Thursday, June 25, 2026

Minute for Mission: Season of Prayer and Reflection in the Korean Peninsula begins

A South Korean soldier (right) shakes hands with a North Korean soldier during
an operation to construct a tactical road to support a joint war remains recovery
project at the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) in DMZ, South Korea, on Nov. 22, 2018.
The two Koreas connected the 3-kilometer-long road at Arrowhead Ridge, a site
of fierce battles in the Korean War. (Photo by South Korean Defense
Ministry/Sipa USA)
Today, June 25, marks 76 years since the Korean War broke out. Throughout that June, skirmishes along the division border led to North Korean forces crossing the border en masse on the 25th. Most U.S. Americans believe the war then ended in 1953; however, only an armistice agreement was signed at that time. This means outright fighting in the war has paused, but the state-of-war itself has continued for 72 years. Countless resources that might have been directed toward the health and welfare of the people throughout the Korean Peninsula have instead been spent on weapons of destruction and perpetuating hostility. This also means that the U.S. military continues to exert “wartime command authority” over the South Korean military, thus they cannot make any major military decision without the permission of the U.S. commander of forces in Korea, including ending the Korean War. We can then say that the Korean War has become the U.S.’s longest “forever war,” even longer than the war in Afghanistan, despite it not being a war with continuous battles.

In this context, our Christian partners in Korea, including the Presbyterian Church in the Republic of Korea and the National Council of Churches in Korea, have been exerting every effort they could to encourage policy makers in Korea and in the U.S. to end policies that deepened hostility and instead open the doors to gradual mutual trust building and the cultivation of a peace regime to replace the forever war regime.

 We have set this time, June 25 until Aug. 15, as a Season of Prayer and Reflection for Peace on the Korean Peninsula, along with our partners and the World Council of Churches. Now, they are also asking us to join them by signing on to the Korea Peace Appeal, calling for authentic dialogue to end the war now and open a chance for peace. So long as we exert authority over the South Korean military, as U.S. Americans we have a responsibility to remove the obstacles we have placed in the way of a Korean-led peace process. Let us join our voices with all those in Korea praying for an end to the war and for peaceful reconciliation on the Korean Peninsula.

Kurt Esslinger 이광원 PC(USA) Global Ecumenical Liaison, National Council of Churches in Korea Reconciliation and Reunification Department Ecumenical Forum for Korea Coordinator

Let us join in prayer for:

Mai Nhu, Director, Core Business Applications, Information Technology, The Board of Pensions
Kyle Nolan, Ministry Relations Officer, Development Office, The Presbyterian Foundation

Let us pray:

God of peace, guide our hands to make tools for peace instead of weapons of war. Let us learn war no more. Guide our hearts to break down walls of division, not with pressure sanctions and threats, but with love, humility and understanding. God, in solidarity with our siblings in Korea, help us to make a way where there is no way. Amen.

God's Mission Our Gifts: Your July Mission and Service Stories and more!

Congregational Stewardship and Generosity
 

“So long, and thanks for all the fish!”
 

This is the message left by the dolphins when they departed Planet Earth just before it was demolished in the book by the same title by Douglas Adams.

Now things are not that dire, but this is the last edition of God’s Mission Our Gifts that I will be helping produce.

I will be retiring on June 30 and so will no longer be your Community of Faith Stewardship Team Lead.

As I think about the last 10 years in devoted stewardship work, there are many “fish” to be thankful for.

 
  1. First must be the incredible people with whom I have worked. You have taught me much and together I really believe we have made a difference in the future of the United Church. Many of these people will continue to work with you, the Communities of Faith, not just to help build sustainability and nurture generous disciples, but to make you look good while doing it!
  2. Thank you to the participants in any of the Called to Be the Church: The Journey courses. You have helped us refine those courses for others. Your results have proven that these courses work.
  3. Thank you to those of you willing to risk trying new things. You know there is danger in risk, but you tried anyways and usually succeeded.
I am grateful for the opportunities this work has brought. As you continue to Inspire, Invite and Thank, building stewardship into the very core of the life of your congregation and its people, I wish you all the very best. Tag!!!

Take care. And remember, God loves you! 


 

Big News for Eastern Canada!!
 

The Rev. Rob Shearer has started as the Growth and Stewardship Animator for the Fundy St. Lawrence Dawning Waters region. He will also be covering the First Dawn Eastern Edge region for the foreseeable future. Those in his regions are welcome to reach out to Rob at rshearer@united-church.ca. Melody Duncanson Hales will also continue with some ongoing work in these regions. Thanks, Melody, for your help!
 

Let’s Say Thank You!
 

As PAR Month wraps up, please take the opportunity to thank your donors.
Thank those who are newly signed up for consistent giving through PAR. They are making a statement about their commitment to the church and to their faith.

Thank those already using PAR who increased their giving. They love their church.

