Thursday, June 11, 2026

Presbyterian Peace Fellowship - Sat June 13 Zoom Briefing on General Assembly Issues

"...and the leaves of the tree are for the healing

of the nations." Rev. 22:2

Hello, Peace Fellowship Friends, Our General Assembly witness starts this Sat. June 13. With violence in so many directions, PPF has planned a very active presence at GA for peacemaking.

Please help in 2 ways:


--- 1. Register for the Sat. June 13 Issues Briefing on Zoom to learn about peace and justice issues at GA, plus details on how to testify on overtures for the Open Hearings, and how to coordinate with other Overture Advocates. Register for June 13 HERE.


--- 2. Become a sponsor for PPF's Peace Gathering at GA HERE.

This covers PPF GA costs and will help keep ticket prices down to encourage GA commissioners to attend. Sponsorship starts at $50. To be listed in the June 26 program, please donate by Sat. June 13 at 3pm ET. We need help on this. Thank you.


To stay connected on GA issues, sign up for PPF GA updates in real time by texting PRESBYPEACE to 855-516-2918


Many Thanks and hope to see you this Saturday on Zoom,

Harry Eberts, Interim Executive Director, PPF

Shaunel Steinnagel, Co-Moderator, PPF

Progressive Partners Issues Briefing

Sat. June 13,

11 am - 12:15 pm ET

10 am CT, 9 am MT, 8 am PT

Register for June 13 HERE.


Join on Zoom for this live opportunity to look at the peace and justice issues coming to the Assembly, from nuclear weapons to fossil fuel divestment to the Iran war and more.

Learn details on how to testify in Open Hearings on Zoom on overtures or reports, and how to coordinate with other Overture Advocates. Anyone may testify on any overture or report. Open Hearing sign up deadline is June 20.

2025 Peaceseeker Award Recipient: Presbyterians for Earth Care for 30 years of earth care leadership, for nurturing the young adult network CANOPY, and for promoting fossil fuel divestment to reduce the war and violence that climate change will bring.

2026 Peaceseeker Award Recipient: Westminster Presbyterian Church in Minneapolis for standing up, singing out and taking risks to resist the violence of ICE, along with many other courageous congregations.


The Peace Gathering at GA

Fri. June 26, 6:30-8:30 pm

Immanuel Presbyterian Church

1100 N. Astor St. Milwaukee

Sandwich Buffet and Dessert


Please Sponsor this event by June 13 HERE.


If you can... Join us during GA for fellowship, food, and inspiration for the work ahead


Learn More/Register for The Peace Gathering HERE



Keynote Speaker: "From Minneapolis to Gaza: Confronting America's Forever Wars" by Dr. Osamah Khalil

Professor of History at Syracuse University’s Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs


Presentation of PPF's Peaceseeker Award:

2025: Presbyterians for Earth Care

2026: Westminster Presbyterian Church, Minneapolis




...To be followed by

Matthew Black in Concert!

The "Everything is Terrible

and No One is Okay Tour"

June 26, 8:30-10 PM

Immanuel Presbyterian Church

Learn more HERE


Community Day of Action at GA in Milwaukee

Sat. June 27, 9-11:30 am

Père Marquette Park near GA Site


As part of the Presbyterian Decade to End Gun Violence, PPF will join in the GA Day of Action focused on gun violence prevention. Activities will include:


  • Guns to Gardens forging demonstration by PPF & Friends
  • Public art using parts dismantled from unwanted guns
  • Resources and organizing tools for congregations
  • A Walk to City Hall & Rally with speakers, including Rev. Margery Rossi, PPF's Minister for Gun Violence Prevention

GA Town Square

Sat. June 27, 2-5 pm Baird Center North Lobby

Come visit with PPF and take home peacemaking education and action resources for your congregation


See you at GA!

Questions? Contact: info@presbypeacefellowship.org


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

WCC news: European Christian Internet Conference marks 30th edition in Rome with focus on AI

Communication professionals, theologians, church leaders, and digital practitioners from across Europe will gather in Rome from 10-12 June for the 30th edition of the European Christian Internet Conference (ECIC), a leading forum exploring the intersection of faith, communication, and technology. 

The Bramante Staircase (or Momo Staircase) at the Vatican Museums. Photo: Marcelo Schneider/WCC

10 June 2026

The event will focus on the theme “From Prompts to Prayers: AI and Authentic Spirituality.” 

As artificial intelligence increasingly influences how people access information, form relationships, and engage with spiritual practices, the conference will examine its impact on faith communities, ethical decision-making, and authentic human connection. Participants will explore both the opportunities and challenges AI presents for churches and Christian organizations worldwide. 

“ECIC has always been a source of inspiration for church communication practitioners across Europe, providing a platform to discuss emerging trends in communication and technology, share best practices, and learn from one another's experiences”, says Ivars Kupcis, WCC communication officer and a board member of the ECIC network. 

“The annual meeting is also a unique opportunity to learn from the churches and communication professionals of the host country. This year in Rome, we look forward to meaningful exchanges with colleagues at Vatican Media and gaining valuable insights into their work, engaging audiences around the globe,” added Kupcis.

