Friday, August 1, 2025

Mission Yearbook: Five years of faithful routine: Zoom worship group marks milestone

On Friday, May 9, a group of 13 Presbyterians — and one from the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) tradition — gathered on Zoom at 8:30 a.m. Eastern time. Nothing about the gathering stood out as particularly remarkable. Participants exchanged greetings and brief life updates and then joined together for a short worship service. The energy was comfortable and familiar, like it had been done hundreds of times before — because it had. What made that Friday’s prayer service remarkable was, in fact, how ordinary it was. As of that Friday’s gathering, this group has gathered every week for morning prayer for five years.

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Weekly prayer faces
Friday, May 9, marked the fifth anniversary for an online prayer service that many people find helpful. (screenshot)

Karen Wellington, a ruling elder from First Presbyterian Church of Goshen, Indiana, who described herself as a more recent joiner, said she tries to never miss. “From the beginning, everyone was friendly and kind, welcoming and gracious,” she said. “When I initially started attending, I was bottle feeding my calf and the group was always anxious to see her growth progress.”

In May 2020, the world was deep in the throes of the Covid pandemic. Many places were under shelter-in-place orders. Grocery trips and doctor’s appointments had become fraught with risk. Frontline workers were laboring around the clock to save lives. Everyone else stayed home, cut off from the vestiges of in-person community life in the name of public safety.

Amid this turmoil, pastors and other church staff were left to minister to their people in whatever ways they could — through livestreamed worship services in empty sanctuaries and daily prayer emails and video visits with struggling congregants. It was a time of profound innovation and collective creativity, where virtual connection became a lifeline instead of simply a daily convenience.

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Weekly prayer screen
Volunteers take turns preparing the liturgy and music for the week (screenshot).

The pandemic took a heavy toll on many people, and church staff were no exception — doing their work in isolation, with few resources and no precedent. A small group of Presbyterian leaders recognized the deep need for professional faith leaders to have their own source of community and support.

The Rev. Dr. Martha Moore-Keish, JB Green Professor of Theology at Columbia Theological Seminary, said the idea for weekly prayer started from a conversation she had with a Columbia alum, the Rev. Rob Jackson. Jackson learned the practice of morning prayer while in Company of New Pastors and reached out to Moore-Keish with a hunger to rekindle the discipline during Covid. The Presbyterian Association of Musicians was quick to add its support.

Others joined in the early organizing work: pastors including the Rev. Marci Auld Glass and the Rev. Lisa Schrott, director of music Karrie Rushing, along with the Rev. Dr. David Gambrell, the PC(USA)’s associate for worship.

An initial Zoom gathering was scheduled, and each participant invited colleagues and friends; it’s continued ever since. Others learned of the gathering by word of mouth and began to attend. Numbers grew to a few dozen people, most of whom participated regularly. Worshipers have included pastors, professors, church musicians, Christian educators and mid council leaders. Almost everyone is Presbyterian, but the gathering is open to others as well.

Participants attend from all across the country. Eventually, a second service was established on Monday mornings at 11 o’clock Eastern Time, to accommodate more folks in the Pacific time zone.

While the group initially used Word documents and PDFs to share liturgy and music, worship leaders quickly evolved to using slides. Volunteers take turns preparing the liturgy and music for the week. At the outset of the gathering, participants sign up to lead prayers and read Scripture. Thirty minutes later, they part ways with signs of peace and return to their in-person lives.

Five years on, Covid remains a public health issue. But most of the hallmarks of communal life have been re-established, including in-person worship and church events. Many congregations that began livestreaming services during the pandemic continue to do so as a way to reach those unable to attend in person. However, most purely virtual worship gatherings eventually stopped or faded in participation, the relics of a haunting moment in history.

For this group of Zoom worshipers, however, weekly gatherings remain a crucial ritual.

If you’re interested in learning more about the weekly prayer service or joining in, fill out this form

Layton Williams Berkes, Communications Strategist, Interim Unified Agency  (Click here to read original PNS Story)

Let us join in prayer for:

Rebecca Storti, Director, Meetings & Special Events, Board of Pensions
Keren Strothman, Mission Specialist II, Theology, Formation & Evangelism, Interim Unified Agency 

Let us pray:

Loving God, you call us to reach out to the most vulnerable among us. Open our ears to hear their cries and give us wisdom as we seek to serve. Amen.

The Presbyterian Outlook - Christmas in July 🎄

To all our planners: This one is for you!

We’re excited to share brand-new Advent content this fall, including fresh prayers, liturgies and a devotional.  

But if you’re hoping to get a head start before the school year begins, our collection of past Advent and Christmas resources is ready and waiting.

And here’s a little incentive to start early: Take 10% off all Advent and Christmas resources through July 31. Use the coupon code July.

Explore timeless materials to help you plan meaningful worship and reflection — without having to wait for the leaves to fall.

