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Since Jesus calls Christians to make disciples of all nations, in this blog we'll consider how we might better share the gospel to the world around us.
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The Synod of the Northeast recently took two significant actions during a special called meeting.

The synod voted and installed as its leader the interim leader, the Rev. Dr. SanDawna Gaulman Ashley. It also approved a new vision proposal, “Reimagining the Church in the World,” which, as Gaulman Ashley said, “balances governance and mission through a decentralized structure, grounded in the core values of stewardship of gifts, flexibility, accountability and leadership development.”
The vision identifies the synod’s four commitments:
The report notes that traditional governance structures “provide stability and accountability, yet they can sometimes limit the ability to respond quickly to emerging needs and opportunities.” The hybrid-missional approach “maintains the financial and governance structures necessary for trust, transparency and sustainability, while at the same time distributing leadership responsibilities in ways that allow ministries to adapt in real time.”
The model “creates space for commissions, committees, task force and teams to emerge as needed, with participation shaped by gifts and passions rather than by office or ordination status, unless otherwise required,” the vision states. “Flexibility is not only an organizational strength but also a spiritual discipline. By integrating stability with adaptability, the synod affirms that the church thrives when it honors the gifts of all, encourages collaborative discernment and responds faithfully to the movement of the Spirit.”
Six “ministry pillars” provide foundation and direction under the new alignment: theology and spiritual formation, governance, storytelling and communication, regional learning, grants, and collaboration.
The synod “remains dedicated to helping presbyteries thrive” by increasing organizational grants and fostering deeper collaboration with other mid councils. “By encouraging partnerships and shared resources, the synod ensures that smaller presbyteries remain resilient,” the report states. “We envision a future where our core values are reflected in every initiative we undertake.”
Details of the six pillars include:
Theology and Spiritual Formation — The synod “nurtures discipleship and spiritual depth through intentional practices of study, prayer and discernment.” By “fostering spaces of spiritual growth, leadership development and faithful imagination, the synod equips individuals and communities to live out their callings with courage, clarity and hope.” The synod “seeks to bring renewed intentionality to spiritual formation as an integral dimension” of synod assembly life with the formation of a Spiritual Formation Team.
Governance — Rooted in Presbyterian polity yet open to innovation, “this pillar ensures that the synod carries out its work with transparency, integrity and faithfulness.” In the hybrid-missional model, “governance balances the fiduciary responsibilities of the Synod Corporation with the missional commitments of the whole body, ensuring that decisions are both responsible and visionary.”
Finance and Fiduciary Management — This work “supports the synod’s mission and vision by safeguarding resources” in part by “aligning financial practices with strategic priorities and ensuring compliance with PC(USA) polity and best practices in nonprofit management.” It includes a Missional Strategy Team to review current missional activities and recommend new initiatives and fundraising strategies.
Grants — This pillar is designed to “build community, embrace diversity, deepen accountability and cultivate sustainable gospel-rooted ministry.” Proposed changes “aim to reflect spiritual practices around community justice and discernment, around forming people instead of just funding, hearing prophetic witness rather than reviewing paperwork, and becoming connectional partners rather than institutional gatekeepers.”
Collaboration — This pillar encourages sharing resources, nurturing innovative partnerships “and, where appropriate, supporting presbytery mergers.” It’s designed to resource presbyteries “committed to innovation, mission-focused partnerships and sustainability.” It is “particularly targeted toward declining or under-resourced presbyteries seeking new pathways to sustainability, mid councils aiming to strengthen connections and collective mission withing the synod, and leadership structures exploring collaboration, mergers or shared resource models.”
Storytelling and Communication — This pillar emerged “from our conviction that faithful storytelling is itself a ministry — one that weaves together identity, mission and witness so the whole church may see, hear and be moved by God’s transforming work,” the report states. “Missional storytelling is not simply about branding or promotion; it is about discipleship and witness. It is about lifting up stories that reveal God’s justice, Christ’s love and the Spirit’s renewing power.”
