Tables of power
Tables of power
Something to think about
Of around 200 sovereign states in the world (recognising that the precise number is subject to dispute and controversy), only 43 have a monarch as their head of state. And they don’t generally gather around a table together to rule the world!
There are plenty of contexts though in which powerful people gather, from board rooms of businesses, to governments and cabinets, to international bodies. In those places of power, the Psalmist would tell us, we can expect the good and just rule of God to be overlooked and even opposed.
Of course, individuals at every level of leadership do work for the common good and seek policies that overturn oppression. But generally, power seeks to maintain itself. So the reign of God is resisted as if it were a ‘bond’ or ‘cord’ on those leaders, when in fact it is a call to justice and liberation for all.
Whether or not we hold positions of influence, we too might cling to a sense of power in our own lives. Doing so can lead us to resist God’s ways as if they were intended to bind us, rather than to help us play our part in making everyone free.