
The Spiritual Disease of Calcification
There is a reason Jesus spoke of wineskins and Jeremiah spoke of clay. Both images expose the same spiritual disease: God refuses to pour His living, expanding, fermenting work into vessels that have become rigid, brittle, and unmoved by His touch. The crisis of our age is not a lack of churches, sermons, or ministries. The crisis is that much of what calls itself the church has become calcified — not merely hardened, but petrified; not merely dry, but fossilized; not merely resistant, but spiritually immovable.
Jeremiah’s Two Movements: Mercy and Judgment
Jeremiah saw this tragedy unfold in two movements. In the potter’s house, he watched clay spoil on the wheel — marred, imperfect, flawed, yet still soft enough to be reshaped. And the Lord said, “O house of Israel, cannot I do with you as this potter?”** (Jeremiah 18:6)**. That was mercy. That was invitation. That was the moment when repentance could still soften the clay.
But the story does not end at the wheel. God sends Jeremiah again — this time not to clay, but to a vessel already fired, already set, already calcified in its form. And the Lord commands him, “Break the bottle… Even so will I break this people”** (Jeremiah 19:10–11)**. This is not clay that can be remade. This is a vessel that has passed the point of pliability. It cannot be reshaped. It can only be shattered.
The Condition of Churchianity Today
This is the condition of churchianity today. It is not simply old; it is calcified. It is not simply traditional; it is petrified. It is not simply cautious; it is unyielded. It has become the bottle of Jeremiah 19 — a vessel that once had potential but now clings so tightly to its own shape that the Potter Himself cannot reform it without breaking it.
Jesus’ Warning: New Wine and Old Wineskins
And Jesus speaks the same truth in different imagery: “No man putteth new wine into old wineskins… the wineskins perish”** (Matthew 9:17)**. Old wineskins are not defined by age but by rigidity. They cannot stretch. They cannot expand. They cannot hold what God is pouring now. They are calcified containers — brittle, inflexible, and destined to burst under the pressure of new wine.
The Wilderness Generation: Stiff-Necked and Wandering
But this is not a new problem. It is the same spirit that kept an entire generation wandering in circles until their bones whitened in the wilderness. “Forty years long was I grieved with this generation… a people that do err in their heart, and they have not known my ways”** (Psalm 95:10). They were wanderers because they were stiff‑necked. They refused correction. They rejected direction. They resisted perfection. And the Lord said plainly, “As I sware in my wrath, they shall not enter into my rest” (Psalm 95:11)**.
Wanderers do not cross over. Calcified vessels do not carry new wine. Stiff‑necked people do not inherit the promise.
Stephen’s Indictment: Resistance to the Holy Ghost
Stephen echoed this same indictment when he cried, “Ye stiff‑necked and uncircumcised in heart and ears, ye do always resist the Holy Ghost”** (Acts 7:51)**. Stiff‑necked people resist the very Spirit sent to transform them. They resist the Potter’s hands. They resist the stretching of the wineskin. They resist the call to become new creatures in Christ.
Paul’s Antidote: Becoming a New Creature
Paul declares the antidote: “If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature”** (2 Corinthians 5:17)**. New creatures are not defined by nostalgia. They are not shaped by tradition. They are not preserved in the amber of past revivals. They are vessels continually softened by repentance, continually stretched by obedience, continually reshaped by the Potter’s hands.
Ezekiel’s Prophecy: From Stony Heart to Heart of Flesh
Ezekiel prophesied of this transformation when he wrote, “I will take the stony heart out of their flesh, and will give them an heart of flesh”** (Ezekiel 11:19)**. A stony heart is a calcified heart — unresponsive, unmoved, unteachable. But a heart of flesh is a wineskin that can stretch. A heart of flesh is clay that can be shaped. A heart of flesh is a vessel that can carry the new wine of God without bursting.
The Potter’s Work Today: Raising New Wineskins
The Potter is not confused in this hour. He is not negotiating with calcified vessels. He is not pouring new wine into containers that have already chosen their shape. He is forming a people who can bend, yield, expand, and be remade. He is raising up new wineskins for a new outpouring. And the only question that remains is whether we will remain calcified relics of what once was, or become pliable vessels for what God is doing now.
The Coming New Wine: A Call to Transformation
For the new wine is coming. The wheel is turning. The Potter’s hands are moving. And He will only entrust His work to vessels that refuse calcification and embrace transformation — vessels that refuse to wander, refuse to stiffen, refuse to fossilize, and instead surrender to the shaping of His hands.

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