Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Mission Yearbook: Gathering celebrates Portugal’s 180 years of Protestant presence

The 79th Synod of the Evangelical Presbyterian Church of Portugal (IEPP) celebrated 180 years of Protestant presence in Portugal in 2025. A recent report from its annual gathering, held May 23–25 at the Cova Gala Social Center in Portugal, offered a poignant reflection on the denomination’s challenges and its enduring commitment to mission, renewal and ecumenical partnership. The report written in Portuguese was shared by Luciano Kovacs, a global ecumenical liaison, and translated through PC(USA)'s Global Language Resources for the Presbyterian News Service. 

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Members of IEPP denomination in Portugal at annual synod gathering.
The synod gathering closed with worship at Igreja Evangélica Figueirense – Presbiteriana (Contributed photo).

At its 79th gathering, the synod celebrated the legacy of Protestant faith in Portugal with the release of a new edition of “O Apóstolo da Madeira” (The Apostle of Madeira), commemorating Dr. Robert Reid Kelley’s medical mission and evangelism on the island of Madeira. The publication was described as “a grateful remembrance of the faith that sustains us and the legacy that inspires us.”

Delegates also acknowledged pressing concerns: a shrinking pastoral workforce, financial constraints and the difficulty of church growth in an increasingly secular society. But signs of hope were present. The synod highlighted vibrant outreach initiatives, particularly Projeto Esperança (Project Hope) and Mulheres que fazem a diferença (Women Making a Difference), which embody the IEPP’s mission to serve, heal and empower.

Launched in 2018, Projeto Esperança continues to flourish as a synodal initiative for children and youth. It fosters spiritual formation through Bible camps, regional gatherings, and the Routes of Faith program, which encourages young people to lead worship and engage in intergenerational ministry across congregations. The project also includes service opportunities like the ABC Kids program — offering school support, therapy and food baskets — and the Euro-Orphans initiative, which supports children of migrants facing emotional and social vulnerabilities.

Meanwhile, Mulheres que fazem a diferença has become a prophetic force within the IEPP. Through retreats, prayer vigils and service like the Heart in Bloom pillow project for breast cancer patients and the Just Like Me therapeutic dolls for children in Angola and Mozambique, Presbyterian women in Portugal are weaving threads of healing and hope. Their gatherings emphasize spiritual depth, leadership development, and ecumenical solidarity, with participation from Catholic, Methodist, Lusitanian and Salvation Army communities.

The synod also emphasized the vital role of young people and cross-cultural, ecumenical experiences in the church’s renewal. Youth-led worship services, ecumenical forums and international exchanges demonstrated that young Presbyterians are not absent but actively shaping the future. From July 25–29, IEPP youth were invited by the United Protestant Church of France to participate in Le Grand Kiff, an event that brought together young Christians from all over Europe around the theme: “Breathe, Hope.” Portuguese youth attended this event for five days of music, worship and sharing, expanding their understanding of the global body of Christ.

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People eat a meal at IEPP synod gathering in Portugal
PC(USA) global ecumenical liaison Luciano Kovacs (in light blue) talks with participants over a communal meal. (Contributed photo)

Ecumenical support remains a cornerstone of IEPP’s resilience. The synod welcomed international guests, including the Rev. Rita Famos of the Community of Protestant Churches in Europe, Kovacs and Professor Douglass Sullivan-González of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), and representatives from Germany’s Gustav-Adolf-Werk (a Protestant aid organization that does diaspora work for the Evangelical Church in Germany) and the Spanish Evangelical Church. Their presence affirmed the IEPP’s place within a global communion committed to justice, inclusion and shared witness.

“Welcoming brothers and sisters from different churches and organizations to the Synod was a clear sign of communion. Their presence reminds us that we are not walking alone, but that we are part of the body of Christ in the world,” stated the synod report. “Brothers and sisters who travel from afar to be with us are living witnesses of God’s care and support. There is a larger family praying for us and listening to us.”

The Rev. Sandra Reis, newly elected president of the IEPP, closed the synod with a call to action: “Let us be a community that rises up in the power of the Spirit, with our feet on the ground and our hearts on fire.”

In a time of uncertainty, the IEPP’s synod offered a compelling vision of a church that, though small in number, is rich in faith, creativity and compassion.

Read the report here.

