Monday, December 1, 2025

Minute for Mission: Presbyterian Awareness for All People Living with HIV


A woman is tested for HIV during a celebration sponsored by the FJKM Women of the Church branch in November 2022. Photo credit: Elizabeth Turk

During the past few years of Covid and other global crises, progress against the HIV pandemic has faltered, resources have shrunk and millions of lives are at risk as a result. This year, UNAIDS is challenging us to tackle the inequalities and inequities in HIV prevention and treatment. Inequity exists between countries and within countries. In Madagascar, only 15% of those infected with HIV know their status, while in the U.S.A., 87% of those infected know their status. Both countries are striving to reach at-risk populations.

The Church of Jesus Christ in Madagascar (FJKM), the PC(USA)’s partner church, sees tackling the HIV problem as an important part of what it means to serve God. One of Madagascar’s goals is to decrease the mother-to-child transmission of HIV. If pregnant women get tested for HIV and those who test positive for HIV take anti-retroviral medication (ART), then the rate of transmission to newborns can be drastically reduced. However, in Madagascar, less than half of pregnant women seek prenatal care from midwives or doctors. As a result, Madagascar has one of the world’s highest rates of maternal mortality and continued maternal transmission of HIV to newborns.

This year, the FJKM is highlighting the need for pregnant women to seek prenatal care and get tested for HIV and to take ART if they test positive for HIV. It included training sessions on this at the biannual pastors’ continuing education this past August and at two events of the Dorkasy, FJKM’s Women of the Church branch. Over 1,300 pastors and 3,000 women were trained. Congregations are being challenged to share “five minutes on health” during worship services and highlight the need for prenatal care and treatment for pregnant women with HIV. Free HIV testing is being offered at special church events and celebrations. The PC(USA) has supported FJKM in many of these training and testing events.

To learn about the ways your congregation can help raise HIV awareness and address the problem in the U.S.A. and around the world, visit pcusa.org/toolkits/hiv-aids.

Elizabeth Turk, MPH, BSN, PC(USA) Former Mission Co-Worker serving in Madagascar

Let us join in prayer for:

David Loleng, Vice President, Church Financial Literacy & Leadership and Stewardship Education, Presbyterian Foundation
Christine LongChurch Consultant – Tacoma, WA, Engagement & Church Relations, The Board of Pensions

Let us pray:

God of Life, we pray for those in our community and around the world who are infected and affected by HIV and AIDS. We pray that our church may be a place of compassion and protection for those in desperate need of healing. Amen.

Mission Yearbook: Video series covers what happens when ‘nones’ become parents

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Graphic with red background and gray street running through it marketing Holy Shift webinar

“In a world marked by rapid change and declining trust in institutions, the enduring value of faith and spirituality offers a beacon of hope and guidance,” writes the Rev. Dr. Lorenzo Lebrija, the executive director of the TryTank Research Institute, an initiative of Virginia Theological Seminary, in his introduction to a new research study on a new generation entering parenthood as religiously unaffiliated young adults. In the 20th century, parenting was a pathway back to faith for young adults who stopped attending in adolescence and their early 20s. But those trends have shifted as a whole generation of new parents have explicitly rejected institutional religion.

According to Lebrija, the Young Adult Parents Research Project asks what happens when the “‘nones’ become parents.” The study offers practical data and insights into how congregations might shift their models when it comes to supporting the spiritual formation of families that fall into the intentionally unaffiliated.

“Holy Shift,” a webinar series co-sponsored by the Around the Table initiative and the 1001 New Worshiping Communities of the PC(USA), took up this question in three consecutive online gatherings grounded in the findings of the research project, which was done in partnership with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and TryTank Research Institute.

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Man in tie with closed mouth smile
Dr. Josh Packard 

The Young Adult Parents Research Project investigated the evolving role of religion and spirituality among parents in the United States ages 25–39, a group marked by increasing disaffiliation from organized religion. With more than 4,000 participants, the study provides insights into how religious identity and spirituality influence parenting decisions, values and engagement with faith institutions.

Session 1 was hosted by the Rev. Neema Cyrus-Franklin, coordinator of Around the Table, as sociologist Dr. Josh Packard of the TryTank Research Institute presented findings and engaged participants in the presentation. The video can be viewed here.