Original, daily devotionals — perfect for printing or emailing

Patterns of divine possibility: An Advent search for God’s diverse ordering
Apocalyptic Advent: Embracing Hope in the Second Coming of Christ
Attending to Advent: poetry, prose and prayer
Night Watch: Devotions for the congregation
Give variety to your congregation’s Advent services with Outlook hymns (with sheet music)
Mary Gladly Told Her Cousin by Carolyn Winfrey Gillette
Advent wreath hymn by Carolyn Winfrey Gillette
Joseph Was Troubled by Carolyn Winfrey Gillette
A Savior Born, A Gift of Joy (Christmas Joy hymn) by Carolyn Winfrey Gillette
See all Advent and Christmas hymns
Advent Liturgies
"Wait for the Lord: An Advent Candle Liturgy" by Montisa Anntoinette Watkins and Shavon Starling-Louis
Blue Christmas service by Christine Chakoian
"Creator of the Stars of Night: An Advent Candle Liturgy" by Carol Holbrook Prickett
"Family Christmas Eve Service" by Jenny Lee
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Copyright © 2025 Presbyterian Outlook, All rights reserved.

Thursday, July 31, 2025

Mission Yearbook: Talking to kids about racism, injustice and the power of love

On April 28, in Rochester, Minnesota, a white woman named Shiloh Hendrix accused a 5-year-old Black boy of stealing something from her diaper bag. She shouted racial slurs at him, calling him the N-word. He also happens to be a child with autism. In defense of him, a man named Sharmake Omar took out his phone, pressed record and confronted the woman. The woman responded by shouting racial slurs at him.

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Nicole Doyley

Omar’s video went viral, and because Hendrix allegedly received death threats, someone set up a GiveSendGo campaign. To date, thousands of people from all over the country have donated more than $700,000 to Hendrix. So many donors used racial slurs and Nazi jargon in the comments of the campaign that it overwhelmed the profanity filter.

This story is disturbing on many levels, not the least of which is the fact that it is as old as the United States itself: white women accusing Black boys of nefarious deeds, which brings racism bubbling to the surface and sometimes results in threats of violence or actual violence (think Emmett Till).

The question is, how can parents help their kids make sense of such a confusing moral landscape, where racism is flaunted and bad behavior is rewarded?

Here are four suggestions to help you to talk to kids about disturbing stories such as this one:

  • When they hear stories like the Rochester incident, start with the big picture. The Bible tells us that there are six things the Lord hates and one of them is “feet that run swiftly to evil” (Proverbs 6:18). God doesn’t want us to do evil and doesn’t want us to run to see it, either. Help your kids think about excellent and praiseworthy things by pointing out a beautiful sky, the kindness of a stranger or the beautiful music on the radio.
  • This doesn’t mean that you should ignore realities like racism, though. Rather, teach your kids about race and racism even when they’re young. You can say things like, “Recently a lady was mean to a little boy because of the color of his skin. That was very wrong, and it made God very sad.” Whether your kids are white or kids of color, tell them that all people are created in God’s image, and those with dark skin bear God’s image just as much as those with light skin.
  • Teach your kids that the root of racism is hate. Jesus teaches us that the second greatest command (after loving God) is loving neighbor, and our neighbor includes people of every race and ethnicity. You cannot love God and hate people.
  • Teach them that part of living in a sinful world means that sometimes right and wrong get mixed up.  Sometimes sinful people will call bad behavior, like the behavior of Shiloh Hendrix, good, and they will even reward it rather than rewarding the brave action of a stranger trying to defend a child. Kids find it confusing when adults do this because they feel adults should know better. But the truth is, adults who are filled with hate do not know better. All we can do for them is pray that their lives will be transformed by God’s love.

There are many sad things about this story, including the fact that Hendrix shouted these slurs with her own young child on her hip.  Parents keep passing racism down to their kids. Perhaps tonight, with your kids, you can model love by praying for Shiloh Hendrix, that God’s transforming love will invade her life; for the little Black boy and his family, that God would heal them and that they would refuse to return evil for evil; and for Sharmake Omar, that God would protect him and draw him to God’s self.

In his sermon called “Loving Your Enemies,” the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. said, “Returning hate for hate multiplies hate, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars. Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate, only love can do that.” Let’s teach that to our children.

Nicole Doyley is the author of “What about the Children?: Five Values for Multiracial Families,” published in February by Westminster John Knox Press. You can find her here.

Nicole Doyley, Special for Presbyterian News Service  (Click here to read original PNS Story)

Let us join in prayer for:

Cameron Stevens,  Mission Associate II, Constituency Relations, Presbyterian Disaster Assistance, Interim Unified Agency
Mindi Stivers, Financial Assistant, Presbyterian Women

Let us pray:

God of mercy, we are privileged to be called to join Christ in the world as we seek to do ministries of justice and kindness and bring glory to your name. Give us the courage to act boldly and let all that we do be conducted in a spirit of humility and love. In Christ’s name. Amen.

