image description image description
image description image description
image description
  • Checkout
  • About
    • Who We Are
    • Where We Work
    • US Regional Reps
    • Our History
    • MTW Staff Careers
    • Contact Us
  • Pray
  • Go
    • Search Opportunities
    • Mission Trips
    • Summer Internships
    • 1–11 Months
    • Longer Term
    • Specialized Ministries
      • Medical
      • Workplace Ministries
      • Arts, Music & Media
      • RUF Mentored Internships
    • Multicultural Mobilization
  • Give
    • Donations Hub
    • Missionaries
    • Projects
    • Estate & Gift Planning
    • Disaster Response/Compassion Fund
  • Stories & More
  • Events
  • Resources
    • All Resources
    • Cultivate
    • Videos
    • 1% Challenge
    • Resources for Kids
  • My Account
    • My Giving
    • My Profile
    • Giving FAQs
    Checkout
    About arrow-dwn
    • Who We Are
    • Where We Work
    • US Regional Reps
    • Our History
    • MTW Staff Careers
    • Contact Us
    Pray
    Go arrow-dwn
    • Search Opportunities
    • Mission Trips
    • Summer Internships
    • 1–11 Months
    • Longer Term
    • Specialized Ministries
      • Medical
      • Workplace Ministries
      • Arts, Music & Media
      • RUF Mentored Internships
    • Multicultural Mobilization
    Give arrow-dwn
    • Donations Hub
    • Missionaries
    • Projects
    • Estate & Gift Planning
    • Disaster Response/Compassion Fund
    Stories & More
    Events
    Resources arrow-dwn
    • All Resources
    • Cultivate
    • Videos
    • 1% Challenge
    • Resources for Kids
    My Account arrow-dwn
    • My Giving
    • My Profile
    • Giving FAQs
Donate
Checkout
image description image description
menu-icon menu-icon
icon
close-icon

Pearls and the people of God

What if God created oysters to perpetually re-enact the gospel story? What if pearls point to Jesus?
Roger W. Lowther|03 Sep 2019
image description
Pixabay: Schaferle-shell

Of all the gems, minerals, and precious metals of the world, nothing compares with the iridescent glow of Akoya pearls. With no cutting, chipping, or polishing needed to bring out their natural beauty, these perfectly shaped spheres are incredibly valuable. Thomas Edison once described cultured pearls as an apparent “biological impossibility.”

Pearls embody an important part of Japanese history and culture. Revered as the “Pearl King,” Kokichi Mikimoto (1858–1954) almost single-handedly created the cultured pearl industry, at one point producing 75% of the world’s pearls. His pearls supplied the high-end jewelry market with necklaces and earrings, bringing great fame. His flagship store and namesake Mikimoto is in Ginza, just a short jog from where I live. Soon after his discovery, others copied his techniques, and freshwater Biwa pearls farmed in Lake Biwa became nearly synonymous with freshwater pearls worldwide.

Pearls have an important place both in Japan and the Bible. Let’s consider this beautiful creation and the rich metaphors that have been created around it.

Beauty from brokenness

The birth of pearls is truly a miraculous event, as I learned from the museum and staff at Mikimoto Pearl Island in Toba, Mie Prefecture. Pearls form from brokenness. When something—a piece of sand, shell, bacteria, or parasite—damages cells in the mantle, the oyster responds by coating it with protective layers. In cultured pearls, this irritant is surgically inserted into the weakest, most fragile area of the oyster along with a small piece of mantle from another oyster that must be sacrificed in the process. Over two years, thousands of fine layers of nacre, made of organic and inorganic elements, create a shiny translucent ball lighter and stronger than concrete.

Damaged oysters create these objects of great beauty and worth. It’s fascinating, then, that pearls—formed from brokenness and suffering—symbolize the perfection of the kingdom of heaven, for no one can enter its celestial city without first walking through its “pearly gates” (Rev. 21:21).

Pearls and the heavenly city

What if God created oysters to perpetually re-enact the gospel story? What if all pearls point to Jesus, the true oyster sacrificed that we may be changed from objects of wrath into objects of mercy (Romans 9:22–24)? Jesus was cut so that we may be washed in his blood and coated with layer after layer of God’s grace. The suffering of the Lamb created a gateway for us to enter the kingdom of heaven, which cannot be entered without accepting the message of brokenness. Through the metaphor in pearls, we can see God’s people displayed and glorified in weakness while covered in the beauty of God living eternally in heaven.

