Common Good

Common Good

Justice in Supply Chains

Scripture References

Read First

Old Testament

Amos 8:4-8

4 Hear this, you who desire to swallow up the needy, and cause the poor of the land to fail,

5 saying, ‘When will the new moon be gone, that we may sell grain? And the Sabbath, that we may market wheat, making the ephah small, and the shekel large, and dealing falsely with balances of deceit;

6 that we may buy the poor for silver, and the needy for a pair of sandals, and sell the sweepings with the wheat?’”

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7 The LORD has sworn by the pride of Jacob, “Surely I will never forget any of their works.

8 Won’t the land tremble for this, and everyone mourn who dwells in it? Yes, it will rise up wholly like the River; and it will be stirred up and sink again, like the River of Egypt.

New Testament

Philippians 2:3-4

3 doing nothing through rivalry or through conceit, but in humility, each counting others better than himself;

4 each of you not just looking to his own things, but each of you also to the things of others.

Thought for the Day

Amos will not let piety cover cruelty. The market is open, the festival barely finished, and already the impatient question rises: when can we sell again, when can we make more? Even Sabbath becomes an inconvenience to greed. The prophet names the practice plainly: small measures, inflated prices, the poor bought ‘for a pair of sandals’.

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Supply chains can make this sin feel modern and distant. A label is tidy; a ledger is clean; a parcel arrives on time. Yet a neighbour’s life can be ground down somewhere along the line, hidden behind subcontracting and distance, until suffering is treated as somebody else’s problem.

Paul’s counsel to the Philippians is disarmingly simple: do nothing from selfish ambition; look not only to your own interests, but also to the interests of others. This is not a technique for virtue-signalling. It is a Spirit-formed attentiveness that refuses to let another person become ‘elsewhere’.

In Christ we belong to one household. If the one who stitched, packed, picked, or loaded were our sister or brother at the Table, how would we want them treated? Lord, give us clearer sight, steadier compassion, and the courage to bear the cost of honesty, even in small everyday choices.

Prayer Points

Respond
  • Lord, have mercy on those trampled by unjust wages, unsafe work, or coercive contracts.
  • Expose what is hidden and straighten what has become crooked in supply and labour.
  • Give integrity and wisdom to those who investigate, report, and enforce protection for workers.
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  • Deliver us from the habit of thinking only of our own interests.
  • Make your people attentive, generous, and slow to excuse harm done at a distance.