Justice Ministries of Lower Susquehanna Synod, ELCA

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Resources and events supporting Racial Justice, Immigration, Disability, LGBTQIA+ Affirming, Prison Outreach, Hunger, and Advocacy Ministries of the Lower Susquehanna Synod of the ELCA.

03/17/2026

by Rev. Wilfred Dimingu

15 Mar 2026

Justice is a word we hear often but trust less and less. It appears in speeches and policies, in slogans and protests, in church statements and prayer services. Yet for many people across the world, justice feels distant, delayed, denied, or distorted. For those displaced by conflict, crushed by debt, excluded by systems, or silenced by power, justice can feel like a promise always made but rarely kept. Lent dares us to ask the hard question: what does it mean to move closer to justice when justice itself seems so far away?

The prophet Micah answers with disarming simplicity: “What does the Lord require of you but to do justice and to love kindness and to walk humbly with your God (Micah 6:8)?” Justice here is not abstract. It is practical, relational, and embodied. It is something we do, something we love, something we walk into daily. Justice is not an optional addition to faith; it is integral to faithful living as a response to God’s covenantal relationship with God’s people.

Amos goes even further, unsettling our comfort. Speaking to a deeply religious society, he delivers God’s shocking words: “I hate, I despise your festivals… But let justice roll down like water and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream” (Amos 5:21, 24). The problem is not worship itself, but worship disconnected from justice. Songs are sung, sacrifices offered, prayers lifted, yet exploitation continues: the poor are ignored, and the vulnerable are crushed. Amos reminds us that God is not moved by religious performance when injustice remains untouched.

Right relationships

These texts confront a temptation still alive today: to draw closer to God while keeping a safe distance from the suffering of others. Lent exposes this illusion. We cannot walk humbly with God while stepping over those denied dignity. We cannot love kindness in theory while systems of cruelty remain unchallenged. We cannot pray sincerely for God’s kingdom while remaining indifferent to or unexamined about the ways our lives may participate in unjust structures.

Justice, in Scripture, is never only about fairness; it is about right relationship with God and with one another within the covenant community. It asks whether communities reflect God’s intention for life together, whether the strong do not dominate the weak, whether resources serve the common good, and whether every person is treated as bearing God’s image. Biblical justice is restorative, not merely punitive. It seeks healing, not revenge. It aims to repair what has been broken and to restore those pushed to the margins.

Across the world, churches live with the daily realities Amos and Micah describe. Some worship amid war and displacement. Others serve communities fractured by economic inequality, climate disasters, racism, or political repression. Still others struggle within societies marked by excess consumerism and quiet despair. These contexts differ, but the call is shared: to let justice flow, not stagnate; to let righteousness move, and not remain trapped in words.

The work of justice is often slow and costly. It may mean speaking out when silence feels safer, sharing when scarcity tempts hoarding, or listening when we would rather explain. It requires humility, the willingness to learn from those whose suffering we do not carry, and to acknowledge that we may sometimes benefit, knowingly or unknowingly from unjust systems in society. Lent does not offer quick solutions, but it forms patient disciples willing to stay close to the cross, where God confronts injustice not through domination but through the self-giving love revealed in Christ.

Reshaping our priorities

To move closer to justice during Lent is to allow our practices to reshape our priorities. Prayer becomes attentiveness to cries we once ignored. Fasting becomes resistance to excess that depends on others’ deprivation. Assisting people in need becomes solidarity, not charity, standing with, not merely giving to, while remembering that generosity flows from God’s grace toward us. Worship becomes a place where truth is told, and courage renewed for life beyond the sanctuary.

As the cross draws nearer, Lent asks us: Where is justice being withheld in our context? Whose voices are missing from our tables and decisions? What must change in our lives, churches, and communities for justice to flow more freely? These are not questions for experts alone. They belong to every baptized person walking the way of Christ.

This week, may we take one concrete step closer to justice — in our homes, our churches, our societies. May we let God’s demand unsettle us, and God’s promise sustain us. And may justice, by God’s grace, begin to roll through us, beyond us, and toward a world longing for healing.

01/02/2026

Welcome! You are invited to join a meeting: CPR Protocol for All/ Elliot & Lynn. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email about joining the meeting.

I want to invite white Christians like me to go on a pilgrimage.Drew Hart’s “Making It Plain”will be a hard read for man...
09/04/2025

I want to invite white Christians like me to go on a pilgrimage.

Drew Hart’s “Making It Plain”will be a hard read for many of us—and that is precisely why it is important. I hope we can read it in the spirit of James Alison’s description of original sin as the “joy of being wrong.”

The “joy of being wrong” is the grace that comes when our illusions are shattered. We would rather see ourselves as innocent, righteous, and on the right side of history. But the Spirit exposes our self-deception—not to condemn us, but to set us free. For white Christians, that means we can let go of our defensiveness, our need to be the hero, and our claims to innocence. In their place, we discover the deeper joy of repentance and the liberation of joining God’s justice-making work.

Drew writes out of the deep wells of the Black church and Anabaptism. He names the gifts of these traditions—and their flaws. He is able to hold together both the beauty and the ugly without flinching.

This kind of honesty is not easy. We do not like to see ourselves as complicit with evil. My own tradition, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, began in 1988 with the explicit goal of becoming a more diverse church. By the year 2000, we hoped that at least 10% of our membership would be people of color or people whose first language was not English. Yet now, nearly forty years later, we remain the whitest mainline denomination in the United States.

