at a round table there are no sides…

On April 18, 2008 / By maggi dawn / Reply

Alan Wilson, the blogging bishop, posted this poem today, which I haven’t come across before. I like its theme, and the honesty it portrays. All church organisations I have come across (including those that claim to be egalitarian and non-organisational) are prone to people "working their way up the table" – simply because that is human nature. To become a "round table" church has less to do with organisational structure than it does with a willingness of heart to share power and presence with all comers. 

In search of a round table

Concerning the why and how and what and who of ministry,
One image keeps surfacing: A table that is round.
It will take some sawing
To be roundtabled.
Some redefining
And redesigning,
Some redoing and rebirthing
Of narrow long Churching
Can painful be
For people and tables.
It would mean no daising
And throning,
For but one king is there
And he is a foot washer,
At table no less.
And what of narrow long ministers
When they confront
A round table people,
After years of working up the table
To finally sit at its head,
Only to discover
That the table has been turned round?
They must be loved into roundness,
For God has called a People
Not "them and us".
"them and us" are unable
to gather round; for at a round table
there are no sides
and ALL are invited
to wholeness and to food.
At one time
Our narrowing churches
Were built to resemble the Cross
But it does no good
For building to do so,
If lives do not.
Round tabling means
No preferred seating,
No first and last,
No better, and no corners
For the "least of these".
Roundtabling means
Being with,
A part of,
Together and one.
It means room for the Spirit
And gifts
And disturbing profound peace for all.
We can no longer prepare for the past.
To be Church,
And if He calls for other than a round table
We are bound to follow.
Leaving the sawdust
And chips, designs and redesigns
Behind, in search of and in presence of
The Kingdom
That is His and not ours.

Chuck Lathrop

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Comments

  1. I come from a tradition that almost always has the preacher choose his/her own scripture to preach from. I actually would prefer following a lectionary in many ways. I fear that if I’m allowed to choose what I preach every time, I may get boring and repetitive because I may, subconsciously or consciously, stick to my favorite topics and scriptures.
    I have really been enjoying your blog!

  2. So… er… why do we sing hymns at football matches, do you think?

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