From the article: “The time is now to talk to youth and families about what they are hearing and seeing, what actions they are taking and what ways your congregation may be able to partner with them to call for justice and together. These are not easy conversations, but we do not live in an easy world.” Use ELCA Youth Ministry Network link to find full article by author Deacon Ross Murray.
Lent begins next week and we are thrilled to announce this years NoPlasticsforLent series! The sixth(!!!) year of this resource series will focus on the intersections of climate justice, resistance, and resilience through a weekly devotional offering from young adults across the ELCA, and an be used by individuals, small groups, or large groups! Devotionals will drop weekly into the link below, and will be shared onto our stories with a profile highlight on instagram for each week’s devotional
The next stop on the Pews to Policy Tour is Phoenix, Arizona, where LEAN will join our partners in ministry for Lutheran Day at the Legislature.
Hosted by Lutheran Social Services of the Southwest and Lutheran Advocacy in Ministry Arizona (LAMA), Lutherans and friends from across the state will gather at the Arizona Capitol in Wesley Bolin Plaza on:
Monday, February 23, 2026 9:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m.
This will be a day to learn, to witness, and to raise our collective voice in the public square — activating our faith in love.
Together we will:
Meet with legislators
Connect with congregational LAMA liaisons and the LAMA Policy Council
Build relationships with Lutherans across Arizona
Speak to the issues that shape our neighbors’ daily lives
All of this flows from our baptismal promise “to strive for justice and peace in all the earth.”
Advocacy Rooted in Our Shared Ministry
Many of the priorities in Arizona echo the work we are doing in Nevada — a powerful reminder that this is church together across state lines.
Issues for advocacy will include:
Free school meals
SNAP access & emergency funding during a federal shutdown
Community school gardens
Lactation care
Rental assistance & transitional housing
Rural affordable housing
These are not abstract policies. They are about food on the table, stable homes, healthy families, and dignity for our neighbors.
Some of the Speakers
We will hear from leaders in public health, government, social ministry, and the church, including:
Will Humble, Executive Director, Arizona Public Health Association
Angie Rodgers, Deputy Director, Arizona Department of Economic Security
Sen. T.J. Shope (R), LD16
Sen. Flavio Bravo (D), LD26
Connie Phillips, President & CEO, Lutheran Social Services of the Southwest
Bishop Deborah Hutterer, Grand Canyon Synod, ELCA
For LEAN, this gathering is more than a single day, it is part of a growing movement to bring the pews to the policy table.
When Lutherans show up:
relationships are formed
stories are shared
hope becomes public witness
And we are reminded that advocacy is not partisan — it is a lived expression of our faith and our love for neighbor.
Last year, as we were preparing for Ash Wednesday, we realized at the last minute that there were no ashes. It would have been easy to assign blame or panic. Instead, I picked up the phone and called the deacon at the Episcopal church across town. They shared what they had, and because of that simple act of communion across congregations, Ash Wednesday was not only saved, it was holy in a deeper way. We were reminded that the church is never just one place, one supply cabinet, or one tradition. It is a people who show up for one another.
This year, snow has cancelled our service.
And yet, as I look toward the snow-covered Carson Pass, I find myself thinking about the wilderness.
The wilderness of Lent. The wilderness where Jesus is led by the Spirit. The wilderness where we are stripped of certainty and taught to trust in God’s abundance.
And I wonder if that is not a Lenten image for us: God’s presence moving beside us in ways we did not plan; in landscapes we would not have chosen.
This season is inviting us to shift our vision: from scarcity to abundance, from isolation to neighbor, love, from fear to moral courage.
I recently heard Senator and Rev. Dr. Raphael Warnock speak about this moment as a time of moral reckoning, a time when we are asked where we stand and how we will live. And I have been thinking about the stories I’ve heard right here in our communities, about people encountering ICE patrols, about neighbors who may not even claim faith and yet embody the gospel by loving and protecting one another.
Because at its core, the way of Jesus has always been this: Love your neighbor.
Jesus did not come to abolish the law, but to fulfill it, to reveal its deepest purpose: a love that resists empire, crosses boundaries, and restores human dignity.
This weekend I will return to my home congregation for its 80th anniversary. It is in Placer County, a place many would label politically conservative, and yet it is where my faith was formed. Three generations of my family still gather there week after week. The same is true here in Carson City, where generations come together in this community we share.
Which is why I cannot accept the narrative that the church is dying.
The church is not dead. We may simply need new eyes to see it.
We see it when ashes are shared across denominational lines. We see it in a snowy wilderness. We see it in neighbors protecting neighbors. We see it in grandparents, parents, and children gathered around the same table. We see it in this congregation.
This Lent, I invite you to look for that abundance.
To notice where God is already present. To notice the companions on the road. To notice the love that refuses to be cancelled — even by snow.