Monday, March 9, 2026

International Women's Day 2026

Celebrating extraordinary women and renewing our commitment to justice and equality

As we mark International Women’s Day 2026, the Uniting Church in Australia is celebrating extraordinary women whose faith, leadership and service enrich congregations and communities across the country.
 
This year’s theme, “Balance the Scales”, is a call to justice and to renewed commitment to equality. To mark the day, people from across the national church were invited to nominate inspiring women whose lives reflect faithful leadership, compassion and witness. The response was overwhelming, revealing countless stories of women nurturing faith, strengthening community and standing with those whose voices are often unheard.
 
In her President's message for IWD ’26, Rev Charissa Suli gives thanks for the women whose ministry and service shape the life of our Church. She describes the theme as a reminder that equality does not happen by accident and that justice remains incomplete where voices are silenced or dignity diminished.
 
Rev Suli also highlights the many ways women proclaim the gospel today – preaching, teaching, advocating, mentoring and praying – sometimes publicly and often quietly behind the scenes. The nominations received this year offer a glimpse of that faithful witness: women empowering others, leading change and living out God’s mission every day.
 
This International Women’s Day, the Church celebrates them all with gratitude and renewed commitment to justice.
Read more here
Copyright © 2026 Uniting Church in Australia, All rights reserved.

UM News Digest - March 6, 2026


UM News Digest - March 6, 2026
UM News is resending today’s Digest to correct an ad that included an incorrect deadline for scholarships for United Methodist students pursuing undergraduate and graduate degrees. The deadline to apply is 11:59 p.m. Pacific Standard Time today. The ad is corrected below and includes a link to apply.
TOP STORIES
“We share a commitment to the humans who surround us and the humans who live in our neighborhood that we will prioritize the people over their political point of view.” — The Rev. Daniel Hawkins, pastor of Martin United Methodist Church in Bedford, Texas.
The Rev. Daniel Hawkins (left) leads service at Martin United Methodist Church in Bedford, Texas. Photo courtesy of Martin United Methodist Church.
The Rev. Daniel Hawkins (left) leads service at Martin United Methodist Church in Bedford, Texas. Photo courtesy of Martin United Methodist Church.
Pastors walk a political tightrope 
CRYSTAL LAKE, Ill. (UM News) — Political and moral polarization is prominent in the United States, and United Methodist pastors are treading carefully on these issues as they lead diverse congregations. Keeping the dialogue going between people who disagree is more important than winning any political argument, said the Rev. Lisa Kruse-Safford, pastor of First United Methodist Church in Crystal Lake. Jim Patterson reports.
Read story
Graphic by Ben Ward, photo by Mike DuBose, UM News.
Graphic by Ben Ward, photo by Mike DuBose, UM News.
‘Signs of Life’: Finding unity in diversity
BEDFORD, Texas (UM News) — The pastor of Martin United Methodist Church in the Horizon Texas Conference said he leads a “purple church,” where people are prioritized over political views. In “Signs of Life,” a new podcast from UM News, Ben Ward talks with the Rev. Daniel Hawkins about bringing diverse church members to the table and having sometimes hard conversations to be in community together. He said the congregation, which is one-third Tongan, is “unified without being uniform.” 
Listen to podcast

Minnesota pastor testifies to U.S. Congress
WASHINGTON (UM News) — The Rev. Mariah Tollgaard, senior pastor of Hamline Church United Methodist in St. Paul, Minnesota, spoke to a U.S. House committee about the impact of the federal crackdown on her parishioners and state. “No nation can build a true future on the terror of its own people,” she said. Heather Hahn reports.
Read story
TODAY'S HEADLINES
Louisiana Conference
Students help translate Braille hymnal
LAFAYETTE, La. — High school students came to the rescue when First United Methodist Church of Lafayette bought a Braille United Methodist hymnal that proved difficult to use. The Braille version is seven large binders with a three-binder appendix. Brad Burkman, inclusion coordinator for the church, recruited students from Louisiana School for Math, Science and the Arts in Natchitoches to help translate the hymn and page numbers from Braille to English so sighted people could find the right pages to pull for each service. Mark Lambert has the story.
Read story

