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This month FutureChurch is proud to celebrate organizations that support LGBTQIA+ persons in the Church and beyond. This week's Profile in Holy Courage is Global Network of Rainbow Catholics.
About GNRC:
"When Pope Francis announced an extraordinary global bishop’s synod on the family, he also inspired LGBT Catholics and their families to organize themselves on a global level. The GNRC originated in Rome, Italy, on October 3, 2014, by a group of LGBT+ Catholic and ally leaders who had gathered there for 'Ways of Love' – an international theological conference on LGBT people and the Church which was organized by the European Forum of LGBT Christian Groups.
One year later, the GNRC was founded in Rome in October 2015 by more than twenty LGBT+ communities from all over the world. After two years of hard work, GNRC was legally established in December 2017, when 32 groups formally ratified and adopted its Constitution and Internal Regulations in Munich- Dachau. Since then, GNRC has worked to increase its capacity, add new members and keep working for full LGBTIQ inclusion in the Catholic Church, which includes three extraordinary Assemblies – Rome (Italy, 2015), Dachau (Germany, 2017) and Chicago (USA, 2019) – and Mexico City (Mexico, 2022). Today GNRC comprises 45 member groups and 6 Associate members from around the world." (This information was found on the GNRC "About" webpage. You can read more here!)
Thank you, Global Network of Rainbow Catholics, for standing up for diversity, inclusion, and equality around the world!
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June 15, 2025 | Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity
Today Shalom Kristanugraha invites us to explore Wisdom as a someone, not a commodified thing we acquire; engage Catholic thinkers on how we meet and encounter wisdom; and embody wisdom with silence.
"What our reading from Proverbs reveals is that wisdom is not something. Wisdom is no thing at all. In the words of the ancient poet, Wisdom is shown to us personified – as someone. Someone present before the existence of form, before even the form of existence itself. Wisdom precedes our being and lies beyond any thinkable container. It cannot be sold, traded, or hoarded. "
Shalom Kristanugraha is a third culture kid originally from Indonesia, passionate about spiritual formation, outdoor education, and existential exploration. While coming from a Protestant background, Shalom developed a soft spot for Catholicism while studying at Union Theological Seminary and meeting some really rad Catholics. Shalom holds a Master’s in Divinity from Union, a Master’s in Environmental Philosophy from the University of Montana, and has worked with various faith groups, denominations, and churches in various capacities. Currently based in North Carolina, Shalom spends their days outfitting people with various watercraft for paddling adventures, slinging sandwiches, and gardening.
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June 15, 2025
Preaching for Trinity Sunday, Madeline Marlett offers a reflection on the tension between suffering and hope and the call to co-create a world where love, acceptance, and the fullness of divine truth can flourish for all:
"The role of the Holy Spirit here is to continuously bring that enlightened truth into the world as the world is ready for it. Just think what more good news is there to discover ahead of us all if we just make room for it! So let us take this Sunday to remind ourselves that we are the hands of the Divine; we can shape a future driven by hope; that the Divine truths that were too vast for our reality will, in time, grow truly unbounded into eternity."
Madeline Marlett (She/Her/Hers) is an LGBTQIA+ activist with a special focus on the intersection of LGBTQIA+ identities and faith identities. As Co-Chair of the DignityUSA Young Adult Caucus, she works to create space for young adults to find queer affirmation and safety in an expansive Catholic context. Originally from the west coast, she now calls Boston, MA home and enjoys rock climbing, hiking, baking and growing community.
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| FutureChurch's Pride 2025 Series: Queer Theology, Ministry, and Joy |
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This June, join FutureChurch on Thursday evenings at 7pm ET for a special 2025 Pride Month series celebrating the sacredness of LGBTQ+ lives and experiences. Each week, we’ll dive into meaningful conversations that bring together deep theological insight, real stories from ministry, and the rich intersections of queerness with race, gender, and class. We’ll wrap up the month with a panel of folks sharing their own witness to queer joy—bold, beautiful, and unapologetically authentic. Come learn, connect, and celebrate with us!
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| June 19, 2025 | 7:00pm ET |
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Week 3: Already the Church: The Prophetic Witness of Queer Catholics and Catholics of Color
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Join FutureChurch for this empowering presentation by Teresa Thompson.
