addicted and your life really started falling apart. There were more and more cracks in the beautiful bowl that once seemed so perfect. If you believed in God, you were pretty sure God had allowed all these things to happen to you because you weren’t the good person God wanted you to be. This life, and these cracks, were punishment for your imperfections and your failings. Your clay bowl was so cracked that you thought it was useless and ready for the junk pile.

But God apparently had a different plan. Rather than judge and punish you for your bad choices and painful experiences, He began to fill in all those cracks and shattered pieces, mending them so that your bowl was restored, still useful and possibly even more beautiful than before! And not only did He repair the gaps and missing pieces, He did it with the costliest materials.

This image of you as a once perfect, then broken, and finally restored clay pot is a spiritual dynamic found in the Bible…it’s called grace.

Japanese craftsmen employ an ancient technique called “Kintsugi” to repair broken clay pots and bowls. It fits with their philosophy that just because something breaks, it shouldn't be thrown away but rather restored. This is honoring the original by giving it new life. And the new bowl or pot has an extra special dimension, having been restored with precious materials like gold or silver.

The kintsugi technique reminds me of God’s working to restore us by His grace. Grace is defined as undeserved favor. We can’t restore ourselves by our willpower and strength alone. It’s a gift of God’s grace, as Paul mentions in his letter to the believers in Ephesus:

Ephesians 2:8
For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith – and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God – not by works, so that no one can boast. For we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared beforehand for us to do.

How amazing that God saves us! He restores us! He transforms us! And it not only benefits ourselves…it’s for the purpose of blessing others and to make the world a better place, “to do good works which He prepared beforehand for us to do.”

Here are some pictures of bowls restored with the Kintsugi process:

kintsugi1-1500-sq.jpg
kintsugi2-1500-sq.jpg
kintsugi3-1500-sq.jpg

Be blessed! The only thing required to have this beautiful and valuable restorative process take place in your life is to receive the grace God is pouring into you. Look for it!


About the Author

John lives in Pleasant Hill with his dog, Gunnar, and a multitude of guests who enjoy the peace and beauty of the Cascade foothills. With three children and three grandchildren all living in Oregon, he is continually blessed with their company and the good food that always accompanies their get-togethers!

In John Rice Tags Loving Our Enemies Within, Cracks, Kintsugi, Restore, Valuable, grace
Comment

Sidebar Title (H3)

Morbi leo risus, porta ac consectetur ac, vestibulum at eros. Curabitur blandit tempus porttitor. Curabitur blandit tempus porttitor. Vestibulum id ligula porta felis euismod semper. Vivamus sagittis lacus vel augue laoreet rutrum faucibus dolor auctor. Fusce dapibus, tellus ac cursus commodo, tortor mauris condimentum nibh, ut fermentum massa justo sit amet risus.

*This sidebar is displayed on all blog pages. It will render on both the list and item views of each blog you create.

email facebook-unauth
  • Home
  • Directions
  • Sermon Library
  • Give
  • Volunteer Interest Form

CitySalt  | PO Box 40757 Eugene OR 97404 | (541) 632-4182 | info@citysalt.org

Copyright 2023, all rights reserved.

CitySalt Church

Celebrate Goodness

CitySalt Church | 661 East 19th Avenue, Eugene, OR, 97402, United States

email facebook-unauth