EMPTY VESSELS

In the sight of the Father, vessels stand,
Empty canvases in the Creator’s hand,
Like clay awaiting the Potter’s touch,
To mould them with love that’s so much.

In the cosmic silence, vessels yearn,
A sacred journey, eager to learn,
The Creator fills them with knowledge new,
Taking filth from them, making them brand new.

Empty vessels, a symphony unsung,
Like ancient bells, waiting to be rung,
Like clothes washed, waiting to be hung,
God Himself works on them till they are done.

The words of Jesus, a divine decree,
“Pray without ceasing,” for you and me,
No limits set on love, on God’s Word divine,
Empty vessels, in His presence, we shine.

God’s abundance flows, an unending stream,
Blessings beyond limit, like a radiant dream.
Infinite love, a boundless sea,
Filling empty vessels, setting hearts free.

Like the widow’s vessels, our souls in God’s hand,
Innumerable blessings, like grains of sand,
For in our emptiness, God finds His place,
Empty vessels, vessels of His grace.

So, in this journey, our purpose unfolds,
To seek God’s wisdom, as His story molds.
Empty vessels surrendered and still,
Filled with His love, according to His will.

A common saying says, “empty vessels make a lot of noise.” Do we also know that empty vessels are what God most needs?

2 Kings 4:3 (KJV) – “Then he said, Go, borrow thee vessels abroad of all thy neighbours, even empty vessels; borrow not a few.”

Elisha commanded the widow to borrow empty vessels from her neighbors. He commanded her to borrow as many as possible. The widow would take those empty vessels and fill them with oil. For them to be filled with oil, they had to be empty. After borrowing those vessels, she should fill them with oil and then sell the oil in those vessels. She would not borrow the vessels and then sell them back to the people while empty because they would not be valuable enough.

The fact that the people gave her those vessels means that the vessels had no value to them. It is like throwing bottles in the dustbin after using the contents inside. What we usually need is the contents inside and not the bottle. The plastic bottle acts like a container to hold what is inside and to protect it from spilling out. Rarely do we sell empty bottles to people. Once we have finished drinking or using what is inside, the bottle loses value.

Therefore, when Elisha commanded the widow woman to take empty vessels, he told her to take that which has little or no value and then add value to it by adding the oil. At her home, she had a little jar filled with oil, and she was going to fill those vessels with that oil that she had.

Remember, Elisha, commanded her to take as many containers as possible. The oil she had was not enough to fill all those containers. Through His miraculous providence, God would increase the oil and fill all the empty vessels that the woman would bring.

“Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness.” The sense of unworthiness will lead the heart to hunger and thirst for righteousness, and this desire will not be disappointed. Those who make room in their hearts for Jesus will realize His love. All who long to bear the likeness of the character of God shall be satisfied. The Holy Spirit never leaves unassisted the soul who is looking unto Jesus. He takes of the things of Christ and shows them unto him. If the eye is kept fixed on Christ, the work of the Spirit ceases not until the soul is conformed to His image. The pure element of love will expand the soul, giving it a capacity for higher attainments, for increased knowledge of heavenly things, so that it will not rest short of the fullness. “Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness; for they shall be filled.” – The Desire of Ages, Page 302.1, Ellen G. White.

The vessels borrowed had value to the woman but had no value to the people giving them away. The bottles we throw away and the scrap metals have value to the people who collect them since they go and sell them to recycling plants but have no value to us.

God takes those things we perceive to have no value and gives them value. One example of this is creating man from the dust of the ground (Genesis 2:7). We wipe our shoes anytime they get dust and are embarrassed to walk publicly when we have dust, but God used that dust to create a human being.

The Devil works by the principle of taking the best that God has made, the way he used the serpent, the cleverest animal at that time. God can take the worst and make them the best. He took Gideon and made Gideon victorious on the battlefield.

An empty vessel may have little value compared to a vessel that is full. However, a full vessel leaves no room to add anything unless it empties. You cannot add liquid mercury to a bottle filled with water because the bottle has no room left for that liquid mercury. You cannot add oil to a bottle that is filled with juice because it has no space left.

Bottles are usually priced according to the content that is in them. A bottle filled with water cannot have the same price as the same-sized bottle with one that is filled with oil. Half a liter bottle filled with diamonds is more expensive than a 10,000-litre water-filled tank.