There are other pointers to the gospel surrounding the heavenly city. Consider the foundations decorated with 12 gemstones. When dug from the ground, they are nothing but plain dull rocks. Only through careful cutting, grinding, and polishing in the hands of an artist can these precious stones sparkle with gloriously rich colors. God delights in his handiwork by crafting beautiful gems out of broken pieces.

Like the 12 gates and 12 gemstones, the people of God can be considered to be represented by the number 12 in the measurements of the walls of heaven. The angel “measured the city with the rod and found it to be 12,000 stadia in length, and as wide and high as it is long. The angle measured the wall using human measurement, and it was 144 cubits thick” (Rev. 21:16–17).

We, the people of God, are represented in the gates, foundations, and walls of heaven. We are the Holy City, the bride of Christ, eternally pointing to and displaying the glory of God through the gospel of Christ. “’Come, I will show you the bride, the wife of the Lamb.’ And he carried me away in the Spirit to a mountain great and high, and showed me the Holy City, Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God. It shown with the glory of God” (Rev. 21:9–11).

Through the pearly gates and the city of heaven, we see a final product of the gospel powerfully at work in our lives and a small glimpse of our beauty and worth in the eyes of God.

Pearls point us to Christ

“The kingdom of heaven is like a merchant looking for fine pearls. When he found one of great value, he went away and sold everything he had and bought it” (Matt. 13:45–46). Dare we imagine that we could be the pearl of great price? Is it possible that Christ gave up everything he had to purchase us? Can we imagine that pain and suffering ultimately point to the building blocks of heaven itself? “With your blood you purchased for God persons from every tribe and language and people and nation” (Rev. 5:9).

The pearls of heaven were purchased by the very own blood of the Merchant. The crowning beauty of heaven can be found in the Lamb who was slain, on the glorious throne of God. Rainbow light envelops this throne, bending and breaking the white light into all the colors of the rainbow (Rev. 4:3). The iridescence of the pearls also creates a rainbow effect, and is yet one more reflection of the Lamb’s broken beauty!

The more we recognize our own brokenness and the mercy God graciously surrounds us with, the more richly we can worship Christ and engage those who are broken and suffering in this world. Pearls not only give a picture of how this world will one day be redeemed into a thing of great beauty, but how we are more cherished in the eyes of God than we could possibly hope or imagine.

Originally published in Japan Harvest.

Roger Lowther

Get Involved

video

Pastoral Interns

1–11 Months More right-arrow
video

Christ Bible Institute Year-round Internship

1–11 Months More right-arrow
video

Mentored Internship: Tokyo City Team

Summer Internships More right-arrow
video

God’s mission for the church: A look at Matthew 28:18-20

When we are making disciples of non-believers, baptizing them, and teaching them God's ways, God will receive greater glory.

See More right-arrow
video

Cultivating a culture of expectancy in missions

People in my life anticipated that God was preparing me for something more and exercised their influence to nudge me forward. How can we spur others toward God’s call?

See More right-arrow
video

A PCA Kurdistan partnership pioneers a new way to adopt unreached people groups

The sales pitch was: "You guys probably don’t want to do this. I know churches like to see results, and there’s nothing there. It’s going to take years." The vision trip members prayed, and said yes.

See More right-arrow
video

Behold your God: A Christmas reflection from the coordinator

The Isaiah 40 message is one of good news of the coming of our Savior—good news for the people of God, in the city of God, and from the people of God.

See More right-arrow
video

What’s Really Needed to Serve in Global Missions? 7 Qualifications You Likely Already Have

Some perceived barriers are just weaknesses God can use. While others can be easily developed.

See More right-arrow
prev
next

Pray that the church in the U.S. would see the importance of embracing God's mission as outlined in Matthew 28:18-20 known as the Great Commission.

Related Story right-arrow

Pray that we would anticipate how God would be preparing church members around us to serve Him in the Great Commission, and encourage them toward His calling.

Related Story right-arrow

Pray for The Kurdistan Partnership—a partnership between PCA churches, MTW, and field workers to advance a church planting movement among the Kurds and Yazidis living in northern Iraq. Pray that God would raise up missionaries from these churches to serve.

