Infinity in a Jar

Day 1 of The Book of Mysteries by Jonathan Cahn

It was morning. The teacher came to my room holding a little clay jar.

“A question,” he said, “Can that which is little contain that which is big?”

“No,” I answered.

“Can that which is finite encompass that which is infinite?”

“No,” I said again.

“But it can,” he replied.

“How?”

He lifted the jar and removed the cap from the top.

“It can,” he said again. “It can if it is an open vessel. A closed vessel can never contain anything larger than its own size. But an open vessel has no limitations. It can now contain the blowing of the wind or the outpouring of the rain. It could even contain the flowing of a river.”

“It would take a long time to contain a river.”

“It could take forever, but the principle is the same.”

“And the reason you’re showing me this is…?”

“Which is larger, that which you know or that which you don’t?”

“That which I don’t know, I would think.”

“So then, it’s only wise that you seek that which you don’t know.”

“I guess.”

“But how do you contain that which is bigger than you…that which is bigger than your ability to comprehend?”

“By becoming an open vessel,” I said.

“Yes,” said the teacher. “Only by opening yourself up can you come to know that which you don’t already know. And only by becoming an open vessel can you contain that which is greater than yourself. The truth is always greater than our knowing. Your mind and heart are finite, clay jars. But the truth has no end. God has no end. The Eternal is infinite…always flowing.”

“Like the river”, I said.

“Yes,” he said, “but when the jar opens itself up, it becomes unlimited. It can contain the waters of the river…so now open your mind, your heart, and your life. For it is only the open vessel and an open heart that can contain the infinity of God.”

The Mission: Today, open your mind, your heart, and your life to that which you don’t yet know, that you might contain that which is greater than yourself.

Isaiah 11:1-9; Jeremiah 33:3; 2 Corinthians 4:7

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