The same applies to us. A person with a mind filled with God’s Word may be small in stature and physically weak, but what he has is more valuable than one whose mind is full of unrighteous thoughts, no matter how big and strong the latter appears.

One who is living in sin and does not want anything to do with God can be likened to a vessel that is full and not willing to be emptied. He is comfortable with their current valuation and does not want to increase in value. Many are in stagnation because they are full vessels. They do not want to get emptied. Therefore, they cannot rise significantly because they are comfortable in their state.

Some have heard the Sabbath message and have been convinced that Saturday is the Sabbath, but because they were brought up in families that keep other days as the Sabbath, they chose not to follow it and continue with their traditions. Some have read the health message, but they have decided that they will not follow it no matter what. So they get deprived of possessing better health. Some have been convinced that God exists but still follow ungodly traditional practices, while some continue to live as atheists.

Lack of knowledge causes many to suffer, but one who does not know is better off than one who learns but does not follow. One who knows and follows shall acquire blessings in their lives. However, one who follows and teaches shall get more blessings than one who follows but does not share knowledge with others. Matthew 5:19 (KJV) – “Whosoever therefore shall break one of these least commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall be called the least in the kingdom of heaven: but whosoever shall do and teach them, the same shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven.”

“Give, and it shall be given unto you” (Luke 6:38); for the Word of God is “a fountain of gardens, a well of living waters, and streams of Lebanon” (Song of Solomon 4:15). The heart that has once tasted the love of Christ, cries out continually for a deeper draft, and as you impart you will receive in richer and more abundant measure. Every revelation of God to the soul increases the capacity to know and to love. The continual cry of the heart is, “More of Thee,” and ever the Spirit’s answer is, “Much more.” Romans 5:9, 10. For our God delights to do “exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think.” Ephesians 3:20. To Jesus, who emptied Himself for the salvation of lost humanity, the Holy Spirit was given without measure. So it will be given to every follower of Christ when the whole heart is surrendered for His indwelling. Our Lord Himself has given the command, “Be filled with the Spirit” (Ephesians 5:18), and this command is also a promise of its fulfillment. It was the good pleasure of the Father that in Christ should “all the fullness dwell,” and “in Him, ye are made full.” Colossians 1:19, R.V.; 2:10, R.V.” – Thoughts from the Mount of Blessing, Page 20.3, Ellen G. White.

If the woman brought ten vessels, God will ensure that those ten vessels are filled. If she got one hundred containers, God would ensure they were filled. If she brought one thousand vessels, God will ensure that they are filled. If she brought one million vessels, God will ensure that those one million were full.

God did not give her a limit on how many containers she should get because God has no limits. He told her, through His servant, “borrow not a few.” In other words, borrow as many as possible. God never gives you a limit to how many times you should pray. He tells you, “Pray without ceasing (1 Thessalonians 5:17, KJV).

God never gives you a limit to the amount of love you should give Him. He tells you in Deuteronomy 6:5 (KJV) – “Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God is One Lord: And thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy might.”

God never gives you a limit on how many times we should have His Word in our minds. He tells us in Psalm 1:2 (KJV) – “But his delight is in the law of the Lord; and in His law doth he meditate day and night.” God never gives you a limit to the number of commandments you should obey. He tells you in Deuteronomy 8:1 (KJV) – “All the commandments which I command thee this day shall ye observe to do, that ye may live, and multiply, and go in and possess the land which the Lord sware unto your fathers.”

God never gives you a limit on how many times and how many places you should teach His Word to people. He says in Deuteronomy 6:7-9 (KJV) – “And thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children, and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house, and when thou walkest by the way, and when thou liest down, and when thou risest up. And thou shalt bind them for a sign upon thine hand, and they shall be as frontlets between thine eyes. 9, And thou shalt write them upon the posts of thy house, and on thy gates.”

God never limits you on the physical location or the type of people to preach. In Matthew 28:19 (KJV), He says, “Go ye therefore and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost:” He never gives you a limit of the truth you should teach. He says in Matthew 28:20 (KJV) – “Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you.”