Beth Waltemath, Communications Strategist, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) (Click here to read original PNS Story)

Let us join in prayer for:

Donald Jeffries, Facilities Technician, Building Services, Administrative Services Group
Nicholas Stark, Associate for Lending Services, Presbyterian Investment and Loan Program

Let us pray:

Eternal God, you call us to love our neighbors and to reach out to the least of these, and we are grateful that you show us ways to serve you. Bless and challenge us to love others as you have loved us, through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Pastor's Life - Ordinary Time

Pastoring in Ordinary Time
by Rev. Lauren Gully

So often the people in our congregations assume that we, their pastors, are something more than ordinary. Whether it is our role, the visibility of our work, or the sacred trust placed in us, it can be easy for others — and sometimes for us — to imagine that pastoral leaders exist on a level slightly removed from the ordinary realities of life. But the simple truth is that we are ordinary people. We carry heavy burdens. We navigate hard transitions. We experience joy and loss, exhaustion and hope, often alongside the very same struggles present in the lives of the communities we serve.

Much of life, when we are honest, is profoundly ordinary. Living is hard work: raising children, caring for aging parents, navigating financial stress, managing health concerns. Living is also deeply joyful: celebrating graduations, a spouse’s promotion, the birth of a child, or a long-awaited reconciliation. Nearly everything we experience could be called ordinary, not because it lacks meaning, but because it is shared human ground. These moments are not insignificant; they form the necessary framework of our lives, marking time with peaks and valleys that shape who we are becoming. The ordinary is where life actually happens.

Rev. Lauren Gully serves as the Pastor for Mission and Outreach at Lafayette-Orinda Presbyterian Church in California, where she previously held the role of Pastor for Spiritual Formation. Her background includes creative writing, global service-learning, interfaith dialogue, young adult ministry, and a strong passion for sustainability. Currently, Lauren serves on the board of Hope Solutions, a local housing non-profit, and is completing her thesis, “How to be Angry at God,” for her Doctorate of Ministry at Duke Divinity School.

Featured Resources

The Story of Transfiguration

"Acknowledging the lordship of Jesus is not about building tents for Jesus — literal or metaphorical — but about partcipating in the mission he had initiated." Rev. Dr. Raj Nadella shares in a Lectionary Preview for February 15.

Luminosity Conference

Make plans to attend the Luminosity Conference in Orlando, FL from March 9-11, 2026. This conference will be an inspiring and transformative experience filled with insightful teaching, practical strategies, and meaningful connections. Join us as we learn, dream, and grow together — because the future of ministry starts with leaders like you.

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Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Mission Yearbook: New hymn celebrates blessing children in Jesus’ name

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Rev. Carolyn Winfrey Gillette and granddaughter
The Rev. Carolyn Winfrey Gillette enjoys time with her granddaughter. (Contributed photo)

Presbyterian pastor and hymn writer the Rev. Carolyn Winfrey Gillette has a new hymn, “Jesus, You Once Blessed the Children,” set to NETTLETON, the tune for “Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing.”

“This new hymn celebrates Jesus blessing the children,” she said in a statement. “It is a prayer that we, as followers of Jesus, will bless them, too, in his name— as we teach them the faith; as we protect them from gun violence; and as we create a cleaner, more just world for them to grow up in.”

“As the old children’s song goes, ‘They are precious in his sight,’ and since children are precious to Jesus, then he calls us to do everything we can to make the world a more loving, faithful, safe, and sustainable place for them to grow up. What are the ways we are willing to change, to be a blessing to them?”

She grants permission for free use of this hymn, including online, for local churches.

Jesus, You Once Blessed the Children

NETTLETON 8.7.8.7 D (“Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing”)

Jesus, you once blessed the children who were often pushed aside.

“God has given them the kingdom,” you proclaimed, arms open wide.

You call people to protect them and to make sure they’re all right.

May we bless the world of children who are precious in your sight.

May we share with them the gospel: In your love, you make us new!

May we help them to be faithful; may they turn in trust to you.

May we teach them love of neighbors in this world’s diversity.

May our love toward friends and strangers be examples that they see.

When our children ask for safety, may we give them what is good.

God, may weapons never hurt them in their homes or neighborhoods.

May we learn that second graders in their classrooms matter more

than the guns we fill our land with — that our nation clamors for.

May we work to stop pollution, may we counter climate change.

For the love of growing children, God, what will we rearrange?

Will we change our laws to save them?  Will we try a whole new way?

May our actions bless the children as we build a better day.

Biblical references: Leviticus 19:34Matthew 18:5-6Matthew 19:13–15Matthew 25:31-46Mark 10:13–16 and Luke 18:15–17Hebrews 13:2.

