Friday, July 10, 2026

Weekly Outlook - Post-GA highlights

Dear readers,

Getting back to regular life after General Assembly has felt a bit like stepping out of a wormhole. For one whirlwind week in Milwaukee, the Outlook team spent our days (and many late nights) reporting, writing, editing and sharing the news. It was exhausting and exhilarating — with some fun along the way.

The downside? Our brains haven't quite gotten the memo that it's over. More than one of us is still having General Assembly dreams while we re-adjust to normal life. (Please tell me we're not the only ones.)

If you closed your laptop after the assembly wrapped up, here are a few stories you may have missed:

One story pairs especially well with that last item. As the denomination wrestles with the consequences of the World Mission closure, Brittany Porch reflects on her congregation's recent mission trip to Peru — a reminder that even amid institutional change, relationships endure and God's love continues to be shared across the world.


Happy reading,

Rose Schrott Taylor
Digital Content Editor
Presbyterian Outlook 

P.S. Want the SparkNotes version of GA for your congregation? Pre-order our post-GA bulletin insert, available July 15. 

Assembly declines to send proposed confession to presbyteries by John A. Bolt
As commissioners debated fossil fuels, Milwaukee’s streets carried a different kind of climate protest by Eric Ledermann
Assembly declares Israel’s war in Gaza a genocide by Eric Ledermann
A hopeful vision for global mission by Brittany Porch 
 
PC(USA) Young Adult Advisory Delegates struggle to reconcile differences by Gregg Brekke and Mary Mabry
Assembly creates commission to investigate World Mission closure by Eric Ledermann

In case you missed it...

Faithful witness in divided times: New books on justice, church and public life
These authors wrestle with polarization, climate change, racism, incarceration and community — asking what faithful Christian witness looks like in a fractured world. — Amy Pagliarella

Spielberg’s Disclosure Day offers wonder — and questions for faith
The acclaimed director pairs suspense with reflections on God, empathy and humanity's place in a universe that may be more populated than we imagined, writes Alfred Walker. 

A Democratic and Republican Faith: A Public Theology for a Church and Nation in Crisis
Reviewer Amy Pagliarella examines Raymond Roberts’ case that America’s democratic ideals are rooted in Protestant theology — and why the church still needs a “thicker” public faith.

APCU to embrace PC(USA) seminaries, Presbyterian-founded schools around the world
APCU is expanding its institutional membership to include seminaries and Presbyterian-founded institutions around the world. — APCU

227th General Assembly elects Pumroy-Cordero, Schondelmeyer as co-moderators
Commissioners elected the pair on the first ballot after participating in a lengthy question-and-answer session with the full slate of candidates. — Eric Ledermann

So Jung Kim: Remember her name
Whitney Wilkinson Arreche remembers the Rev. Dr. So Jung Kim as a holy agitator whose passion for ecumenism and everyday theology left ongoing ripples.

From relief to renewal: What the Jinishian Memorial Program teaches the church about mission
As the Jinishian Memorial Program marks 60 years, Greg Allen Pickett explores what its long commitment to local leadership and civic formation can teach the church about mission.
Our version of GA SparkNotes for your congregation... available July 15. 
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Copyright © 2026 Presbyterian Outlook, All rights reserved.

RNS Morning Report - Faith-based AI company Gloo faces moment of truth

RNS Morning Report Desktop
Scott Beck has long hoped the faith-based AI company he founded in 2013, Gloo, would help churches and other Christian groups harness technology to spread God’s word and help save the world.
More than $400 million in losses and 13 years later, that dream faces a critical juncture. Leaders at Gloo Holdings Inc. hope a stock sale on Friday (July 10) will bring in more than $20 million to the faith-based company to help keep it going and make it a kind of one-stop shop for outsourcing church services.
RNS National Reporter Bob Smietana spoke to Beck earlier this year, who said Gloo had finally reached critical mass with about 150,000 churches signed up for its services – technology, marketing and fundraising products.
But it’s not clear if Wall Street has faith in Gloo.
 
 

Top Stories

Will Wall Street have faith in a Christian AI company?

Faith-based AI company Gloo faces moment of truth after $438M in losses

(RNS) — Serial entrepreneur Scott Beck believes he has a mission to help churches and Christian ministries spread God's work and help others. After years of financial losses, he believes his investment in building a faith-based tech company will soon pay off.
Will Wall Street have faith in a Christian AI company?

Inside a Christian mother’s fight against ICE activity in Chicago

(RNS) — The second episode of ‘Faith on the Immigration Frontline' follows Audrey Luhmann, mother of eight, as she patrols courthouses, responds to community alerts, gathers supplies for immigrants and cares for her family.
Will Wall Street have faith in a Christian AI company?

New polls show plummeting support among faith groups for Israeli government, Netanyahu

(RNS) — One survey found that most U.S. adults — 62% — now view the Israeli government unfavorably, a nearly 20-point shift from 2022, when only 43% said the same.
Will Wall Street have faith in a Christian AI company?

In East India, a Marian shrine draws in Christian, Hindu and Muslim pilgrims 

(RNS) — The historic Catholic minor basilica attracts thousands of pilgrims annually — the majority of them Hindu and Muslim — seeking what they call the power of the divine feminine from the Virgin Mary. 

Opinion

Will Wall Street have faith in a Christian AI company?