Mike Ferguson, Editor, Presbyterian News Service (Click here to read original PNS Story)
Cole Norgaarden, Summer Fellow, Office of Public Witness – Washington, Presbyterian Life & Witness
Matt Sumrow, Summer Fellow, Office of Public Witness – Washington, Presbyterian Life & Witness
Loving and liberating Jesus, grant us the humility to recognize you in others and to receive the gifs that the Holy Spirit has given to communities and churches. May all our encounters give witness to your transformative and liberating power. Amen.
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The Rev. Greg Allen-Pickett opened his workshop at Stewardship Kaleidoscope by asking attendees to share observations on the political climate in their own congregations. Stewardship Kaleidoscope is a conference presented by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.
His question produced a litany of frustration, anxiety, and dismay from pastors and church leaders.
Among the responses:
“Politics and faith are colliding in our pews in ways that they have not been in recent time,” said Allen-Pickett, who referred to the Civil War split of the Presbyterian Church as a historical comparison. “There are even different versions of what our stewardship dollars should fund.”

But Allen-Pickett, pastor of First Presbyterian Church of Hastings, Nebraska, told workshop attendees that there is hope for stewardship messages in a time of political division in society and in church. Purple, he pointed out, may be used to describe congregations whose members reflect the full range of political views, but it is also the liturgical color of the two seasons in the church calendar that are focused on Christ — Advent and Lent. “By keeping our focus on the life and ministry of Christ, we have been able to have conversations about politics within the word, life, death and resurrection of Jesus,” he said.
Allen-Pickett shared stories from his church to illustrate that practice. A member of the congregation who serves on the local governing board visited him with news of a proposal to display the phrase “In God We Trust” in the courthouse and to solicit Allen-Pickett’s support. “I told him I didn’t think that was a good idea,” he said. “I think he was shocked, but we had a conversation about it.” The next day, another member came to express her disagreement with the proposal, citing her atheist husband’s opposition; he had also served in the military and felt strongly about the separation of church and state.
“So, I have two members of my congregation on opposite sides of a highly charged local issue,” Allen-Pickett said. “I ended up mediating a conversation between them to try to reach some understanding. It was hard, but I tried to model civil dialogue.”
He shared another illustration about how his church has a long relationship with Catholic Social Services. For one month every summer, church members make sandwiches and pack sack lunches. The program is popular and well attended. “We may disagree about how children ought to be fed, but we are not going to stop feeding them,” he said. “When your hands are covered in peanut butter and jelly, it’s hard to have fights.”
Finally, as part of capital campaign planning, he learned that “even solar panels can be political.” A retired ecotheology professor from nearby Hastings College advocated for installing such panels on the church roof as an act of environmental stewardship. The proposal was met with resistance from some members of the church until a conservative member who had installed panels on his weekend cabin touted the economic benefits.
“This two-pronged approach generated support across the political divide,” Allen-Pickett explained. “The church bought into it, and we are one of two buildings in town with solar panels.”
Stewardship, then, includes the financial and tangible gifts with which God has entrusted us, but also the relationships God calls us to build with each other. It is, Allen-Pickett said, “about our very lives and how we choose to live them. It is about how to make our lives a living offering to God.”
He offered four strategies for engagement in an age of sharp political division:
“Almost every week, I say to my congregation that we are the hands and feet of Jesus, sharing the love and light of Christ,” Allen-Pickett said. “Our goal has always been to model the way of Christ. If I can point to the red letters in the Bible and I have built trust with them, they will come to me and have the conversation.”
Chuck Toney for the Presbyterian Foundation (Click here to read original PNS Story)
Lucille Kearns, Summer Fellow, Office of Public Witness – Washington, Presbyterian Life & Witness
Katie Murray, Summer Fellow, Office of Public Witness – Washington, Presbyterian Life & Witness
O God, help us to know each other and to appreciate the rich, cultural diversity that defines our sisters and brothers in the world. Amen.
