ELCA World Hunger’s Domestic Hunger Grant application Zoom webinar will offer information about the process of applying for a domestic hunger grant. Webinar will review granting priorities and the grant application process, how to submit an LOI, and answer questions from grant applicants. To join us for this virtual event, please register here. Participants will be provided with a link once registered. The webinar will be recorded and accessible via the Domestic Hunger Grant FAQ page.
May 5: Wear Red and Raise Awareness for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women
Tuesday, May 5, 2026 marks the National Day of Awareness for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls, and Relatives (MMIWGR), a day the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America is calling all congregations and leaders to observe through prayer, advocacy, and visible witness.
At the 2025 ELCA Churchwide Assembly, a memorial was adopted encouraging congregations, synods, and the churchwide organization to observe May 5 annually and promote the wearing of red as a sign of awareness and solidarity. This year, the ELCA’s Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women Sub-Task Force has developed a comprehensive toolkit to help communities participate meaningfully.
WHY THIS MATTERS
The crisis of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls, and Relatives is ongoing. Indigenous communities continue to experience disproportionately high rates of violence, disappearance, and loss. As a church, we are called not only to awareness, but to repentance, accompaniment, and justice.
The ELCA’s commitment, rooted in its Declaration to American Indian and Alaska Native People, calls us into solidarity with Tribal nations, families, and advocates who continue searching for loved ones.
HOW TO PARTICIPATE ON MAY 5
Congregations and individuals across the Grand Canyon Synod are invited to:
Wear Red on May 5 as a visible sign of remembrance and advocacy
Share social media posts and graphics from the ELCA toolkit
Engage in conversation, prayer, and learning within your community
Attend a virtual vigil hosted by Women of the ELCA at 5:00 p.m. PDT, 7:00 CDT.Link here.
Explore resources and stories to deepen understanding and response
Wearing red is more than symbolic, it represents both remembrance and the voices that are still unheard.
BEYOND ONE DAY
May 5 is a beginning, not an endpoint. The toolkit encourages ongoing engagement through:
Following Indigenous-led organizations working for justice
Hosting book studies, film discussions, or community conversations
Advocating for policies that protect Indigenous women and communities
Participating in vigils and prayer gatherings throughout the year
As Lutherans, we understand justice as part of our call to love our neighbor. This work reflects our shared commitment to walk alongside those who suffer, speak truth about systems of harm, and participate in God’s healing work in the world.
A CALL TO THE SYNOD
We encourage every congregation, ministry partner, and leader to share this toolkit, lift up this awareness day, and participate in ways that are meaningful in your context.
Let us be a church that does not look away—but instead remembers, honors, and acts.
For more information, resources, and social media graphics, access the ELCA toolkit and share it widely. If you have questions, you may also reach out to the MMIW Sub-Task Force or Chair Brenda Blackhawk.
On May 5, wear red. Pray boldly. Speak clearly. Stand together.
Nevada imports the vast majority of its food. When supply chains are disrupted, grocery prices rise or shelves thin, our communities feel it immediately. Strengthening local and regional food systems is not just an economic issue — it is a matter of food security, public health, and care for our neighbors.
At the same time:
1 in 7 Nevadans experiences hunger
Rural counties like Nye, Esmeralda, Mineral, and Lincoln face some of the highest food insecurity and longest drives to full grocery stores
In urban areas — Las Vegas, North Las Vegas, Reno, Sparks, and Carson City — entire neighborhoods are classified as food deserts
Food insecurity is shaped by housing costs, low wages, transportation access, and rising food prices, not by a lack of food alone.
Nevada’s Farmers and Ranchers
Nevada producers are innovators, but they face structural barriers:
Extreme heat and drought
Over-allocated and declining water resources in the Colorado River Basin
High land and transportation costs
Lack of in-state processing and distribution infrastructure
Difficulty accessing large institutional buyers
And yet, from the Carson Valley and Fallon to Pahrump, Amargosa, and Moapa, Nevadans are growing:
Specialty crops
Dairy and beef
Tribal and traditional foods
Hydroponic and greenhouse produce
Consumers, schools, and restaurants are actively seeking Nevada-grown food, but farmers need the policy and infrastructure to get it to market.