Wednesday, July 30, 2025

Minute for Mission: World Day Against Trafficking in Persons

Mary Jane Veloso, a human trafficking victim who was imprisoned unjustly for 14 years in Indonesia for unwittingly carrying 2.6 kilos of heroin into that country in luggage provided to her by individuals who had recruited her to work in Malaysia, has been freed from Indonesian custody and returned home to the Philippines.

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Supporters gathered outside the Correctional Institute for Women to show their unwavering support for Mary Jane Veloso. (Contributed photo)
Supporters gathered outside the Correctional Institute for Women to show their unwavering support for Mary Jane Veloso. (Contributed photo)

In December, PC(USA) Mission Co-Worker the Rev. Cathy Chang, who is now a Global Ecumenical Liaison with the PC(USA)’s Interim Unified Agency, was at the Manila airport to help welcome Veloso home in a terminal crowded with reporters and well-wishers. 

Once Veloso approached the arrivals area, “everybody started chanting her name,” Chang said. “We were quite a distance away. She was flanked by security personnel, and her parents and family could not hug or touch her.”

Chang and others then accompanied Veloso to the Correctional Institute for Women, where she was held for a quarantine protocol. “That is routine for everyone,” Chang said. “Thankfully, there was an initial family reunion after her arrival at the CIW.”

Now 40, Veloso, a domestic worker, was arrested in 2010 in Indonesia. She denied knowing about the drugs in the luggage she’d been given by those who’d recruited her to work in Malaysia — two Filipinos who were convicted in 2020 of large-scale illegal recruitment. In 2015, she’d been sentenced to be executed in Indonesia, but at the 11th hour was granted a stay thanks in part to pleas from then-Philippine President Benigno Aquino because of the recent arrest of one of her recruiters.

Chang said Veloso’s release was the result of a high-level diplomatic agreement between the Ministry of Justice in Indonesia and counterparts in the Philippines. Under diplomatic agreements signed by members of ASEAN, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, the custody of a prisoner can be transferred. Chang credited both Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. and new Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto.

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The pink flowers that the Rev. Cathy Chang purchased for Mary Jane Veloso’s family to help welcome Veloso back to the Philippines. (Contributed photo)
The pink flowers that the Rev. Cathy Chang purchased for Mary Jane Veloso’s family to help welcome Veloso back to the Philippines. (Contributed photo)

“From what I could see during the live feed [of Veloso’s arrival in Manila], she obviously has aged. But the joy showed in her eyes,” Chang said. “Even at the press conference, I could see how she radiated joy, relief and gratitude.”

The question on the minds of Veloso’s many supporters is whether Marcos will grant her clemency. They’re circulating this petition, which states, “Mary Jane is among many women migrant workers, from impoverished backgrounds, who have been preyed upon by illegal recruiters and human traffickers.” Her safe return “will shine as a beacon of hope for migrant workers around the world, especially for those who feel abandoned and neglected and who face unjust detention, the harsh realities of exploitation and injustice.” Everyone is invited to join international supporters through this online signature campaign.

Clemency for Veloso “is long overdue,” Chang said. “I think she has already suffered so much.” Chang credited Migrante International and the Church Task Force to Save Mary Jane, in addition to Veloso’s lawyers and Indonesian migrant advocates, for their tireless advocacy.

Several hours before leaving for the Manila airport, Chang stopped by a neighborhood florist to purchase some flowers for Veloso’s family to give to her. “Not knowing which colors to choose, I chose pink because that seemed the best choice,” Chang said. “I told the florist that they would be preparing ‘history-making flowers’ because they would later be given to Mary Jane Veloso.”

“Later, while waiting at the airport,” Chang said, “I learned that pink is Mary Jane’s favorite color.”

Join the letter writing campaign for Veloso’s release. Go here for a template for a letter your church or mid council can send on her behalf.

Read additional Presbyterian News Service reporting about Veloso’s ordeal and how Presbyterians have supported her over the years hereherehere and here.

Since 2015, the Rev. Cathy Chang has served as a mission co-worker in the Philippines. In 2025, she began serving as a Global Ecumenical Liaison – International with the Interim Unified Agency.

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

Let us join in prayer for:

Andrea Stevens, Charitable Gift Advisor, Presbyterian Foundation
Angie Stevens,  Manager, Communication Specialist, Interim Unified Agency   

Let us pray:

In the name of Jesus Christ, who proclaims good news to the poor, liberty to the captives, and justice to the oppressed, may our prayers and actions lead to Mary Jane Veloso’s clemency. Amen. 