For new worshiping communities across the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), securing sustainable funding while staying true to their mission presents unique challenges. Traditional fundraising models often don't fit the realities of small, emerging communities led by bi-vocational leaders serving diverse populations.

The Lake Institute on Faith & Giving recently partnered with the 1001 New Worshiping Communities movement to address these challenges, offering specialized training to 21 leaders and three staff members. The workshop, held at a discounted rate for the network, provided tools for integrating financial stewardship with theological vision.
“We are grateful to the Lake Institute for offering this training to our network at a significant discount,” said the Rev. Nikki Collins, manager of the 1001 New Worshiping Communities movement. “Beyond that, in the planning for this event, the Lake Institute staff worked with Jeya So, associate for training, 1001 NWC, to tailor some of their materials for the unique context of starting new worshiping communities and for working across cultural contexts.”
Collins emphasized the quality of the program, noting that facilitators brought both expert knowledge and deep personal experience in congregational giving while creating space for participants to explore their own relationship to money.
Looking ahead, Collins said 1001 NWC will continue listening to the needs of new worshiping community leaders and their supporting presbyteries to identify additional training that will lead to sustainability and flourishing.

The training offered a crucial shift in perspective: viewing stewardship not merely as fundraising but as spiritual formation. This reframing resonated deeply with Peter Okyere, a Ph.D. candidate and digital ministry strategist who leads A Light to the Nations, a new worshiping community that began in Worthington, Ohio, in 2023.
As coordinator for immigrants and refugees in Scioto Valley Presbytery, Okyere launched the Matthew 25 initiative with connections to Delaware, Ohio, and ministry partnerships in Ghana and Nigeria. The multicultural, justice-oriented community aims to embody hospitality and provide a spiritual home for people seeking authentic connection across cultures.
Okyere said he hoped to gain practical tools for aligning fundraising and resource development with the mission of multicultural ministry while ensuring sustainability and remaining faithful to core values. The training delivered on that hope, emphasizing entrepreneurial thinking and adaptive leadership for communities building from the ground up.
"The training reminded me that generosity grows when people see how their gifts advance God's mission," Okyere said. "I plan to integrate narrative storytelling into our ministry — sharing testimonies of transformation that inspire giving and deepen engagement. This will help our community connect financial practices with discipleship and justice."
Learning to communicate mission and invite others into generosity while building sustainability without losing the heart of ministry drove one leader's participation in the training. Katia Regina DaCunha, founder and executive director of Latinx In Action, leads its emerging new worshiping community serving immigrant families on Cape Cod in the Presbytery of Southern New England.
The community began informally in 2017 in Hyannis, Massachusetts, responding to spiritual hunger among newly arrived immigrant families experiencing trauma and isolation. Prayer gatherings and pastoral care naturally grew into a worshiping community rooted in dignity, hope and hospitality, creating space where people encounter God's presence in their own language, culture and story.
An elder currently pursuing ordination through Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, DaCunha said she hoped to gain tools for sustainable leadership, fundraising with integrity and the building of generous cultures that fit multicultural and immigrant contexts. The training offered practical and accessible frameworks that spoke directly to the realities of small, emerging and often under-resourced communities.
During a practical exercise, DaCunha shared the community's Emergency Safe Planning Program for immigrant families who may face encounters with Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The feedback she received proved invaluable.
“Their insights helped me see even more clearly how essential this program is for the safety, stability and dignity of our families,” DaCunha said. “I left with concrete ideas on how to communicate its impact and invite partners to support it.” She identified strengthening and funding this program as a priority moving forward.
Beth Waltemath, Communications Strategist, Presbyterian Life & Witness (Click here to read original PNS Story)
Atticus Gore, Summer Fellow, Office of Public Witness – Washington, Presbyterian Life & Witness
Austin Lane, Summer Fellow, Office of Public Witness – Washington, Presbyterian Life & Witness
Creator God, we give thanks for the gift of compassion. We pray for comfort for all. Amen.
Dr Mathews George Chunakara served as general secretary of the Christian Conference of Asia (CCA) from 2015 to 2026. He reflects below on hi...