Friday, January 9, 2026

MLP Stands With Immigrants

Presbyterian Peace Fellowship - Upcoming Webinar: Faith Perspectives from Venezuela

Upcoming Webinar: Faith Perspectives from Venezuela

The Peace Church Working Group invites you to join an upcoming webinar featuring presentations from people from Venezuela, those who know the region well, peace activists, and pastors. Panelists will share faith perspectives on ways individuals and churches can respond, followed by a time for questions and answers.


Panelists include:


Ben Daniel, Pastor, Montclair Presbyterian Church (Oakland, CA)

Bill Galvin, Director of Counseling, Center on Conscience & War

Sarah Henken, former Presbyterian mission coworker and regional liaison for the Andean Colombia region

Ricardo Corzo Moreno, Presbyterian minister based in Caracas

Rev. Dr. Neddy Astudillo, Venezuelan eco-theologian and Presbyterian pastor

Bruce Gillette, Presbyterian pastor and co-moderator of the Joint Justice Team for Cayuga, Syracuse, and Susquehanna Valley Presbyteries


This conversation comes as the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) has recently urged Congress to prevent unauthorized war, reminding us that war should never be entered lightly, without authorization, or without accountability.


Saturday, January 10

12:00–1:00 pm Eastern (ET)

11:00 am–12:00 pm Central (CT)

10:00–11:00 am Mountain (MT)

9:00–10:00 am Pacific (PT)


We hope you’ll join us for this timely conversation and help share it with your communities.


In peace,


Dezi

Communications Manager

Presbyterian Peace Fellowship

Register Here

Presbyterian Peace Fellowship | 17 Cricketown Road | Stony Point, NY 10980 US

WCC News: Churches will play role in Switzerland’s Crans-Montana healing for years to come, says pastor

Churches will be engaged in helping with healing for Crans-Montana residents for many years after the tragic events of 1 January and long after the media have left the picturesque Swiss town, where a New Year’s Day fire in a nightclub claimed the lives of 40 young people and injured 119 others in a national tragedy that stunned the world.
St Pierre cathedral in Geneva, Switzerland, held a memorial service for those affected by the tragedy in Crans Montana on 8 January 2026. Photo: Ivars Kupcis/WCC
09 January 2026

That is the assessment of Rev. Dr Guy Liagre, pastor at the Evangelical Reformed Church of Valais in Crans-Montana.

Liagre described how the local Protestant and Roman Catholic churches have mobilised with prayer and support for all those impacted by the tragic events during New Year celebrations in the Swiss winter sports resort, with the ages of those who died ranging from 14 to 39. Many of the injuries were serious.

On 1 January, Liagre sent a sombre message to parishioners: “Unfortunately, the first worship service of the year will take place in a different atmosphere than expected.”

He elaborated on different church services organised around the tragedy, after the event, including one Liagre shared with Rev. Gilles Cavin, president of the Synod of the Evangelical Reformed Church of Switzerland.

Cavin spoke of the “terrible uncertainty” for families unsure if their loved ones are among the dead or still alive among the injured. “We pray for their friends hard hit by misery on this day that was meant to be one of festivities and friendship,” he said.

Local media reported that Cavin, who has three daughters the same age as some of the victims, “went to support the Catholic teams” present.

Meeting with family members

Liagre, former general secretary of the Conference of Reformed Churches, said in an interview with the WCC, “In the field, I met with people who lost their family members.” 

He explained that those badly injured in the fire went to hospitals in the surrounding area in Switzerland, such as Sion, Zurich, Lausanne, and Geneva, as well as to hospitals in Belgium, France, and Italy.

“We know that what happened is news, which is immediate for the media. But for us, it's just the start. And I think this dramatic event will be remembered every New Year for the first 50 years at least here in Crans-Montana,” Liagre said, noting that it could impact tourism, a key livelihood for residents of the area.

“What we had to do is what we do as churches, and that means we have to go all the way with those people touched by these dramatic events. And that is not only the families of those affected, but also those who helped, including those who helped in the first line and first responders.”

Bishop Jean-Marie Lovey, Roman Catholic Bishop of Sion, told Vatican News, “The mood is heavy and charged, full of emotions and questions...People question themselves a lot. Expectation, the need for clarification, and misunderstanding are evident. It is so terrible.

“We must give way to the police, the public prosecutor, the world of health, hospitals, and families. But the first initiative was that of Mass on Thursday evening at 6 p.m. (on 1 January). I went to this celebration in a full church. People need to come together, to meet again, to live together the emotion and, perhaps, the questioning and comfort that the presence of each other can bring.”

