Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Mission Yearbook: Indiana church abolishes over $1 million in medical debt for neighbors

Last fall, First Presbyterian Church of Columbus, Indiana, celebrated its 200th
anniversary (Photos by Rich Copley).
As part of its 200th anniversary celebration, First Presbyterian Church of Columbus, Indiana, has taken an extraordinary step to serve its neighbors.

With a $10,000 gift from a generous church family, the congregation partnered with Undue Medical Debt to purchase and abolish just over $1.78 million in medical debt for 1,488 individuals across south-central Indiana. 

The impact reaches deep into the community:

  • Bartholomew County: $1.03 million relieved for 916 individuals
  • Brown County: $237,000 relieved for 225 individuals
  • Jackson County: $507,000 relieved for 347 individuals.

“This is about bringing hope and healing in a very practical way,” said the Rev. Dr. Felipe N. MartĂ­nez, pastor of First Presbyterian Church. “Our bicentennial is not only a time to look back with gratitude but also to look forward with compassion. We wanted to help ease a burden many families were carrying.”

The initiative was inspired by a family in the congregation who wished to remain anonymous. Other families in the church have added to that initial gift. Their donations were multiplied through Undue Medical Debt’s model, which converts every $1 contributed into an average of $100 in debt relief.

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FPC of Columbus choir sings
The choir at First Presbyterian Church of Columbus, Indiana, sings during the church's 200th anniversary celebration last fall 

Medical debt is the leading cause of bankruptcy in the United States and often prevents families from seeking further care. Those who qualify for debt relief through Undue Medical Debt typically earn less than four times the federal poverty level or have debts that exceed 5% of their annual income.

Individuals whose debt is being abolished will soon receive letters directly from Undue Medical Debt. These letters are not a scam —they carry the good news that their debt has been fully eliminated and, importantly, that this debt will also be removed from their credit records. Recipients are strongly encouraged to open these letters when they arrive.

First Presbyterian Church has an additional $10,000 in donated funds reserved to abolish more debt when the next purchase becomes available, extending the impact of this future event further.

While this is not a fundraising campaign, church leaders hope their example will inspire other faith communities and nonprofit organizations to consider how they too might stand alongside families struggling with medical debt.

Since being founded in 2014 by two former debt collectors, Undue Medical Debt has acquired — and abolished — more than $20 billion of burdensome medical debt, helping over 7 million families and addressing a major social determinant of health. Undue partners with individuals, faith-based organizations and corporations and empowers donors by converting every dollar contributed into $100 of medical debt relief on average. Learn more here.

Founded in 1824, First Presbyterian Church of Columbus has served the community for two centuries through worship, outreach and social impact. The church continues to embody its mission by fostering compassion, justice and service in Columbus and beyond.

First Presbyterian Church of Columbus, Indiana (Click here to read original PNS Story)

Let us join in prayer for:

John Kim, Senior Translator, Global Language Resources, Administrative Services Group
Sam Young Kim, Stewardship Officer – Korean, Stewardship and Major Gift Officer, Administrative Services Group         

Let us pray:

Gracious God, help us to continually look for  you in all of Creation and help us always to be a blessing in your sight. Amen.

World Communion Offering Resources and Grants

The World Communion Offering logo and the words, "This Fall."

First World Communion Offering this Fall


The World Communion Offering is happening for the first time this fall as mandated by the 226th General Assembly (2024). It’s exciting to explore this new opportunity with you.

World Communion Offering Grant Update


Soon we will be able to share with you how the application process works, the timeline for receiving grants and where you can find the application to apply.
As a reminder, any council of the church (i.e., mid councils and sessions) can apply for a grant regardless of your participation in the World Communion Offering.

Things to Remember about the World Communion Offering

  • You will receive a standing order if you had one for the Peace & Global Witness Offering. They will ship in July.
  • Check our website for resources being unveiled for this offering starting in late summer. This will include a worship resource for World Communion Sunday prepared in partnership with the Presbyterian Association of Musicians.
  • There will be a video to share with your members.
  • Mark your calendar for the Season of Preparation, which is Sept. 6-Oct. 4, 2026. Resources can be found online.
If you have any questions, please reach out by replying to this email or calling the number in the box below.
Thank you for generously supporting the Churchwide Special offerings. 
If you have any questions, reply to this email or call us at (800) 728-7228, Ext. 5047. 
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Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Mission Yearbook: PC(USA) charters its first Zo Presbyterian Church

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Elders of Zo Presbyterian Church are ordained at service to charter as a church.
The first class of elders of the Zo Presbyterian Church is ordained and installed. (Contributed photo).

The sanctuary at North Decatur Presbyterian Church resonated with the rhythmic pulse of traditional Zo music and voices lifted in harmonious prayer last fall as an Indigenous community from Myanmar’s western mountains claimed its place in the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.).