Session 2 was hosted by the Rev. Libby Hugus of Resonate Coaching as participants had the opportunity in large and small groups to start envisioning new ministries with young adult parents in their faith communities. The video is available here.

Session 3 was a panel discussion of a variety of practitioners who have started new ministries that appeal to young parents, hosted by Hugus. The video can be viewed here.

The Young Adult Parents Research Project was co-sponsored by the 1001 New Worshiping Communities Movement of the PC(USA)’s Interim Unified Agency.

Beth Waltemath, Communications Strategist, Interim Unified Agency (Click here to read original PNS Story)

Let us join in prayer for:

Lora Limeberry, Accountant, Financial Reporting, Administrative Services Group
Elizabeth Little,  Church Consultant - Charlotte, NC, Engagement & Church Relations, The Board of Pensions 

Let us pray:

Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers, for by doing that some have entertained angels without knowing it” (Hebrews 13:2). Amen.

Saturday, November 29, 2025

Mission Yearbook: Mister Rogers homage helps wrap up a week of listening and learning

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Rev. Dr. Matt Sauer Friday
The Rev. Dr. Matt Sauer donned his red sweater one last time Friday during the 2025 edition of Synod School (photo by Kim Coulter)

As he did all week long at Synod School, the Rev. Dr. Matt Sauer shared his inner Fred Rogers on the final day, donning a red sweater to honor the wisdom and caring heart of a Presbyterian pastor influential to the millions of Americans who grew up watching “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood.”

Sauer, pastor of Manitowoc Cooperative Ministry in Wisconsin, shared a clip of Rogers singing “It’s You I Like” to Joan Rivers on “The Tonight Show,” which Rivers found moving.

“In this space I get to be more real than anywhere else,” Sauer told his fellow Synod Schoolers. “It’s a gift you give me every year.” Sauer closed with a clip of Rogers singing his “Goodnight God.”

Led by Synod School Dean Lisa Tarbell, those assembled got to honor one of their own. John Tonje, who grew up attending Synod School, was drafted last month by the Utah Jazz after a stellar basketball career at Wisconsin. Tarbell recorded herself congratulating Tonje and then being cheered by those who filled Schaller Chapel.

Tarbell had another significant announcement: next year’s convocation speaker will be Dr. William Yoo, Associate Professor of American Religious and Cultural History at Columbia Theological Seminary and the author of two recent well-regarded books published by Westminster John Knox Press: “Reckoning with History” and “What Kind of Christianity.” The 72nd Synod School is scheduled for July 26–31, 2026, at Buena Vista University in Storm Lake, Iowa.

Also on the last day of this year’s school, the Rev. MaryAnn McKibben Dana, Synod School’s convocation speaker, sported a tie-dyed T-shirt given to her by a youth group in Jacksonville, Illinois. “She’s one of us now,” the youth said.

Turning to the day’s topic, authenticity, McKibben Dana reported that a Synod School musician shared with her the guidelines for a community band he plays in back home, including:

  • Tell one another, “You sound great!”
  • Figure stuff out and play wrong notes occasionally.
  • If a song is feeling too difficult, pick up some percussion.

“In this gathering, I don’t want perfection,” the musician told McKibben Dana. “I want humanity.”

She played a clip of an interview with the novelist, poet and professor Ocean Vuong, who said students — especially students in the U.S. — “are more and more self-conscious of trying.”

“They would say, I want to be a poet, I want to be a good writer, but it’s a bit of a cringe. This cringe culture is, ‘I don’t want to be perceived as trying and having an effortful attempt at my dreams.’ As a teacher, that’s a horrifying sort of report from the field,” Vuong said. “I think they are scared of judgment. They perform cynicism because cynicism can be misread, as it often is, as intelligence. You are disaffected. You’re too cool. You’ve seen it all. And so, they pull back.”

“But in fact, they are deeply hungry for sincere, earnest effort,” Vuong said. “Sincerity is something we deeply hunger for, particularly young people, but we are embarrassed when sincerity is in the room.”