God who is infinite, who is God from everlasting to everlasting (Psalm 90:2), created us in His image (Genesis 1:26) and wants us to share in His infinite nature. His will was for man to live eternally just like Him. He never wanted us to be mortals like we are now.

John 10:10 (KJV) – The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.” Satan, whose purpose is to kill, steal and destroy, aimed to kill Adam and Eve when he tempted them to sin. After they fell, Satan was excited because their lives would soon be cut short since the wages of sin is death (Romans 6:23).

John 10:11 (KJV) – “I am the good shepherd: the good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep.” Jesus sacrificed His life for the love He had for us. He says that the good shepherd gives his life for the sheep. This illustration can be shown by David when he was a shepherd boy. He risked his life to fight the lion and bear to save the life of his sheep (1 Samuel 17:34-36).

Jesus is immortal, and He is infinite because Jesus is God. Jesus died on the cross so that we can be immortal as Him and live eternally with Him. God proved the Devil wrong that although we are fallen, through Jesus we have been redeemed to share in His infinite nature.

Therefore, when God calls us to do something and when He gives us a purpose to fulfill, He puts no limit to the extent we ought to fulfill that purpose. 1 Corinthians 10:31 (KJV) – “Whether therefore ye eat, or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God.” The glory of God has no limit. Therefore, when we are doing service to God, we should do it with no limit. Ecclesiastes 9:10 compels us to do it with our might.

An author like Ellen G. White probably knew only one language, English. However, since God is a God who does not limit our purpose, He has enabled her writings to be translated into numerous languages. She is among the most translated authors in the world. Her education was also limited since she reached third grade, but she has written books covering all essential topics of life, books that have greatly benefited those who have followed her wise counsel. Some have built successful schools by following her counsel in her book Education. Some have had good health because they followed the counsel of her book Counsels on Health or Ministry of Healing. Some have built successful churches because they made the book Evangelism to be their guide.

Ellen White’s books offer a complementary source of wisdom and do not conflict with Biblical truth in any way. God did not limit her purpose to her earthly education. Her work went beyond her limited worldly education. Therefore, if you can’t continue with your education because of a particular health challenge or circumstances that have made you not continue, stick with God. Ask God to show you your purpose and let Him be your guide.  

Those who accepted God’s call to write the Bible have impacted millions of generations. The Bible has been widely translated into almost all the languages in the world, including the native languages of various small tribes.

Authors, Poets, musicians, and many others have had their works posthumously celebrated. We read books, listen to music, and watch movies whose originators are currently dead. God does not limit anyone. We are the ones who limit ourselves. Elisha told the widow to bring as many vessels as possible. The widow was the one to decide how many containers she would bring.

2 Kings 4:1 (KJV) – “Now there cried a certain woman of the wives of the sons of the prophets unto Elisha, saying, Thy servant my husband is dead; and thou knowest that thy servant did fear the Lord: and the creditor is come to take unto him my two sons to be bondmen.”

When the widow approached Elisha, she only wanted to pay the debt her husband owed the creditors. She was distressed by that situation because she did not want her sons to be taken for slavery by that creditor. Her only need at that time was to pay that debt.

God looked beyond her situation. 2 Kings 4:7 (KJV) – Then she came and told the man of God. And he said, Go, sell the oil, and pay thy debt, and live thou and thy children of the rest.” God wanted her to pay off that debt and have something to sustain her and her children all the days of their lives. God wants to give us more than we ask or imagine (Ephesians 3:20).

Many Godly people who are successful in this life will tell you that they never imagined they would be where they are now. Mary never imagined that she would be the mother to God (Jesus), she was just keeping herself pure, obeying God’s commandments. Enoch never imagined that he would be translated and never see death; he was living a righteous life. Same with Moses and Elijah.

God always wants to give you more. He never wants to provide you with less, as many Christian teachings today depict. If God did not want the widow to have abundant resources, He would have given her a limit to the number of vessels she should take. He would have told her something like, “don’t borrow more than ten vessels” or “don’t borrow more than one million vessels.” But he did not tell her that. Instead, He told her, “Borrow not a few.”

Your purpose and calling may be in music. If that is the case, you should sing as many songs as you can as long as you live. Don’t limit yourself to one single or one album. Sing as many songs as you can. You may be gifted in writing. Write as many articles and books as possible.