Tuesday, July 29, 2025

Mission Yearbook: Google VP addresses Stillman College graduates

Stillman College, founded in 1876 by the Presbyterian Church, celebrated its 2025 commencement this year as 65% of graduates earned honors, showcasing the institution’s unwavering commitment to academic excellence.

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Stillman graduates
Graduates take selfies to celebrate the completion of their undergraduate career at Stillman College's 2025 Commencement on Saturday in Birthright Alumni Hall in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. (Photo by Chris Megginson, Stillman College)

The ceremony, held in Birthright Alumni Hall due to inclement weather, celebrated 121 graduates and highlighted the growing partnership between Stillman and Google, which presented a $30,000 gift to the college.

“We are not going to let this rain on this wonderful day for the Class of 2025,” Dr. Yolanda W. Page, the eighth president of Stillman College, said to an excited crowd to begin the ceremony.

The energy-filled ceremony, which lasted less than two hours, marked a transformative moment for the Class of 2025, consisting of 43 male and 78 female graduates. A recurring theme throughout the program was resilience and adaptability, traits the graduates will carry forward into their future endeavors.

Google’s Vice President of Employee Engagement, Melonie D. Parker, delivered a commencement address that reflected on Stillman’s history and its ability to navigate challenges and thrive.

“Stillman by its very existence tells you challenges are not stop signs. Challenges are invitations to innovate, to persevere, to build something meaningful, even when the path seems unclear,” Parker said.

She encouraged graduates to carry forward the legacy of past Stillmanites who overcame financial strains, fluctuating enrollment and civil rights battles, emphasizing that their resilience led to meaningful progress.

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Melonie D. Parker
Melonie D. Parker, Vice President of Employee Engagement at Google, Inc., delivers the commencement address at Stillman College's 2025 Commencement on Saturday. Parker also received an honorary doctorate during the ceremony and presented Stillman College with a $30,000 unrestricted gift on behalf of Google. (Photo by Trent Spruell)

“Stillman endured. It adapted. It found new strength,” Parker said. “This wasn’t just institutional survival. It was a demonstration of what a committed community can achieve.”

In recognition of her impactful contributions to leadership and her unwavering support of HBCUs, Parker was awarded an honorary doctorate of humane letters by Page and Board of Trustees Chairman Joe Hampton. Additionally, Parker presented a $30,000 unrestricted gift to Stillman on behalf of Google.

“The partnership between Stillman College and Google is one rooted in a shared mission and vision,” Parker said. “At Google, we strive to make information universally accessible and useful, and this aligns perfectly with Stillman College’s mission to foster academic excellence and empower diverse populations for leadership and service.”

Class of 2025 valedictorian Amarachi Okafor delivered heartfelt senior reflections, underscoring the importance of community and perseverance. Her sister, Chinazam Okafor, salutatorian, introduced Parker as the keynote speaker.

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Dr. Yolanda Page and Catherine Cox
Dr. Yolanda W. Page, eighth president of Stillman College, presents Catherine Cox of Tuscaloosa, Alabama her bachelor of science in mathematics at Stillman College's 2025 Commencement on Saturday. (Photo by Chris Megginson, Stillman College)

Nine distinguished members of the Class of 1975 were honored as the Golden Class during their 50th reunion celebration, recognizing their enduring connection to Stillman College and their lifelong contributions to its legacy.

The ceremony also featured musical performances by the Stillman College Choir and Band. The Rev. Vernon Swift of Elizabeth Baptist Church offered the invocation, while the Rev. Dr. Joseph Scrivner, dean of chapel at Stillman College, delivered the benediction.

As members of the Class of 2025 embark on their journeys, Stillman College remains steadfast in its mission to empower leaders for change. The continued support from partners like Google ensures that future generations of Stillmanites will thrive in an ever-changing world.

Stillman College, an accredited, four-year liberal arts institution in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, offers a diverse range of undergraduate programs and is committed to providing a transformative educational experience. A historically Black college and university (HBCU) founded in 1876 by the Presbyterian Church, Stillman has a rich history of educating students from various backgrounds and promoting academic excellence. The college is dedicated to developing critical thinkers and leaders who will make significant contributions to their communities. For more information about Stillman College, go here.

Stillman College, Presbyterian News Service (Click here to read original PNS Story)

Let us join in prayer for:

Elaine Stepp, Operations Reconciliation Specialist, Presbyterian Foundation
Tim Stepp, Associate Director, Internal Audit, Administrative Services Group (A Corp) 

Let us pray:

God our Creator, Sustainer, Redeemer and friend, through Christ you demonstrate, in fullness, the depth of your love. May we reflect his compassion, which permeated all his actions, as we serve. Amen.

Mission Yearbook: Five years of faithful routine: Zoom worship group marks milestone

On Friday, May 9, a group of 13 Presbyterians — and one from the  Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)  tradition — gathered on Zoom at 8:...