The Service of Constitution, conducted in multiple languages and punctuated by spirited hymns, marked a historic milestone: the chartering of the first Zo Presbyterian Church in the PC(USA). For two hours, the congregation celebrated not just the birth of a new church but also the fulfillment of a journey that began thousands of miles away and was nurtured by the hospitality of Presbyterian communities across metro Atlanta.

The Zo people, an Indigenous ethnic group who fled persecution in Myanmar, have worshiped at North Decatur Presbyterian for the past two years. Before that, Memorial Drive Presbyterian and Decatur Presbyterian Church welcomed them to worship in their spaces, providing temporary homes as the community grew and discerned its call to become a chartered congregation.

Video URL: player.vimeo.com/video/1043556984

The service showcased the vibrant worship style of the Zo community, with congregants dressed in traditional attire leading spirited hymns accompanied by drums and guitars. The Rev. Andy James, the stated clerk of the Presbytery of Greater Atlanta, conducted the installation of the Rev. Sarah Lane as pastor of the new congregation.

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Rev. Sarah Lane greets congregants wearing red Pentecost stole.
The Rev. Sarah Lane (Photo by Lindsay Armstrong)

Lane is the daughter of the late Rev. Dr. Lianchinkhup Taithul, who founded the Zo Presbyterian Church before suffering a fatal car accident. Upon her father's death, Lane felt called to attend seminary, seek ordination and lead the community, becoming the first Zo woman ordained in the Presbyterian Church.

“The roots of this church reach back to Myanmar’s mountains, but its branches already stretch throughout Atlanta and are growing toward Baltimore, toward Indianapolis and toward the world,” Lane said. “Where others saw displacement, God saw dispersal — seed scattered to grow new life in unexpected soil.”

The chartering represents the culmination of years of faithful work that began with a single visit to a presbytery office. The Rev. Dr. Lindsay Armstrong, executive director of the presbytery’s New Church Development Commission, recalled that pivotal moment. “When Rev. Dr. Lianchinkhup walked into my office years ago, he carried more than a dream — he carried a people’s hope,” Armstrong said. “Today, that hope has been realized.”

Armstrong emphasized the significance of the milestone, describing it as both historic and deeply personal. “The first Zo congregation in the PC(USA) is not an ending but a beginning,” she said. “It is the Spirit saying again, ‘See, I am doing a new thing — do you not perceive it?’”

The Zo people fled Myanmar amid political persecution and civil conflict, with many settling in the United States over the past decade. The community has maintained strong ties to its cultural and religious heritage while building new lives in American cities.

For North Decatur Presbyterian, serving as host church to the Zo congregation has provided a glimpse into the early days of church planting. The Rev. Mary Anona Stoops, pastor at North Decatur Presbyterian, was preparing for her own congregation's 70th anniversary celebration when the Zo church was chartered.

“Celebrating the chartering of Zo Presbyterian Church was a profound joy and gift,” Stoops said. “It is like seeing our own story come alive again, reminding me of what it takes to begin a new church: perseverance, vision and deep faith.”

The service included the presentation of a charter certificate, the examination of the congregation’s officers and the celebration of the Lord’s Supper. Congregants from across the presbytery attended to witness the historic occasion.

“To charter is not to finish something — it is to throw open the doors of possibility,” Armstrong said. “Zo Presbyterian Church stands as both home and horizon.”

According to Armstrong, the new congregation represents a growing trend in the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), as immigrant and ethnic communities increasingly shape the denomination’s future. The PC(USA) has prioritized new church development in recent years, with particular focus on multicultural and multilingual congregations.

“This moment is historic, but it’s also profoundly personal,” Armstrong said. “The Zo people are teaching us what it means to be the Church — courageous, communal and compelled by love.”

Beth Waltemath, Communications Strategist, Presbyterian Life & Witness (Click here to read original PNS Story)

Let us join in prayer for:

Robert Kent, IT Specialist, Information Technology, The Presbyterian Foundation
Joshua Kerr, Ministry Relations Officer, Development Office, The Presbyterian Foundation

Let us pray:

Gracious God, give us strength and courage to follow your call. Even though our numbers are small, grant us that our fruit be plentiful and our blessings great. Amen.

Monday, May 25, 2026

Minute for Mission: Memorial Day Devotional: Remembering. Honoring. Walking Together.

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Presbyterian Federal Chaplains Logo (cross)

Psalm 34:18: “The Lord is near to the brokenhearted and saves the crushed in spirit.”

There are moments in history that leave marks too deep for time to erase. Wars are among them. They shape generations, redefine communities, and leave behind both visible and invisible wounds. For those who have served — and for those who have loved them — these marks are carried long after the conflict ends.