Thank those not using PAR but still being generous. Generosity is a mark of discipleship.

You cannot thank people too much or too often. Now is the time!


New Stewardship BLOG
 

The Rev. Brenna Baker offers you Summer, and the Stewardship is Easy in this month's Stewardship Blog!! You can find it on Round the Table on the United Church website.
 

Getting Started in Stewardship
 

This is where it all begins. Communities of Faith completing this course have better outcomes.

After this FREE 90-minute online course you will better understand:
  • Stewardship is not fundraising.
  • Stewardship is discipleship.
  • Why people give?
  • What can you do next?
Find out more and sign up on CHURCHx.
 

Called to Be the Church: The Journey
 

Don’t wait!! Get ready and register now for the fall courses.

Everything you need to rediscover what stewardship really is!

Find the courses, dates, and times and sign up on CHURCHx.

 

Get the Stewardship support you need.
 

The people and resources you need to help you succeed are here
 

Your July Mission and Service Stories

These stories and more can now be found on the United Church of Canada Foundation’s website here. PowerPoint slides for each story are available on the Mission and Service Resources page.

July 5
Grace at the Gate

[Image credit: Courtesy of JCC]
 
Each morning, five-year-old Mohammad sat in his wheelchair at the gate of his home in Beirut’s Sabra/Shatila refugee camp, watching other children head to kindergarten while he remained behind. Born with partial paralysis and facing significant barriers to care and education, his world seemed limited, until a nearby kindergarten opened its doors and offered him a place to belong.

June 12
Reverence and Service

[Image credit: Courtesy of Rev. Won Hur]
 
“It is often difficult to see or fully understand the impacts of our faith at work in the world. Like fruit trees in an orchard, they take time to grow, blossom, and bear fruit for all to enjoy. Such is the work of ministry and service—it is often hidden from our eyes, yet it is growing and flourishing.”

June 19
Shared Wonder

[Image credit: Courtesy of Cave Springs Camp]

“I found a salamander!” a camper calls from a forest trail, and within moments a small crowd gathers in wonder. At Cave Springs Camp, moments like these help children and youth slow down, connect with creation, build friendships, and discover a deep sense of belonging in a supportive community rooted in faith.
 

June 26
Pursuing Peace

[Image credit: Photo by David McIntosh]

“Just like Miyako residents, I live on an island and can relate to their everyday lives on their island, as it was small and humble just like here in Newfoundland. There was one prominent difference. The majority of the residents are seeking peace from their own government, something we don’t have to worry about here in Canada. God called upon me to see how the people of Miyako Island are living, and to share with everyone their struggle for peace.”

Gifts with Vision News
 

Our small but mighty Gifts with Vision catalogue has been updated – featuring brand new gifts, as well as your existing favourites. Take a look now!

Questions? Email Gifts with Vision. You can also call us at 1-844-715-7969.

Why be a Mission and Service Volunteer?

You love the Mission and Service stories and want to share them: you’ve been reading the stories on the website every now and then, and you think they would inspire your congregation – if only you could hear about how other people were using them!

As a volunteer, you can have Mission and Service stories for the upcoming month sent right to your email inbox. They’re part of a weekly email with lots of information you can use. 
You can also virtually meet other Mission and Service volunteers and learn what works for them! 

Contact us today to learn more!  
  
Mission and Service Volunteer Program   
The United Church of Canada Foundation 
ms@united-church.ca   
1-800-465-3771 
GOD’S MISSION, OUR GIFTS is your newsletter. We want to provide news and information that you can use in your community of faith, whether you’re a minister, a board member, an administrator, a treasurer, or anyone else who wants to make a difference.
 
What else would you like to see? What can we do to help your community of faith get where it needs to go? Send us your thoughts!
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Copyright © 2026 The United Church of Canada, All rights reserved.

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Mission Yearbook: GA Moderator asks mid council leaders to lead ‘R.E.S.C.U.E.’

The Rev. CeCe Armstrong’s “Leading the R.E.S.C.U.E.” was the closing message of the recent Mid Council Leaders Gathering as part of the final day’s worship service, a fitting sending for leaders in the PC(USA) heading back home to continue their ministry in the communities they serve.

The Rev. CeCe Armstrong, Co-Moderator of the 226th General Assembly (2024),
preaches Wednesday during closing worship for the Mid Council Leaders Gathering.
(Photo by Rich Copley)
Armstrong, who together with the Rev. Tony Larson is Moderator of the 226th General Assembly (2024), used Psalm 71:1–6 to preach on a ministry of R.E.S.C.U.E., for “receive,” “expose,” “send,” “challenge,” “utilize” and “enlist.”

