You will remember the much...
Illustration
You will remember the much-traveled story of the Oriental teacher who scooped up a grasshopper and cupped it in his huge fist in such a manner that it could not be seen. "Is the grasshopper alive or dead?" the teacher asked one of his pupils. Wisely, the pupil replied, "It is as you wish, Sir." Indeed, the fate of the grasshopper was in the master's hand.
In the days when gladiators were brutally pitted against man and beasts to the delight of the jaded throngs who jammed the Coliseum, the emperor sat at a safe distance from the contest as both spectator and judge. For a combatant to prevail over an opponent did not necessarily mean the victor would live. If his desperate fight for life had pleased the emperor, the sovereign would signal a "thumbs up," indicating the gladiator would live to fight another day. "Thumbs down" indicated he would be killed on the spot. Consequently, at the conclusion of each contest, all eyes were on the emperor's hands. It would be as he wished.
Jeremiah used a familiar figure, the potter's wheel, to underscore a message which Israel had belligerently neglected. Their fate was in the hands of the Sovereign God. "Behold, like the clay in the potter's hand, so are you in my hand, O house of Israel."
In the days when gladiators were brutally pitted against man and beasts to the delight of the jaded throngs who jammed the Coliseum, the emperor sat at a safe distance from the contest as both spectator and judge. For a combatant to prevail over an opponent did not necessarily mean the victor would live. If his desperate fight for life had pleased the emperor, the sovereign would signal a "thumbs up," indicating the gladiator would live to fight another day. "Thumbs down" indicated he would be killed on the spot. Consequently, at the conclusion of each contest, all eyes were on the emperor's hands. It would be as he wished.
Jeremiah used a familiar figure, the potter's wheel, to underscore a message which Israel had belligerently neglected. Their fate was in the hands of the Sovereign God. "Behold, like the clay in the potter's hand, so are you in my hand, O house of Israel."