Memorial Day invites us into a sacred pause. It is more than a long weekend or the unofficial start of summer. It is a day set apart to remember, intentionally and reverently, those who gave their lives in service to others. It is also a day to acknowledge the quiet grief carried by families, friends and communities who continue living in the absence of someone they love.

Remembrance is not passive. It asks something of us. It calls us to see the cost of sacrifice, to honor it not only with words but also with presence. For some, this remembrance is expressed in ceremonies and flags placed beside gravestones. For others, it is found in silence, in tears or in stories shared around a table.

As people of faith, we are also called to care. To stand beside those who mourn. To listen without rushing. To offer comfort not just through words but also through companionship. Sometimes the most meaningful ministry is simply refusing to let someone grieve alone.

We may not fully understand the weight carried by those who have experienced war firsthand or the depth of loss felt by their families. But we can be a community that bears witness to their stories. We can be people who embody compassion, extending grace and support in both small and profound ways.

Our denomination has over 120 chaplains serving in the Veterans Affairs hospitals, Federal Bureau of Prisons, and the military, and they are ministering within a broader community where that reality is an indelible part of their life journey. While it will be a day for remembrance, as chaplains, it is, more importantly, a time to share a prayer, offer a shoulder to cry on, counsel, or walk in silence, but never alone. Hopefully, it will become an indelible support in a time of remembering. 

On this Memorial Day, may we remember with gratitude. May we honor with humility. And may we walk alongside those who carry loss, offering them the steady reminder that they are not alone.

Rev. Dennis Hysom, Executive Director, Presbyterian Federal Chaplaincies

Let us join in prayer for:

Jessica Kelley, Senior Acquisitions Editor, Publishing & Editorial, Presbyterian Publishing Corporation
Wilson Kennedy, Associate Director, Annual Giving, Administrative Services Group    

Let us pray:

God of mercy and peace, we remember today those who gave their lives in service to others. We honor their sacrifice and hold in our hearts the families who continue to feel their absence. Teach us to be people of compassion and be ready to listen, to comfort and to stand with those who grieve. May we reflect your love in our care for one another. Amen.

Sunday, May 24, 2026

World Evangelical Alliance - Make It the Day Your Church Adopts a Frontier People Group

Minute for Mission: Presbyterian Heritage Sunday

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John Witherspoon Portrait
John Witherspoon Portrait (provided)

The Rev. John Witherspoon was many things: the only active clergyman to sign the Declaration of Independence, the leading Presbyterian of the Revolutionary era, a Scottish immigrant, president of the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University), an active politician and a slaveholder.

Witherspoon was born in Scotland in 1723. He attended the University of Edinburgh and then served two parishes as a Church of Scotland minister. He was 45 years old, a husband and father, when two Americans — Benjamin Rush and Richard Stockton — persuaded him to emigrate to America in 1768 to head the College of New Jersey. 

By most accounts, Witherspoon was an excellent choice for the College. He built a reputation as a dynamic preacher, an engaged teacher, and a colonial leader — not just in Presbyterian, religious and educational circles but increasingly in politics as well. 

In May 1776, two months before he began serving in the Second Continental Congress, Witherspoon preached a sermon titled “The Dominion of Providence Over the Passions of Men.” This sermon became one of the most well-known and influential sermons of the Revolution. Witherspoon made a strong case that God sided with the patriots because their cause was just.

Like many Founding Fathers, Witherspoon was an enslaver. It is not clear when he acquired the two enslaved people listed in his estate at the time of his death, and little is known about them. Their names are lost to history, at least for now, and Witherspoon never wrote about them in any of his surviving correspondence. Witherspoon did not believe, as some did, that enslavement was a benevolent practice supported by the Bible. He thought slavery would disappear in the United States within a generation. But he never called for abolition. His view of slavery prevailed in the newly organized Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. — just as it did in the national government.

McKenna Britton, Communications, Presbyterian Historical Society, Presbyterian Life & Witness

Let us join in prayer for:

Andy Keeney, Information Security Officer, Information Systems, The Presbyterian Foundation
Stephen Keizer, Vice President Ministry Relations, Development Office, The Presbyterian Foundation  

Let us pray:

Gracious and loving God, guide us as we strive to see and honor the full scope of past experiences. Open our minds and hearts to recognize the complexity of history and to feel compassion for human beings who lived in the past. We pray for your guidance today and into a future that often seems disconnected from Christ’s call. Help us to find the way. Amen.

Mission Yearbook: Indiana church abolishes over $1 million in medical debt for neighbors

Last fall, First Presbyterian Church of Columbus, Indiana, celebrated its 200th anniversary (Photos by Rich Copley). As part of its 200th an...