Not Our Workmanship, But His
Bill Hall
via Gospel Power, Vol. 13, No. 33, Aug. 13, 2006
"For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for
good works, which God prepared beforehand that we should
walk in them" (Ephesians 2:10).
When one is baptized he becomes a new creation, but he
is not the creation of any man. He is the workmanship of God.
He is not the workmanship of the person who coverted
him -- not primarily, anyway. Man can teach, influence, persuade, and baptize; but only God can cleanse, and give him
new life. He is God's creation -- God's workmanship. Just as
surely as no man could create an "Adam," just that surely no
man can create a new creature in Christ.
Neither is one self-made. In Christ, one does not lift himself "by his own bootstraps." Christianity is not a "do-it-yourself religion" -- not in the fullest sense. One does not effect
his own salvation through his own merit. Rather, in obedience to the gospel and faithfulness as a Christian, he places
himself as clay in God's hand, to become the work of the
divine Potter, who molds, shapes, and perfects him that he
might be fashioned in the image of His Son.
He is the workmanship of God because his salvation is "by grace...through faith," "the gift of" God (Ephesians 2:8,9). If
one's salvation were of meritorious works, he would not be
the workmanship of God. this is the primary thrust of the
passage.
The workmanship of God exists as a monument to the
greatness of the Potter; as a beautiful painting is a monument to an artist, so a mature and perfected Christian is a monument to the marvelous power of God. Such a person is a product of God's grace and exists for "the praise of His glory"
(Ephesians 1:6,12,14; 3:14-19). That God could take a Peter, a John, a Saul of
Tarsus, an Aquila, a Priscilla, a John Mark,
and mold him or her into the lovely vessel each became is a
manifestation of His greatness. That He could do the same
for people this writer has known and observed equally manifests His greatness. That He can and will do the same for me
if I will but submit myself to His care in humble obedience,
trust, and prayer is the greatest marvel of all.
The workmanship of God must be handled with care. Such a person is
special, precious, priceless to God. As one
is cautious in handling a family heirloom or rare piece of pottery fashioned by the hands of a master, so we must be cautious in our treatment of that creation which is the work of
God. "Do not destroy the work of God for the sake of food,"
Paul warned the Romans (Romans 14:20). That person toward
whose tender conscience you are showing little regard or
whose soul you are placing in jeopardy is the work of God.
Love that person. Appreciate him. Be tender toward him.
Recognize his value. Handle with care!
The workmanship of God must never be content until it is
brought to perfection. "Finish then Thy new creation,"
Charles Wesley wrote in his familiar hymn, "Love Divine." In
keeping with this, Paul could express his confidence in the
Philippian Christians, "That He who has begun a good work in
you will complete it until the day of Jesus Christ" (Philippians 1:6,7).
Only those who remain in the Potter's hands until brought
to completion and perfection become vessels of honor. All
others become marred and fit only for destruction (II Tim. 2:19-21).
Let not man, then, boast of himself. Self-righteousness
has no place in the heart of a Christian. If any man boast,"let him glory in the Lord" (I Corinthians 1:31) and "in the cross of
our Lord Jesus Christ" (Galatians 6:14). We are His workmanship.