HOME
WE ARE DISCIPLES
Regional Life Regional Staff Contact Make a Gift Week of Compassion General Church BLOG
REGIONAL MINISTRIES
African-American Ministries All Peoples Community Center AllianceQ Chapman University Church Relations Disaster Recovery Ministry Disciples Seminary Foundation Eastmont Community Center Hispanic Convención NAPAD (N. American Pacific Asian Disciples) Older Adult Ministries Pro-Reconciliation Anti-Racism Ministry Project Impact Young Adult Ministries Youth Ministry
CONGREGATIONS
Find a PSWR Congregation General Church Resources Grants & Scholarships Missions & Advocacy Publicize Your Event Prayer Calendar 2025
CLERGY
Clergy Training Continuing Education DOC Lectionary Grants & Scholarships Pulpit Supply Search & Call General Church Resources Publicize Your Event Theological Foundations for Ministry
CALENDAR
EVENTS
Upcoming Regional Events Winter & Summer Camps for Youth Regional Assembly 2024 Highlights PSWR Photo Gallery

Christian Church | Pacific Southwest Region

HOME
WE ARE DISCIPLES
Regional Life Regional Staff Contact Make a Gift Week of Compassion General Church BLOG
REGIONAL MINISTRIES
African-American Ministries All Peoples Community Center AllianceQ Chapman University Church Relations Disaster Recovery Ministry Disciples Seminary Foundation Eastmont Community Center Hispanic Convención NAPAD (N. American Pacific Asian Disciples) Older Adult Ministries Pro-Reconciliation Anti-Racism Ministry Project Impact Young Adult Ministries Youth Ministry
CONGREGATIONS
Find a PSWR Congregation General Church Resources Grants & Scholarships Missions & Advocacy Publicize Your Event Prayer Calendar 2025
CLERGY
Clergy Training Continuing Education DOC Lectionary Grants & Scholarships Pulpit Supply Search & Call General Church Resources Publicize Your Event Theological Foundations for Ministry
CALENDAR
EVENTS
Upcoming Regional Events Winter & Summer Camps for Youth Regional Assembly 2024 Highlights PSWR Photo Gallery

DSF Update, May 2023

Disciples Seminary Foundation (DSF) has undergone a number of significant changes in the past few years but continues to fulfill its mission “to support the formation of emerging theological leaders” seeking to be theologically informed and spiritually grounded for the church and a variety of communities they serve.

DSF awards tuition-based scholarships to Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) and United Church of Christ students who attend one of the DSF’s partner schools. As we look to a new academic year, 2023-2024, DSF partner schools will include Claremont School of Theology, soon to be located in a portion of the historic Westwood United Methodist Church in Los Angeles; Iliff School of Theology located in Denver; and Pacific School of Religion located in Berkeley. 

In this graduation season, DSF has eight seminary and doctoral graduates, 28 Certificate of Ministry Studies (CMS) graduates, and eight Diploma of Ministry Studies (DMS) graduates. You may see photos from these celebrations on our social media pages, and you can also read about all our graduates in our upcoming Graduate Newsletter, which will be published later this summer.

In the months ahead, we will continue to get things in order as we prepare for new executive leadership. With new leadership comes the possibility for new vision. Because I know how significant DSF has been in the lives of many since its formation 62 years ago, I am excited and ready to see what the future holds for us. As I prepare to finish my call as Interim Executive Director of DSF, I say thank you. Thank you for this call and the confidence that the gifts and skills needed to move DSF forward were embedded in this call. 

Much heart,

Rev. Belva Brown Jordan
Interim Executive Director

PostedMay 24, 2023
AuthorAlisa Mittelstaedt
CommentPost a comment

Global Ministries Southern California News

The Covid pandemic altered worship and meetings for most everyone.  Recently, our Global Ministries Southern California Team met to discuss updates with our identified mission partners and set some future goals. 

We hope some regional churches enjoyed a visit from Jeffrey Mensendiak reporting about his life in Japan and the ongoing recovery of more than ten years since the Sendai earthquake and Fukushima nuclear disaster.  We welcome your posts from those who met with Jeffrey!

In the coming year, we hope to visit at least one of our mission partners in Tijuana.  All are welcome.  One partner, Albergue Las Memorias, a shelter for people living with addictions and HIV, protected their residents quite well during the Covid pandemic.  Tuberculosis is a problem in Tijuana and especially for high-risk populations.  The newly built tuberculosis clinic at Las Memorias is now in active use.  There are additional migrant mission projects in Tijuana that some of our regional churches have been involved with.  "Room for All" has inspired practical member support for the past few years, providing beds and basics to those in need.

Our Team supported DOC Missionary Paul Turner in the Democratic Republic of the Congo for several years.  Projects in the Congo included more than 200 pairs of eyeglasses being distributed; election monitoring; and advocating for regional pygmy populations to receive healthcare, as well as projects to help increase economic livelihoods for citizens.

Prior to the Covid pandemic, our Team arranged an annual work trip, generally to Central America.  Plans are being made for this annual trip to proceed in early 2024, either to Cuba, Central America, or Ecuador.

