This year in Pennsylvania, a new variety of mountain laurel is blossoming — not the flower, but a presbytery.

Lehigh and Lackawanna presbyteries, which cover the northeastern part of the state and include one church in New York, are merging to become one, single, new Mountain Laurel Presbytery, named for the state flower of Pennsylvania.
The mountain laurel, which grows across the state and along the Eastern part of the United States, is known for its ability to thrive in rocky soil.
Lackawanna and Lehigh officially voted in favor of the merger at their May 3 joint assembly. The decision was approved by the Synod of the Trinity at its meeting on June 17. On July 11, the General Assembly’s administrative commission on mid councils, newly created during last summer’s 226th General Assembly, gave final approval.

Nearly a year ago, the Rev. Denise Pass was called to serve as shared general presbyter for the two merging presbyteries. She emphasizes that she was brought it at the end of a long and involved process. In fact, while these formal steps are recent, Pass said there has been talk of merger among Pennsylvania’s eastern presbyteries going back nearly five decades.
Pass said the ongoing decline in church membership nationally was certainly a contributing factor in the decision to merge, but that other realities more specific to their geographic context also factored in. Portions of that part of Pennsylvania are rural and very sparsely populated, which means that in some cases there may be one small Presbyterian congregation for an entire county.
“There seemed to be a fairly significant disconnect between the denomination and the presbytery and many of the rural or smaller congregations in the presbytery,” Pass said.
When the Rev. Rhonda Kruse was hired as Lehigh’s transitional presbyter in September 2019, talk of collaboration between the two presbyteries reemerged more intentionally. For a while, a third presbytery — Northumberland — was also involved, but eventually dropped out of the process.

In 2022, Kruse became presbyter for Lackawanna Presbytery as well, and, after a series of staff turnovers, the presbyteries began to share other personnel as well. Eventually, they began to have joint presbytery meetings and explored what merging might actually look like.
In late 2023, the two presbyteries officially agreed to pursue a merger. The Rev. Karen Kinney was hired as a merger coordinator, with the responsibility of overseeing the union process and ensuring all legal, financial, ecclesiastical and relational needs were met.
Reflecting on the experience upon her retirement in 2024, Kruse said focusing on building relationships between the two presbyteries proved essential.
“The key to the success of all of this was that we were very deliberate about having in-person only meetings, starting in November of ’22,” Kruse said. “We got to know each other, started working on trying to make sure that relationships were being built.”
Pass echoed this sentiment, describing herself as “an adult adoptee of the PC(USA)” who really values the connectional nature of the denomination.
The Rev. Forrest Claassen, the executive for Synod of the Trinity, praised how intentional the two presbyteries were in discussing clearly and explicitly what their expectations were, describing it as the equivalent of “really, really good premarital counseling.”
The process has involved a lot of technical and logistics work, such as combining committees and writing a new operations manual. But there have been fun elements, too. In January, presbytery leaders held a naming contest for the new presbytery. There were a number of suggestions, but Mountain Laurel Presbytery won out.
The name is, perhaps, especially appropriate for a presbytery committed to thriving in the face of a challenging modern church landscape. Claassen explained that many people don’t associate Pennsylvania with Appalachia, but the mountain range does extend through the eastern part of the state.
Layton Williams Berkes, Communications Strategist, Interim Unified Agency Click here to read original PNS Story)
Let us join in prayer for:
Denise Gray, Supervisor, General Ledger Office, Administrative Services Group
Katrinia Green, Controller, Presbyterian Foundation
Let us pray:
Holy One, continue to show us how to multiply our loaves and fishes. Amen.