US sanctions are harming the Cuban Catholic Church, the island’s hope

(RNS) — If the United States truly seeks a more hopeful future for Cuba, it should pursue policies that strengthen Cuban civil society — including the Catholic Church — rather than causing suffering.

ICYMI

Will Wall Street have faith in a Christian AI company?

Pro-Palestinian interfaith coalition protests Christian Zionist summit

WASHINGTON (RNS) — Interfaith Action for Palestine gathered around 200 people to protest Christians United for Israel and US military support for Israel.
Will Wall Street have faith in a Christian AI company?

Jehovah’s Witnesses buy data center property for new expansion

(RNS) — ‘We are still in the early stages of evaluating how the facility might best support our future operations,’ a spokesperson said.

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As a nonprofit newsroom that covers all faiths, RNS sits uniquely at the intersection of freedom of the press and freedom of religion. News tips or feedback? Email comments@religionnews.com. Like the Morning Report? Share it with a friend. Forwarded this newsletter? Subscribe here. We rely on reader donations to power our reporting. Donate here. Or send a check to: Religion News Foundation PO Box 1808 Columbia, MO 65205
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Copyright © 2026 Religion News Service, All rights reserved. 

WCC INTERVIEW: Local communities show strong agency in honing communications networks

The World Council of Churches, along with ecumenical and civil society partners, are preparing for the first Global Dialogue on AI Governance, convened by the United Nations and being held in Geneva, 6-7 July. Participants in a symposium on "Our Common Future: Advocating for Digital Rights and AI Accountability" held in mid-April in Berlin reflect on some of the issues that will come to the fore in the Global Dialogue.
14 April 2026, Berlin, Germany: Carlos Baca (Mexico) pictured at an International symposium entitled ”Our Common Future: Advocating for Digital Rights and AI Accountability”, organized by the World Association for Christian Communication in collaboration with the World Council of Churches, Evangelische Mission Weltweit - Association of Protestant Churches and Missions in Germany, and Brot für die Welt, and held on 13-14 April 2026 in Berlin, Germany, bringing together 25 invited participants representing key ecumenical networks and partners. Photo: Albin Hillert/WCC
09 July 2026

In many communities in Mexico, over the past 15 years, communications science, radio, and now artificial intelligence (AI) have vastly changed. 

When Carlos Baca first entered the local telecommunications sector, he was helping people mainly with advocacy and regulatory issues they were facing. He has been working with rural, remote, and Indigenous communities developing telecommunications and community communication projects through the organizations Redes, A.C., and Rhizomatica.

Baca wished to acknowledge the collective work carried out by the organizations involved together with the communities themselves, which have ultimately been the driving force behind this process. 

He shared some real-life examples from his experience.

Over the years, Baca has followed a methodology that involves the community, and the decision of what organizations need to do is based on the real needs within that community. 

“We started to work with connectivity, so we got involved in this process that we now call a community network,” Baca said.  “We developed a community network together with the communities in Oaxaca.”

An evolving network 

Baca explained that the network in Oaxaca is a mobile community network, so he and his team developed the entire system, including an economic model, as well as the regulatory aspects that allow the network to exist. “This is a network that has been evolving over the years,” said Baca.

He described that, currently, “there are now 17 communities in Oaxaca who have their own infrastructure to operate a network, and they have now 4G networks in these communities. My background and my dream is to work with the communities in the capacity-building aspect to understand technologies and to make decisions based on this knowledge about technologies.”

Baca noted that the initiative, which began in 2013, is the result of a long, complex journey involving regulatory changes, capacity-building efforts, technological appropriation processes within communities, and many other lessons learned along the way. “Today it stands as an internationally recognized reference, as there is no other network of this nature operating at a comparable scale anywhere else in the world,” he said. 

For approximately the last five years, the organization has consolidated itself as a mobile virtual network operator. “Through Mexico’s shared network model, it is able to operate nationally while ensuring that the value generated is redistributed back to the participating communities through a different and more community-oriented model,” said Baca, who also 

That’s why it’s important for people to address and understand AI—what it really is and its real implication in people’s lives.

The moral voice needs to come from the grassroots, he said.

“I am really sure that these discussions about technology are happening on the ground,” he added. 

Involve the people  

Baca said that, at times, high-level discussions on technology keep us from seeing how people solve their communications challenges on the ground. 

“We are talking about mobilizing; we are talking about the need for regulation. There is this urge to just make sure things just don't get out of hand. But if the right conditions are created in the local communities, wonderful things happen,” he said.

Baca offered an example from Oaxaca that occurred when a community tried to move from 2G networks to 4G networks. 

"The simple answer is always that, of course, we want to have internet, but the people in this community know about the network itself, and how it works,” he said. “They say that the main characteristic of the network is the communication, so it needs to be always available.”

Community members believed that, if they had internet and all the people want to go to YouTube to see funny videos, the internet would get saturated and they would not be able to use it for communication. 

“So, they said, we need to ban YouTube,” said Baca. “But someone said, no, no, this is not the only thing that we have in YouTube. We also have, for example, videos to repair my truck.”

Ultimately, he added, it's really a collective decision in the community to make the rules based on the understanding of the technology itself.

“When these things happen, people have to have enough knowledge to know the technologies, and to know the real needs that they can solve with it,” said Baca. “And then they have the space to decide about these resources. They can do different things that we cannot imagine.”

See more
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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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