Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Mission Yearbook: Presbyterian Giving Catalog allows even small churches to make a big impact

What difference does a church of 50 members make? A big one, it turns out.

At a recent meeting, the session of Villisca Presbyterian Church in Iowa found themselves asking a familiar question: Why do small churches feel like they’re too small to make a difference?

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Rev. Sandy Wainwright Rossander
The Rev. Sandy Wainwright Rossander

“We’ve always had the attitude of ‘whatever we have, we can share,’” said the Rev. Sandy Wainwright Rossander, pastor of Villisca Presbyterian Church. “A small gift is just as significant as a large one.”

Rossander, who once served as moderator of the Presbytery of Missouri River Valley, has seen firsthand how many congregations underestimate their ability to make an impact. But for her and the Villisca church, located in a town of just 1,500 people, smallness has never been a limitation.

“Even in our smallness, we can still make a difference in the mission of the church,” she said. That conviction has become central to the church’s identity.

For more than 10 years, churches, mid councils and individuals have been turning to the Presbyterian Giving Catalog — available in English both in print and online — as a tangible way to provide real and positive impact around the world.

But this congregation in Villisca, Iowa, had generosity in their hearts before the catalog was in their hands.

More than 20 years ago, Villisca Presbyterian Church created the Blessing Box — an invitation for members to share blessings during worship announcements. Each time someone shared, they added a dollar to the box. Some Sundays brought only a dollar or two. Other times — like when a member turned 80 — the box gained $80. When a need arose in the community, the congregation gave the contents of the Blessing Box to help: a new parent, a teacher new to town, a neighbor in need. To date, they’ve shared more than $3,000 in blessings.

The spirit of giving extends to the children, too. Sunday school students have been collecting nickels and dimes for years, pooling their coins for meaningful gifts. When the Presbyterian Giving Catalog was introduced, those small gifts took on even greater purpose.

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Blessing Box
For decades, generous giving has been a mainstay at Villisca Presbyterian Church (contributed photo).

“For just $10, the kids could give farming tools,” Rossander remembered. “It was exciting for them to see what they could do for someone else with just their coins.”

The idea that many small gifts can make a big difference soon inspired the entire congregation. Now, the church occasionally takes a coins-only offering during worship so everyone can join in the fun of choosing items from the Giving Catalog. One favorite is the Family of Chickens — a reminder of how a single gift can multiply into food, income, and opportunity through eggs, feathers and fertilizer.

The 2025-2026 Presbyterian Giving Catalog has been reorganized around a new purpose-based model, reflecting action taken by the 226th General Assembly (2024).

“The new Giving Catalog highlights four cause areas: Provide Clean Water, End Hunger, Sustain Communities and Support Education,” said the Rev. Wilson Kennedy, associate director for Stewardship and Funds Development for the PC(USA). “The tagline, ‘Give with a Purpose,’ boldly featured on the cover, is an invitation for each of us — and all of us — to help transform lives, together.”

The catalog, also available in Spanish and Korean, features 44 giving opportunities designed to fit every mission interest and every budget.

For Villisca Presbyterian Church, the Blessing Box helped members and friends bless their neighborhood. The Presbyterian Giving Catalog invites them to bless the world — together with Presbyterians near and far.

“Some of the most inspiring stories we hear come from small congregations,” said Teresa Mader, manager of the Presbyterian Giving Catalog. “When a handful of people pool their gifts — whether it’s a few dollars, a handful of coins or a special offering — those gifts join thousands of others to create real, lasting change. The size of the church doesn’t determine the size of the impact.”

“We don’t ever run out of ideas!” Rossander laughed. The Giving Catalog, she said, makes it easy for everyone — every church, every individual — to find a way to participate in mission. 

Join Villisca Presbyterian in sharing blessings near and far. Discover how you, too, can share the good news and tangible resources through the Presbyterian Giving Catalog. Click here to get started.     

Jana Blazek for Stewardship and Funds Development (Click here to read original PNS Story)

Let us join in prayer for:

Ronnika Muhammad , Payroll Specialist, Human Resources, Administrative Services Group
Julie Mullins, Acquisitions Editor, Publishing & Editorial, Presbyterian Publishing Corporation 

Let us pray:

God of those who struggle, we lift to you all families that battle for survival and long to thrive. Teach us to take risks for our neighbors, whereby we find you in our midst. Amen.

