• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Mosaic MennonitesMosaic Mennonites

Missional - Intercultural - Formational

  • Home
  • About Us
    • Our History
    • Vision & Mission
    • Staff
    • Boards and Committees
    • Church & Ministry Directory
    • Mennonite Links
  • Media
    • Articles
    • Newsletters
    • Video
    • Audio
    • Bulletin Announcements
  • Resources
    • Conference Documents
    • Missional
    • Intercultural
    • Formational
    • Stewardship
    • Church Safety
    • Leaders’ Resources
    • Request a Speaker
    • Pastoral Openings
    • Job Openings
  • Give
    • Leadership Development Matching Gift
  • Events
    • Pentecost
    • Delegate Assembly
    • Faith & Life
    • Youth Event
    • Women’s Gathering
    • Conference Calendar
  • Mosaic Institute
  • Vibrant Mosaic
  • Contact Us
  • 繁體中文 (Traditional Chinese)
  • English
  • Việt Nam (Vietnamese)
  • Español (Spanish)
  • Indonesia (Indonesian)
  • Kreol ayisyen (Creole)

Articles

Called to Work for Justice and Amahoro

May 21, 2026 by Cindy Angela

CALL TO MINISTRY STORY
by Mukarabe Makinto-Inandava

The story of my vocation begins in my childhood. I was just three years old when my father died. All I know of him comes through my mother’s stories—how he was a community organizer and an advocate for justice, and how he dreamed of building a school where every child, especially girls, could learn for free.

I was the youngest of seven siblings. After my father’s death, one of my brothers and two sisters were forced to drop out of school, and I was expected to stay home too. But my mother sent me to school anyway. I faced bullying and hardship, but I was living a dream my father once had.

My mother was a woman of few words but modeled community care. She raised not only us, but many children from the village—especially those born out of marriage or abandoned. Everything we had, we shared with others.

My heart was constantly angry. I grew up physically fighting for justice for me and other orphans, longing for my father’s protection. I saw how some of my siblings had to marry terrible people. I couldn’t understand why God was allowing this misery.

With mama’s encouragement, I went to university and got a job with USAID. But the 1993 genocide against the Tutsis broke out in Burundi and everything changed. Working at USAID gave me shelter and a chance to help others, but it also exposed me to deep divisions and hatred I hadn’t fully understood. A senior colleague yelled at me: “you, evil Tutsis, you killed our president!” My mother had never told me I was a Tutsi.

Then I understood how deep was the division and hate that colonizers had sowed and I was angry. A senior colleague who was a mother had just called me and all Tutsis murderers. That was not right; that was not the compassion my mother modeled; it was not the vision my father had to educate all the children in my community.

I realized I couldn’t stay. If I did, I might have to join the army and die. The country I wanted to build had betrayed me. I fled to Kenya with a friend, without papers and a little money in my pocket. I saw a job ad for the UN. I barely knew how to use a computer, but God made a way. I got the job, and suddenly I was organizing humanitarian aid for Hutu refugees—many who had planned or participated in the massacre of one million Tutsi in Rwanda in 1994. My heart revolted, but I heard my mother’s voice: Justice is for everyone. Remember your father’s vision. Help when you can.

From then on, I found myself in one space after another working for justice—from Madagascar to the U.S., working for the UN and advocating for girls orphaned by conflict and HIV. But I carried my anger like a shield until God led me and my husband to a small Nigerian church in New York. I came just to worship and sing. But little by little, I started hearing the Word, and it began to change me. Eventually my husband and I both accepted Christ.

One day I received a phone call saying that my mother had died. My infant son was peacefully sleeping upstairs and my husband was away. I felt completely alone. A helpless orphan.

But then I felt a presence—gentle but firm hands holding me from behind—and I heard a voice: You believed a lie. “I am your Father”. Say the word “Father.” I had never said that word in any language. After three attempts, I said it louder. In that moment, the Father of the fatherless began healing me. God opened doors so I could attend mama’s funeral with a message of God’s love for hundreds who came to say goodbye to a mother who exited as quietly as she had lived, yet whose legacy still impacts many.