The teacher has the authority to set the tone, Vuong said. “If you set the tone for your students and you welcome them — that you won’t judge them, that [they] can be sincere and honest without being condemned or ridiculed for it, that they can try their best and it won’t be cringy to do so — then you truly liberate them toward their best selves.”

McKibben Dana wondered how we “get past this idea that being myself is somehow cringy and that it’s better to be intelligent and removed.”

Years ago, she took a parenting workshop during which young parents were asked to imagine their children at 21 or 25. What are the qualities parents would like their grown children to have? Answers included service to the world, meaningful work, a community that cares for them, a sense of joy and work-life balance.

“Great!” the instructor said. “That’s your list. That’s how you build the self you send into the world as they grow into maturity.”

McKibben Dana displayed a photo of a bumper sticker proclaiming “Non-judgment day is here.”

“Let us go out into the world,” she said. “Let us be encouraged.”

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

Let us join in prayer for:

Shelly Lewis, Administrative Manager, Finance & Accounting Controllers Office, Administrative Services Group
Tony Lewis, Operations & Accounting Associate, Operations, Presbyterian Publishing Corporation        

Let us pray:

Merciful Lord, forgive us for not listening for not hearing the voices of the oppressed and suffering. May your love guide us in joining our brothers and sisters for transformation, bringing glory and humor to you. Amen.

Friday, November 28, 2025

Mission Yearbook: Fellows invite Presbyterians to imagine a church made new

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A white church and blue sky
(Photo by Stephen Myers via Unsplash)

A church is the people.

A place where Scripture guides our imagination into new life.

A place where everyone belongs.

A place where people can ask all the questions they have.

A place where all of life is woven together.

A place where the community wants to come, to share and to be.

That was the collective picture of a church envisioned by attendees of a midweek worship service recently led by summer fellows from the Presbyterian Office of Public Witness and the Presbyterian Ministry at the United Nations.

Attendees of the July 23 service were asked to share their ideas on a digital whiteboard as part of an exercise in radical imagining.

“The UKirk college ministry I participated in as an undergrad started the year with our leadership team with a similar prompt” to imagine a church that serves your needs, fixes what is broken and makes you excited to attend, said Isabella Shutt, a fellow pursuing a master of divinity degree from Princeton Theological Seminary.

The whiteboard filled with elements like “transformative and powerful preaching" and “racial equity" as well as qualities like “celebrates the gifts of every person" and “opens the door and the community is welcomed in.”  The board also included drawings of things like the sun and trees, a loaf of bread, a fish, a cup and other doodles.

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Colorful stained glass in a spiral pattern
Photo by Adam Gonzales via Unsplash)

The exercise was part of a sermon based on Ezekiel 47:1–12 in which Ezekiel first sees visions of calamity but later is led to the banks of a river, where God lets him in on something more hopeful.

The Lord “explains that the healing power of the river will cause fish to become abundant, that the river will heal all things, that the trees will bear fruit,” said fellow Alex Pickell, a PC(USA) candidate for ordination who helped give the sermon. “Note that Ezekiel is not seeing it with his own eyes. God is sharing this vision with him. Maybe Ezekiel won’t ever see it all for himself. All he sees is the river before him. But through God’s vision, Ezekiel is being opened up to the idea that there could be a new, full life for his people, one that’s abundant and vibrant. Ezekiel’s task then is to imagine the possibilities.”

Why the need for radical imagination today? “Radical imagination is a collective process of play and exploration, used to conjure new choices where there appeared to have been none before,” Shutt said. “It is rooted in lessons from the past and present and is deeply concerned with the future.”

Shutt went on to say, “Radical imagination can lead us to ask questions like, ‘If we are rebuilding a temple, why not expand its impact beyond the people who worship there and plan for the land around it as well? If we are building on a river, why not consider the needs of the fish and the plants that make that river its home?’”

The 30-minute service, mostly attended by employees of entities of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), was one of the final activities of the fellows, who are college students and seminarians serving in the advocacy offices and engaging in a summer of writing Action Alerts, attending policy briefings and working with ecumenical partners.

This year’s fellows have served at a tumultuous time, marked by divisive policymaking in Washington and war and famine abroad. natural disasters, civil unrest and other chaos, but “we await the wonderful rainbow at the end of the hurricane.”

