|
This past week the FutureChurch staff gathered together in Cleveland for two days of dreaming, planning, and team-building. While we meet twice a week on Zoom to check-in and collaborate, there's nothing quite like having the opportunity to physically be together. I know I speak for the whole team when I say that it is a blessing to have colleagues that are also friends. Some highlights of our time together included talking and laughing over shared meals, planning for our 35th Anniversary, considering ways to connect with a multigenerational audience, strolling through Lakewood Park (pictured above), and even navigating an Escape Room (...which we sadly failed, despite Russ' quick thinking and Ann Marie's knack for puzzles!). As we enjoyed each other's company, our unspoken prayer was always YOU. FutureChurch exists because YOU exist, and we couldn't be more grateful to collaborate with you in the work to build a more just Church. Thank you for being our "why."
|
|
|
|
May 25, 2025 | Sixth Sunday of Easter
Today Jordan Taylor Jones invites us to explore by taking inventory of our communities and the challenges and struggles they face, with the help of Harriet Tubman; engage what resources of praise and worship look like; and embody the nature of God and God’s plan for justice for all nations with a contemplative exercise.
"In a short essay on lament and hope, Christian social ethicist Emilie Townes writes about the importance of facing the harsh realities of grief and lament: 'Naming the hot mess…is both admitting the realities – and possibilities – and confessing that we cannot right things without leaning strong and hard into our faith for the sustenance to stand up, dig in, and do the work our souls must have.' The 67th Psalm has a dual function of expressing profound grief while also excessive praise for the Divine. "
Jordan Taylor Jones is a minister and community organizer at Metro Hope Church in East Harlem. He recently earned his Masters in Divinity degree at Union Theological Seminary where his scholarship focused on the role of spirituality in the formation of marginalized “fugitive communities” in the African diaspora. His organizing work centralizes on Black liberation, international solidarity, and interfaith dialogue.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
May 25, 2025
Preaching for the Sixth Sunday of Easter, Dr. Kim R. Harris lifts up “Saintly Seven” African Americans on the path to canonization and asks how the Holy Spirit is calling us to widen our vision of holiness and belonging:
"I am thinking about a vision of who we are. And thinking about that widening of the vision and shining of a spotlight on the many heritages of people who are Catholic in these United States and in these Americas...When we imagine what our beautiful city could become, will become… When we continue to pray for the coming of the Holy Spirit. How do we envision that beautiful city?"
Dr. Kim R. Harris is Associate Professor of African American Religious Thought and Practice at Loyola Marymount University. A liturgist, composer, and recording artist, she teaches Black liberation and Womanist theologies and presents on Black Catholic music, Negro Spirituals, and Civil Rights freedom songs. She composed Welcome Table: A Mass of Spirituals and co-authored The Fire This Time: A Black Catholic Sourcebook.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Pentecost Project- NEW HIGHLIGHT! |
|
|
Community of St. Peter Seeks to Preserve and Renew a Living Tradition
|
|
|
|
|
With the fire of Pentecost and emboldened by the Holy Spirit, we at FutureChurch are engaging in a new project to recognize and celebrate communities that are embodying the mission of Pentecost. Over the next several months, we will continue highlighting communities that have been emboldened to live the Gospel in new and creative ways. Today we introduce you to the Community of St. Peter.
"The Community of St. Peter is the only independent and inclusive Eucharistic community in the Catholic tradition in the city of Cleveland. With roughly 250 total members and about 100 at each Sunday Liturgy, the Community works to strike a balance between faithfulness to the Catholic tradition and freedom to blossom from that tradition in new and creative ways."...
Read More about Community of St. Peter...
|
|
|
|
| May 27, 2025 | 7:00pm ET |
|
|
Modeling Synodality from the Margins: Prophetic Styles of Liturgy
|
|
|
|
|
Over the past year, FutureChurch has been celebrating the work of communities that have been emboldened by the Spirit to live the Gospel in new and creative ways. From intentional living communities, to independent worship spaces, to organizations that are re-envisioning what it means to serve, these trailblazing communities serve as witness that the creative power of the Spirit never ceases.
Meanwhile, in March the Church began a three-year implementation phase for the Synod on Synodality. This implementation phase creates space and a timeline for local churches to begin the process of integrating the Synod’s conclusions and proposals in their own contexts. The implementation phase also creates opportunities to assess the reception of that integration before another global assembly at the Vatican in late 2028.
As the global Church begins implementing the Synod’s conclusions and proposals, many communities- including those highlighted in our Pentecost Project- have already been journeying together in the spirit of synodality in a variety of beautiful ways. These communities offer a valuable witness to the entire People of God about what is possible when communities discern the call of the Spirit together.
Over a series of several panel discussions FutureChurch will create space for these communities to share their synodal principles and practices with us, that we might all benefit from their prophetic styles of liturgy, leadership, discernment and decision making, community building, and living the Gospel in the world.