A year later, my husband felt God calling us to missions. We gave away most of our belongings, bought a travel trailer, and moved with our three kids for 11 months across 14 Southern states, praising God with instruments, song, and dance wherever we went. God met us in miraculous ways—provision appeared whenever we were in need; prophetic words in Florida; racial reconciliation in Mississippi; healing in Texas.

Eventually, we settled in California, joining close relatives. We served at LA Faith Chapel. We took Anabaptist History classes with Jeff Wright at the Center for Anabaptist Leadership. I started working with Mennonite Central Committee West Coast representing non-traditional Mennonite Churches from the Pacific South Mennonite Conference. We started Amahoro International in 2000, now a Mosaic Conference-Related Ministry. Amahoro means “peace” in the Kinyarwanda and Kirundi languages. In 2016, we founded Amahoro Life Center in Uganda, a development project working with Burundian refugees.

I yearned for more opportunities to study, and that desire was answered as I moved to Harrisonburg, VA and joined Eastern Mennonite University as a Master in Conflict Transformation at the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding.

God’s calling in Micah 6:8, the same as EMU’s mission, is getting me closer to my parents’ legacy. Today the vision is clearer than ever; and as the Holy Spirit guides, I want to decolonize our minds exposing the ideology of genocide so we can rebuild our communities based on our values of Amahoro, Ubuntu, and justice starting in East Africa, especially in the Great Lake Region (Burundi, Congo, and Rwanda).

My parents’ dreams shaped my ministry. Though I am still on this journey, I walk with purpose, knowing that the Holy Spirit is guiding me every step of the way.


Mosaic values two-way communication and encourages our constituents to respond with feedback, questions, or encouragement. To share your thoughts or send a message to the author(s), contact us at communication@mosaicmennonites.org.   

Filed Under: Articles, Call to Ministry Stories Tagged With: Amohoro, Call to Ministry Story, Los Angeles Faith Chapel, Mukarabe Makinto-Inandava

Remembering Lives and Raising Voices in Souderton, PA

May 21, 2026 by Cindy Angela

by Patrice Freed

On Sunday, April 26, members of the Souderton, PA community gathered for a powerful, moving event to remember victims of gun violence and call for meaningful change. The day brought together faith, advocacy, and youth leadership in ways that left a lasting impression on all who participated. This public act of witness extended beyond the event itself, inviting the broader community to acknowledge and engage with the reality of gun violence.

The event was sponsored by Zion Mennonite, Zwingli United Church of Christ, and local advocacy organization Heeding God’s Call to End Gun Violence. Members of other local Mennonite congregations also participated.

T-shirts were displayed as a “Memorial to the Lost,” each one representing a life taken by gun violence, a visual expression of loss and remembrance.

A walk through Souderton concluded participants gathered at Zwingli UCC to act by signing letters addressed to lawmakers. These letters called for stronger, common-sense measures to reduce gun violence and protect communities.

A defining strength of the event was the leadership of Zion’s youth. Their energy, organization, and commitment played a pivotal role throughout the day. From helping coordinate the T-shirt display to guiding participants during the walk and encouraging letter-writing efforts, the youth demonstrated compassion and determination.

(Photos courtesy of Zion Mennonite)


Patrice Freed

Patrice Freed grew up at Zion Mennonite (Souderton, PA) and still worships there. She’s a grandmother to nine and loves the outdoors and working for peace and justice.

Mosaic values two-way communication and encourages our constituents to respond with feedback, questions, or encouragement. To share your thoughts or send a message to the author(s), contact us at communication@mosaicmennonites.org.   

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Zion

“Deus Ex Machina: God from the Machine”

May 14, 2026 by Cindy Angela

by Vincent V. Marshburn

CEOs, politicians, and pundits are currently praising the virtues of artificial intelligence (AI) as a technology that might miraculously solve many problems. Some of their language borders on the mystical and sacrosanct. At the same time, media coverage of generative AI highlights the extreme consequences of its misuse, from harmful effects on mental health to manipulation of content in exploitative ways.

