In a quiet church gathering in Bindura, a simple object lesson turned into a powerful spiritual wake-up call. Armed with three plastic bottles, Mrs. Makoni did not just preach a sermon, she demonstrated one. In doing so, she confronted a deep issue many believers silently battle with, spiritual leakage.
At first glance, the three 500ml bottles looked identical — clean, upright, and ready to be filled. But as she began pouring water into them, their true condition was revealed:
The first bottle, though upright, had no bottom. The water poured in simply gushed out. The second bottle with holes at the base, received the water, but it slowly seeped out. The third bottle stood whole. It retained every drop poured into it.
She paused, looked at the congregation and said,
“These bottles represent today’s Christians. We all appear whole from the outside. We speak in tongues, sing on stage, and carry Bibles. But when the Word is poured into us the question is what happens?”
The first bottle, she explained, is the Christian who is present in body but disconnected in spirit. The Word goes in and goes out. It never takes root. The second is the believer who receives the Word with joy but allows the cares of life, bitterness, sin, or distractions to quietly drain them of spiritual strength. The third bottle? That’s the one who receives, retains, and is transformed.
Quoting James 1:22, she said:
“Do not merely listen to the Word, and so deceive yourselves. Do what it says.”
Luke 8:15 says:
“The seed on good soil stands for those with a noble and good heart, who hear the Word, retain it, and by persevering, produce a crop.”
She challenged the congregation to introspect deeply:
“What kind of vessel are you? Can the Word of God dwell richly in you? Are you growing, changing, maturing… or are you just attending?”
The message struck home. In a world of spiritual consumption — online sermons, daily devotions, church events, and social media scriptures — believers are more exposed to the Word than ever. But is the Word taking effect? Are we retaining it? Are we bearing fruit?
So… what kind of vessel are you?
Mrs. Makoni’s message wasn’t just for those seated in the pews, it was for all of us. For the backslider who feels too broken, for the believer who’s grown cold, for the soul that’s been leaking silently, the call is clear: Come back to the source.
No matter your condition, bottomless, leaking, or hardened — there is grace enough for you. There is healing for your soul. And there is a God ready to refill you… if only you’re willing.
Return. Be restored. Be filled again.






















