Friday, January 16, 2026

The Office of Public Witness Remembers Renee Good

“This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you. No one has greater love than this, to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.”
John 15:12–13

 

Jesus teaches that there is no greater love than the willingness to make the ultimate sacrifice for others, to lay down one’s life for someone else. It is to offer oneself unselfishly for the sake of others, especially the defenseless and the vulnerable.

On Wednesday, January 7, 2026, Renee Nicole Good was shot while moving her car, attempting to follow the orders of an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer. Her last words, captured on video, were, “I’m not mad at you.”

We lament and mourn the loss of Ms. Good, a widow of a veteran, a wife, and a mother who put herself in harm’s way not out of any desire to do harm, but to observe and bear witness to the actions of ICE. We affirm the right to peaceful protest and lawful observation for all Americans, without the threat of repressive or deadly responses by government and law enforcement authorities.

As Presbyterians, we hold a twofold connection to Ms.  Good. First, we are bound by our shared faith in a God of justice, who calls us to engage the powers of this world and to counter hate with love. Our tradition compels us to oppose injustice with a prophetic word from the Lord and to participate in the transformation of the world God loves.

Our second connection is more personal: Ms. Good was one of us. She was a fellow Presbyterian. Edgewater Presbyterian Church (Illinois) remembered her with these words:“Renee Nicole Good lived out the conviction that every person deserves kindness, regardless of their background… Her story is a testament to the power of the Presbyterian mission and a challenge to our conscience. We mourn a fellow Presbyterian whose quiet smile and creative spirit touched lives from Colorado to Northern Ireland to Minnesota.”

Alongside Ms. Good, we remember George Floyd, whose life was taken at the hands of law enforcement in 2020, within one mile of where Ms. Good was murdered at the hands of enforcement officers, a stark and enduring reminder of the deadly consequences of injustice and the unfinished work of truth, repentance, and transformation to which God continually calls us.

In the coming week, we will remember the life and witness of the martyred Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., who called this nation to a “radical revolution of values”. Values that demand divestment from racism, materialism, and militarism. Ms. Good’s life and death echo this same moral call.

Her memory also stands in a sacred lineage of faithful witnesses who have risked and lost their lives in defense of human dignity. We remember the four Maryknoll Sisters—Sisters Ita Ford and Maura Clarke, Ursuline Sister Dorothy Kazel, and Lay Missioner Jean Donovan—who were abducted, abused, and murdered in El Salvador in 1980 for standing alongside the Salvadoran people.

We name as well the Rev. Elijah Lovejoy, murdered for his opposition to the evil of slavery, for whom Giddings Lovejoy Presbytery is named. These are not isolated tragedies, but part of a continuing story of costly discipleship.

We must remember her name: Renee Nicole Good. We remember her as a testament to Jesus’ teaching that God does not change the world through violence, but through faithful presence amid struggle, and that through love refuses to abandon the work of acceptance, justice, and compassion.

Ms. Good’s wife, Rebecca Good, offered a fitting memorial: “On Wednesday, January 7th, we stopped to support our neighbors. We had whistles. They had guns. We were raising our son to believe that no matter where you come from or what you look like, all of us deserve compassion and kindness. Renee lived this belief every day. She is pure love. She is pure joy. She is pure sunshine. Renee was a Christian who knew that all religions teach the same essential truth: we are here to love each other, care for each other, and keep each other safe and whole.”

Through this remembrance, we rededicate ourselves to advocacy in the name of Christ Jesus. We stand with those who are detained or killed by ICE, treated unjustly, and vilified—whom God defends as bearers of the divine image. We proclaim a God who values all people and who calls us, again and again, to remind the world to value the lives of all.

Through this remembrance, we rededicate ourselves to advocacy in the name of Christ Jesus. We stand with those who are detained, harmed, or killed by enforcement practices, treated unjustly, marginalized, and vilified, whom God defends as bearers of the divine image. We proclaim a God who values all people and who calls us again and again to remind the world to value the lives of all.

 

Statement on the US Detention of Refugees

Statement on the US Detention of Refugees

Scripture calls us to welcome the stranger and protect the vulnerable, and to honor the dignity of those who seek refuge among us.