The first program in the series- Prophetic Styles of Liturgy- will take place on May 27th at 7:00pm. The program will feature a panel discussion that will highlight the liturgical celebrations of four different communities:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| June 5, 2025 | 7:00pm ET |
|
|
Synodality and Queer Theology: An Exploration
|
|
|
|
|
Join FutureChurch as we kick off our Pride Month series with a presentation from Ish Ruiz, Ph.D. on the connections between synodality and queer theology.
Dr. Ish Ruiz is an assistant professor of Latinx and Queer Decolonial Theology at Pacific School of Religion and holds a PhD in Theology and Ethics from the Graduate Theological Union. He is also the coordinator of the Latinx Roundtable of the Center for LGBTQ+ and Gender Studies in Religion housed at PSR.
A native from Puerto Rico and a queer Catholic theologian, Ish’s research interests explore the intersection between Catholic moral theology, queer theology, Latinx theology, ecclesiology, sexual ethics, liberation, human rights, and Catholic education. He is the author of LGBTQ+ Educators in Catholic Schools: Embracing Synodality, Inclusivity, and Justice (Rowman & Littlefield, fall 2024) and a co-editor of Cornerstones: Sacred Stories of LGBTQ+ Employees in Catholic Institutions (New Ways Ministry, fall 2024). He has published several academic and public theology articles in the field of Catholic theological ethics and has ministered in Catholic schools and parishes on matters of LGBTQ+ and Latinx inclusion throughout the nation.
Prior to his appointment at the Pacific School of Religion, Ish was a post-doctoral fellow at Candler School of Theology at Emory University and an adjunct professor at the University of Dayton. He also worked at the secondary school level for 11 years, chaired the Marianist LGBTQ+ Initiative team, served as a union activist to protect the rights of LGBTQ+ Church employees, and presented in various pastoral conferences throughout the US. Through his teaching, research, and service, Ish hopes to see a world where Catholicism (and, more broadly, Christianity) embrace the diversity of gifts people of all ethno-racial backgrounds and sexual identities bring to society and the Church.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| June 12, 2025 | 7:00pm ET |
|
|
Responding to the ‘More’
|
|
|
|
|
Join FutureChurch we hear from Sr. Marian Durkin who will discuss her decades of experience ministering to and with the LGBTQ+ community.
Since leaving her role on the leadership Council of Sisters of Charity of Saint Augustine, Sr. Marian Durkin has been involved in a number of volunteer activities. She participates monthly in a prayer group at Edna House, a house for women in recovery based in Ignatian Spirituality. She co-facilitates an annual retreat for the LGBTQ+ community, which celebrated its 25th anniversary in 2024.
In the area of social justice, she initiated a JPIC (Justice, Peace and the Integration of Creation) group consisting of sisters from 6 different communities and a lay woman. The group has been meeting for more than 15 years and is engaged in prayer, education, and action around a variety of social justice issues. She also serves in the Social Action Ministry of her parish, The Cathedral of St. John, Cleveland.
She remains active in her opposition of the death penalty and in her support of the trans community. A volunteer on a number of boards she is grateful to have been able to serve on the board of Lakewood Catholic Academy for 20 years.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| The Stations of the Resurrection According to John |
|
|
|
|
|
| A Complete Visual Journey by Laura James |
|
|
Created by Laura James and commissioned by Rita Houlihan, The Station of the Resurrection According to John 24x36 print offers a comprehensive visual journey through the pivotal moments following Christ's Resurrection. The thoughtfully designed compilation presents all ten stations in a single, elegant format, allowing viewers to contemplate the entire Easter narrative at once.
Each station is meticulously rendered with attention to theological detail and artistic beauty, creating a meaningful tool for personal devotion or liturgical education. From the Empty Tomb to Pentecost, the print guides the viewer through Christ's appearances and the birth of the early Church.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| September 5-7 | West Hartford, Connecticut | New Ways Ministry |
|
| The Path of Desire: Adventures in Spirituality; A Retreat for LGBTQ+ People, Family, Friends, Pastoral Ministers, and All |
|
|
New Ways Ministry is sponsoring a retreat for EVERYBODY — LGBTQ+ people, family, friends, and pastoral ministers, and all interested people. Entitled The Path of Desire: Adventures in Spirituality, the retreat will be held Friday to Sunday, September 5-7, 2025, at Holy Family Passionist Retreat Center, 303 Tunxis Road, West Hartford, Connecticut. The retreat will be facilitated by Lisa Fullam, D.V.M., Th.D., professor emerita of moral theology at the Jesuit School of Theology of Santa Clara University. This retreat will explore spiritualities of desire—spiritualities that seek God in the longings of our hearts and the yearnings of our imaginations. The weekend will combine talks, small group discussions, silent meditation, communal prayer, and socializing.
Register and learn more here.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| We seek changes that will provide all Roman Catholics the opportunity to participate fully in Church life and leadership. |
|
|
FutureChurch is a national 501(c)(3) organization and your contribution is tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|