Everyday Justiceنموونە
Right relationships
You don’t publicly confront Billy Graham lightly. Yet that’s exactly what John Stott did in the mid-1970s. What was important enough to risk a rift between two global figures in the evangelical church?
The church’s call to social justice.
Our modern world is full of cries for justice. Everyone wants to see ‘justice done’, even if we all have a slightly different idea of what that would look like. But what does godly justice involve, and how might we live it out in our everyday situations?
Biblically, justice is firstly a characteristic of God Himself, and closely tied to the idea of righteousness. Much like God, it’s intrinsically relational. Though we often reduce justice down to individualistic terms – getting what I deserve – it instead looks like broken relationships being restored.
Let’s start with the exodus. God hears the cries of His people as they’re enslaved, and He delivers them. Into this context, He gives them the law: they know what it’s like to be on the receiving end of injustice, and they’re to live in a different way – a holy people following a holy God. And this new way of living revolves around right relationships: loving God (Deuteronomy 6:5), loving their neighbour as themselves (Leviticus 19:18), and also loving the rest of creation.
For instance, even the animals are given a day off to rest. Even the land is given a sabbath year off to lie unploughed. God’s people aren’t to dominate creation, but to care for it. Their righteousness is lived out through their relationships: with God, other people, themselves, and with the natural world.
In the light of this biblical picture of righteousness, how might we live more justly? What sort of practices might lead to right relationships? There are plenty of options, but I suggest we focus on simplicity.
If everyone in the world lived like we do in the UK, we’d need 2.7 Earths to sustain us. Instead, simple living restrains our desire to consume, and applies the same idea as the sabbath year. Rather than ruthlessly exploiting our world, we choose to be content with less, allowing creation, and our poorest neighbours – worst hit by ecological disasters – to flourish.
How might we live more simply in our daily lives? How might this affect our travel, our diet, or our habits? As everyday changes multiply into a wider effect, may all our relationships look more just as a result.
Action
What changes could you make to live righteously?
Scripture
About this Plan
Our modern world is full of cries for justice. Everyone wants to see ‘justice done’, even if we all have a slightly different idea of what that would look like. But what does godly justice involve, and how might we live it out in our everyday situations? This six-day plan will explore what it means to pursue biblical justice in our ordinary lives.
More