Monday, June 22, 2026

Minute for Mission: General Assembly is underway

Presbytery and synod leaders heard from Kate Trigger Duffert, an Associate Stated Clerk and the Director of General Assembly Planning, about what to expect during General Assembly, the 227th in denominational history — and the important role mid council leaders have in making the Assembly a success.

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Kate Trigger Duffert speaks to mid council leaders
Kate Trigger Duffert, director of General Assembly Planning, speaks to mid council leaders on Tuesday (photo by Rich Copley).

Speaking at the recent Mid Council Leaders Gathering, Trigger Duffert called the biennial Assembly, which began June 21 and concludes July 2, “the broadest council of the whole church.”

“The business that comes to GA does not come from some mystical location,” she said, but instead originates in conversations in sessions across the country, from people elected to serve on committees, and from staff. “It all comes together for conversation and discernment,” she said.

GA is also an event, one that’s important to thousands of Presbyterians, and it’s “a community of faith where we worship together,” she said.

The General Assembly Standing Rules “are our core values,” she said. Those values include the worship of God, creation of community and faithful discernment. “That’s the foundation we work with planning the Assembly,” which carries the theme “Persevering Toward Wholeness” and uses Rev. 22:2 as its featured Bible verse.

When Trigger Duffert displayed a slide of the proposed docket for the 227th General Assembly, which is being held online and at the Baird Center in Milwaukee, some of the mid council leaders actually whooped it up. The biggest change in the schedule, she said, is the Community Day set for June 27. That day will include a community action and a Town Square, where Presbyterian-adjacent groups can set up tables to interact with those in attendance.

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Tony de la Rosa has a question during the mid council leaders gathering
Tony de la Rosa, the general presbyter for Salem Presbytery, had a question Tuesday following a presentation by Kate Trigger Duffert (photo by Rich Copley).

The election of the Moderators will be on July 2. It’ll be commissioners’ final action before engaging in closing worship.

The Rev. Jihyun Oh, the Stated Clerk of the General Assembly and Executive Director of the Unified Agency, asked the first question: How can mid council leaders be helpful in helping to select GA committee leaders?

Those selections are ultimately made by the Moderators of the 226th General Assembly, the Revs. Tony Larson and CeCe Armstrong, Trigger Duffert said. But mid council leaders are encouraged to forward the names of people they know who have the skills needed to moderate a committee. “Let us know,” she said, “and we will pass those names along to the Co-Moderators.”

Larson said that commissioners to the 225th and 226th General Assembly are also eligible to serve as committee leaders, but the priority is commissioners to the 227th General Assembly.

Trigger Duffert said the Town Square is the successor to exhibit halls of past Assemblies. “It’s not a massive production,” she said. There won’t be any booths — just tables so that groups can interact with those in attendance.

Once again, seminary luncheons will be available, she said.

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

Let us join in prayer for:

Joseph Moore, Ministry Relations Officer, Development Office, The Presbyterian Foundation
Roberto Morales, Research Analyst, Research Services, Administrative Service Group 

Let us pray:

Father, may we, empowered by the Spirit, follow the example of your Son, whose incarnation brough healing, wholeness and redemption. Be present to your church in difficult places as we witness to the good news until “every knee shall bow and every tongue confess that Jesus is Lord.” In Chrit’s name. Amen.

Sunday, June 21, 2026

Minute for Mission: Father’s Day

“Father” imagery and language have been a topic of theological discussion for the past quarter of a century, at least.

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Build a Better World

The writers of “A Brief Statement of Faith,” the confession created at the time of Presbyterian reunion, addressed the matter this way: “We trust in God, who Jesus called Abba, Father.”

A popular book when I was in seminary, some years ago, published by the then Westminster Press, was “Is God the Only Reliable Father?” by Diane Tennis. It continues to provide important food for thought for me.

Plus, we know right now that fatherhood, and all manner of cultural and social issues, are hot topics of conversation, some more beneficial than others. Bruce Springsteen’s “My Father’s House” speaks to these eloquently. 

I think about all of these things, including my own father and grandfathers, now gone. I think about my own experience of fatherhood, and where I’ve done OK and where I’ve fallen short. I think about those whose memories are not so fond, or whose experiences are not so positive, or those who have sought — unsuccessfully — to become fathers.

That’s a lot to overlay on any one particular holiday.

All of which is to say, Happy Father’s Day to those for whom this is a good day. I hope the day is filled with gratitude and joy for you and those you love.

And perhaps, along the way — and with a sense of gratitude — this day can include a gift to the Presbyterian Giving Catalog. It will for me.

Our theme this year isCelebrate Your Dad, the Giver: A Gift That Fuels His Passion.” Your gifts will support commitments and themes that are very important on this day, and that reflect the best of paternal values:

  • Building communities → Support for farming tools or water systems.
  • Teaching and mentoring → School supplies or teacher training.
  • Caring for family → Hygiene kits or food relief.

These commitments were important to my dad, and they are to me. I hope I have imparted those values to my children. That would be a terrific Father’s Day gift!

I invite you to join me in supporting them.

John Wilkinson, Vice President and Director, Stewardship and Funds Development

Let us join in prayer for:

Lee Mitchum, Trust Services Manager, Trust Services, The Presbyterian Foundation
Chesimon Moore, Accounting Analyst, Controllers, The Presbyterian Foundation

Let us pray:

God, thank you for your presence and for your listening ear during every season of our life. Continue to care for your people as we do our best to minister to the ones you entrust to our care. Amen.

Saturday, June 20, 2026

Minute for Mission: World Refugee Day

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Outside U.S. District Court to support resettlement.

You cannot turn on the news these days without hearing about violence and displacement. We live in turbulent times. According to the United Nations, we are witnessing record high numbers of forced displacement and migration — over 100 million globally.  The causes are many — civil wars, the rise in autocratic governments who violate human rights with impunity, drug wars and even domestic violence. Natural disasters, too, such as hurricanes, droughts and flooding. And when asked, most migrants will tell you that they have left home for a combination of these factors. Their destinations are often determined by where they have family or friends and the financial resources to get there. 

June 20 is World Refugee Day. A day to remember and acknowledge all those who have had to seek safety outside their country. We take time to remember and pray for the situations that caused them to leave in the first place. We pray for their safety as they journey and where they settle. We recognize the many gifts they bring with them and the contributions they make to their new homelands. We pray for our own communities to be a place of welcome, comfort, joy and new possibilities for all of us. 

June 20 is also a day to recommit ourselves to living into the type of world that God envisions for us. As Christians living in the United States, we have a particular responsibility to speak up with our elected officials. To speak out against xenophobia, racism and hatred. To speak for the dignity and rights of every human being — in our foreign development policies and in our immigration policies. 

Presbyterian Disaster Assistance has compiled World Refugee Day resources from across our denomination and from our ecumenical and interfaith partners to offer a number of ways that we can honor refugees and displaced people. How will you honor this day? 

Susan Krehbiel, Associate for Migration Accompaniment Ministries, Presbyterian Disaster Assistance

Let us join in prayer for:

Victor Min, Translator, Global Language Resources, Administrative Services Group
Carrie Mitchell Church Consultant – Princeton, NJ, Engagement & Church Relations, The Board of Pensions                    

Let us pray:

O God of the sojourner, today we remember those who have set out on journeys not of their own choosing. We pray that you may guide them to safety and give them courage to face the challenges that lie ahead. And may our hearts be open to meet Jesus in each encounter. Amen.

Friday, June 19, 2026

Minute for Mission: Juneteenth

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Juneteenth, the official freeing of enslaved people on June 19, 1865, in Texas, is one of the most important events in American history — but most students haven’t even been taught it. Maybe that will change now that Juneteenth is a national holiday

It makes sense to acknowledge the day when Union troops arrived in Galveston a full 2½ years after President Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation — it is the start to remedying one of this country’s darkest sins.

However, it also sets in motion the maintenance of Black subordination in the country’s postbellum society. Yes, Black people were no longer enslaved, but white supremacy ideology is still openly and unapologetically killing Black people and people of color because of extreme ignorant terrorist cells of hatred and silently approved all around this country.

Yet, more than 20 states are moving to strike aspects of American history and anti-racist teaching from public school curricula. Their argument is that examining our history of racism breeds contempt that is racially divisive. On the contrary, discussing history truthfully and using its lessons to inform our future breeds empowerment and is racially unifying. Instead of seeding anger and blame, it allows us to approach solutions to current and future problems with the greatest insight, and it helps build trust and accountability within our systems.

A white supremacist, neo-Nazi, mass murderer and domestic terrorist was convicted for perpetrating the Charleston church shooting on June 17, 2015, in South Carolina. During a Bible study at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, the terrorist killed nine people, all African Americans, including senior pastor and state senator Clementa C. Pinckney, and injured one other person.

And in 2022, a white adult male gunman entranced by a white supremacist ideology known as “replacement theory” opened fire at a supermarket in Buffalo, New York. He methodically shot and killed 10 people and injured three more, all of them Black, in one of the deadliest racist massacres in recent American history.

Knowledge of our history is essential to inform solutions to future problems.

Gunmen have referenced the racist idea known as “replacement theory” during a string of mass shootings and other violence in recent years. It was once associated with the far-right fringe, but has become increasingly mainstream, pushed by politicians.

Knowledge of our history is necessary for accountability – not retribution or atonement.

Without a clear understanding of what led to these boiling points through an examination of history, we cannot create systems of accountability that are strong enough to maintain order. Studying history does not involve retribution, revenge or atonement. It involves an understanding of why one inciting event can lead to such outrage and mistrust that we need to examine the efficacy of the system itself.

That is what anti-racist teaching does: It does not retroactively place blame on the perpetrators of negative acts. Instead, it examines the role of different systems in allowing repeated negative acts and offers solutions to strip away some of the negative relics of the system that causes these acts to occur. In this case, it is examining the criminal justice system’s history of police brutality in Black communities and adjusting laws and policies that intentionally targeted these communities, while holding wrongdoers accountable in the moment.

Knowledge of our history is empowering and can shift entire narratives about people.

Learning history can be extremely empowering: It provides a portal into what we can achieve, while helping us put current, often negative, conditions into better context. It also provides a crucial opportunity to change the narrative for entire populations of people. 

Michael Moore, Associate for African American Intercultural Congregational Support, Racial Equity & Women’s Intercultural Ministries, Presbyterian Life & Witness

Let us join in prayer for:

John Merten,  Data Entry, Funds Development, Operations, Administrative Services Group
Terri Milburn, Accounts Payable Manager, Accounts Payable Office, Administrative Services Group

Let us pray:

Eternal and Divine God, we honestly lament how disheartening it is to still not be free from the bonds of the sin of racism. We lament that the ever-present pain of injustice is like an anchor around the necks of Black people since our enslaved presence in this land. God, help us to see you as the God of the oppressed and savior of those who seek liberation. We ask that you empower those in positions of power to be positive and vocal agents of change instead of silently complicit in the pain of those most marginalized in our world. We thank you for the freedoms obtained and yet we pray for your guidance to achieve that which is still not yet reality. In Jesus’ name we pray this solemn prayer. Amen.

Thursday, June 18, 2026

Mission Yearbook: Rev. Jihyun Oh speaks on changing and courage

Speaking on “Changes, Curiosity and Councils,” the Rev. Jihyun Oh told mid council leaders she suspects they’ve been addressing those realities as much as she has over the past year or so.

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Stated Clerk of the General Assembly Jihyun Oh
The Rev. Jihyun Oh

“You are stewarding and midwifing change too, as the church seeks to be faithful to the changes we are experiencing almost daily,” the Stated Clerk of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) and Executive Director of the Unified Agency told those gathered online and at the Presbyterian Center for the recent Mid Council Leaders Gathering. Oh named a few changes: society undergoing deep polarization, the rise of white Christian nationalism, the worsening climate crisis and increasing marginalization.

“We need to shift because … things can no longer be assumed,” she said, and the PC(USA), through its unification process, must “get to a place where we are structured for the 1-million-member denomination we are and not the 3.5-million-member denomination we once were.”

In a world that’s rapidly changing, one characteristic that’s been lifted up is curiosity, and that was the focus of most of Oh’s talk. “There is a need for innovation and for people with a growth mindset,” she said. “We sometimes don’t recognize new models are needed, and we need to develop them while dealing with reality now. We have to develop the models while we’re doing the changes.”