The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) Office of Public Witness is deeply concerned by reports that refugees who have been lawfully admitted to the United States are being detained. Families who have already been welcomed into safety and passed extensive screening should not be uprooted again, separated from the communities supporting them, or made to live under renewed fear and uncertainty. Scripture calls us to welcome the stranger and protect the vulnerable, and to honor the dignity of those who seek refuge among us. We believe our nation must not undo the safety it has already promised, but instead uphold justice, compassion, and the rule of law for our newest neighbors.

On January 9, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services announced Operation “Post-Admission Refugee Reverification and Integrity Strengthening” (PARRIS), which reopens and intensively re-examines certain refugee cases after resettlement. The operation’s initial focus is reported to be approximately 5,600 refugees in Minnesota who remain in refugee status while awaiting green cards. In recent days, refugee-serving organizations have reported that refugees, including children, have been detained, with limited public information about the standards being applied, the scope of enforcement, or the due process protections available.

This is not a routine administrative review. It is a sweeping action that undermines the promise of protection the United States makes when it resettles refugees. It is unjust to detain people who are here legally, and it is especially cruel to subject families to detention and secrecy after they have already survived persecution and displacement.

Just as importantly, these actions risk communicating to the world and to refugee communities that the United States will not honor the protection it has promised. They reflect a deeply troubling and cold-hearted turn toward a refugee policy shaped more by suspicion than by compassion, and they weaken the moral credibility of our nation’s commitment to welcome those who have fled persecution.

The United States has made binding commitments under international law to protect refugees; this operation contradicts those commitments.

Our denomination’s stance is clear and longstanding. Presbyterians have repeatedly affirmed the call to welcome refugees, to support their resettlement, to seek family reunification, and to oppose policies that endanger refugees or return them involuntarily to harm. Across decades of General Assembly action, the PC(USA) and our predecessor denominations have urged the United States to uphold humane refugee policy, uphold the rule of law, and resist cruelty and discrimination.

The Office of Public Witness calls on the administration to:

  • Immediately halt detentions of lawfully resettled refugees connected to Operation PARRIS
  • Guarantee due process, including access to legal counsel and clear, timely procedures
  • Provide transparency about the legal authority, criteria, and implementation of this operation
  • Protect family unity and ensure refugees are not isolated from their communities and sponsors
  • Reaffirm the U.S. commitment to refugee protection, rather than weakening it through fear-based enforcement

We urge Congress to conduct immediate oversight, demand public answers, and ensure that refugee policy is carried out humanely and lawfully.

We call on Presbyterians and people of faith to continue to stand with refugees, support resettlement communities, and live out Christ’s call to love our neighbors. In this moment, we urge our nation to choose welcome over suspicion, truth over secrecy, and hope over fear.

EarthBeat Weekly: Catholic outcry as US withdraws further from global climate action

Catholic outcry as US withdraws further from global climate action
 

EarthBeat Weekly
Your weekly newsletter about faith and climate change

January 16, 2026


 


The signing ceremony for the Paris Agreement on climate change is seen at U.N. headquarters in New York City April 22, 2016. (CNS photo/Mike Segar, Reuters)

The opening of 2026 has been a turbulent time for U.S. environmental policy.

The Trump administration attacked Venezuela, with controlling the South American country's vast oil reserves a driving factor. Meanwhile, the president has renewed his long focus on acquiring, and perhaps by force, Greenland, a place where climate change is vividly on display while home to a wealth of critical minerals. [This New York Times report from way back in 2015 offers a stunning look at the magnitude of melting in Greenland.]

At the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, administrator Lee Zeldin has directed the federal government's top environmental health office to no longer consider the potential lives saved from proposed regulations and rules and instead only the economic impact on businesses. Meanwhile, a final rule aimed at revoking the "endangerment finding" — the EPA decision underlying all federal climate regulations — is expected any day. 

