Bible Society of South Africa
Xanthe Hancox

Blessed assurance – Day 8

Have thine own way

Bible text(s)

Jeremiah 18

2“Go down to the potter's house, where I will give you my message.” 3So I went there and saw the potter working at his wheel. 4Whenever a piece of pottery turned out imperfect, he would take the clay and make it into something else.

Jeremiah 18:2-4GNBOpen in Bible reader

Adelaide Pollard was an American hymn writer with a dream – she wanted to go to Africa as a missionary. Unfortunately, she was unable to raise the funds needed to make the journey. Greatly discouraged, she attended a prayer service one evening and as she sat there, she overheard an elderly woman pray, “It really doesn’t matter what you do with us, Lord, just have your own way with our lives”.

The words sank in. Adelaide went home and meditated on the old woman’s prayer and on the Bible text in Jeremiah 18:3-4. As a result, she wrote a hymn which millions have sung:

Have Thine own way, Lord!
Have Thine own way!
Thou art the potter; I am the clay.
Mould me and make me after Thy will,
While I am waiting, yielded and still.

Like Adelaide, we so often forget we’re the clay, not the potter. Paul reminds us in Romans 9:20, “A clay pot does not ask the man who made it, ‘Why did you make me like this?’” God moulds us, shapes us and forms us into the vessel he wants us to be. It’s not an easy process. Being moulded and changed into a vessel that can be used for God’s work is painful, but it is necessary.

Shortly before World War I, Adelaide did reach Africa. However, the war forced her to retreat to Scotland. After the fighting was over, she returned to the United States where, despite failing health, she preached in New England.

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