Middle Philippines Conference
Remembering Rodolfo C. Beltran
NUEVA ECIJA, Philippines — Rodolfo C. Beltran, the first person outside the United States to serve on The United Methodist Church’s highest court, died March 3 at age 93. A distinguished lawyer, educator, church leader and pillar of the community, he was elected to the Judicial Council in 2000 to an eight-year term. Gladys P. Mangiduyos has an obituary.
Read obituary
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COMMENTARIES
UM News includes in the Digest various commentaries about issues in the denomination. The opinion pieces reflect a variety of viewpoints and are the opinions of the writers, not UM News staff.
Church must do messy work of restoring community
EVANSTON, Ill. (UM News) — When congregations and seminaries present themselves through the lens of political ideology, they squander a sacred gift: the church’s capacity to hold us together, writes the Rev. Dr. Javier A. Viera, president of Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary. The church’s calling is not to mirror a fractured society, he says, but to practice a different way of being together. The seminary has launched the Garrett Collective as a way to help the church lead the way in building community across differences.
Read commentary
PRESS RELEASES
Society of St. Andrew
Anti-hunger ministry seeks new head
BIG ISLAND, Va. — Lynette Johnson, executive director of United Methodist partner Society of St. Andrew since 2017, plans to retire at the start of September. The board of the anti-hunger ministry has engaged North Carolina-based executive search firm Arnstrong McGuire to oversee a national search for the next executive director.
Learn more about the Society of St. Andrew
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RESOURCES
United Methodist Communications
UMCOR Sunday is March 15
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — When people face disaster, the United Methodist Committee on Relief is there to help. But that kind of response requires trained staff, reliable systems and the ability to act quickly and compassionately. United Methodists can support UMCOR’s administrative costs through the UMCOR Sunday special offerings on March 15. United Methodist Communications offers resources to mark the day and encourage giving
See resources

Religion and Race
Mental health focus of grant program
WASHINGTON — United Methodists looking to improve mental health support in underserved communities can apply for CORR Action Fund grants of up to $10,000 being offered by the United Methodist Commission on Religion and Race. Successful proposals will include a diversity of voices, be culturally sensitive and create initiatives that will result in lasting change that can be replicated elsewhere.
Learn more

Higher Education and Ministry
What it means to be United Methodist-related
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The United Methodist Board of Higher Education and Ministry has released an updated version of “What It Means to Be Related to a United Methodist Church with Education in Its DNA,” reaffirming the church’s enduring commitment to church-related education. The primer gives United Methodist-related institutions in the U.S. a clear guide to understanding their United Methodist identity.
Learn more
RECENT HEADLINES
Photo courtesy of the Rev. Sarah Borgstrom Lee
Photo courtesy of the Rev. Sarah Borgstrom Lee
With DEI dismantled, ministries still work for diversity
Read story
Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News
Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News
Dare to take risks to move church forward, pastor says
Read story
EVENTS
Monday, April 6 -
Friday, May 29

Online course: Journey Through the Psalms
More United Methodist events
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Friday, March 6, 2026

Weekly Outlook - Bad Bunny, Jesus and the comment section 🎤

Dear readers,

What does empathy look like in a divided world?

It’s a question many Christians are asking with new urgency. Some public voices have recently dismissed empathy as weakness or even a cultural threat. Yet Scripture repeatedly calls God’s people to something different: to rejoice with those who rejoice and weep with those who weep.

That tension is part of what inspired our newest Fresh Outlook Bible Studies resource, "On the Road to Empathy." This four-session study, written by the Rev. Dr. Robyn Byrd Michalove, invites congregations to explore empathy as a faithful Christian practice through stories from Luke’s Gospel and the Book of Acts. Along the way, participants reflect on the stories that shape us, the blind spots we carry and the ways Christ calls us to move from understanding toward action.

Written specifically for young adults, this study would also be a great fit for adult education programs, small groups, or a churchwide conversation. We hope this new resource will help your community listen more deeply and walk more faithfully with one another.

Learn more about the study and read a sample.

Peace,

Rose Schrott Taylor
Digital Content Editor
Presbyterian Outlook 

A PC(USA) statement on the escalating war with Iran by the Office of Public Witness
Shortening the Book of Confessions? A stated clerk responds by Christian Boyd
Bad Bunny, Jesus and the comment section by Trip Porch
When foster youth age out, a church steps in by John Bolt
Why vigils matter as anxiety rises by Maggie Alsup
A sermon for elderly Christians in troubled times by Brenda Monroe Moten

In case you missed it...

Love Letters to God
Andrew Taylor-Troutman praises "Love Letters to God' as a raw, brave epistolary friendship that wrestles honestly with suffering, faith, and a love strong enough to endure doubt.

Presbyterian politicians mix faith with their civic service
Elected officials and candidates find belief a powerful ally in leadership. — Gregg Brekke

A homecoming
Doug McMahon reflects on how a bone marrow transplant teaches us that we humans are bound together, each needing the other, even at a cellular level.  

Middle, high school students invited to ‘Wholly Shift!’ at 2026 Hastings Youth Conference
Hastings College and the ASPIRE program invite students to an inclusive space where young people can explore their faith, build lasting connections and recognize their value.

Legal Defense Fund visits Springfield, Ohio
Haitian immigrants and others live in fear, but faith communities stand with them. — Cindy Corell

Discussion guide for our Empathy issue
In each issue of the Outlook, we include a discussion guide to further reflect on the issue. — Don Griggs