Thursday, June 25, 2026

Weekly Outlook - Why the monogamy overture was referred

Dear readers,

It's been an eventful start to GA227, with committee work happening from Monday to Wednesday this week. Committee recommendations go to the assembly plenary meetings, which begin on Sunday and run through Thursday, July 2. 

A lot has happened — more than I can cover in a single email — but a couple of themes are emerging for this editor. The first is a cross-committee response to the 2025 closure of Global Mission. Another is how the denomination continues to negotiate our new organizational reality of a unified agency, notably responding by recommending limits to the agency's power. Lastly, there have been a couple key moments of advancing protections for LGBTQIA folks.

Read about these themes and more below — and sign up for our free text updates to get links to breaking stories. 

Peace,

Rose Schrott Taylor
Digital Content Editor
Presbyterian Outlook 

Documents contradict PL&W testimony on covenant given to terminated mission co-workers by Eric Ledermann
 
Constitution committee rejects call for special study of Olympia Overture amendments by Blake Brinegar
The exhibit hall’s successor arrives at General Assembly by Greg Allen-Pickett
PC(USA) overture on monogamy deemed out of order, referred for further study by Gregg Brekke

 
Committee moves to limit PL&W authority in revised Organization for Mission by John Bolt
 
Committee advances measure on LGBTQIA+ inclusion and transparency by Harriet Riley
 

In case you missed it...

Committee advances sexual misconduct proposals, rejects ‘Book of Order’ terminology change
The Gender and Sexuality Justice Committee approved a two-pronged approach: better understanding the scope of misconduct and strengthening support for survivors. — Harriet Riley

Theo of Golden
Andrew Taylor-Troutman reflects on Allen Levi’s "Theo of Golden," a novel that reveals God’s love, grace, and the beauty of the divine image in the worn and ordinary faces around us.

Climate and Environmental Justice Committee votes to go further on fossil fuel divestment
Majority favors stepping away from such companies by 2030. — Darla Carter

In marathon second day, ordination committee approves 8 of 10 recommendations from Ordination Task Force
Approvals included a vote reversal on a controversial ordination exam alternative. — Layton Williams Berkes

What happens after clergy sexual misconduct?
Drawing on his experience serving a congregation after a pastor's sexual misconduct, Joel Moody argues that CON-06 would establish clearer expectations for restoration, strengthen accountability and ensure survivors' voices are heard.

GA committees begin work on agency oversight, ecumenical relations and investment policies
The first day of committee meetings focused largely on the denomination's new agency structure, while commissioners also advanced full-communion discussions and considered changes to investment policy. — John Bolt

Making the most of Milwaukee: An all-in-one guide
We've rounded up the best spots to eat, drink and explore in Milwaukee. — Caroline Garcia
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WCC NEWS: Archbishop of Canterbury takes pilgrimage to the Holy Land

Archbishop of Canterbury Sarah Mullally has taken a five-day pilgrimage to Palestine and Israel at the invitation of the Anglican Archbishop in Jerusalem, Most Rev. Hosam Naoum.
Photo: A Krogmann
25 June 2026

The visit is a joint pilgrimage of prayer and solidarity—meeting and praying with Palestinian Christians in East Jerusalem, the occupied West Bank, and Israel.

The pilgrimage has included travels to Jerusalem, Nazareth, Bethlehem, and Birzeit; meetings with church leaders, lay people, and congregations in churches across the region; and visits to holy sites in Nazareth, Bethlehem, and Jerusalem.

The Archbishop of Canterbury also met with several patriarchs and heads of churches, and heard about the challenges and opportunities currently facing them in their ministry.

“I bring with me the prayers and solidarity of the Church of England and Anglican Communion – and the assurance that Christians in Palestine and Israel are not forgotten,” she said. 

Naoum said: “As we travel together from Bethlehem to Jerusalem and throughout the Holy Land, following the path of our Lord’s earthly ministry, we are reminded of our shared calling to be instruments of his peace and reconciliation.”

The Archbishop of Canterbury met with 26-year-old Layan Nasir, a Palestinian Anglican who who has spent three periods in Israeli administrative detention and prison over the last five years.

Nasir, who is a member of St. Peter’s Anglican Church in Birzeit in the West Bank, was released from Israel’s Damon Prison in May. 

The Archbishop of Canterbury offered prayers and listened to her experiences about her time in detention. 

"I’m grateful to Layan’s family for their hospitality in their home. I will pray for them, and for God’s blessing and healing for Layan after the terrible ordeal of her incarceration,” she said. "I pray for the release of all people who have been unjustly imprisoned, here in Palestine and Israel and around the world.”

Also in her pilgrimage, Archbishop Mullally delivered a sermon at St Peter’s Church in Birzeit, addressing the challenges faced by Palestinian Christians and the broader community.

In her sermon, she told the congregation she would use her role as archbishop to seek “the peace you desire and the freedom you deserve.”

Acknowledging that "faithfulness can be costly,” Archbishop Mullally lamented that 2,000 years after the birth of Christ "you are now facing so many barriers to practising your faith and living freely.”

She continued, “And your faithful, hopeful resistance is also visible as fathers and mothers navigate the web of checkpoints daily to provide an income for their family, or to get their children to school to provide for their future, or as you gather to break bread together week by week in this church.” 

During the final day of her pilgrimage—24 June—the Archbishop of Canterbury addressed the Heads of Churches in Jerusalem, and reflected on what the visits have meant. 

“Over the past few days, I have had the privilege of making a pilgrimage through this land. Pilgrimage is, of course, a journey through places,” she said. “But it is also a journey of the heart and mind. It is an exercise in listening: listening to God, listening to one another, and allowing ourselves to be changed by what we hear and encounter.”

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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.

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RNS Morning Report - Vatican says no to women preaching

RNS Morning Report Desktop
 
Early on, Pope Leo XIV signaled support for women’s leadership in the Catholic Church, but a new Vatican decision released on Tuesday (June 23) barring laypeople, including women, from preaching the homily at Mass is testing how far that openness is likely to go.
 
RNS Vatican Reporter Claire Giangravè reports that the Vatican’s decision suggests Rome’s promises of greater lay and female participation, emphasized during the global Synod on Synodality, still have firm limits when it comes to the liturgy and ordained ministry.
 
“What this clarification really reveals is the extent to which the Vatican will go to try to stop the Holy Spirit,” the executive director of the U.S.-based advocacy group for women’s ordination and gender equality in the church, Kate McElwee, told Giangravè, adding that it “doubles down on exclusion instead of listening to the needs of Catholics today.”
 
 
 
 

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