The day after the tragedy, there was another Catholic mass in which the local Protestant Church participated.

There was a service organised by the pastors of the Reformed Evangelical Church of the canton of Vaud, in collaboration with the Catholic Church, for another ceremony that brought together a grieving region.

“Many of the victims are young people who live nearby,” said Aline Marguerat, president of the Belmont-Lutry Parish Council of the Roman Catholic Church. “We had to at least offer that to the families. It was organised very quickly and with immense emotion.”

On Tuesday, 6 January, the Protestant Church in Sierre held a candlelit vigil to commemorate and pay respect to the victims with the announcement saying, “We accompany the victims, their families and those dear to them.”

On New Year’s Day, just hours after the tragedy, the World Council of Churches (WCC), in two separate letters, conveyed its heartfelt condolences to churches across Switzerland and to Swiss authorities, highlighting prayer, compassion, and international solidarity in the face of the profound loss.

WCC pastoral letter

In a pastoral letter addressed to the churches in Switzerland, WCC general secretary Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay said, “You are not alone. People around the world are praying for you, mourning with you, and standing in solidarity with you.

“May you find strength and comfort in one another, and may the memories of your loved ones become a source of light and peace in the difficult days ahead.”

Testimonies and statements collected in recent days indeed mention many young people who have disappeared or been seriously injured in the Greater Lausanne area. Schools such as Chamblandes Gymnasium and the private Champittet College, which lost three pupils and four past students, were hit badly.

Catholic parishes and places of worship offered times of prayer and reflection. In the canton of Neuchâtel, one was held at the Church of the Sacred Heart in La Chaux-de-Fonds, where people could leave flowers and candles.

Another place for reflection was at the Catholic Church in Fleurier, where there was a special Mass, and another at Notre-Dame Basilica in Neuchâtel, as well as one in Peseux, dedicated to the victims, their families, and the medical staff.

The official memorial service was to take place on 9 January in Martigny, starting at 1:45 p.m., organised by the Swiss Confederation in collaboration with the Swiss Protestant and Roman Catholic churches.

The ceremony was to be broadcast live on the national broadcaster, RTS1, as part of a special programme.

And subject to weather conditions, Geneva’s international symbol, the Jet d'Eau, a huge water fountain, was to be illuminated in the colours of Valais on Friday, 9 January, a day of national mourning decreed by the Swiss Confederation.

Swiss Protestant Churches invite prayer in wake of tragic fire (WCC news release, 5 January 2026)

WCC expresses condolences after Crans-Montana tragedy (WCC news release, 1 January 2026)

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The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 356 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 580 million Christians in over 120 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay from the Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa. 

Media contact: +41 79 507 6363; www.oikoumene.org/press
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The Christian Recorder - AME Clergywoman Rev. Quantá Crews Launches Re-election Bid for Arizona State House

AME Clergywoman Rev. Quantá Crews Launches Re-election Bid for Arizona State House

Disclaimer: This email is a paid advertisement.

Representative Crews’ path to the Arizona Legislature began far from the House floor, inside a small law firm where she updated the Arizona Revised Statutes as new laws went into effect. What seemed like a technical task became a lesson in power. Small changes in language carried real consequences for people’s lives. That early exposure to the law shaped how she understands policy and responsibility.

Raised just outside Detroit in a union household, she learned early the value of hard work, fairness, and looking out for one another. She proudly marched as a Might Marching Hornets as a Lady of Distinction Flag Girl while a student at Alabama State University in where she learned that the “Price of Glory is High”. She later earned her degree from Grand Canyon University, carrying forward a legacy of discipline, service, and pride.

An ordained A.M.E. minister, real estate appraiser, and vocational educator, Quantá brings both lived experience and professional expertise to her leadership. Her work across public and private sectors equips her to confront complex challenges with clarity, compassion, and resolve.

Now in her second term representing Arizona’s Legislative District 26, she serves as Democratic Caucus Co-Whip, sits on the Ways and Means Committee, and is the Ranking Democrat on the Public Safety and Law Enforcement Committee. She champions access to quality education, quality healthcare, housing security, and the resources Arizonans need to compete in an ever-evolving job market.

A devoted mother, poet, and woman of faith, she believes government must work for the people it serves. Her mission is clear. To build an Arizona where opportunity, affordability, and security reside.

To support her reelection, click here to donate.

