Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Mission Yearbook: Presbyterian Advocacy Hour webinar on education draws nearly 200

Almost 200 people recently attended a Presbyterian Advocacy Hour focused on public education.

Image
CDC via Unsplash
Photo courtesy of CDC via Unsplash

“Education is in trouble. We have witnessed attacks on education by the current administration,” said the Rev. Dr. Alonzo Johnson, convenor of the PC(USA)’s Education Roundtable. “But there is something we can do about it. We can move away from despair and take action.”

Presenters offered strategies for supporting students and classrooms in their communities.

“The quality of education we experience begins at home” by “reading and talking to our children,” said Dr. Wanda Beauman, a retired educator and an Education Roundtable member. “We as the church want to include, encourage and support them” through strategies that include focusing on education-oriented ministry and supporting congregations in starting or improving educational programs.

Johnson pointed attendees toward “Loving Our Neighbors: Equity and Quality in Public Education (K-12),” the most recent General Assembly statement on education, which was approved in 2010.

The Rev. Suzanne Parker Miller, executive director of Pastors for North Carolina Children, pointed to a long list of those who “make decisions for our schools,” including the president, Congress, the courts, the U.S. Department of Education, the Department of Agriculture (which provides breakfast and lunch programs), state legislatures, local school boards, superintendents, principals and teachers.

Miller called it “our job” to counter and dismantle Christian nationalism, “the No. 1 threat to education today” because of its connection to school vouchers that “defund public schools,” book bans, and other initiatives.

Renee Danyo, a retired Detroit educator and member of the Education Roundtable, appeared alongside Andrew Reinel, director of adult and neighborhood organizing at 482 Forward, a Detroit-based education justice coalition. Reinel explained the organization began about 10 years ago when the state of Michigan took over Detroit Public Schools when the schools went bankrupt. Since then, 482 Forward “has been active in the education scene to get students the quality education they deserve,” Reinel said.

“Even the better public schools in Detroit are facing things no kid should have to go through,” Reinel said. Dangerous schools and crowded classrooms continue to be issues, “and we are behind in several academic measures.”

The coalition is working to galvanize voters behind a statewide ballot initiative planned for next year around increasing school funding. “We’re it. There is no cavalry to come save us,” Reinel said. “We know Covid money is running out, and with threats from the federal level, this [ballot initiative] is something folks are excited about.”

Laura Zhang-Choi of New Jersey, another member of the Education Roundtable, offered up a list of what congregations can do to boost schools in their neighborhood. The list included supporting students and teachers at community functions, assigning a ruling elder or outreach-focused committee “to check in with the district,” and attending school board meetings “to support staff and advocate for students. Show up with a clergy collar, if necessary,” she advised pastors on the call.

The Rev. Dave Brown, who’s also a member of the Education Roundtable, had a list of six things “every church can do to support public education”:

  • Celebrate and pray for educators in worship one Sunday in the fall.
  • Meet the principal of the public school nearest the church. “Be sure they know your support,” Brown suggested. “Be clear that you support the separation of church and state.”
  • For preachers: Offer a sermon on education, knowledge, equity and the way of Jesus.
  • Create a fund that can be used by teachers for out-of-pocket expenses and publicize the existence of the fund.
  • Establish a school board liaison person or team. Host a school board candidates forum, or a forum for others running for office with a focus on public education.
  • Explore establishing a before- or after-school program at your church.

Bruna Bouhid, senior policy director for United We Dream, the largest immigrant youth-led community in the nation, noted the stories of disappearances happening to immigrants at the hands of law enforcement.

“I share this not to paralyze us into fear, but to empower us into action,” Bouhid said. “We need folks speaking out. Let’s be community together.”

The Presbyterian Advocacy Hour is offered at noon Eastern Time on the fourth Wednesday of every month. Learn more and register here.

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

Let us join in prayer for:

Ashley Winn, Associate for Portfolio Administration, Presbyterian Investment & Loan Program
Janna Wofford, Operations Manager, Association of Presbyterian Colleges & Universities (APCU) 

Let us pray:

Almighty God, give us grace that your knowledge may become ours. May we grow in faith and bear fruit worthy of your people, living and growing in the Holy Spirit, both now and forevermore. Amen!

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Mission Yearbook: Presbyterian Advocacy Hour webinar on education draws nearly 200

Almost 200 people recently attended a  Presbyterian Advocacy Hour  focused on public education. Image Photo courtesy of CDC via Unsplash “Ed...