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Everyday Justice

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Life under the sun

When three young Black men missed penalties in the final of Euro 2020, the online racial abuse that followed was as inevitable as it was tragic.

We all agree that this sort of racial injustice needs rectifying, and that to do so might require punitive measures.

But who’s to blame? Those who wrote online posts? Social media companies who know how their platforms are used and yet fail to act? How about the wider culture of the UK – of which we’re all a part – which grows division and exacerbates tension?

We mustn’t excuse racially abusive individuals. But neither can we punish them without considering wider societal factors: the communities they grew up in, the rules of right and wrong they’ve been taught.

Instead, Scripture gives us a third way, where the weight of guilt is strongest for the individual who did wrong, but the whole community is also held responsible.

We see this in the prophets. God calls us to act justly, love mercy, and walk humbly, but so often we act unfairly, love judgment, and walk proudly away from our God. In response, in Ezekiel 18, God’s prophet speaks of the consequences for the individual who sins.

However, there’s also corporate punishment for a society that allows such sin to flourish – exile. And from that place of exile, Daniel confesses the rebellion of his people. Daniel is never recorded committing such sins himself – he was barely a teenager when the exile started – yet he still repents, realising his complicity as part of a disobedient community.

Daniel’s confession ends with a plea for God’s restoration. In the social sciences, restorative justice brings the victim, perpetrator, and wider community into communication, so everyone can play a role in repairing harm through repentance and forgiveness. This heals divides, and allows right relationships to be rekindled – much like biblical justice.

Whether we’re culpable on an individual or corporate level, how can we practically play our role within God’s restorative purposes in our everyday lives? Like Daniel, one way we can do this is prayer.

We might repent of our willing participation in broken systems of injustice, where our daily habits prioritise our convenience over other people’s welfare. Or we may intercede over unjust everyday situations, where an individual’s actions threaten peace. And as we kneel in prayer, may we find the wisdom and courage to stand as agents of God’s restorative justice, to act justly, love mercy, and walk humbly with Him this week.

Action

What role might prayer play in God’s restorative purposes in your daily life?

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Sobre este plano

Everyday 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? This six-day plan will explore what it means to pursue biblical justice in our ordinary lives.

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