June Matters: Closed Primaries

In Nevada, primary elections are closed to non-party members. That means unaffiliated voters, which is now the largest voting bloc in the state, are often shut out of the process. Too many Nevadans are left without a voice in deciding who advances to the general election.

At Lutheran Engagement and Advocacy in Nevada (LEAN), we believe civic participation matters. As people of faith committed to the dignity of every neighbor and the importance of public engagement, we recognize the ongoing conversation around how Nevada’s election systems can encourage broader participation and ensure more voices are heard.

Faith calls us not to withdraw from public life, but to remain engaged in building a democracy where all people are encouraged to participate in shaping the common good.

LEAN INTO 2026: Faithful Civic Engagement in Nevada

Election seasons can feel overwhelming. The constant noise, division, advertisements, and political tension can make many people want to disengage entirely. Yet as people of faith, we are called not to withdraw from the world, but to engage it thoughtfully, compassionately, and faithfully.

That is why Lutheran Engagement and Advocacy in Nevada (LEAN) is launching LEAN into 2026, a statewide initiative focused on nonpartisan civic engagement, public discipleship, and helping congregations and communities participate faithfully in Nevada’s election season.

Nevada’s:

  • Primary Election is June 9, 2026
  • General Election is November 3, 2026

But elections are not simply one day on a calendar. They are part of an ongoing process of shaping our communities and participating in public life together.

As Lutherans, we believe faith is lived not only inside the walls of the church, but also in how we love our neighbors, care for the vulnerable, seek justice, and participate in the common good. Civic engagement is one expression of that calling.

This work is not about endorsing candidates or political parties. In fact, any election-related engagement by congregations must remain strictly nonpartisan and comply with IRS guidelines. Instead, this initiative is about equipping people with trustworthy information, opportunities for learning, and resources that encourage thoughtful participation in our democracy.

Throughout the year, LEAN will offer online events, trainings, educational materials, and opportunities for conversation around faithful civic engagement.

Planned opportunities include:

  • Online discussions on elections and ELCA social teaching
  • Civic engagement trainings for rostered and lay leaders
  • Resources for congregations and ministry teams
  • Nevada-specific voter information and educational guides
  • Post-election gatherings focused on prayer, reflection, and ongoing engagement

One upcoming event, Elections & Civic Engagement: What the ELCA Teaches & How Congregations Can Engage, will explore how Lutheran social teaching connects to public life and how congregations can engage in ways that are faithful, transparent, and nonpartisan.

Another planned gathering following the election will create space for worship, reflection, and conversation about where we go from here as communities seeking hope and healing in a polarized time.

The ELCA also offers important resources to support this work, including guides on:

  • Being a public church during election seasons
  • Voter engagement and civic participation
  • Churches serving as polling places
  • Supporting voters experiencing homelessness
  • Understanding the relationship between race and voting access

At a time when distrust and fear often dominate political conversations, faithful civic engagement reminds us that our neighbors are not our enemies. Democracy depends on participation, relationships, listening, and a shared commitment to human dignity.

As people of faith, we have an opportunity to model a different way forward — one rooted not in fear or division, but in compassion, truth, justice, and hope.

We invite congregations, ministry leaders, and individuals across Nevada to join us as we LEAN into 2026 together.

For more information, upcoming events, or resource requests, visit LEAN for Justice or contact Pastor Paul Larson at paullarson@leanforjustice.org.

Spring Updates: States Edition

“It can be easy to think of the UN as something that deals with problems in other countries—places more impoverished or unstable than ours, but that’s not the full picture” said Lutheran Advocacy Ministry in Pennsylvania Fellow Daniella Garber. To learn about her experience at the UN Commission on the Status of Women with the Lutheran Office for World Community and updates from the ELCA-affiliated State Public Policy Office network, visit here.

Partners in Ministry: The year in review: LAMA’s 2026 Ministry Report

In a year when many of our neighbors have felt anxious, unseen, unheard, or afraid, Lutheran Advocacy Ministry Arizona has continued to live into a simple but powerful conviction: faith belongs in the public square when our neighbors are hungry, unhoused, sick, excluded, or pushed to the margins.

As Lutherans, we are called to strive for justice and peace in all the earth—not as a slogan, but as a way of being church together. Advocacy is one expression of neighbor love. It is how we bring our baptismal promises into conversations about hunger, housing, health care, voting, immigration, public schools, and the dignity of every person created in the image of God.

