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Dear Justice-Seeker,

This issue of MFSAVoices is jam-packed with resources and information. So much so that it won't all fit in your email message so be sure to click view entire message at the bottom of this email to view the entire issue. Our newsletters are designed to be used all month long. So take a quick glance and take note of important dates to add to your calendar but also come back in the following weeks to work your way through the action items.  

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We continue to see the urgency of our work to make broad systemic change. Change that honors the dignity and worth of all people, puts people over money, and honors the earth and all her inhabitants. Since 1907, MFSA has been shining a light on injustice and organizing to change it.  

You make our collective work possible by your witness for justice every day in your church, community, and Annual Conference. MFSA does not receive any financial support from the United Methodist Church's giving channels. 100% of our budget is funded through your membership dues and your generosity in giving.

 

Stories of Hope and Resistance

The church has long been a place where justice is not only preached but lived out in times of political and social upheaval. However, with the arrival of a new administration intent on rolling back hard-won rights and freedoms, faith communities across the country are refusing to remain silent.

This new section of our newsletter is dedicated to sharing the ways churches are standing firm in their commitment to justice. We're excited to highlight actions and movements within faith communities that resist oppression, embody radical hospitality, and insist on a future where love, dignity, and equity prevail.

Whether through direct advocacy, sanctuary efforts, mutual aid, or prophetic witness, these faith communities remind us that another world is possible—and we are called to help create it. If your church is engaged in work that challenges injustice and fosters hope—especially through acts of subversion and resistance against oppressive policies—we want to hear from you.

Here are some stories of hope and resistance:

United Methodists Called to Courageous Resistance Amid US, International Crises

United Methodists join queer-led Capitol Hill protest denouncing Christian Nationalism and standing in solidarity with LGBTQ+ persons 

 

An Indiana Chapter is Forming

A new MFSA chapter is forming in Indiana. During the Indiana Annual Conference, an informational meeting will be held on Thursday, June 5 at St. Luke's United Methodist Church in Indianapolis. This effort is being led by a local three-member task force, with plans to officially charter the chapter at a gathering this September in Indianapolis.

We celebrate this emerging chapter and the spirit of grassroots organizing that continues to grow across the connection!

 

New MFSA T-Shirt

"We Believe" T-Shirt Design

We just launched a new t-shirt design, just in time for Annual Conference season!

Boldly affirm your faith-rooted commitment to justice. Featuring core convictions from our movement, this shirt lifts up the truths we live by.

 

Racial Audit Implementation Team Update

Reflecting on Theme 1 by Rev. Anna Swygert, MDiv

Note: ​In June 2023, the Methodist Federation for Social Action (MFSA) Board of Directors established the Racial Audit Implementation Team to carry forward the recommendations from the comprehensive Racial Audit. This work represents our deep commitment to becoming an anti-racist organization. Rev. Anna Swygert is a member of that team, and this reflection is part of our collective journey to name, confront, and transform the white dominant culture within MFSA. It emerges from ongoing conversations centered on six key themes/patterns of white supremacy identified within our organization. These are the entrenched patterns we are actively working to disrupt as we move toward the liberation and equity we seek. 

We are sharing these reflections and insights publicly with our movement because accountability, transparency, and shared learning are essential to dismantling white supremacy. We know that transformation does not happen in isolation. By sharing our process, struggles, and growth, we hope to invite our broader community into this work with us—offering tools, solidarity, and space for mutual reflection as we continue building a more just and faithful movement.

Theme 1: MFSA prioritizes white comfort, focusing on “white saviorism” and being “the good white ones”. This behavior results in performative allyship. It commodifies and renders People of Color invisible.

The racial audit taught us that MFSA is a predominantly white organization that perpetuates racism, despite its commitment to justice. The audit showed 64% of people of color and 49% of white people agree that there is a gap between MFSA’s stated commitment to being anti-racist and actually working to dismantle white supremacy. This discrepancy between its anti-racist commitments and internalized white supremacy results in performative allyship that centers whiteness above all else. But what is at this center, and why does it continue to strengthen and take hold within an organization that should want it removed? Some of our first steps as an implementation team were to take a strong look at this white center of dominance... 