Your purpose may be in software development. Develop as many software products as possible and sell them to as many people as possible. Don’t limit your market to your country only. You may be selling a product. Don’t limit yourself to selling to your neighborhood or city only. Sell it everywhere. Elisha did not tell the woman who to sell the oil to. She left that for her to decide.

Proverbs 13:22 (KJV) – “A good man leaveth an inheritance to his children’s children” God wants you to leave an inheritance for your children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren. He wants your blessings to flow to forthcoming generations. He wants you to create generational wealth. His wish is for your children and upcoming generations to suffer less that is why a man who lives an inheritance for his generations is called good.

Limiting yourself shows that you don’t love your neighbor as you love yourself. Many have wasted resources living frivolous lives because they only care about their present lives and they care less about their generations. After they pass away, their children are subjected to suffering.

Leaving an inheritance for your children doesn’t necessarily have to mean money. It is okay to leave money for them, but it is better if you can equip them with the needed skills and mental capacity to handle that money. Take them to school. Take them where you work. If you have a business, put them in that business’s operations so they can understand how that money is made.

Children I have seen engaged in their parents’ businesses end up being more disciplined and living well-balanced lives. The ones who squander their parents’ wealth after they are dead are usually the ones who used to be provided for and were not given the knowledge of how that wealth was created. The ones who fight for their parents’ wealth after they die are usually the ones whose parents did not take time to equip them with the skills of wealth creation and sustenance.

An inheritance for your children also means investing in your children’s spiritual lives and moral upbringing. Take them to church and always have time for Bible study at home. Most importantly, lead by example. Leading by example will have a more substantial influence than mere instruction.

Some children cannot afford to go to school because their parents are drunkards. The fact that their parents are drunkards means they have money but are misusing it instead of investing in their children. Some beg on the streets because their mothers have sent them to beg so that they can provide for the family. Such parents only care for the present and have no business about the future.

Some families are suffering because their parents are involved in gambling. They have money to gamble but don’t have money to educate their children. Some are suffering because their parents are busy working, particularly fathers. As the fathers do their best to provide for their families, they leave the work of teaching good morals and discipline to the mothers. This results in men who are effeminate if they are sons. That is one of the reasons we have a broken society: fathers are not present.

Some Christian-born men lead weak Christian lives because they never saw their fathers attending church. It was always the work of the mother to take them to church. If more fathers would be strong in Christ and pray for their families the way most mothers do, we would live in a world close to heaven’s standards. God does not want us to limit ourselves. That is why he is bidding us not just to live for ourselves but also to live lives that will benefit our future generations.

Genesis 11:4 (KJV) – “And they said, Go to, let us build us a city and a tower, whose top may reach unto heaven; and let us make us a name, lest we be scattered abroad upon the face of the whole earth.”

One purpose of building the city of Babel was for the inhabitants to be contained in that one city. They did not want to be scattered abroad. When God made man, He told them in Genesis 1:28 (KJV) – “And God blessed them, and God said unto them, Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it: and have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth.”

God commanded us to replenish the earth, but the people building the tower of Babel went against God’s will by making a city so that they do not fill the world. In other words, they were limiting themselves while God wanted them to go beyond their limits. God’s purpose must be fulfilled and nobody can stop it. God confused them by bringing in different languages so that they could replenish the earth and go beyond their limits as He had initially intended.

The same way God increased the widow’s oil and gave it no limit to the number of vessels it can fill is the same way God provides us with no limit on how to use our gifts. The more the widow poured the oil into the vessels, the more the oil increased. And the more she sold the vessels, the more money she had.

God has not given you limits on the number of times you should worship. He has said the Sabbath is only one day, the seventh, but that does not mean you should not give Him time during the other days. God sometimes can punish you for limiting yourself because you are making a waste of the abilities He has given you, the way the master punished the third servant when he failed to use his one talent (Matthew 25:26-30).

When God created us, He created us with a lot of value. However, sin comes to rob us of that value. A person who fills himself daily with the Word of God and holds it dearly to his heart will always generate great ideas. He will be sober in his decisions because nothing in his mind corrupts his decision-making cycle.