And on Jan. 7, two weeks before its exit from the Paris Agreement becomes official, the Trump administration announced it would also move to withdraw from the bedrock treaty for the 2015 climate accord, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

"These decisions will have painful and direct repercussions on the lives of vulnerable populations and God's creation already suffering from a changing climate," Bishop A. Elias Zaidan, chairman of the Committee on International Justice and Peace for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, said in a statement about the planned withdrawals from more than 60 U.N. bodies and related organizations, including the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the world's leading climate science group.

GSR international correspondent Chris Herlinger and I reported this week how several Catholic groups joined the U.S. bishops in quickly assailing the Trump administration's move to exit the central U.N. climate treaty, a process which takes a year to complete. Once it does, the U.S. — the largest source of historical emissions and top present-day user and producer of oil and gas — will stand as the only country in the world not part of the UNFCCC.

The Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns, whose missionaries see firsthand in their work across 25 countries the life-threatening impacts of intensifying droughts, storms and rising sea levels worsened by climate change, called the planned exit "an isolationist move" whereby the U.S. "is abandoning its moral responsibility as a leading global power and as the world's largest historical contributor to greenhouse gas emissions."

"Withdrawing from this framework is not just a policy shift; it is a rejection of our duty to protect our common home and the future of all humanity," Lisa Sullivan, the Maryknoll NGO's senior policy officer for integral ecology, told me. 

Read more: US 'abandoning its moral responsibility' with exit from bedrock climate treaty, Catholic groups say



 


What else is new on EarthBeat:

 

by Junno Arocho Esteves, OSV News

According to the decree, Leo has established that from Jan. 10, following the closing of the church's Jubilee Year, until Jan. 10, 2027, a special Year of St. Francis may be proclaimed, in which every Christian, "following the example of the Saint of Assisi, may himself become a model of holiness of life and a constant witness of peace."

Read more here »


 

by Ersun Augustinus Kayra

If ecological sin is real, then ecological repentance must be real, too: pipes that work, standards that bite, and the stubborn, persistent work of repair.

Read more here »


 

by Ryan Byrnes

The Kisiyas come from a minority of Christians who have lived in the Al-Makhrour valley for thousands of years and make up about 1% of the West Bank's population.

Read more here »


 

by Gina Christian, OSV News

The Trump administration's plans to acquire Greenland for the U.S. are being met with concern, sometimes fear and "a quiet strength" by residents, said the Arctic island's only Catholic parish priest.

Read more here »


What's happening in other climate news:


Scientists call another near-record hot year a 'warning shot' of a shifting, dangerous climate —Seth Borenstein for the Associated Press

Why Greenland matters for a warming world —Somini Sengupta for The New York Times

US carbon emissions rose in 2025 as coal produced more power —Julian Spector for Canary Media

Trump administration sues California over law keeping oil wells from homes, schools —Hayley Smith for the Los Angeles Times

At Detroit auto show, spotlight dims for EVs —Alexa St. John for the Associated Press

Why your power bill is spiking faster than a nearby data center's —Shannon Osaka for the Washington Post

Countries want debt relief for conservation. Is China ready to play a role? —Katie Surma, Georgina Gustin for Inside Climate News

Monarch butterflies could disappear. Butterfly Town USA is scrambling to save them —Amanda Ulrich for the Guardian

In Ecuador's battle of toad vs. road, toad wins —Katie Surma for Inside Climate News


Final Beat:


Last week, I made the pitch for you, our readers, to share what stories or topics at the intersection of faith and environment you'd like to see EarthBeat explore this year. We're still interested.

You can send your ideas to earthbeat@ncronline.org

As always, thanks for reading EarthBeat.


 


Brian Roewe
Environment Correspondent
National Catholic Reporter
broewe@ncronline.org

 


 


 
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Truth and Action Roundup 1.16.2026

Thursday, January 15, 2026

Presbyterians for Earth Care - Lenten Devotional Writers Needed and Introducing our 2026 PEC Leadership





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Lenten Earth Care Devotional

Writers Needed

For the 2026 Lenten season, Presbyterians for Earth Care will provide free daily devotionals based on lectionary readings.  PEC will be partnering with Red Presbiteriana Para el Cuidado de la Creación as a collaboration with both English and Spanish Lenten Devotionals to share. We will be including each Sunday in Lent, as well as significant days of Holy Week.  If you would like to write a devotion in English, please CLICK HERE.  To sign up to write a devotion in Spanish, please CLICK HERE. Please sign up no later than January 23rd.  Devotions must be submitted no later than January 30th. 