 

Lighting the Candle of Peace, Hope, and Justice

As we navigate the realities of this new administration, justice-seeking congregations across the country are standing in solidarity with those targeted by oppressive policies. We've seen churches respond by incorporating the Candle of Peace, Hope, and Justice into their worship services, lifting up prayers and commitments to resist injustice.

Inspired by the Central Methodist Mission in Johannesburg, which lit a candle encircled in barbed wire during the struggle against apartheid, Rev. Dr. Donna Claycomb Sokol of Mount Vernon Place UMC in Washington, D.C., is one of the pastors who has reintroduced this practice. Rev. Andy Oliver of Allendale UMC in St. Petersburg, Florida, is another. Now, more than 50 congregations—including several MFSA-aligned churches—have joined this movement, lighting a candle each week and naming those suffering under policies of cruelty and exclusion.

Recently, churches have lit the candle:
🕯️ For migrants—asylum seekers facing deportation, undocumented families living in fear, and faith leaders offering sanctuary.
🕯️ For federal workers—those losing their jobs, living in uncertainty, or suffering retaliation for speaking out.
🕯️ For USAID—millions impacted by halted humanitarian aid, from hungry children to struggling farmers.
🕯️ For the National Institutes of Health—patients, researchers, and those dependent on lifesaving medical advancements.
🕯️ For the conflict in Ukraine—those enduring war, Russian dissidents, and leaders seeking true peace.
🕯️ For the judicial branch—judges facing threats, courts upholding the rule of law, and those caught in legal battles over justice.
🕯️ For institutions of higher education and students—scholars facing retaliation, lost funding, and threats to free expression.

Each time the candle is lit, congregations proclaim that the light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has never overcome the light.

You can access the liturgy below. This document will be updated weekly, with liturgy uplifting a new group targeted by this administration.

In this moment, as faith communities, we must recommit to resisting evil, injustice, and oppression in all its forms. Together, we will continue to bear witness, proclaim justice, and keep the light shining.

 

Call Your Representatives and Demand Accountability

We are reminded that respect for the office does not mean silence in the face of harm. Our democracy is under threat, and our most vulnerable communities are at risk. Now is the time to speak up—call your representatives and demand accountability.

 

MFSA is now on Bluesky

We've noticed many of our friends and partners making the move to this platform, and we're thrilled to join the conversation there. Stay connected with us for updates, advocacy, and conversations that matter.

Connect with us @mfsavoices.org

 
 

Now's the Time for Action

Here are a few ways you can seek justice and work for broad systemic change:

  1. If you have a pension or retirement fund with Wespath, please sign this petition

  2. Pressure Elected Officials to Block Weapons for Genocide 

  3. Contact Congress to support legislation that defends Palestinian children and families human rights

  4. Join the boycott of Chevron who is profiting off the genocide in Gaza

  5. Here is a list of products and services to boycott of companies that are supporting Israel's apartheid of Palestine.

  6. Take the pledge to bring racial justice into our education system. From curriculum to student life, there is so much we can do to make schools a safe and equitable place for all children.

  7. Protect Anti-Corruption human rights defenders in Africa.

  8. Ask Congress to expand access to medical care as one way to fight back against racial inequality.

  9. The House has passed the reauthorization of The Fredrick Douglas Trafficking Victims Prevention and Protection Reauthorization Act. Now the Senate needs to do the same. Let them know to pass this vital legislation.

  10. We must continue to protect people seeking asylum. With anti-immigrant sentiment still high among part of the country it is vital we ensure our laws protect those coming here to escape dangerous situations. 

 

In Case You Missed It

  1. Check out any Lenten Devotions you may have missed
  2. Check out our Beyond Borders Immigration Webinar Series with UMVIM and DHM
  3. Webinar with MFSA, UMKR, and Fossil Free UMC: #BoycottChevron
  4. Read the last MFSA's Racial Audit Implementation Team Update
  5. Read MFSA's statement on the election and statement of solidarity
 
 
 

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Contact Us

Methodist Federation for Social Action
996 Maine Ave SW #307
Washington, District of Columbia 20024
(202) 240-2546
bridget@mfsaweb.org

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