And still, I know there are gifts in my tradition. Growing up, we confessed together: “We are in bo***ge to sin and cannot free ourselves.” That is radically honest. In the absolution, we proclaimed the God of the Exodus, the One who forgives, renews, and leads us, so that we may delight in God’s will and walk in God’s ways.

Drew invites people like me onto a pilgrimage:

• From teacher → to student

• From telling the story → to listening to the story

• From needing to be the hero → to facing our history of “lording it over others”

• From clinging to innocence → to unlearning innocence

• From pointing out biblical characters’ flaws → to asking how we repeat them

• From “just us” → to a Christlike justice that makes things right

• From being a puppet of empire → to being a prophet of the kingdom

• From following Plantation Jesus → to following the Genuine Jesus

• From needing to be supreme and on top → to following the way of Jesus through kenosis

• From Christendom → to practicing Christ’s way in the Gospels

This pilgrimage includes the joy of being wrong. It is the joy of realizing: I didn’t see clearly. I misunderstood. I was complicit. And now, God is opening my eyes to something more life-giving.

That is the gift of this book. “Making it Plain: Why We NEED Anabaptism and the Black Church” by Drew G.I. Hart is a hard truth, but a liberating one. I hope we receive it with humility, honesty, and courage.

08/27/2025

REGISTER TODAY! “See Me, Believe Me” by Rev. Dr. Yolanda Denson-Byers is the focus of a national book club and prayer celebration as the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries prepare to welcome leaders of color into their most visible leadership positions.

This book study is held every Thursday at 9am PST / 12pm EST from September 4 through October 9. We will PRAY for them and EMPOWER ourselves for supportive action, while building joyful community. You don't want to miss these stories, surprise special guests, and valuable skill build tips!

REGISTER HERE (IT'S FREE!!!): https://hubs.li/Q03FQxc60

Sponsored and made possible by White Lutherans for Racial Justice, Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries, Delaware-Maryland Synod ELCA, Lower Susquehanna Synod ELCA, and Augsburg Fortress.

08/27/2025

We are excited to announce that this fall we are offering a 4 week book study with one of our board members, Pastor Matthew Best! Together, we will be diving into “The God Who Sees” by Rev. Karen Gonzalez! We will meet online, every Thursday at 7 PM from September 11- October 2! To register, use the link below!

https://tree4hope.networkforgood.com/events/90334-tree-4-hope-book-study

We are excited to meet you there!

08/27/2025

As the ELCA prepares to welcome and support our new Presiding Bishop-elect and Secretary, who are leaders of color, this is a valuable resource for White allies.

We give thanks for Yolanda Denson-Byer's wisdom and her generosity in sharing it with the church and the world. Check out an interview she did with Living Lutheran and discern how you can make this book and its message a part of the conversation in your own context.

Interview link: https://www.livinglutheran.org/2024/10/necessary-soul-work/

08/27/2025

The first time I voted was a few months into the COVID-19 pandemic. Everything about that day felt strange. I remember standing six feet behind my mother, the first woman who taught me the importance of voting. We walked into the old Presbyterian church I had driven past my whole life but never ente...

08/27/2025

Mark your calendar as we look ahead towards September, as we will kick off the month with our push against political targeting and bullying of our trans siblings and neighbors.

Lawmakers across the country have been trying to pass laws targeting trans people. Though none of these bills have passed yet in Pennsylvania, there is no knowing how long that trend will last.

This political targeting puts real people at risk and is a prime example of political bullying. If the bullying starts in the legislature, it must stop there too. That’s why we’re pressuring lawmakers in Pennsylvania to stop writing and voting for these bullying laws.

We want our lawmakers to know that votes on anti-trans bills like SB9 are a vote for discrimination and political targeting.

Join us to write postcards to lawmakers on Friday, September 5th and Sunday, September 7th, 3:00-7:00pm at Penn Square and Buchanan Park.

08/27/2025

“Now is the time to lift our national policy from the quicksand of racial injustice to the solid rock of human dignity.”
— Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Enjoy and share this One World poster as we honor the anniversary of the 1963 March on Washington this week.
https://lfj.pub/mlk-poster-spring2018

08/27/2025

A current bipartisan housing reform bill can make a difference with sustainable solutions that address root causes of housing insecurity and homelessness. Please communicate with your lawmakers your convictions and experiences to bring these solutions forward! https://give.elca.org/page/87088/action/1?chain
Lutheran Disaster Response

08/22/2025

The Season of Creation 2025 is just around the corner! Find out how you and your community can engage in this global movement and engage in advocacy and witness calling for peace with creation! https://conta.cc/4fFq9zy

Also! Send us your pictures of creation to help us fill our timelines with the beauty of peace in and with God's good creation! ELCA Advocacy Lutherans Restoring Creation

Lower Susquehanna Synod ELCA Upper Susquehanna Synod, ELCA Allegheny Synod 8C Northwestern PA Synod, ELCA Northeastern Pennsylvania Synod - NEPA, ELCA Southeastern Pennsylvania Synod (SEPA), ELCA SWPA Lutheran Synod Northwestern PA Synod Green Team

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Colonial Park, PA
17109

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