Plans are also underway for a pilgrimage to the Holy Land in the Fall of 2024.  With recent political changes, Palestinian and Israeli tensions are higher than in the past 20 years, with violent conflicts occurring.  We partner with Churches for Peace in the Middle East, as well as other Israeli and Palestinian organizations working for peace.  Our hope is to share educational sources with regional churches as we prepare for a trip of witness and advocacy.  Watch for more to come!

Our next virtual meeting will be on Wed, April 26th at 10 am.  Join us by writing to revnbacon@gmail.com for access to the meeting link.

PostedApril 6, 2023
AuthorAlisa Mittelstaedt
1 CommentPost a comment

Breaking Bread, Spring 2023

“Invitation to Prayer.” 

I wonder if you’re feeling some of the same, a rebound (sports term).  As I have returned to in-person meetings, visits, and speaking engagements, across the region and beyond, I’m being asked more and more about how are congregations fairing in this “post-pandemic” period. This is a difficult question, because, it should be couched with, where was the community pre-pandemic?  What was its response amid the pandemic? Were the needed changes addressed for the health, and future of the congregation?  Many of our congregations adapted, and others implemented hybrid approaches. A variety of mixed strategies and efforts have had measures of growth in attendance and ministry reach (online and in-person).  But this has not been every congregation’s experience. We are responding prayerfully and faithfully to an increase in calls for assistance. 

I believe there is a rebound, but I would characterize it as a sense of urgency to the recovering of what has seemed to have been missed in our past effort/s.  Those of us who are familiar with the sports term might be able to visualize, lots of people in the paint (court) rushing for the ball to put it back in the play or in the hoop.  The rush or sense of urgency does not always provide the best results.  Although, someone out there (a basketball enthusiast) may have a percentile to contest this notion.

Since I was installed as your Regional Minister, I have not stopped “working hard to ably break open this new season and chapter, which promises to continue strengthening our region’s ministry for many years to come.”  We are seeing the fruits of this labor, and hope these will reap a harvest for us all. I appreciate many of our clergy, and leaders, who remind us to “Arise, Anew.” As we look to learn, develop, and respond to our congregation’s new/er needs. We also seek as well to live more faithfully our regional life, together.  More to come.  I invite us all, more earnestly, to this season of prayer for each other.  Here is our prayer calendar.

On Saturday, April 1, 2023, Clergy, leaders, and churches joined together, at the invitation of Abundant Life Christian Church in an annual Community Prayer Breakfast. Several of our pastors (Rev. Dr. Darrell Haley, Pastor Ronnie Taylor, and Rev. Eddie Anderson) offered prayers for:

-       the healing and wholeness of the world and international relationships,

-       the healing and wholeness of the minds, bodies, and spirits, and

-       the healing and wholeness of our communities and church.

Rev. Dr. Lisa Tunstall was the invited speaker, and charged the clergy and congregations present, as well as the African American Convocation (she presides), and our Pacific Southwest Region to “a consistent faith and persistent prayers.”

I would like to share with you the following beautiful invocation, prayed at this event, written, and offered by Rev. Sadie Cullumber.  May it be our open opening, and continuing of this season of prayers:  

God of the ancestors,

We come before you this morning with seeking and searching hearts. We come to you as we stand at the edge of newness, the edge of change, the edge of a new way, a new possibility in this world. Our hearts are tired, worn, beaten, broken, and yet, they are open. Our hearts are open, God. And we can feel you, your spirit moving in us, weaving us together as your people, your body. We can feel it, like a whisper, a soft breath.

We call your spirit into this space, we ask you to rise in each one of us today and every day, as we do your will. God we are still recovering as a whole world from so much trauma, so much isolation, so much abuse and harm. And God you know that this trauma is ancient. It is trauma born of violence, abuse, neglect and on and on and on, God.

But as your people, in the face of all this evil, we choose to gather in prayer and communion. We choose to join our hearts that are broken but wide open; we choose to lift up our voices in song and in prayer; we choose to place our vision on hope; we choose to reach out and reach in to find ourselves and one another. We choose to jump right into the living waters that surround us, that are offered to us in love and peace by your precious son, Jesus the Christ.

God we invite your Holy Spirit into this sacred space, this sacred moment. We feel our strong and aching hearts soften as you envelop us with your living waters. And we lay down our weapons, our pain, our anger, and our rage for a few moments as we are held in the lap of your generous spirit. In the peace of these moments, we remember to breathe and to connect to our bodies and to our spirits in the sacredness of breath. In these moments of peace, we are restored and renewed for the work.

We give thanks to you for all of it—for a moment to stand in the sun, faces upturned and hearts open; we give thanks for the lessons we are learning so that we can be your people, even when those lessons are hard; we give thanks for our own bodies that carry us through; we give thanks for the beautiful bodies that surround us and for the spirits too. We give thanks for the ancestors who came before and who are here now, an assembly of the Saints, encouraging us and believing in us, moving in us. We give thanks, we give thanks, we give thanks!!!  Amen and amen.”[1] 

Let us prayerfully, “Arise, Anew.” 

