Common Good

Common Good

Kingdom Unity Amid Diversity

Scripture References

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Old Testament

Zechariah 8:20-23

20 The LORD of Armies says: “Many peoples and the inhabitants of many cities will yet come.

21 The inhabitants of one will go to another, saying, ‘Let’s go speedily to entreat the favour of the LORD, and to seek the LORD of Armies. I will go also.’

22 Yes, many peoples and strong nations will come to seek the LORD of Armies in Jerusalem and to entreat the favour of the LORD.”

23 The LORD of Armies says: “In those days, ten men out of all the languages of the nations will take hold of the skirt of him who is a Jew, saying, ‘We will go with you, for we have heard that God is with you.’”

New Testament

Galatians 3:26-29

26 For you are all children of God, through faith in Christ Jesus.

27 For as many of you as were baptised into Christ have put on Christ.

28 There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free man, there is neither male nor female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus.

29 If you are Christ’s, then you are Abraham’s offspring and heirs according to promise.

Thought for the Day

Zechariah imagines the nations on the move: peoples and strong nations coming to seek the LORD, even taking hold of a Jew’s robe and saying, “Let us go with you, for we have heard that God is with you.” It is an image of desire and of welcome, of strangers becoming companions on the road to worship.

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Paul speaks of a unity even deeper than shared travel plans. In Christ, we are sons and daughters of God; we are “all one”. The distinctions that once determined belonging no longer decide our place at the table. Baptism, he says, clothes us with Christ himself.

This matters for public life because division so easily becomes our drug. We learn to sort people into “ours” and “theirs”, to treat difference as threat, to build a common life on suspicion. The kingdom calls us to a better strength: belonging that does not require contempt.

So we pray for unity that is not uniformity, and diversity that is not fragmentation. We pray for churches and communities to practise hospitality across lines of class, ethnicity, and history. And we ask to be people who are recognisably with Jesus: not because we have all the right enemies, but because we have learned to love.

Prayer Points

Respond
  • Lord, clothe us with Christ, and free us from contempt, suspicion, and the pride of exclusion.
  • For the Church, grant unity that honours difference and refuses domination or erasure.
  • For communities fractured by race, class, or political hostility, give peace, truth, and patient repair.
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  • For those who feel like strangers, make room: in our churches, our neighbourhoods, and our hearts.
  • Teach us to see one another as those for whom Christ died, and to practise welcome with courage.