Nevada Policy Opportunities
Strengthen Local Food Economies
Invest in food hubs, cold storage, and distribution networks so small producers can sell to schools, hospitals, and grocery stores
Expand Farm-to-School and Farm-to-Institution purchasing
Increase support for beginning and small-scale farmers, including tribal producers
Water & Climate Resilience
Support water-efficient irrigation and soil-health practices
Protect agricultural water access while planning for long-term drought
Fund climate-resilient growing systems (greenhouses, controlled-environment agriculture)
End Hunger in Nevada
Protect and strengthen SNAP and WIC access
advocate for universal free school meals
Invest in senior and rural nutrition programs
Food Access in Every ZIP Code
Incentivize grocery stores and mobile markets in underserved communities
Support transportation solutions for rural food access
What Lutherans Are Already Doing in Nevada
Across the Sierra Pacific Synod and the Grand Canyon Synod’s Nevada congregations:
Food pantries and weekly community meals
Community gardens
Partnerships with food banks in Northern Nevada and Southern Nevada
Advocacy for hunger programs and just economic policy
Many of our members serve as:
Agricultural workers
Truck drivers and warehouse staff
Grocery and food-service workers
Nutrition program leaders
This is our shared ministry.
A Lutheran Theology of Food
In Nevada — one of the driest states in the nation — food and water are sacred.
At the table of Holy Communion, we receive bread and wine, fruits of the earth and human labor
Manna in the wilderness teaches us there is enough when we trust God’s daily provision
The gleaning laws show that food systems must include the poor
Jesus feeds people without asking their status, income, or citizenship
Food is not a commodity alone — it is a sign of God’s justice.
ELCA Social Teaching
This work lives at the intersection of:
Caring for Creation – sustainable agriculture in a drought-stricken state
Sufficient, Sustainable Livelihood for All – fair markets for Nevada producers
Hunger, Poverty, and Economic Justice – food access as a human right
A Call to Action for Nevada Lutherans
Together we can:
Advocate for state funding for local food infrastructure
Partner with Nevada farmers and farmers markets
Expand congregational meal and garden ministries
Support policies that ensure every Nevadan can afford healthy food
Because in Christ’s economy, everyone is fed, the land is healed, and the community rejoices.
While adopted in 1994, the social message on “Community Violence” remains sadly relevant today. The message speaks about the causes of violence as complex and pervasive, and of how violence breeds violence. In proclaiming the forgiveness and love of the gospel of Jesus Christ, the church addresses the root of violence while being committed to social actions that respond directly to community violence and the people it affects. The message explores how the church can live out this commitment as a community of worship, education, service and ongoing deliberation and advocacy.
“Community Violence” urges us to become more involved in countering the reality and fear of violence in our communities and our neighbors’ communities, pursuing justice and seeking peace no matter how long the journey or complex the challenge.
You can read or download the full social message on “Community Violence” in English or en español.
Lutheran Engagement and Advocacy in Nevada continues to follow developments across the Sierra Pacific and Grand Canyon Synods regarding immigration and community safety.
We are aware of recent reports of ICE activity and community response in California. These reports reflect a broader national landscape where immigration enforcement actions are raising concern, prompting public protest, and leading to policy conversations at local and state levels.
We invite congregations and partners to:
Share local observations or verified reports of immigration enforcement activity
Communicate any pastoral or community care needs arising from these situations
Stay connected as we work to provide faith-based resources, education, and advocacy grounded in dignity, accompaniment, and justice
As Lutherans, we are guided by our call to welcome the stranger, accompany our neighbors in fear, and advocate for policies that uphold human dignity and the common good.