Blessings,
Richie

[1] Cullumber, Rev. Sadie. Invocation Prayer, Abundant Life Christian Church Community Prayer Breakfast, Carson, CA, April 1, 2023.

PostedApril 6, 2023
AuthorAlisa Mittelstaedt
CommentPost a comment

Breaking Bread, Winter 2023

“Our World is a Neighborhood”

Happy New Year.

Our region will soon celebrate the life, and work of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. on January 22, 2023, at 4pm in the Disciples Ministry Center, Fullerton, CA.  It has been wonderful to hear his works, and ministry remembered in pulpits across our congregations and beyond.  Amid these, I highlight a reflection “A Man for Our Time” shared via Facebook by Rev. Brian Daly, Pastor of Pacific Beach Christian Church. Rev. Daly reflected on parts of Dr. King’s last Sunday morning sermon (March 31, 1968) Remaining Awake Through a Great Revolution.  

 Here is an excerpt: “Our world is a neighborhood. Through our scientific and technological genius, we have made of this world a neighborhood and yet … we have not had the ethical commitment to make of it a brotherhood.  But somehow, and in some way, we have got to do this.  We must all learn to live together as brothers. Or we will all perish together as fools.  We are tied together in the single garment of destiny, caught in an inescapable network of mutuality. And whatever affects one directly affects all indirectly.  For some strange reason I can never what I ought to be until you are what you ought to be. And you can never be what you ought to be until I am what I ought to be. This is the way God’s universe is made; this is the way it is structured.”[1]

As noted by Rev. Daly, this voice is still speaking to our time/s.  Amen.  Hence, Dr. King is still “a man for our time.”  I wonder if you hear and agree with this voice and vision for our time.  While the masculine terms might jar, in our time.  At heart we know that Dr. King’s vision engendered everyone.  Afterall, his words, “whatever affects one directly affects all indirectly.”  Some understand the world is changing. Indeed, science and technology has had it “become a neighborhood.”  I wonder if true for you, what has changed greater is you, and I.  We hope for the better.  Amid the changes, challenges, and complexities.  May we recover and renew the flame of our ethical commitments to bring about God’s reign, here and now.  Afterall, we proclaim it is among us.  It is in our daily living, work, effort, neighborhoods, and communities, together, we build and realize the beauty of God’s Kin-dom.  You, and I are important to make this world better for all.

Let us “Arise, Anew.” 

Grateful for Dr. King and for his works! 

Blessings,
Richie

[1] Washington, James Melvin. A Testament of Hope: The essential writings and speeches of Martin Luther King, Jr. Harper Collins, 1991. Pg. 269

PostedJanuary 20, 2023
AuthorAlisa Mittelstaedt
1 CommentPost a comment

Breaking Bread, Fall 2022

Assembling our Region on October 14 – 15, 2022, Fullerton, CA

 There is an air of anticipation blowing across our congregations.

 Our Region, like so many others, on the even years enjoys an assembly, it is where we come together, convening our congregations’ delegates for the purposes of conducting business, worship, education, fellowship and serving as a witness to the world. 

 In this Assembly, we concern ourselves with the question, How do we forge ahead, beyond gloom, and discover a new way forward? We need a light. We are being called to Arise Anew. Together, we will take time for business, create space for each other, become inspired by keynoters, and worship in ways we pray all will help us to Arise, Anew.  

 If you have not reported and submitted your voting delegate forms (due October 1, 2022). Please call the office and receive additional instructions.  There is still time to register online: https://events.r20.constantcontact.com/register/eventReg?oeidk=a07ejde5as72b6751d9&oseq=&c=&ch=

As a result of the pandemic, public health, and safety concerns we assembled and gathered (2020 – 2021), virtually. This year we are grateful to celebrate in a hybrid format, virtually, and in-person. Thank you in large part to the technological advances, and support of First Christian Church, Fullerton. PSWR Disciples will worship and be served in a virtual Regional audience as well as with in-person assembling. We will Arise, Anew.

 Too, as we look to the future, the vision and work of the General Board of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in the United States and Canada inspires our deeper covenant. It is raising the question, How We Do Church in a New Time and Place?  Here is a link to more information about the same: https://disciples.org/covenant-project/ 

 I would like to thank the many volunteers, talents, gifts, and efforts that came from our congregations. Our Region is filled with a beautiful array of diversities in culture, languages, music, worship, social and theological perspectives and much more. Many of these will be reflected in this upcoming Regional Gathering, October 14 – 15, 2022. It has been shaped together with you at heart and in mind.

 Once again, please register and attend, help us witness our strength and support the many efforts of our congregations. We are praying and working to Arise, Anew.

 Blessings,

Richie

PostedOctober 6, 2022
AuthorAlisa Mittelstaedt
CommentPost a comment
Newer / Older

 115 E. Wilshire Avenue, Fullerton CA 92832 • (626) 296-0385
The PSWR is a Regional Ministry of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ).