Friday, February 27, 2026

Mission Yearbook: POAMN workshop covers grief and how to become better grieving congregations

Deborah Brandt knows the weight of grief. By her mid-40s, she had lost both parents, navigating memories while closing estates and selling her childhood home.

Determined to be the support she once needed, Brandt trained in Dr. Alan Wolfelt’s companioning model, an approach that honors grief rather than trying to fix it.

Logan Weaver Unsplash
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Photo by Logan Weaver via Unsplash













Brandt, a coach, consultant and speaker, recently presented a workshop called “Becoming Better Grieving Congregations” during the annual conference of the Presbyterian Older Adult Ministries Network.

For the past decade, Brandt has served as a funeral celebrant. “I work with families on their worst day. Together, we co-create the ceremony. Together, we decide who’s speaking. We create some boundaries,” she said.

Brandt opened the workshop by passing around a battery-powered candle, asking everyone present to choose a word describing their experience with grief.

She offered up definitions for trauma, grief (the inner, natural response to an external event) and mourning, which she called “the outward expression of grief.”

“Grief is a normal part of life,” Brandt said. The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition, has turned “normal grief into a mental disorder,” according to The Lancet, and Brandt challenged a few myths about grief, inviting workshop participants to:

  • Recognize and acknowledge that every experience of loss is unique
  • Honor lived experience
  • Be compassionate with yourself and others.

“At any given time, one in four people is experiencing loss,” she said. Loss is a frequent theme in the Bible, but we are given these promises in Lamentations 3:22–23: “The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases, his mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning; great is your faithfulness.”

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Deborah Brandt
Deborah Brandt

Brandt then asked those in attendance to write the version of themselves they present to others on the outline of a mask she reproduced on a piece of paper. On the other side, attendees wrote the parts of themselves they keep hidden. Brandt placed the papers in a bag and then had each person draw one and read the qualities on a random paper out loud.

“There are lots of things pastors can share in their communities,” said Brandt, who did a similar exercise following the murder of George Floyd. “What they shared [then] was so hard, even in a safe space, because they couldn’t share it in their own community,” she said. “We need more safe spaces for sharing our concerns.”

“We get uncomfortable when people are grieving in front of us,” she said. Try saying “this is so hard” or “how can I support you?” or “I’m sad you are in this place” or “how do you like to be supported” or “tell me about your loved one” or even “I can bring dinner Thursday night,” she suggested.

“Being silent,” Brandt said, “is sometimes just right.”

Brandt called grief “a full-body experience — emotionally, physically and cognitively.” But, as the author bell hooks noted, “where there is grief, there is powerful, enduring love.”

“Uncomfortable is where growth and change happen,” Brandt said. “A good mourning community understands that.” Learn more in this study by the Dougy Center: The National Grief Center for Children and Families.”

Grief “is dynamic and cannot be fully defined by stages or phases,” Brandt said, adding, “there is no one right way to grieve.”

She cited some companioning skills developed by Wolfelt:

  • WAIT, which stands for “why am I talking?”
  • Follow the person’s lead
  • Say what you sense
  • Avoid problem-solving, advice and cliches
  • Provide compassionate accountability, which Brandt called “a mixed bag.”
  • Grief is “sacred and liminal space”

As Makeda Pennycooke, a coaching strategist, put it, “Living in the ‘and’ is a way of accepting what is while staying open to the possibilities of what might be. It’s learning to hold two things that feel like opposites alongside each other without judgment or without choosing one over the other.”

Brandt said faith communities can ask, “how are we inviting more vulnerability for grief in our congregation?” The writer and poet Cole Arthur Riley notes that “to be human in an aching world is to know our dignity and become people who safeguard the dignity of everything around us.”

“Rituals create lasting connection,” Brandt said. 

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

Let us join in prayer for:

Joey Brown, Associate, Direct Mail and PILLARS, Administrative Services Group, A Corporation
Andrew Browne, Executive Vice President, Engagement & Church Relations, The Board

Let us pray:

God, we pray that we may discover Jesus Christ in the face of every stranger that we may know through your Holy Spirit and that love eternal that is the essence of your character and the true end of our humanity. Amen.

Ministry Matters - What is Lent actually for?

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A Word from the Editor 

February brings the Lenten season—which means most pastors are simultaneously planning the most theologically dense worship of their year while personally wondering if they have anything left to offer it. That tension between leading others into the wilderness and feeling like wilderness yourself is real, and we're not going to pretend otherwise. 

This month we're asking what Lent is actually for. Not as a logistics question—there are plenty of resources for that—but as a theological and pastoral one. The practices of Lent were never designed to make individuals feel more spiritual in isolation. They were designed to reshape how the people of God live together. These articles take that seriously. And if you're heading into this time running on empty—there's something here for that, too. 



—Cameron 

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Your Lenten Discipline might be the problem

by Ministry Matters

"Somewhere along the way—especially in middle-class American Christianity—we kept the prayer and the fasting and quietly let the almsgiving become optional. We turned Lent into a self-improvement project dressed in sackcloth.
Learn More

Acts 4 is possible. We're living it in Minneapolis

by Tyler Sit

"But as a United Methodist pastor in Minneapolis, I’m witnessing Acts 4-type sharing all around me. While Minneapolis’ incredible activism—including faith-based witness—is in the headlines of the news, the ways people are supporting each other on the ground is just as miraculous.
Read Now
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Could the Acts 4 church really exist today?

When Lent feels...empty

by Cameron Merrill

"Nobody tells you, in seminary or in the books about spiritual formation or in the annual call from your conference about Lenten programming, that you will spend entire liturgical seasons on the outside of your own faith."
Continue Reading
The General Board of Church and Society upholds the Wesleyan commitment to social holiness through witnessing to just social policies and practices. This 100-year commemorative book will utilize archival materials from the agency’s historic publications to tell the story.
Experienced administrator Jana Holiday reframes the spreadsheets, meetings, and daily management tasks of organizational life as sacred opportunities for spiritual growth—showing how the practical work of leadership can become a formative faith practice.

Whether you're currently part of a Hub for Innovation cohort or striking out on your own, this workbook helps you translate inspiration into movement. With reflection prompts, vision-mapping exercises, and tools to experiment, evaluate, and evolve, you'll gain clarity, confidence, and momentum.

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Mission Yearbook: POAMN workshop looks at caring for the sandwich generation

To illustrate the pressures on members of the sandwich generation, Jen Rabenaldt brought along some toy sandwich ingredients she used as a teaching aid.

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Jen Rabenaldt's sandwich ingredients
To illustrate the complexities and challenges of the sandwich generation, Jen Rabenaldt brought along sandwich ingredients to the POAMN workshop she led. (Photo by Mike Ferguson)

Rabenaldt, a commissioned ruling elder who directs Christian education and is the office manager at First Presbyterian Church in San Luis Obispo, California, recently led a workshop on “The Sandwich Generation” at the annual conference of the Presbyterian Older Adult Ministries Network.

“I found myself in this sandwich generation a few years ago and didn’t know it was a thing,” she said. Rabenaldt’s husband was dying of cancer, and her mother was “starting her dementia journey,” she said. “My sandwich looks a lot different now. I’m not sure I’m eager for this adventure again, but I know I’d be ready for it.”

In her work and in her family life, Rabenaldt is a caretaker. “I want to make sure everyone is taken care of and has what they need. I forget that I need that, too, although I am getting better about asking for help and finding resources,” she said. “As churches, we could be better about walking alongside people.”

“I’ve brought us some sandwiches,” she said, gesturing to the sandwich ingredients scattered atop a table. “What kind of sandwich are you in? I felt like a club sandwich for a long time, and now I feel like an open-faced sandwich.”

One in four adults is now caring for both children and older parents, and Rabenaldt expects that number to grow. “We need to remember to take care of ourselves as well as those around us,” she said.

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Jen Rabenaldt
Jen Rabenaldt

The club sandwich Rabenaldt described “is a multigenerational household, even if the parents don’t live with you,” she said. Her open-faced sandwich describes elder care. “It’s a silly way to look at it, but it’s descriptive of what it feels like right now,” she said. “This season can be really exhausting. I still work full-time, and [caring for her father] is my full-time job on top of my full-time job.”

That care can, of course, bring joy. “I feel blessed to be such a big part of my dad’s life,” she said.

One workshop participant said she and her siblings agreed that those family members who couldn’t contribute financially to their mother’s care would instead contribute something in-kind, such as home repairs. “We were able to care for our mother in her home for 10 years,” she said. “It worked out quite nicely.”

“Having those hard conversations and the easy ones too is really important,” Rabenaldt said.

Finances can boost the level of stress. Rabenaldt opted to hire someone to take her father to haircuts, flu shots, dentist appointments and the like. “There are things you can do,” she said, “to take a layer out of your sandwich.”

Caregivers should also continue nurturing their spiritual lives, “which often goes out the door when we’re caring for a loved one,” she said. “It’s important to have in your brain what can help you refuel or reset — even if it’s being quiet for 15 minutes.”

For Rabenaldt, self-care sometimes looks like sitting quietly in the church sanctuary for a few minutes and sometimes involves “watching the dumbest … movie I can find. I don’t have to think about anything,” she said. “Just because we’re helping people all day doesn’t mean we’re not lonely.” Deacons or Stephen ministers “can see people and help with the loneliness,” and having mental health concerns addressed from the pulpit can lay the foundation for “a more comfortable conversation.”

“We also have to remember boundaries, which is hard sometimes,” she said. “We need to learn to say ‘no,’ so we don’t wear ourselves out.” She asked workshop participants to “think about one thing you can say ‘no’ to.” Whatever that is, “it can wait until tomorrow.”

“It’s on us if we don’t communicate,” Rabenaldt said. “People aren’t mind-readers.” Most bosses “are open to you taking time off if you need it,” she said.

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

Let us join in prayer for:

McKenna Britton, Communications Associate, Interim Unified Agency
Analise Brown, Registrar & Administrative Assistant, Office of Presbyterian Youth and Triennium, Interim Unified Agency

Let us pray:

God of eternity, you call us to be a people faithful to your call. May we find our prophetic hope in your voice. May we find our compassion in the depth of your heart and love. In Jesus, we pray these things. Amen.

Thursday, February 26, 2026

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

Scroll down for congregational stewardship news!

Your March Mission and Service Stories

PowerPoint slides for each story are available on the Mission and Service in Worship page.

March 1
Grandmothers Leading with Love

Grandmothers with supplies in Kenya
[Image credit: Lindsay Glennie]
 
In Kenya’s Rift Valley, grandmothers are doing what grandmothers do best: loving fiercely. Many are raising their grandchildren while grieving children of their own. Through Mission and Service partnerships, they’re sitting down with pastors, sharing their stories, and helping their churches choose compassion over stigma. Change begins with listening — and it’s already happening.

March 8
Partnership in Bloom

[Image credit: Jelena Safronova]
 
Spring doesn’t tiptoe in. It pushes through. And so do Mission and Service partners. When wildfires force families from home, when food costs soar, when isolation weighs heavy, they’re already showing up. Every gift strengthens work that is steady, practical, and rooted in community. Hope is growing — and we’re part of it.

March 15
A Steady Flow of Care

Silver Spire United Church view from the street
[Image credit: Silver Spire United Church]

At Silver Spire United Church in St. Catharines, something as ordinary as a shower becomes extraordinary. While guests wash, their laundry tumbles clean next door. Fresh clothes. Donated toiletries. A chance to exhale. It’s simple. It’s practical. And it reminds people they matter.

March 22
Local Knowledge, Global Transformation

Youth helping with farm chores
[Image credit: Asian Rural Institute]

Two hours never feels like enough at the Tomken Grove Afterschool Program. Neighbourhood children gather in an electronics-free space for play, movement, shared snacks and responsibility, building connection and community beyond the school day.

March 29
Steady Presence on the Northern Landscape

Hillcrest United Church at Sunset
[Image credit: Hillcrest United Church]

In Fort Nelson, British Columbia, Hillcrest United Church reflects the strength and generosity of rural ministry. Through worship, community gatherings, and everyday care, this vibrant congregation offers connection close to home while participating in a wider movement of hope across Canada and beyond.

Congregational Stewardship and Generosity

 
It seems so simple, yet we too often forget.
SAY THANK YOU!
Whenever you can.
However you can.
  • With the annual tax receipts.
  • At your annual meeting.
  • Sunday worship.
  • Board/Council meetings.
  • Wherever you meet people.
Just say thank you.
For all they do. For all they give. For all they are.
Tell them they matter. Tell them they are making a difference. Tell them they are appreciated.
Tell them God loves them.
And just say thank you.

Take care. God loves you! Thank you for all you are and do.

Rev. Dave

Let’s Get Ready!

It’s Tax-Receipt Time!

Write a nice personal message to include with the tax receipts you send to say, “Thank-you” to people for their 2025 gifts. Share a couple of inspiring highlights from the past year of how their gifts made a difference in people’s lives and increased discipleship. The most important phrase to use is, “Your gifts made this possible.”