Armstrong called Psalm 71 a “senior citizen’s prayer,” noting that “through stress and longing, the author trusted God and affirmed trust in God” throughout youth and into adulthood. “The poet praises God because God’s answer was certain to come,” Armstrong said. That “total commitment to God echoes how we get to this point in life with the positive outlook of joy in the Lord.”

“We can trust God for our future, but sometimes that’s hard,” she said. “You’ve just got to have faith, friends.”

Like the psalmist, when we’ve been rescued by God, “there’s a need to tell others of God’s grace and mercy,” according to Armstrong. “I know you’re in charge of a lot of stuff,” she told mid council leaders, “but can you steal away for a while each day and study God’s Word?”

We trust in God, and on that topic, Armstrong wondered if any in worship had bothered to check their chair for sturdiness before plopping into it. “You trusted it would hold together,” she said, “and we need to have that same trust in God.”

“We trust God, even if the rescue is from our own selves.”

The Co-Moderators of the 226th General Assembly (2024), the Rev. Tony Larson and the
Rev. CeCe Armstrong, help each other to remember their baptisms. (Photo by Rich
Copley)
Now that more of us are living into our 80s and 90s, “we tend to believe the longer we serve, the more effective we are, and that’s not true,” she said. “Find your replacement and train them as you go. Be the one who gets to sit back and watch the fruit of your labor. … Smell your roses while you can sniff.”

As mid council leaders, “we might have the arrogant thought we are responsible for rescuing those under our care,” that “we will save the people, the church and the denomination.”

“You can’t save nobody!” she said. “Jesus did that already.”

“Since God is a God of rescues,” she said, “let’s look at God’s R.E.S.C.U.E. plan.”

For “receive,” we are to “receive those who seek Christ,” she said, because “just as you did this for the least of these, you did it to me.”

For “expose,” Armstrong urged worshipers to “expose the wonders and mysteries of our triune God.” “I pray we will proclaim a relevant and righteous gospel. Stretch to expose the triune God everywhere. Find out who you serve, then meet them where they are.”

Image
A group of people with hymnals sing during a worship service.
Mid Council Leaders and fellow worshippers joined in several hymns, including "Spirit, Spirit of Gentleness" (Glory To God hymnal No. 291) at final worship of the 2025 Mid Council Leaders Gathering. (Photo by Rich Copley)

For “send,” she called on leaders to send people with hope. “Fall in love with these people over and over again, no matter how many times they break your heart. If you don’t love them, they can’t get what God has.” She defined supplication as “the way to never tire of the work. That’s why I tell people, ‘I love you and there’s nothing you can do about it.’”

Our many “challenges” are all the more reason to depend on God. “Know your labor is not in vain,” Armstrong told the leaders. “Don’t seek to be more successful; seek to be more faithful to the God who called you to this work.”

We must “utilize” every gift God has given us, Armstrong said. “God wants to work through us collectively, so listen to God, who still speaks in the silences.” The work “is not about you, no matter how much it expands or contracts,” she said. Leaders’ gifts “are the answer to prayers that have been prayed.”

We must “enlist” others “to assist on this journey,” she said. “God will send the help that will be the hands and feet of Christ.” It’s the “generosity of our siblings in the faith that helps make this work possible.” But “don’t expect scar-free ministry, for our risen Savior did not obtain that.” Rather, “walk with the understanding that God has you and has had you all the time.”

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

Let us join in prayer for:

David Myers Director, IT Finance & Administration, Information Technology, The Board of Pensions
Lori Neff LaRue, Vice President, Education, Engagement & Church Relations, The Board of Pensions

Let us pray:

Loving God, open our eyes to those in need in our community. Give us courage to address their needs and show your love to all — today and every day. Amen.

WCC NEWS: Rev. Prof. Teddy Chalwe Sakupapa appointed new director of WCC Commission on World Mission and Evangelism

Rev. Prof. Teddy Chalwe Sakupapa has been appointed new director of the World Council of Churches (WCC) Commission on World Mission and Evangelism. 
Rev. Prof. Teddy Chalwe Sakupapa. Photo: Albin Hillert/WCC
24 June 2026

Sakupapa, 44, belongs to the Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa, and is a Zambian national living in South Africa, married, and father of two children. He holds a master's degree from the Protestantse Theologische Universiteit in the Netherlands, and a doctor of philosophy in theological studies from the University of the Western Cape, South Africa. He was ordained in the United and Uniting Church.

Sakupapa is an ecumenical theologian and missiologist with over 15 years of experience in ecumenical leadership, theological education, programme governance, and academic publishing. He currently serves as vice moderator of the WCC Commission on Ecumenical Education and Formation.

“Rev. Prof. Sakupapa emerged as a highly compelling choice demonstrating a rare combination of theological depth, strategic clarity, and practical organisational competence,” said WCC general secretary Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay. “We appreciated his ability to articulate both the historical trajectory and the current priorities of mission which positioned him for rapid and effective onboarding.”

