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The Missional Wisdom Foundation
Wisdom for the Way

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Theme XVI:
Missional Inclusion

What Kind of Power?

By Sarah S. Howell-Miller

July 17, 2019

“Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.” This quote from Lord Acton often is used as a warning when someone gains a position of authority or as an explanation when someone in power behaves badly. Power, it seems, is like fire—play with it, and you’ll likely get burned.

I have always loved 2 Corinthians 12:9, “My grace is sufficient for you, for power is made perfect in weakness.” To me, this verse calls those who represent Empire—all who have power, authority, privilege, and advantage that others do not—to lay down their earthly power, to become dependent instead on God’s grace. Power, it seems, is to be given up.

But what about those who have no power? Telling someone that in order to draw close to God they must give up their power stings, but saying the same to someone who has been oppressed and victimized by Empire, who lacks the kind of power that Empire wields, doesn’t make sense. And simply praising their powerlessness as an asset in their spiritual journey is disingenuous and denies the reality that the poor and powerless in our society often are made to suffer.

I’ve been thinking a lot about power and whether it can be wielded for good. People in power can do good without fundamentally changing an unjust system. Is the answer, then, to take power from the powerful and give it to the powerless?  Transferring power from one group to another seems like it would just perpetuate the system in a new way.

I found the beginnings of an answer in Cyndi Suarez’s book, The Power Manual. Here, she asks an important question: what kind of power are we talking about? Suarez distinguishes between two kinds of power: dominating power and liberatory power. Dominating power is about supremacy, submission, and scarcity, while liberatory power is about creating a world based on abundance. The distinction between these two forms of power comes down to how they deal with difference: is it a problem, or is it an asset?
Suarez says that to change what kind of power we engage with, we need to refuse powerless identities and change the way we interact with dominating power. We need to engage with God’s abundance rather than with the world’s scarcity. Dominating power corrupts, but liberatory power has the potential to heal. 

Those who represent Empire are not to blame, but they (we) do bear responsibility for changing the balance of power—as do we all. Power is made perfect—transformed and made liberatory—in weakness—in life-affirming, abundance-believing interactions that honor others’ humanity without seeking domination over them.

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The MWF Dispersed Community is a varied collection of persons who support and do the work of the Missional Wisdom Foundation. What is that work? To embody the Holy Spirit in the world, to support Communities that seek to be a means of Grace, and to learn and teach about living missionally.
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Spotlight:
National Gathering 

Great Intentions for the Road Ahead

Great Intentions for the Road Ahead

by Wendi Bernau

After all that had been absorbed at National Gathering 2019, all the friendships and connections nurtured, all the conversations and stories shared, all the good food and fun and creativity, all the time taken for reflection and intention, it becomes time to ask: how are we doing now, weeks later, as regular life has returned to us in full force? 

As part of the Open Space time, I asked our participants to continue their learnings and reflections by adding sticky notes to our banner - what questions did you ask, what do you want to remember or commit to, what inspired you? and so on. These stickies (many of which you have seen over the course of these Spotlight articles) have reflected all the fabulous memories and take-aways from the National Gathering. 

At the last session of Open Space, I asked everyone to consider, as they go back to regular life: what commitments will you make? What inspirations do you desire to keep close with you as you go? There was a delightful variety of responses from very general to very specific. So here, in the after-weeks of our time together, I wonder: what would it look like to check in and ask, “have you been able to take these steps, make these changes, keep these commitments?” There is no judgment; I’m just curious (and maybe a little nosy) that way. How’s everybody being? 

There are no names attached so I cannot check up on you individually, but I sure hope to see each and every one of you (and some new friends too) at next year’s National Gathering. Save the date: April 23-25, 2020 in Dallas at the Mix. We have a place prepared for you. 

Community Voices: Jana Strukova

"I have not encountered the concept of open space before. When the invitation came for an audience to offer a conversational topic and moderate a subsequent conversation around it, people took an initiative and suggested a plethora of topics. It was not an impulsive gesture; rather one could see that people who suggested topics lingered with them, pondered them and were ready to share their thoughts with others...For me open space modeled the practice of conversation-not merely as a logical, rationalistic reflection on the concept; but rather as a binding practice of exchanging vulnerabilities but also hopes and alternative ways to fulfill calling in God’s Kingdom."


 

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