Too often, the immense spiritual wisdom, examplary ministry, and prophetic leadership embodied by queer Catholics and Catholics of color goes unrecognized by the institutional Church. Yet, these gifts are real, vital, and deeply transformational—whether or not they receive official acknowledgment.
In her presentation, Teresa Thompson will explore what it means to shift away from asking for inclusion or representation and instead move toward claiming space within our faith tradition and our Church. Drawing from her own personal experiences in a Catholic Lesbians ministry and from the work of Black writers influenced by Catholic thought—creators whose work is theologically powerful even if they’re not labeled "theologians"—Thompson will reflect on how the Spirit moves in and through overlooked places and people.
Finally, just as Juneteenth marks an ongoing recommitment to the truth of freedom already preclaimed but not yet fully realized, Teresa will invite us all to recommit to honoring the truth of the sacredness of queer Catholics and Catholics of color.
Teresa Thompson is a Catholic writer based in Brooklyn, NY. Her work has been published by Geez Magazine, FutureChurch, Catholic Women Preach, and Ignatian Solidarity Network and can additionally be read on her Substack, Liturgy of the Ours. Teresa is also a Bernardin Scholar at Catholic Theological Union and a board member of the Metro NY chapter of Call To Action, and serves as part of the Catholic Lesbians ministry at the Church of Saint Francis Xavier. Originally hailing from the Caribbean and Ireland, Teresa worked in New York City’s public mental health system for seven years before founding her private practice, where she specializes in providing psychotherapy for complex trauma and religious trauma. She loves being a friend, sister, daughter, wife, and mother.
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| June 26, 2025 | 7:00pm ET |
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Week 4: A Celebration of Queer Faith, Love, and Joy
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Join FutureChurch as we conclude our Pride Month series with this moving panel!
To conclude our 2025 Pride Month Series, FutureChurch has invited a dynamic panel of guests to reflect and share on their experiences of faith, love, and joy.
Nick Fagnant, MEd, MATM (he/him) is a queer theologian, Ignatian educator, and public scholar committed to justice, relationality, and belonging in Catholic education. A PhD student in Theology and Education at Boston College’s Clough School of Theology and Ministry, his research integrates Ignatian spirituality, LGBTQ+ perspectives, and critical pedagogy to advance theological education rooted in solidarity and human flourishing. Nick will moderate the panel.
Ariell Watson Simon is a healthcare chaplain living in central Missouri. She entered the Catholic Church in 2011 as an undergraduate student at Loyola University Maryland, and later received a Master of Divinity from Boston College School of Theology and Ministry. Ariell has served as a healthcare chaplain in hospitals and nursing facilities in three states. She regularly contributes to New Ways Ministry's blog and coordinates FutureChurch's Sunday evening online liturgy and faith sharing. Ariell enjoys offering spiritual direction, writing, and fostering a theological imagination for an inclusive Church.
Rachelle Simon is the Executive Director of United Way of Pettis County in her hometown of Sedalia, Missouri. Rachelle returned home to take this role after a 20 year absence. During that time, she was formed by Catholic Higher education, receiving her Bachelor's degree from Rockhurst College, master’s in counseling from Villanova University, and Masters of Divinity from Boston College. She has a professional background in counseling, higher education, non-profit work, and Catholic campus ministry. Rachelle is a member of the board of Bethlehem Farm, a Catholic community in West Virginia. She believes in the power of people working together to support one another and improve the lives of all. In her personal time, Rachelle enjoys cooking, hiking, and spending time with family.
Maryn Hakes (they/them or ze/zir), is a queer, trans nonbinary person and practicing Catholic. In both their paid and volunteer work, they are active at the intersection of faith and queerness and engaged in justice and liberation work. They also enjoy knitting/crocheting, gardening, and getting outside to enjoy creation.
Andy Buechel-Rieger, PhD, is Associate Professor of Religious Studies in the Liberal Arts department at Mount St. Joseph University in Cincinnati. His work focusing on the Catholic dogmatic tradition and how LGBTQ experience and thought can bring new insights. He and his husband, Stephen, live with their son, dog, and canary in Ohio.