Related Story right-arrow
video

Pastoral Interns

1–11 Months More right-arrow
video

Christ Bible Institute Year-round Internship

1–11 Months More right-arrow
video

Mentored Internship: Tokyo City Team

Summer Internships More right-arrow
video

God’s mission for the church: A look at Matthew 28:18-20

When we are making disciples of non-believers, baptizing them, and teaching them God's ways, God will receive greater glory.

See More right-arrow
video

Cultivating a culture of expectancy in missions

People in my life anticipated that God was preparing me for something more and exercised their influence to nudge me forward. How can we spur others toward God’s call?

See More right-arrow
video

A PCA Kurdistan partnership pioneers a new way to adopt unreached people groups

The sales pitch was: "You guys probably don’t want to do this. I know churches like to see results, and there’s nothing there. It’s going to take years." The vision trip members prayed, and said yes.

See More right-arrow
video

Behold your God: A Christmas reflection from the coordinator

The Isaiah 40 message is one of good news of the coming of our Savior—good news for the people of God, in the city of God, and from the people of God.

See More right-arrow
video

What’s Really Needed to Serve in Global Missions? 7 Qualifications You Likely Already Have

Some perceived barriers are just weaknesses God can use. While others can be easily developed.

See More right-arrow

Pray that the church in the U.S. would see the importance of embracing God's mission as outlined in Matthew 28:18-20 known as the Great Commission.

Related Story right-arrow

Pray that we would anticipate how God would be preparing church members around us to serve Him in the Great Commission, and encourage them toward His calling.

Related Story right-arrow

Pray for The Kurdistan Partnership—a partnership between PCA churches, MTW, and field workers to advance a church planting movement among the Kurds and Yazidis living in northern Iraq. Pray that God would raise up missionaries from these churches to serve.

Related Story right-arrow
close-icon

Donation Error

Please enter valid amount.

mtw logo
Mission to the World
1600 North Brown Rd
Lawrenceville, GA 30043
United States
Donor-Advised Fund Portal
Circle Portal
About
  • Who We Are
  • Where We Work
  • US Regional Reps
  • Our History
  • MTW Staff Careers
  • Contact Us
Pray
Stories & More
Events
My Account
  • My Account
    • My Giving
    • My Profile
    • Giving FAQs
Go
  • Search Opportunities
  • Mission Trips
  • Summer Internships
  • 1–11 Months
  • Longer Term
  • Join the Story
  • Specialized Ministries
    • Medical
    • Workplace Ministries
    • Arts, Music & Media
    • RUF Mentored Internships
  • Multicultural Mobilization
Give
  • Donations Hub
  • Missionaries
  • Projects
  • Estate & Gift Planning
  • Disaster Response/Compassion Fund
Resources
  • All Resources
  • Cultivate
  • Videos
  • 1% Challenge
  • Resources for Kids
image description
image description
image description
image description
image description
image description
1-678-823-0004
[email protected]
mtw logo
Mission to the World
1600 North Brown Rd
Lawrenceville, GA 30043
United States
Donor-Advised Fund Portal
Circle Portal
About arrow-down
    • Who We Are
    • Where We Work
    • US Regional Reps
    • Our History
    • MTW Staff Careers
    • Contact Us
Pray
Stories & More
Events
My Account arrow-dwn
    • My Account
      • My Giving
      • My Profile
      • Giving FAQs
Go arrow-dwn
    • Search Opportunities
    • Mission Trips
    • Summer Internships
    • 1–11 Months
    • Longer Term
    • Join the Story
    • Specialized Ministries
      • Medical
      • Workplace Ministries
      • Arts, Music & Media
      • RUF Mentored Internships
    • Multicultural Mobilization
Give arrow-dwn
    • Donations Hub
    • Missionaries
    • Projects
    • Estate & Gift Planning
    • Disaster Response/Compassion Fund
Resources arrow-dwn
    • All Resources
    • Cultivate
    • Videos
    • 1% Challenge
    • Resources for Kids
image description
image description
image description
image description
image description
image description
1-678-823-0004
[email protected]
Manage Consent

To provide the best experience, we use cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent may adversely affect certain features and functions. If you wish, you may view our privacy policy.

Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
  • Manage options
  • Manage services
  • Manage {vendor_count} vendors
  • Read more about these purposes
View preferences
  • {title}
  • {title}
  • {title}