Amid this uncertain societal landscape, individuals such as myself, a congregant at Homestead (FL) Mennonite, seek to bring balance, reason, and spiritual perspective to the conversation. I have worked in information technology since the early 1990s and have served as a college professor for 20 years. At the invitation of Pastor Pavel Gailans, I recently presented a two-part workshop to share about the fundamentals of modern AI, its impact on society, and its implications for the Body of Christ in its mission to share the Gospel.

Borrowing from a literary phrase, I titled the workshops “Deus Ex Machina (God from the Machine): Christian Stewardship of Technology.” I addressed the curiosity and concerns within the Christian community surrounding modern AI. I began by noting that the idea that technology can “save” us is an extension of humanity’s historical tendency to seek solutions apart from God. Throughout history humans have tended to look to any other source for divinely-inspired deliverance. Recognizing this mindset is important to understanding why so many people seek comfort and succor in technology.

In the first workshop, I reviewed a brief history of AI and its current iterations. I shared some of the benefits and pitfalls of generative AI and emphasized the need for discernment among Christians to identify appropriate uses of these systems. AI, I suggested, is a tool and, like any tool, can be used constructively or destructively.

The second workshop focused on practical uses of specific generative AI tools. I demonstrated how NotebookLM can help summarize and analyze user-defined content including documents, webpages, and audio or video transcripts. These tools can be used to create learning aids and invitational materials for activities like Bible studies or outreach efforts.

I emphasized that no AI tool is a substitute for human contact and connection. While the keyword for the first workshop was discernment, the keywords during the second workshop were authenticity and disclosure. Equipped with these principles, I believe that we who claim the Cross can offer a distinctive witness in conversations about artificial intelligence and its role in our world today. Both workshops concluded with productive question and answer sessions.


Vincent V. Marshburn

Vincent V. Marshburn was born in Vietnam and raised in the U.S. He works in education and information technology and is a contributing writer for the local city newspaper. He has been married to his remarkable wife, Cheryl, for 35 years, and they somehow managed to successfully homeschool all four of their children into college.

Mosaic values two-way communication and encourages our constituents to respond with feedback, questions, or encouragement. To share your thoughts or send a message to the author(s), contact us at communication@mosaicmennonites.org.   

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: AI, Homestead, Vincent Marshburn

Discerning Mosaic’s Missional Practices in a Globally Connected World

May 14, 2026 by Cindy Angela

by Noel Santiago

Mosaic’s vision is to “embody the reconciling love of Jesus in our beautiful and broken world.” As a community that celebrates and extends God’s grace, justice, and peace, we shape our common life around three deeply interrelated priorities: missional, intercultural, and formational. When Mosaic talks about missional, what we mean is that “we are committed to participating in the healing of our world by sharing and living out the Good News of Jesus.” These are not separate projects, but different facets of the same call to follow Jesus together.

Today, we live in a highly networked, relationally dense world. Messages, money, and people can cross borders in seconds, but so can harmful assumptions, power imbalances, and old colonial patterns dressed up in new language. As Mosaic’s relationships increasingly connect across regions and continents, we are asking hard but hopeful questions about what faithful mission looks like now. Can our identity and mission be confined by national borders? How do we structure partnerships that reflect genuine transformative mutuality rather than one-directional help?

These questions shape the current work of the Missional Priority Team (MPT). The MPT is currently made up of Jeff Wright, Marco Güete and myself. We are discerning: How are we presently participating in God’s mission with our global partners in ways that are reciprocal, just, and decolonizing, while remaining rooted and accountable in our local contexts? How is God inviting Mosaic to practice mutually transforming mission in a globally connected world, where we expect to be changed as we walk with others?

Leaders in South Texas gather to reflect with the Mosaic Priorities Guide. Photo by Marco Güete.

We are also exploring what specific practices, partnerships, and structures will allow Mosaic to embody the reconciling love of Jesus with, not just for, our global neighbors. Finally, we are asking how we, as the MPT, can best support Mosaic’s missional vision in light of these global realities.

As your ministry engages across the street and around the world, what have you found helpful in cultivating mutually transformative relationships? How have these relationships helped your ministry more deeply understand and respond to what God is doing in your particular context? What challenges are you facing, and what questions do you have, as you relate with neighbors near and far?

Leaders in MosaiColombia gather for fellowship and equipping. Photo by Javier Márquez.