Ed Buechel received his undergraduate degree from Xavier University and his law degree from the University of Kentucky. He has practiced law in Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky since 1977 and is currently in the process of retiring. Ed and his wife, Kathy, live in Edgewood, KY, and love and are very proud of all of their children, grandchildren, and in-laws. Ed has served on the Board of Fortunate Families for over 10 years and is currently its President. He also facilitates Catholics Embracing ALL God’s Children, a support group for LGBTQ+ individuals and allies in Northern Kentucky. Ed and Kathy are active participants in many LGBTQ+ events, working to create a loving, supportive place for LGBTQ+ individuals within the Catholic Church. Ed also serves as Chairman of the Board of St. Charles Community, a nonprofit supporting seniors in Northern Kentucky.
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| Pentecost Project Highlight |
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Community of St. Peter Seeks to Preserve and Renew a Living Tradition
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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...
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| Looking Ahead to the Feast of St. Mary Magdalene |
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| July 17, 2025 | 7:00pm ET |
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2025 Mary Magdalene Presentation with Dr. Mary Coloe, PBVM
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Join FutureChurch for this annual tradition of highlighting scholarship about Mary Magdalene!
Based on her expert analysis on the Gospel of John in the Wisdom Commentary series, Dr. Mary Coloe, PBVM will present on what we would gain if we were to proclaim all of John 20:1-18 on Easter Sunday morning.
Dr. Mary L. Coloe, a member of the Presentations Sisters of Victoria, is professor of New Testament at Yarra Theological Union, a college of the University of Divinity in Melbourne. Mary taught for over twenty years at Australian Catholic University and also at Boston College, the Jesuit School of Theology in Berkeley, and in Jerusalem. Mary has written many academic publications on the Gospel of John, as well as books to help parents and teachers, such as A Friendly Guide to John, The Two Hands of God, and A Friendly Guide to the Birth of Jesus. Mary has also written an introduction to the Johannine literature for the new revised edition of the Jerome Biblical Commentary.
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Mary of Magdala Celebration Planning Guides
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In 1997, FutureChurch launched an international campaign to restore St. Mary of Magdala to her rightful place as the apostle to the apostles, asking supporters to sponsor special celebrations on or around July 22 at which a biblical expert would trace Mary’s unparalleled fidelity in accompanying Jesus through crucifixion, death, burial and resurrection. This would be followed by a prayer service at which a woman would preside, preach and encourage attendees to reflect on their own encounters with, and witness to, the risen Christ.
Annual celebrations of St. Mary of Magdala exploded after that, going from 23 that first year, to 150 the following year to between 250 to 400 celebrations worldwide in each year since. Every summer, thousands of women and men help correct an egregious injustice done to a great woman leader in our church.
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| July 22, 2025 | 7:00pm ET |
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2025 Mary Magdalene Celebration: Women Speaking Truth to Power
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Join FutureChurch our annual celebration of the Feast of St. Mary Magdalene.
This year, we will prayerfully uplift the voices and celebrate the witness of women who, following in the footsteps of Mary Magdalene, are speaking truth to power. We'll hear the prophetic words of women who are speaking out to both society and the Church about a variety of justice and human rights issues. This year, we are honored to welcome Sr. Eilis McCulloh, HM, of NETWORK – the Catholic social justice lobby – who will be our guest preacher.
Sr. Eilis McCulloh is a member of the Sisters of the Humility of Mary (Villa Maria, PA) and currently serves on the Grassroots Mobilization Team at NETWORK Lobby for Catholic Social Justice. She is a frequent contributor to Global Sisters Report and is also a co-host of the Just Politics podcast. She currently serves on her religious community’s JPIC and Racial Justice Committees.
Prior to joining the staff at NETWORK, she spent more than 10 years ministering in refugee resettlement and immigration services in St. Cloud, MN, Akron, OH, and Cleveland, OH.
Sr. Eilis holds a BA from Westminster College (New Wilmington, PA), an MA in Theology from John Carroll University (University Heights, OH), and a JD from the University of Akron-School of Law.
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| The Stations of the Resurrection According to John |
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| A Complete Visual Journey by Laura James |
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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.
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| We seek changes that will provide all Roman Catholics the opportunity to participate fully in Church life and leadership. |
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FutureChurch is a national 501(c)(3) organization and your contribution is tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law.
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