Pillay added: “His strong academic grounding in ecumenical missiology, his leadership within ecumenical bodies such as the Ecumenical Education and Formation Commission, and his capacity to frame mission as both a theological and organisational process were especially appreciated.”

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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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Living into Right Relations: June 2026


Reconciliation and Indigenous Justice News from
The United Church of Canada

National Indigenous Spiritual Gathering, July 2026

[Image: Photo courtesy of Cheryl Jourdain |Original Art by Trinity Anderson, from Fisher River Cree Nation in Manitoba]
 

The National Indigenous Spiritual Gathering will take place at Carleton University in Ottawa from July 15-19, 2026. This is the triennial gathering of members of Indigenous communities of faith from across the country. Under the leadership of the National Indigenous Elders Council (NIEC), participants will spend important time together building community, and sharing in sacred ceremony, teachings, and worship.They will establish a new National Indigenous Council to give leadership to the Indigenous church on its journey of self-determination. And they will celebrate the ordination of Brian George, a member of the National Indigenous Elders Council. We invite the whole church to lift up in prayer the spiritual gathering and all who are preparing to participate in it.


Support for The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation

[Image credit: The United Church of Canada]

Leaders of the Anglican, Presbyterian, and United churches attended an event on June 18, 2026 at the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation (NCTR) in Winnipeg. A number of Elders and survivors of residential institutions were present to lead ceremony and receive a financial contribution from the three churches to the NCTR to help it construct a new building. United Church Moderator Kimberly Heath spoke with gratitude of the NCTR’s several important roles. This includes not only preserving the legacy of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada (TRC)—managing all of the survivor statements and other TRC records, but also continuing to gather statements, collect information about missing children and unmarked burials for the National Student Memorial Register, and, critically, carrying out many educational activities.

The Moderator and General Secretary were among several church leaders who had an opportunity to take part in an NCTR-led workshop during the May 2026 meeting of the Governing Board of the Canadian Council of Churches. National Indigenous Elder Council member, Lorraine Kakegamic, joined them at the June NCTR event.

The churches’ financial contribution to the new NCTR building is one of the ways they are carrying out their commitments to support the journey of truth-telling, healing, and reconciliation.

Celebrating Indigenous Culture In Support of Art for Aid

[Image credit: courtesy Zion-Memorial Church]

Zion-Memorial United Church, Carleton Place, held its fifth Indigenous cultural fair in May 2026. It is an enriching day-long celebration of Indigenous culture and artistic talent. Organized in collaboration with the District Public Library and town of Carleton Place, the fair provides a great learning opportunity for both adults and children. An Elder leads the opening ceremonies, there is a Sacred Fire, Medicine Table, Indigenous dancers and drummers, workshops, and Indigenous vendors who sell beautiful handmade creations and food. Funds are raised for Art for Aid—an initiative by founder Colleen Gray to send art supply shipments to remote Indigenous schools in northern Canada. Feedback from participants tells organizers the fair is successfully fostering dialogue, reconciliation and relationship building between local Indigenous and non-Indigenous people. This year’s fair was supported in part by the Justice and Reconciliation Fund.

Rematriation of the Tatamagouche Centre, Nova Scotia

[Image credit: courtesy Women of First Light]

The Tatamagouche Centre rematriation project is an invitation to live into right relations by restoring Indigenous stewardship of land that has always been Mi’kmaq territory. Rematriation is not about ownership; it is about renewing relationship—with the land, with spirit, with ancestors, and with future generations.

For more than 60 years, the Tatamagouche Centre has been a place of learning, welcome, and transformation. In 2021, Women of First Light—an Indigenous women-led organization in Wabanaki—requested the land be returned, and the Tatamagouche Centre Board committed to dialogue. One year ago, in July 2025, a Memorandum of Understanding was signed between Women of First Light, the Tatamagouche Centre, and the United Church of Canada (Fundy St. Lawrence Dawning Waters and Bermuda Nova Scotia Regional Councils), marking a shared commitment to rematriation.

The dream is that the land will be held in perpetuity under Indigenous stewardship as a place of healing, cultural restoration, and renewed right relations for all our relations. As Women of First Light continues capacity-building and community listening, the Tatamagouche Centre is also working to keep buildings cared for during the transition, including urgent infrastructure needs.

If you are able to support the Centre during this tender time—helping keep the heat on and cover basic costs until the transfer—donations can be made at https://www.tatacentre.ca/donate. Please include “sustain the centre” in the notes.

Thank you for walking this path with care, so the land can be returned in a good way.
 
Living into Right Relations will take a short summer break.  The next issue will be published at the end of August 2026.
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Minute for Mission: Season of Prayer and Reflection in the Korean Peninsula begins

A South Korean soldier (right) shakes hands with a North Korean soldier during an operation to construct a tactical road to support a joint ...