We invite you to share your experiences, insights, and struggles so that, together, we can grow in practices that embody the reconciling love of Jesus in a globally connected world. As we do, we invite your prayers and your questions. Together, we seek to follow Jesus in ways that honor the gifts, voices, and leadership of others near and far, trusting that God’s mission is always larger than any one place, people, or plan.


Noel Santiago

Noel Santiago is the Leadership Minister for Missional Transformation for Mosaic Conference.

Mosaic values two-way communication and encourages our constituents to respond with feedback, questions, or encouragement. To contact Noel Santiago, please email nsantiago@mosaicmennonites.org.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: missional, Noel Santiago

Faithful Witness in a Time of Christian Nationalism

May 7, 2026 by Cindy Angela

by Cal Hackett

On Saturday, February 21st, 2026, Salford Mennonite (Harleysville, PA) welcomed Dr. Drew Strait, Associate Professor of New Testament and Public Faith at Anabaptist Mennonite Biblical Seminary, for an all-day workshop on faithfully responding to Christian nationalism. Salford’s Justice and Peace Team organized the event with the hopes of fostering unity among Christians and churches in southeastern Pennsylvania who are committed to faith-rooted justice and embolden them to challenge all that opposes the peaceable ways of Jesus. The event had over 125 registrants who represented nearly 20 congregations.

The day was split into four lectures that examined the causes and impact of Christian nationalism, as well as strategies to respond to it as Anabaptist Christians. The lectures drew heavily from Dr. Straight’s 2024 book Strange Worship: Six Steps for Challening Christian Nationalism.

One particularly important topic was about Biblical authoritarianism. Dr. Strait explained that Biblical authoritarianism is a way of reading the Bible that leads to the belief that national identity should be rooted in a literal interpretation of the Bible and Christianity should be imposed on others, often blending Church and government. Dr. Strait listed the passages that are often used for this interpretation of Scripture, which includes the Great Commission in the Gospel of Matthew and Genesis 1, when God told humanity to take dominion over the Earth. This interpretation has been used by Christians to justify violence, colonization, and the enslavement of people. The fear is that as Christian nationalism rises today, so will the dehumanization of others. It is deeply concerning that this is all done in the name of Jesus.

Photo by Andrew Zetts.

Dr. Strait made sure to recognize that dehumanizing others never leads to progress. The lectures were filled with current examples of where white supremacist Christian nationalism is alive today, such as the signs, symbols, and language at the January 6th insurrection and rhetoric from government officials on social media. There was time given for small group discussion and one thought-provoking group question was: In what ways do you think preaching the whole life of Jesus can counter processes of radicalization?

When asked about what stood out most from the event, Chase Snyder, a high school junior from Salford Mennonite, said “the way in which Christian nationalism has been slowly infusing itself into…Christian culture for sixty plus years without being noticed, and how it has become a part of people’s identity.” His observation reflected a broader sentiment shared by many attendees: a sense of surprise and concern at how gradually this kind of toxic and dogmatic form of Christian identity has gained a foothold in American culture.

Photo by Joe Landis.

The workshop left many participants reflecting on how subtle and powerful the influence of Christian nationalism can be in both religious and political life. By examining the historical roots of these ideas and how certain biblical passages have been interpreted to support them, Dr. Strait challenged attendees to think more critically about how faith is used in public discourse.

At the same time, he emphasized that responding to Christian nationalism requires more than criticism; it calls for a renewed focus on the teachings and example of Jesus. Participants were encouraged to consider how preaching and living out the whole life of Jesus, marked by humility, compassion, and care for marginalized people, can serve as a powerful counter to narratives rooted in power and exclusion. As the day concluded, many left with a deeper awareness of the issue and a renewed commitment to engage their communities thoughtfully, working toward forms of Christian witness that resist dehumanization and promote justice, humility, and faithful discipleship of Jesus.


Cal Hackett

Cal Hackett attends Salford Mennonite in Harleysville, PA and is a student at Dock Mennonite Academy in Lansdale, PA.

Mosaic values two-way communication and encourages our constituents to respond with feedback, questions, or encouragement. To share your thoughts or send a message to the author(s), contact us at communication@mosaicmennonites.org.   

