OK, let's get back to this.
The potter-clay analogy is about what God is able to do. God is in control & can decide what to do with the clay. Right?
It appears twice in the Bible, IIRC - in Jeremiah 18 and in Romans 9. In Jeremiah, it's talking about a something going wrong while a potter shapes a pot, and the potter being able to ball up the clay and start over again, making something different out of it. In Romans, it's talking about the potter being able to make from the same clay vessels for honor and vessels for dishonor.
It's the Romans passage I've heard used to argue one position or another about the potter choosing who goes to heaven & who goes to hell, and the clay having nothing to say about it. You're just whatever the potter decides to make you.
These are the arguments I'm familiar with, but you seem to be taking it a different direction, and I wish you would explain what you're trying to say in more detail because I've asked you several questions about this post & obviously I've done nothing but misunderstand.
[bible]romans 9:20-24[/bible]
Does vessels of wrath refer to those who are God's own, whom God knows intimately? God's own, God's Church, the redeemed, blood-bought children in Jesus Christ?
Why did you say the potter/clay analogy only applied to this group?