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The Christian Recorder is the official newspaper of the African Methodist Episcopal Church and the oldest continuously produced publication by persons of African descent.  

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Copyright © 2026 The Christian Recorder, All rights reserved.

EarthBeat Weekly: This year at Christmas, sisters in Vietnam repaired flood-damaged homes

At Christmas, sisters in Vietnam repaired flood-damaged homes
 

EarthBeat Weekly
Your weekly newsletter about faith and climate change

January 9, 2026


Daughters of Mary of the Immaculate Conception Sr. Mary Teresa Pham Thi Lai (center) distributes Christmas cakes to people affected by natural disasters at her community in Hue, Vietnam, Dec. 23, 2025. (Joachim Pham)


On Christmas Eve, as floodwater stains still marked the walls of his damaged home, 75-year-old Le Cuoc lit candles and offered food in gratitude — not only to heaven and his ancestors, but also to a God he had never celebrated before.

A Confucian follower who lives alone in Hue, central Vietnam, Cuoc marked Christmas for the first time after religious sisters helped him repair his house and survive in the aftermath of devastating disasters.

"I understand Christmas now — that God is with people and that we must love one another," he told Joachim Pham, a Vietnam-based journalist reporting for Global Sisters Report this week. "That is what I learned after the sisters helped me."

Across Vietnam's flood-battered central provinces, nuns observed Christmas quietly, scaling back decorations and celebrations to redirect resources to those whose homes, crops and livelihoods were swept away by storms and floods.

Instead of bright lights and large Nativity scenes, they focused on rebuilding roofs, paving muddy paths and restoring dignity — finding in these acts a deeper meaning of the season, Pham reports.

Read more: Vietnamese nuns, disaster victims rebuild Christmas from debris and share hope

You may have seen headlines this week about the Trump administration taking steps to withdraw the U.S. from more than 60 United Nations and international agreements and organizations. Among them, the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change — the bedrock treaty under which the Paris Agreement was adopted and that facilitates international climate conferences like the most recent COP30 in Brazil.

Watch the pages of EarthBeat on Monday for coverage of Catholic reaction to these planned withdrawals from U.N. accords and international associations, which mark the latest moves by the Trump administration to unwind environmental policies and pull back from actions to address climate change.



 


What else is new on EarthBeat:

 

by George Cassidy Payne

Students at the Jesuit-run school experience how environmental stewardship becomes spiritual practice — where caring for creation is seen as inseparable from caring for neighbors and the oneness in community. 

Read more here »


 

by Mudita Menona Sodder

How can I ignore Christ himself being born this Christmas as a tiny helpless babe when I turn a deaf ear to his whimper in the cry of the poor and the Earth's weakening plight?

Read more here »


 

by Brian Roewe

With the death of Pope Francis, the introduction of Pope Leo XIV and major shifts in the U.S. away from climate and clean energy policies, there's no doubt 2025 has been a momentous year on the faith-and-environment beat. 

Read more here »
 


What's happening in other climate news:


Trump withdrawal from bedrock UN climate treaty raises legal questions —Valerie Volcovici for Reuters

Venezuelan oil brought to the U.S. would be refined in Black Gulf communities —Adam Mahoney for Capital B

Trump says Venezuela stole U.S. oil, land and assets. Here's the history. —Tobi Raji and Leo Sands for the Washington Post

Oil industry will eye Venezuela warily, experts say —Marianne Lavelle and Georgina Gustin for Inside Climate News

As Trump eyes Greenland, what could that mean for island's mineral wealth and environment? —Nicholas Kusnetz for Inside Climate News

White House completes plan to curb bedrock environmental law —Matthew Daly for the Associated Press

Journey to the melting continent —Raymond Zhong for The New York Times

The secret world of animal sleep —Christina Larson, Nicky Forster, Hyojin Yoo, Peter Hamlin and Caleb Diehl for the Associated Press

How the planet fared in 2025 — the good, the bad, and the ugly —Matt Simon for Grist


Final Beat:


The beginning of 2026 has seen a swarm of major news stories, and not just on the environmental beat.

We at EarthBeat and NCR of course will follow and report news as it breaks and develops, but we also want to hear from you the readers. What topics, trends or other story possibilities are on your mind? Are there subjects or issues about which you want to learn more? 

Let us know by dropping a message at earthbeat@ncronline.org. Your feedback can help shape our coverage in the weeks and months ahead beyond the breaking news and major headlines.

As always, thanks for reading EarthBeat.


 


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

 


 


 
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