This year, LAMA’s work was guided by the 2026 policy priorities discerned by the LAMA Policy Council: food insecurity and the root causes of hunger; civic engagement, including support for public schools and informed Christian engagement; and health care, with a focus on fair and equal access for all God’s people.

Below are highlights of a remarkable year of advocacy and engagement in the Grand Canyon Synod.

Grand Canyon Synod Hunger Leaders Network

The Grand Canyon Synod Hunger Leaders Network continued to meet monthly for education, conversation, encouragement, and action. Since June 2021, this network has helped congregations better understand hunger and poverty, share practical ministry ideas, connect with ELCA World Hunger resources, and advocate for policies that address hunger’s root causes.

Our goal remains: one Hunger Leader from every congregation in the synod. This year, 101 hunger leaders from 61 congregations participated in the network, helping connect congregational ministries across Arizona, the Navajo Nation, southern Nevada, and parts of Utah.

Highlights of the GCS Hunger Leaders Network year include:

  • Continued promotion of ELCA World Hunger resources, including Advent, Lent, Domestic Hunger Grants, Daily Bread Grants, and other churchwide opportunities to support hunger ministries.
  • Promotion of ELCA World Hunger’s 2027 Domestic Hunger Grant application cycle, including letters of inquiry due July 1, 2026, with priority focus areas including food security, clean water, housing, job access, human rights, and policy change.
  • Leadership and participation in the 2026 40-40-40 Lenten Challenge, rooted in Matthew 25 and the theme, “Lord, When Did We See You?” The challenge invited participants to daily devotion, daily learning, daily action, and daily donation in support of ELCA World Hunger.
  • Continued connection with coalition partners including Arizona Faith Network, Bread for the World (including the BFW Advocacy Summit in Washington, DC), Arizona Food Bank Network, ELCA World Hunger, Lutheran Social Services of the Southwest, and congregational hunger ministries across the synod.
  • Ongoing storytelling about local hunger ministries and congregational responses to food insecurity, poverty, housing instability, and the needs of vulnerable neighbors.

The 2026 Lenten Challenge invited the five ELCA Region 2 synods—Sierra Pacific, Southwest California, Pacifica, Grand Canyon, and Rocky Mountain—to join in a friendly challenge for a good cause, with a goal of individuals representing 50 congregations per synod participating.

LAMA Liaison Roundtable

The LAMA Liaison Roundtable continued to meet monthly by Zoom, bringing together congregational advocates for education, faith-rooted reflection, current events, encouragement, and action.

These gatherings remain one of LAMA’s most important ministries. They help participants ask: What does it mean to be Lutheran in this moment? How do our social teachings guide us? How do we speak faithfully, pastorally, and prophetically in a polarized public square?

Topics this year included Arizona State Budget Negotiations; SAVE America Act; Faith in Wartime; ICE and Immigration; Story Telling and Writing Advocacy Op-Eds; Political Violence; Faith & Civic Life Social Statement; and H.R. 1 Economic Impact, including hunger and poverty, health care, public education, voting and civic engagement, immigration, Christian engagement in public life, legislative advocacy, and preparation for Lutheran Day at the Legislature.

Our goal remains: one LAMA Liaison from every congregation in Arizona.

Lutheran Day at the Legislature

LAMA hosted its 5th annual Lutheran Day at the Legislature on Monday, February 23, 2026. 185 advocates from 28 legislative districts gathered at the Arizona State Capitol for a day of advocacy, learning, worshipful public witness, and conversation with elected officials.

The 2026 gathering focused on LAMA’s policy priorities: food insecurity, civic engagement, health care, and the public systems that protect the dignity and well-being of our neighbors.

Speakers for the 2026 rally included Will Humble, Executive Director of the Arizona Public Health Association; Angie Rodgers, Deputy Director of the Arizona Department of Economic Security; Sen. T.J. Shope; Sen. Flavio Bravo; Connie Phillips, President and CEO of Lutheran Social Services of the Southwest; and Bishop Deborah Hutterer of the Grand Canyon Synod.

Participants heard from leaders, met with legislators, toured the Capitol, were introduced from the House and Senate galleries, and practiced advocacy as a public expression of faith. The day also included training and preparation opportunities, including Request to Speak training and Lutheran Advocacy Day preparation.

Congregational Engagement

LAMA continued to visit, encourage, and learn from congregations across the Grand Canyon Synod. This year, LAMA was invited to share information, preaching, teaching, advocacy training, and conversation with 10 congregations and many ministry partners, including King of Glory, Tempe; Bethlehem, Mesa; Christ, Sedona; Foothills, Tucson; Love of Christ, Mesa; and Sierra Evangelical, Sierra Vista.

