My wife, Carolyn, and I met Phipps Festus Bourne in 1995 in his shop in Mabry Hill, Virginia. Bourne, who died in 2002, was a master wood carver whose carvings are almost exact replicas of real objects. Carving a duck is simple, he said. You just look at a piece of wood, get in your head what a duck looks like, and then cut off everything that doesnt look like it.
So it is with God. He looks at you and meblocks of rough woodenvisions the Christlike woman or man hidden beneath the bark, knots, and twigs and then begins to carve away everything that does not fit that image. We would be amazed if we could see how beautiful we are as finished ducks.
But first we must accept that we are a block of wood and allow the Artist to cut, shape, and sand us where He will. This means viewing our circumstancespleasant or unpleasantas Gods tools that shape us. He forms us, one part at a time, into the beautiful creature He envisioned in our ungainly lump of wood.
Sometimes the process is wonderful; sometimes it is painful. But in the end, all of Gods tools conform us to the image of his Son (Rom. 8:29).
Do you long for that likeness? Put yourself in the Master Carvers hands.
We are Gods handiwork, and our Father will not abandon the work of His hands. Ephesians 2:610 provides further insight into the theme of Gods handiwork. After Christs atoning death, God raised Him from the dead and seated him at his right hand in the heavenly realms (v. 20). Those who believe in Him have been given new life by Gods grace.