But what folks need is more certainty, she said. “They want to know where we’re headed and what the topography is like, and that’s not something we have the luxury to do right now,” Oh said. “I trust you are inviting your faith leaders to do the same.”

She said she’s been drawn to the work of Jean Piaget, the Swiss psychologist. Piaget has written extensively on curiosity being an innate characteristic in babies and children. “Children develop a hypothesis, conduct experiments without knowing it, test it out, and then shift their hypothesis depending on what they experienced,” Oh said. “Curiosity helps in the developmental function of human beings.”

It's not just about “innovation and openness to change and having a growth mindset and achieving your goals,” she said. “Curiosity is critical to human well-being. It helps us make sense of reality, helps us find meaning in our lives, develop our minds and cultivate care for what’s beyond ourselves.” It’s “an innate characteristic of all people that needs to be nurtured.”

As colleagues, “we might ask, ‘what am I seeing and what are the assumptions I have that keep me from seeing new possibilities?’” she said. “What happens if we shift those assumptions?” Asking questions about our foundational assumptions “might help us find new ways if we don’t take it as disrupting or threatening, but an exercise in curiosity, like children do.”

We need answers to important questions, including “whose lens is missing?” she said. “Asking who is not at the table isn’t just about diversity. It is the difference between seeing the whole picture versus not seeing it.”

That discussion elicited one of Oh’s favorite jokes: Some muffins are cooking in an oven. One muffin says it its neighbor, “it’s really getting hot in here.” The other muffin replies, “Wow! A talking muffin.”

“Are there ways we miss the rising heat?” Oh asked. “How might we open ourselves to see what God is doing in the world? What happens when we take seriously God saying, ‘behold, I am doing a new thing.’”

She asked: How will joining God require us to change the way we’ve always done things or things that have given us joy in the past but are not the way to go forward anymore?

Oh finds herself turning again and again to one of her favorite verses in the Bible, Romans 12:2: “Do not be conformed to this age, but be transformed by the renewing of the mind, so that you may discern what is the will of God — what is good and acceptable and perfect.”

“Curiosity is one of the ways our minds get renewed,” she said. “It helps us deepen learning, it rewires our minds for caring and compassion, it helps develop our brains and it’s a way to participate with the Holy Spirit’s invitation to renew our minds.”

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

Let us join in prayer for:

Andrea McNicol, Assistant Controller & Budget Manager, Budgets & Forecasting, Administrative Services Group
Brianne Merten, Operations Associate, Operations, The Presbyterian Foundation

Let us pray:

Lord of all Creation, we pray for an end to hostilities, prejudices and hatred everywhere, especially in the land we call Holy. Gather all your children in your loving arms and shield them from the terrors of war and violence. Amen.

Father's Day Message 2026

Father's Day Message from the General Secretary, Rev. Dr. Gina C. Jacobs-Strain, American Baptist Churches USA Office of the General Secretary


Happy Joy-filled Father’s Day!

 

3 John 1:4

“I have no greater joy than to hear that my children are walking in the truth.”

 

On this Father’s Day, we offer our sincere gratitude for the many expressions of fatherhood that bless our families, congregations, and communities.

 

We honor fathers, grandfathers, godfathers, uncles, brothers, guardians and all who embody a fathering presence through love, affirmation, encouragement, guidance, integrity, compassion, and care. We celebrate each of you on Father’s Day and pray the day will be special for you.

 

We also recognize that this day holds a range of emotions. We lift in prayer those who grieve, those who long for connection, those who have lost fathers and children, and those whose experiences of fatherhood are complex or painful. May God’s abiding presence and love bring comfort, healing, and peace.

 

On behalf of American Baptist Churches USA, we extend deep appreciation for your witness and wisdom. We give thanks for you and for the many ways your lives reflect God’s love. May you be strengthened and renewed and may the love you share continue to reflect God’s enduring grace.

 

Grace and peace to you this Father’s Day.


Rev. Dr. Gina C. Jacobs-Strain

General Secretary

American Baptist Churches USA

American Baptist Churches USA | P.O. Box 851 | Valley Forge, PA 19482 US

Mission Yearbook: Presbyterian Giving Catalog allows even small churches to make a big impact

What difference does a church of 50 members make? A big one, it turns out. At a recent meeting, the session of Villisca Presbyterian Church ...