These visits continue to be among the most meaningful parts of LAMA’s work. Across Arizona, congregations are feeding neighbors, welcoming immigrants, supporting unhoused families, offering letters and testimony, registering voters, caring for children and older adults, and showing up where public policy meets real human need.

Direct Advocacy

In addition to education, congregational engagement, and coalition work, LAMA continued to build bridges with elected officials and advocate for policies that reflect our Lutheran commitments to justice, dignity, mercy, and the common good.

This year’s direct advocacy included:

Through a Grand Canyon Synod grant of $3,885, LAMA received support for a one-year subscription to Skywolf, a legislative bill-tracking software tool, strengthening LAMA’s ability to monitor legislation and equip advocates with timely information.

Public Schools, Civic Life, and Faithful Engagement

In 2026, LAMA’s civic engagement priority included special attention to public schools and informed Christian engagement. The Policy Council affirmed that public schools serve not only as places of education, but also as essential community anchors—offering food programs, safety, care, shelter from extreme heat, and support for students and families who are underserved.

LAMA also continued encouraging faithful, nonpartisan participation in civic life. In a contentious public climate, LAMA sought to model healthy dialogue, public responsibility, and Lutheran engagement shaped by Scripture, ELCA social teachings, and concern for the neighbor.

Health Care Advocacy

Health care became a major focus of LAMA’s 2026 advocacy. Guided by the ELCA social statement Health and Health Care: Our Shared Endeavor, LAMA affirmed that health and wholeness are blessings God intends for all people and that access to care is not merely an individual concern, but a shared responsibility.

With nearly 2 million Arizonans relying on AHCCCS, Arizona’s Medicaid program, LAMA paid close attention to proposals affecting access, affordability, rural hospitals, mental health care, and immigrant families.

In Other News

LAMA continued to offer information and updates on grants, ELCA resources, Bible studies, toolkits, policy alerts, Lutheran social teachings, public witness opportunities, and congregational advocacy resources. Remember LAMA’s first Giving Tuesday campaign? The AMMPARO Candlelight Prayer Vigil in Peace Park?

We also continued to strengthen relationships with ministry partners, coalition partners, congregational liaisons, hunger leaders, ELCA Advocacy, ELCA World Hunger (including planning and participating in the 2025 World Hunger Leadership Gathering), Lutheran Social Services of the Southwest, Bread for the World, Arizona Faith Network, Arizona Food Bank Network, and others working toward justice and the common good.

Most of all, we give thanks for the people of the Grand Canyon Synod: the pastors, deacons, lay leaders, hunger leaders, LAMA liaisons, youth, young adults, bishops, ministry partners, and advocates who continue to show up.

We are learning. We are speaking. We are building relationships. We are practicing public faith. We are remembering that advocacy is not separate from ministry—it is ministry.

This report was prepared for the Grand Canyon Synod Assembly in June 2026.

LEAN into 2026: Nevada’s 2026 Candidate Breakdown

Nevada’s 2026 election season is already taking shape, and is underway.

The latest candidate spreadsheet, which includes Name, Party, Office, Address, offers a revealing snapshot of who is stepping forward to seek public office across the state. The list includes more than 1,100 candidates for offices ranging from Congress and Governor to the Nevada Legislature, Attorney General, Secretary of State, and local offices.

What stands out is not only the number of candidates, but where activity is concentrated. Nevada’s 2nd Congressional District is already especially crowded, with 27 candidates listed. With Congressman Mark Amodei’s retirement, this traditionally conservative Northern Nevada district will be one to watch closely.

Several statewide races are also drawing attention, including the race for Governor. At the legislative level, candidates are stepping forward across Assembly and Senate districts, reminding us that decisions affecting hunger, housing, education, immigration, voting rights, and care for vulnerable neighbors are often made close to home.

For people of faith, this matters.

Advocacy is not only about responding after laws are passed. It is also about paying attention early, learning who wants to represent our communities, and asking good questions before Election Day.

Who understands the needs of families struggling with food insecurity?
Who is listening to congregations serving migrants, seniors, students, veterans, and people living in poverty?
Who is prepared to govern with compassion, dignity, and concern for the common good?

This list is also a practical invitation:

Do you know who is running in your district?

Now is a good time to look up your congressional and legislative districts, learn the names of candidates, visit campaign websites, attend forums when available, and begin asking how their priorities align with the needs of your neighbors.

Elections are not just about names on a ballot. They are about the kind of community we are willing to build together.