God is calling us to empty ourselves of the filth brought by sin that we have filled ourselves with so that He can fill us with His righteousness. He does this so that through us, our families, and generations can be blessed like the widow who gained money to feed her family through the proceeds of the oil she received. God wants us to not only be a blessing to our families but also to be a blessing to other people.

The widow did not use the oil she had gained for her family only. She sold it to other people. Therefore she was a blessing to other people. Failure to surrender fully to God does not give God room to work in us. You cannot put juice in a bottle that has a little kerosene in it, or a little diesel fuel in it. The fuel will contaminate the juice. Therefore, God wants us to surrender ourselves fully to Him so that He can empty us and give us the highest value we have ever imagined.

1 Corinthians 5:6-8 (KJV) – “Your glorying is not good. Know ye not that a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump? Purge out therefore the old leaven, that ye may be a new lump, as ye are unleavened. For even Christ our passover is sacrificed for us: Therefore let us keep the feast, not with old leaven, neither with the leaven of malice and wickedness; but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth.”

God does not want any corruptible seed to be left in us because a tiny grain of sin will corrupt our entire lives the way weeds tamper with the growth of plants. He calls us to take out the old leaven that we may be a new lump. He does not want us to be diamonds that are covered in dust or hidden amid garbage.

God wants us to stand tall as cities set on hills that cannot be hidden, for we are the world’s light (Matthew 5:14). We cannot lighten the whole world if we still allow a little darkness to overshadow our lights. God wants us to be a city set on a hill. Let’s not drag Him back.

John 2:7 (AMP) – “Jesus said to the servants, “Fill the waterpots with water.” So they filled them up to the brim.”

For Jesus to tell the people at the wedding feast to fill the drums with water means the drums were empty. If they were filled with something else, they had to pour it out before filling it with water so that whatever was inside would not contaminate the water.

Filling the drums with water was something they could do, but changing it to wine was something they could not do. The same way borrowing the empty vessels from her neighbors was something the widow could do, but ensuring the oil only gets over once all the vessels were full was something she could not do.

God calls us to do all we can with our ability then He will do what is beyond our capacity. It is in our ability to stop contaminating our minds with bad movies and music and any evil thing that meets our eyes or enters our ears which we have control over, but it is not in our ability to purify our minds; only God can do that.

It is in our ability to take the Bible and read, but the Holy Spirit’s work makes us understand. It is in our ability to pray for the sick and for the afflicted, visiting them wherever they are but it is in God’s ability to heal them and uplift them from their situations. Therefore, we should do all we can and leave God to do what we cannot. Our work is to present ourselves to Him like empty vessels.

“If you have a sense of need in your soul, if you hunger and thirst after righteousness, this is an evidence that Christ has wrought upon your heart, in order that He may be sought unto to do for you, through the endowment of the Holy Spirit, those things which it is impossible for you to do for yourself. We need not seek to quench our thirst at shallow streams; for the great fountain is just above us, of whose abundant waters we may freely drink, if we will rise a little higher in the pathway of faith.” – Thoughts from the Mount of Blessing, Page 19.4, Ellen G. White.

Matthew 5:6 (KJV) – “Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness: for they shall be filled.”

Those who hunger and thirst for righteousness are spiritually empty people. People who have a strong desire to attain the righteousness of God. People who are uncomfortable with their current spiritual state and want to gain more. They constantly strive for more because they know that the path of the just is like a shining light that shines more and more unto the perfect day (Proverbs 4:18).

God has no limit on how much our lights should shine. He wants our lights to keep on shining brighter and brighter. If our lights are glowing today, they should be more brilliant the following day than they are today. The kingdom of God is a kingdom of progress. It is not a kingdom of stagnation or backward movement. That is why we may read a Bible verse today and keep on discovering new meanings to that same verse as long as we live because the depth and breadth of God’s Word are infinite.

Those who hunger and thirst after righteousness live happy lives, as the word used for blessed in the beatitudes is the same word used for happy. That is why some Bible versions use “Happy are they” instead of “Blessed are they”. God highly favors those who hunger and thirst for righteousness because they aim to please God.