Tune: John Wyeth’s “Repository of Sacred Music,” 1813

Alternate tune:  HOLY MANNA (“Brethren, We Have Met to Worship”)
Text: Copyright © 2025 by Carolyn Winfrey Gillette. All rights reserved.

Email: carolynshymns@gmail.com. New hymns are found here.

Mike Ferguson, Editor, Presbyterian News Service (Click here to read original PNS Story)

Let us join in prayer for:

Angielee Acevedo, Lead Housekeeper, Stony Point Center
Rhea Adams, Service Desk Technician, Information Technology Infrastructure, Administrative Services Group 

Let us pray:

God of all peoples, help us to trust that you will bring to completion by the day of Jesus Christ the good work you have begun. In the name of Jesus. Amen.

World Evangelical Alliance - From Nazareth to the World: Botrus Mansour Leads 650 Million Evangelicals

Listen Today!


In this episode of evangelical 360, Brian Stiller sits down with Botrus Mansour, our secretary general and a Palestinian evangelical lawyer whose life has been shaped by faith, culture, and the call to bridge divides.

Mansour shares his journey from local ministry in Israel to leading a global fellowship representing over 650 million evangelicals.


He reflects on:

• Evangelical identity rooted in Jesus, grace, and Scripture

• The WEA’s role as a global convening space, not a hierarchy

• Advocacy for religious freedom while remaining non-partisan


From Nazareth, Mansour reminds us that global leadership can grow from connection and collaboration, not tradition or power — guiding a worldwide evangelical family to walk together across difference.

Subscribe to YouTube to catch every episode of evangelical 360!


Every blessing,


Warmly,

Brian C. Stiller is the Global Ambassador of the World Evangelical Alliance, serving a global community of over 600 million Christians since 2011. Born and raised in Canada, Brian holds undergraduate and graduate degrees from the University of Toronto and a doctoral degree from Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary. His career began in 1967 with Youth For Christ (YFC), eventually becoming President of YFC/Canada, the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada, and Tyndale University College & Seminary in Toronto. He is the author of 12 books, including Evangelicals Around the World: A Global Handbook for the 21st Century (General Editor) and An Insider’s Guide to Praying for the World. Visit him at brianstiller.com and follow his blog at dispatchesfrombrian.com.

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Over two billion Christians in the world today are represented by three world church bodies. The World Evangelical Alliance (WEA) is one of those, serving more than 600 million evangelicals belonging to churches that are part of 143 national Evangelical Alliances in 9 regions. Launched in London in 1846, the WEA unites evangelicals across denominations for prayer, evangelism, mission, theological education, religious freedom, human rights advocacy, relief, and engagement in a wide range of social issues. It speaks with one voice to United Nations, governments, and media in public or through behind-the-scenes diplomacy on issues of common concern to the Church. For more information, visit worldea.org WEA has been a charter member of the Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability since 1980. WEA is audited annually by an independent public accounting firm. WEA is a registered 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. In the United States, your contribution is tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law.

WCC NEWS: WCC extends condolences, calls for justice in wake of Congo mine collapse

A landslide caused by heavy rain on 28 January collapsed several mines in eastern Congo, leaving at least 200 people dead.
Photo: Albin Hillert/WCC
02 February 2026

The collapse took place at the Rubaya mines, which have previously collapsed because the tunnels are dug by hand, poorly constructed, and left without maintenance.

Rubaya lies in the heart of eastern Congo, a mineral-rich part of the central African nation which for decades has been ripped apart by conflict and is already suffering from an acute humanitarian crisis with more than 7 million people displaced, including more than 300,000 who have fled their homes since December.

Congo is a major supplier of coltan, a black metallic ore that contains the rare metal tantalum, a key component in the production of smartphones, computers, and aircraft engines.
The country produced about 40 percent of the world's coltan in 2023, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

World Council of Churches general secretary Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay called for prayers from the global fellowship, and extended condolences to those who have lost loved ones.

“We grieve with all those affected and hold you in prayer as you cope with loss,” he said. “We call for an end of the exploitation of mine workers who toil in unsafe environments and who bear the brunt of extractive greed.” 

WCC member churches in Congo

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The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 356 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 580 million Christians in over 120 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay from the Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa.

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Mission Yearbook: Gathering celebrates Portugal’s 180 years of Protestant presence

The 79th Synod of the  Evangelical Presbyterian Church of Portugal (IEPP)  celebrated 180 years of Protestant presence in Portugal in 2025. ...