The conference will feature keynote presentations from distinguished scholars and practitioners, including Fabio Pasqualetti, dean of the Faculty of Social Communication Sciences at the Pontifical Salesian University; Ilenya Goss, theologian, physician, and expert in ethics and spirituality; and Jussi Koski, a pioneer in digital communication and emerging technologies. 

Established more than two decades ago, ECIC has become a unique gathering place for church communicators, online pastors, digital strategists, content creators, and social media professionals representing diverse Christian traditions across Europe.

ECIC #30 program

See more
The World Council of Churches on Facebook
The World Council of Churches on Twitter
The World Council of Churches on Instagram
The World Council of Churches on YouTube
World Council of Churches on SoundCloud
The World Council of Churches' website
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
Our visiting address is:
World Council of Churches
Chemin du Pommier 42
Kyoto Building
Le Grand-Saconnex CH-1218
Switzerland

WCC NEWS: WCC webinar: no woman banished for her God-given biology

More than 500 million girls and women lack access to adequate menstrual products or hygiene facilities. Many are kept from school, from churches, from public life, because of something their faith communities have rarely spoken of. On 4 June, the World Council of Churches (WCC) brought together participants from four continents to confront that silence, in a Menstrual Hygiene Day webinar themed "Breaking the Blood Taboo."
Webinar: Breaking the Blood Taboo: Faith Communities as Allies in Menstrual Hygiene & Period Poverty
09 June 2026

"For something so universal, so natural, so fundamental to the continuation of human life, the silence on menstruation is not only inexplicable, but also it's inexcusable,” said Rev. Dr Kenneth Mtata, WCC programme director for Life, Justice, and Peace.

Mtata traced the stigma back to purity codes in Leviticus, misapplied across traditions for centuries, before pointing to Christ's healing of a woman who had bled for 12 years. "He did not turn away from her impurity. He restored her dignity." His goal for the WCC: a world in which "no woman is banished from community, worship, or dignity because of her God-given biology."

“As Christians, we have considered the holiness of the blood that flew from the cross of Jesus’ crucifixion,” said Dinesh Suna, WCC programme executive for Land, Water, and Food, while responding to Jess Hall, theologian and researcher from Aotearoa New Zealand, “but we don’t talk about the blood that flew in Jesus’ veins from Mary’s uterus.”

As of 2026, approximately 2.1 billion girls and women menstruate globally, yet more than 500 million cannot access adequate menstrual products or hygiene facilities, according to the World Bank and UNICEF. In many countries, one in four girls misses school during her period. 

Hall developed that thread in a recorded address. "Salvation could not just be wished for, or thought about," she said. "Bodies were needed. The sweaty, roaming body of a young messiah, and the bleeding, growing body of a young woman." Theology, she argued, can be a resource for dismantling the very stigma it once helped construct.

Michele Vecchi, WASH specialist with Norwegian Church Aid, brought the argument from scripture to infrastructure. In many communities, women and girls who lack private sanitation at home are forced to find hidden places to manage their periods, exposing them to harassment and violence. Denying those services and then blaming women for the consequences is, he said, a double injustice. "We cannot discriminate people two times, not even one, but for sure, not twice."

Three WCC young research fellows, Roksanna Keyvan, Rosa Soto Ceferino, and Toyosi Olatayo, working across WASH governance, environmental engineering, and social advocacy, brought the conversation to the ground. Together they traced what they called the geography of menstruation: the reality that climate change, water scarcity, and inadequate infrastructure compound period poverty differently depending on where a girl is born.

Keyvan, who has worked with faith-based organisations on water projects in Nepal, the Dominican Republic, and the Amazon, stressed that access depends not on construction alone but on who trains local operators and who is accountable when systems fail. Olatayo, speaking from Nigeria, issued a direct challenge to faith communities: in contexts where the church is the most trusted institution, its silence on menstruation is not neutrality, it is complicity.

For Gracia Violeta Ross Quiroga, WCC programme executive for HIV, Reproductive Health, and Pandemics, menstrual stigma compounds the discrimination faced by women living with HIV, migrants, refugees, and women with disabilities. "The women should never be alone on this. A good period is a manifestation of your health."

"Moving from stigma to dignity, from silence to solidarity, from exclusion to inclusion," she said.

And, in closing: "We should not get tired. The church can become the family, the faith community can become the family, the network, the support that women need. Let's do it for them."

The webinar was organised by the World Council of Churches in collaboration with Norwegian Church Aid and the Partnership of Religion and Development.

Period. End of Sentence. (documentary)

UNICEF - Menstrual health and hygiene

World Bank - Period poverty data

International Partnership on Religion and Sustainable Development (PaRD)

Norwegian Church Aid — WASH work

See more
The World Council of Churches on Twitter
The World Council of Churches on Facebook
The World Council of Churches' website
The World Council of Churches on Instagram
The World Council of Churches on YouTube
SoundCloud
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
Our visiting address is:
World Council of Churches
Chemin du Pommier 42
Kyoto Building
Le Grand-Saconnex CH-1218
Switzerland

SojoMail - The trailblazing queer priest organizing with the NAACP

Presbyterian Peace Fellowship - Sat June 13 Zoom Briefing on General Assembly Issues

    "...and the leaves of the tree are for the healing of the nations." Rev. 22:2 Hello, Peace Fellowship Friends, Our General Ass...