Moving to Action as Community through Intersectional Analysis

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Land Acknowledgment links:

https://elca.org/indigenous

Telling the truth about the lands we inhabit: https://www.livinglutheran.org/2021/11/48330/

https://resources.elca.org/ministries-of-diverse-cultures-and-communities/land-acknowledgement-guide/

https://native-land.ca/

Labor Acknowledgment link: https://www.diverseeducation.com/demographics/african-american/article/15108677/on-labor-acknowledgements-and-honoring-the-sacrifice-of-black-americans

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Join us as we move toward Creating Beloved Community: Healing Together. This session began with a brief devotion on grace before turning to the specifics of patriarchy and white supremacy.

Jen De Leon, ELCA Director for Racial Justice, and Mary Streufert, ELCA Director for Gender Justice and Women’s Empowerment, facilitated an interactive introductory session to a tool they developed to assist leaders across this church. Their Intersectional Analysis for Programs, Budgets, and Decisions is a guide for individuals and groups to use in order to prioritize marginalized communities.

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"Rarely, if ever, are any of us healed in isolation. Healing is an act of communion." -- bell hooks, All About Love

ELCA Coaching is collaborating with a variety of leaders as we discern where Spirit might be collectively calling us as people of faith. We began gathering online with faith leaders in March of 2020 to wrestle together with Being Church in a global pandemic, which transitioned over the summer of 2021 to Courageous Leadership, as COVID revealed our perceptions and misconceptions about most things in life. Jesus is our primary model as we move toward Creating Beloved Community: Healing Together, gathering each Wednesday to learn together and experiment in community with spiritual practices and focus areas.

We believe this is in attunement with our call as Christians from:

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To answer some commonly asked questions about these regular gatherings:

"Why are you still meeting?" "Don't become too familiar with loneliness. Community is a risk, but liberation depends on the collective. Who can you trust to hold you?" -- Cole Arthur Riley, author of Black Liturgies

"How can I prepare?" Beloved Community members pay attention and listen actively. We invite you to bring a spirit of curiosity and openness to these gatherings and to all aspects of your life. What are you noticing? Where is Spirit moving? How are you being invited to participate in the work God is already doing, especially outside the walls of the building where the church often gathers?
 
"What if I'm not a group person?" Beloved Community members take calculated risks. We invite you to take a small step outside your comfort zone and allow yourself to be seen and witnessed. We can almost guarantee that you will be pleasantly surprised by the loving, caring, and nurturing nature of community in this time together.