“No human agent can supply that which will satisfy the hunger and thirst of the soul. But Jesus says, “Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: if any man hear My voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with Me.” “I am the bread of life: he that cometh to Me shall never hunger; and he that believeth on Me shall never thirst.” Revelation 3:20; John 6:35.” – Thoughts from the Mount of Blessing, Page 18.3, Ellen G. White.

When we hunger and thirst for righteousness we seek to learn more about God than that which we have been taught in church. Many Christians only depend on what their pastors have taught them over the weekend or on YouTube, or while reading from authors like me but do not take time to study the Word of God for themselves. They rely on second-hand information rather than firsthand, which is why many when they are called upon to teach or preach, their lessons have little authority. They are like the scribes whose words lacked authority because they mainly depended on what the prophets taught them and never sought God for themselves (Matthew 7:28-29).

One who hungers and thirsts for righteousness seeks God wholeheartedly. While studying the Bible, he compares various versions and sometimes uses material such as the Strong Hebrew concordance (for the Old Testament), the Strong Greek concordance (for the New Testament), or the Strong exhaustive concordance (for the whole Bible) to find out the original meaning of different words in the Bible.

One who shows earnest and persevering effort to learn more about God will surely gain that knowledge. One who yearns to be filled with the righteousness of God, hungering and thirsting, will be filled indeed.

“As we need food to sustain our physical strength, so do we need Christ, the Bread from heaven, to sustain spiritual life and impart strength to work the works of God. As the body is continually receiving the nourishment that sustains life and vigor, so the soul must be constantly communing with Christ, submitting to Him and depending wholly upon Him.” – Thoughts from the Mount of Blessing, Page 19.1, Ellen G. White.

“As the weary traveler seeks the spring in the desert and, finding it, quenches his burning thirst, so will the Christian thirst for and obtain the pure water of life, of which Christ is the fountain.” – Thoughts from the Mount of Blessing, Page 19.2, Ellen G. White.

“As we discern the perfection of our Saviour’s character we shall desire to become wholly transformed and renewed in the image of His purity. The more we know of God, the higher will be our ideal of character and the more earnest our longing to reflect His likeness. A divine element combines with the human when the soul reaches out after God and the longing heart can say, “My soul, wait thou only upon God; for my expectation is from Him.” Psalm 62:5.” – Thoughts from the Mount of Blessing, Page 19.3, Ellen G. White.

God fills those who hunger and thirst after righteousness. God cannot fill those who don’t because He is a God who does not like forcing things. He has given us the free will to choose between righteousness and evil, blessing and cursing. It will be folly if we choose curses while we have blessings on the table ready to be received. Matthew 9:37 (KJV) – “Then saith he unto His disciples, The harvest truly is plenteous, but the labourers are few.”

“The words of God are the wellsprings of life. As you seek unto those living springs you will, through the Holy Spirit, be brought into communion with Christ. Familiar truths will present themselves to your mind in a new aspect, texts of Scripture will burst upon you with a new meaning as a flash of light, you will see the relation of other truths to the work of redemption, and you will know that Christ is leading you, a divine Teacher is at your side.” – Thoughts from the Mount of Blessing, Page 20.1, Ellen G. White.

Let’s present ourselves before God as empty vessels and allow Him to fill us.

Prayer

Dear Heavenly Father,

I come before you as an empty vessel, acknowledging my need for Your presence and guidance. Fill me with Your Holy Spirit and righteousness. Help me hunger and thirst for Your truth and love. May my life be a reflection of Your glory. In Jesus’ name, Amen.

Activity

Take a moment of reflection today to identify an area in your life where you feel spiritually empty or in need of God’s guidance. Open your Bible to a passage that speaks to that need and spend some time meditating on the words. Allow God to speak to your heart and fill you with His wisdom and love. As you go about your day, consciously seek opportunities to share a word of encouragement or kindness with someone else, being a vessel of God’s love to those around you.

GOD BLESS YOU!

Author: Mark Alex   

Email: gettruthgetlife@gmail.com 

Phone Number: +254710633247   

My LinkedIn Profile: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mark-alex-0b87a9109/

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2 responses to “EMPTY VESSELS”

  1. Emptied Vessels are Sinners Who in needy of Christ and those who are satisfied can be likened to those Calling Jesus but their deeds doesn’t march to what they are claiming

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    1. Very true brother Samson!

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