You can get sample letters by downloading the “Stewardship Digging Deeper” free Stewardship Resource Kit from the Encouraging Generosity in Your Community of Faith webpage.

 

Lenten worship resources

Look no further. Worship, Liturgy, Sermon, Kids Activities, for all 5 weeks of Lent are all available in the Loving Our Neighbours: Worship for Five Sundays of Lent file on the Stewardship in Worship webpage.
 

Easter is coming

When you have a fuller house for worship on Easter Sunday, family, friends, people you have never met, it's really important to tell your story. People want to know, what is your Community of Faith doing, what makes it different, because of Jesus’ resurrection? Connect the dots for them. And hopefully one of those stories is about generosity as a spiritual practice.
 

May is PAR Month

How will you Inspire, Invite and Thank people who are not giving consistently to try it, by using PAR (Pre-Authorised Remittance) to give monthly?

How will you Inspire, Invite and Thank people already using PAR to increase their monthly giving?

 

PAR month resources will be available under Downloads at the bottom of the United Church PAR webpage in March.

Resources You Need!

 

NEW Free Capital Campaign Resource kit

In secular fundraising they say that if done well, capital campaigns can raise 10 times the annual amount given for operating. Think of the church or ministry you love. What would it mean to raise 10 times your annual donation amount? Improved facilities? New programs? 

There is a lot of untapped potential generosity if your Community of Faith hasn’t engaged in a capital campaign in a while.

Get the free Capital Campaign Resource kit. Ideas, plans, samples.

And don’t forget the Stewardship Starter Kit, Digging Deeper Kit, Stewardship Program Kit, Planned Legacy Giving Kit. 

All available on this web-page: Free Stewardship Resource kits.


Stewardship Seconds (NEW Update for January-June 2026!)

Short, pithy sayings that pack a punch, to help infiltrate stewardship thinking into your community of faith. Add them to newsletters, worship, announcements, webpages, wherever people gather!  Find them at the Stewardship in Worship webpage.


Offering Introductions & Dedication Prayers (NEW Update for January-June 2026!)

The offering time in worship is NOT about collecting money! It is about growing generous disciples and stewards. These Offering Introductions, and Dedication Prayers, for each Sunday of the year, will help. Find them at the Stewardship in Worship webpage.


2026 Lectionary Worship Starters UPDATED

Sermon ideas, theme hymns, RCL based. Five-week worship series on giving and generosity. Available now on the Stewardship in Worship webpage.

Get the Stewardship Support You Need


Team Changes.

  • Welcome to the Rev. Sarah Giles!! Sarah will be covering for Vicki Nelson while she is on medical leave. Those of you in the Prairie to Pine, Living Skies, Northern Spirit, Chinook Winds, and Pacific Mountain regions can reach Sarah at sgiles@united-church.ca
  • Beginning on January 1, 2026, The Rev. Roger Janes has retired! We will seriously miss him, but wish him the best. Those in his regions are still welcome to reach out using stewardship@united-church.ca. We hope to have a staffing update for you, soon.

In both cases for the short-term, other members of the team are covering. For the longer term, more information will be coming when we know more.

The people and resources to help you succeed are here.

Gifts with Vision News

Our small but mighty Gifts with Vision catalogue – featuring the gifts currently on the Gifts with Vision website – is being updated! Brand new gifts, as well as your existing favourites, will be available March 5, 2026! The website will be unavailable from March 2-6 to allow for these updates.
 
Questions? Email Gifts with Vision. You can also call us at 1-844-715-7969.

Why be a Mission and Service Volunteer?

What do you feel called to do? There's a place for you!

You might be part of the Outreach Committee: you’re looking for new outreach ideas, but nothing is really clicking. We can help you find new partners to support through Mission and Service (and also Gifts with Vision!) and share their stories with your community of faith. 
As a volunteer, you’ll receive Mission and Service stories for each month well in advance, so you can see what you might want to emphasize in your work and also have talking points to share. 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  
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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Your generosity enables the United Church to love, serve, and minister in the world. Make an online donation or learn more about your options to support the work of the church. 
Copyright © 2026 The United Church of Canada, All rights reserved.

Mission Yearbook: POAMN workshop covers grief and how to become better grieving congregations

Deborah Brandt knows the weight of grief. By her mid-40s, she had lost both parents, navigating memories while closing estates and selling h...