Writer Instructions:

  • Devotions should be 250-300 words long.

  • Mention the scripture referenced in your devotion.

  • Include a brief prayer at the end. 

  • Share your name, church/organization, and city/state.


All devotions should be emailed by January 30th: English devotions to presbyearthcare@gmail.com, and Spanish devotions to redecopcusa@gmail.com.

Se acerca la temporada litúrgica de la Cuaresma y como todos los años Presbyterians for Earth Care nos invita a reflexionar esta temporada desde una mirada más amplia con todos los elementos de la creación.  Al igual que en la pasada temporada de Adviento y Navidad, la Red Presbiteriana para el Cuidado de la Creación se ha unido en colaboración con PEC para la producción y publicación de estos devocionales en Español,  por eso te invitamos a considerar escribir una pequeña reflexión que resalte tus acciones personales o congregacionales hacia el cuidado de la creación.  El formato sugerido para cada página es la Escritura seleccionada del leccionario, una breve reflexión, una oración sencilla y alguna sugerencia de acción a tomar (ejemplo).  Para economizar espacio, solamente utilizaremos la cita bíblica, no es necesario copiar todo el pasaje.  Necesitaremos que incluyas el nombre, la iglesia u organización y la ciudad o estado.  También aceptaremos historias personales relacionadas al cuidado de la creación y la Curesma.  La reflexión no debe exceder 300 palabras.  PEC la publicará en formato digital en línea para que pueda ser impreso y/o compartido. Debes inscribirte en o antes del 23 de enero de 2026 para enviar tu participación.  Necesitaremos recibir tu escrito para el día 30 de enero de 2026 para que pueda ser incluido en el panfleto.  Además, puedes compartir fotos o dibujos originales (con permiso para reproducir) que impriman bien en blanco y negro para el panfleto.

Si te interesa escribir una reflexión en Inglés, regístrate aquí , si prefieres hacerlo en Español utiliza este registro.  Puedes enviar tu escrito a:  presbyearthcare@gmail.com (para Inglés) y a redecopcusa@gmail.com (para Español).

Gracias por tu ayuda y cooperación.  Tu participación enriquecerá la temporada de Cuaresma para otro(a)s y beneficiará a toda la creación de Dios.

Introducing the 2026

PEC Steering Committee!

PEC would like to thank retiring PEC Vice Moderator Jane Laping for her dedicated leadership! Jane has been actively involved with our organization for over 25 of our 30 years of existence, and has been called a “PEC Legend” by more than one PEC member. She promises this will not be the last we see of her. Thank you for all you do to care fort God’s creation, Jane!

Resource Now Available: PEC 2025 Conference Workshop Recordings


Did you miss the October 2025 PEC Conference Sacred Creation: Justice Flows Down Like Water, or wish you could watch some of the presentations again? All of the recordings of workshops, keynotes, and worship gatherings are available for anyone to access on our YouTube channel. Please view and share these offerings with your church groups, families, and friends so that all may benefit from top-notch presenters and timely topics.


Recordings Available:

4 Worship Services with Rev. Rebecca Barnes and Rev. Jocelyn Wildwright

3 Keynote Talks with Rev. Andrew Black

7 Engaging Workshops on various topics related to water and spirituality

International Discussion Panel representing work in Guatemala, Kenya, & Peru

How can we help you care for God’s creation?  Drop us an email and let us know at presbyearthcare@gmail.com


Help us grow! Please let us know if there is anyone we should add to our list!  Just reply to this email.  Thank you!

Please help us to continue to assist individuals and churches in creation care work by donating to PEC through our website by CLICKING HERE.  Thank you!

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The Office of Public Witness Remembers Renee Good

“This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you. No one has greater love than this, to lay down one’s life for one’s ...