Later, during the sermon, Pickell noted that the Ezekiel passage raises serious questions, such as “Where is God in our rapidly changing world?” and “Who are we being called to be in it?”

“In our own world, like Ezekiel’s, we are experiencing a disordering of life,” Pickell said. "Our country, our world, and our denomination face changes and terrible loss. It can seem almost too much to bear at times.”

However, that is where radical imagination comes in, Shutt said.

After the whiteboard exercise, she advised attendees, “As you continue reading the news, adjusting to your changing roles during unification, and working towards a better future, remember that, like Ezekiel, you are asked to imagine. Amen.”

Darla Carter, Communications Strategist, Interim Unified Agency (Click here to read original PNS Story)

Let us join in prayer for:

Kristen Leucht, Senior Church Consultant - Los Angeles, CA, Engagement & Church Relations, The Board of Pensions
Clare Lewis, President & CEO, Presbyterian Investment & Loan Program    

Let us pray:

Loving God, we pray for those who hunger and thirst for the gospel for those who teach, for those who learn, for all who are called to your service. Amen.

Affordable Advent liturgies, prayers and hymns 🎄

Slow down. Pay attention. Draw Near this Advent.

Dear friends,

In a season often marked by hurry and noise, Advent invites us to slow down — to breathe, to watch, to draw near to the One who draws near to us.

This year, the Presbyterian Outlook is delighted to share our 2025 Advent devotional, Draw Near. Written with pastors, congregations and everyday followers of Christ in mind, this devotional offers Scripture, reflection and prayer for each day of Advent — grounding us in hope, stretching us toward justice and opening us to the quiet wonder of God’s presence.

Whether used personally, in family devotion, small-group study, or as a congregational resource, Draw Near is crafted to nurture reflection and communal preparation for the coming of Christ.

Inside you'll find:

  • Daily Scripture readings and reflections

  • Prayer prompts

  • Accessible, Reformed-rooted theological insight

  • Beautiful Advent themes of longing, hope, waiting and incarnation

We pray these words help you step into the season with intention and tenderness, guided by the God who meets us in flesh and light and love.

In hope,
The Presbyterian Outlook team

Read a sample

✨ Order your digital devotional today ✨

Thank you for supporting the Outlook’s mission to equip and inspire faithful Christian witness in the world. May this Advent season be for you a time of deep anticipation, holy attentiveness and renewed joy in Emmanuel, God-with-us.

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Copyright © 2025 Presbyterian Outlook, All rights reserved.

WCC NEWS: New WCC Advent resource will help mobilise healing communities

A new Advent resource from the World Council of Churches, “Reflection, Prayer, Action,” is designed to guide congregations in preparing for the birth of Christ by engaging deeply with themes of women’s wellbeing and agency, the positive role of men in family life and reproductive health, displacement and migration, and the promise of peace.
'Family moments make great memories' reads a sign in the kitchen as a family prepares an evening meal in their home in Beit Sahour, in the larger Bethlehem area. Photo: Albin Hillert/WCC
28 November 2025

Rooted in Scripture, early Christian insights, and the lived realities of today’s world, “Reflection, Prayer, Action” offers concise reflections, prayers, community actions, and advocacy points to mobilise churches to become agents of healing and justice. 

By integrating spiritual formation with concrete acts of solidarity and resource mobilisation, especially in support of health, wellbeing, and vulnerable communities, this Advent initiative invites faith communities to anticipate Christ’s coming not only with devotion, but with committed action that nurtures hope, restores dignity, and strengthens holistic peace.

“We reflect on the resilience, dignity, and agency of women, embodied powerfully in the story of Mary,” reads one reflection. “As a young, pregnant teenager, Mary embraces God’s calling with remarkable courage despite potential stigma, insecurity, and risk.”

Download the full ressources here

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The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 356 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 580 million Christians in over 120 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay from the Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa.

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Minute for Mission: Presbyterian Awareness for All People Living with HIV

A woman is tested for HIV during a celebration sponsored by the FJKM Women of the Church branch in November 2022. Photo credit: Elizabeth Tu...