Filed Under: Articles, Uncategorized Tagged With: AMBS, Cal Hackett, Drew Strait, Salford

Ambassadors 2026 Welcomes Its First International Participants

May 7, 2026 by Cindy Angela

by Javier Márquez

Mosaic Conference’s Summer Ambassadors program is going international.

For the first time, the 2026 cohort will include five participants from Latin America—three from Colombia and two from Mexico—marking a significant expansion of the initiative’s reach and vision. This year’s program has also received more applications than ever before, with qualified applicants exceeding available funding by more than 50 percent, underscoring both the program’s growing impact and the need for additional support.

Ambassadors 2023

Mosaic seeks to raise $15,000 from congregations and individuals by June 1 to support the expansion in number of participants. Many Ambassadors come from under-resourced communities, and modest stipends make it possible for them to dedicate their summer to leadership development and ministry. In addition to welcoming international participants, Mosaic will also host two leadership retreats this year — one in Pennsylvania and one in Latin America.

Mosaic is grateful to Everence for providing partial sponsorship for the U.S-based Ambassadors in 2026, helping to make expansion possible.

The international Ambassadors include Santiago Gómez from Iglesia Cristiana de Liderazgo y Fe; Rumaldo Conchacala and Rosita Mojica from the Wiwa Indigenous Christian community; and Eunice Domínguez and Ana Hernández from Iglesia Vida Nueva in Mexico City.

Ambassadors 2024

They will join 11 U.S.-based Ambassadors serving in California, Florida, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania. Four are placed with Mosaic Conference-Related Ministries: Ripple Community, Inc. (Allentown, PA); Midian Leadership Project (Charleston, WV); Healthy Niños Honduras; and Crossroads Community Center (Philadelphia, PA). The remaining participants will serve within Mosaic congregations across the conference.

Together, these young leaders represent partner congregations and ministries that reflect Mosaic’s commitment to cultivating leadership across diverse cultural and ministry contexts. The addition of Colombian and Mexican participants not only broadens the program geographically but also deepens the cultural and spiritual richness of the community.

“I am hopeful for the next generation of leaders across Mosaic Conference,” said Cindy Angela, the Ambassadors Program Director for 2026. “As we grow beyond the U.S. for the first time, I’m excited to see how the Spirit will work through our Ambassadors in Colombia and Mexico—and what this means for the future of Mosaic Conference.”

Throughout June, July, and August, each Ambassador will lead a ministry project rooted in their local context. In Colombia, Santiago will guide youth discipleship in his congregation. In the Wiwa community, Rosita will teach Damana—an endangered Indigenous language—within Sunday school, while Rumaldo will help develop community gardens that promote environmental stewardship and collaboration. In Mexico City, Eunice and Ana will serve in hospitals, offering food and water to families accompanying loved ones.

Ambassadors 2025

Across the U.S., Ambassadors will likewise engage in projects that reflect the needs and strengths of their communities, working within congregations and partner ministries to foster connection, service, and growth.

Ambassadors invites young adults ages 18 to 24 to grow as leaders through hands-on ministry, mentorship, and collaborative learning. Participants design and implement projects that respond to real needs while deepening their faith and leadership capacity.

As co-director based in Colombia, I have been encouraged by both the program’s growth and its expanding vision—particularly the opportunity to connect young leaders across borders and support the impact they are making in their communities.

The 10-week program concludes with a final in-person gathering where participants share their experiences and reflect on what they have learned. Ambassadors 2026 offers a compelling picture of the church’s mission in action: forming young leaders committed to service, peace, and the transformation of their communities—now across multiple countries.


Javier Márquez

Javier Márquez is Associate for Community Cultivation and Leadership Development. He is an Anabaptist Colombian pacifist and poet. He is based in Bogota, Colombia.

Mosaic values two-way communication and encourages our constituents to respond with feedback, questions, or encouragement. To contact Javier Márquez, please email jmarquez@mosaicmennonites.org.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Ambassadors

Jacob’s Wisdom and Ecclesiastes 9:11-18

April 30, 2026 by Cindy Angela

by Jeff Wright

Editor’s Note: A longer version of this reflection was shared at the Conference-Related Ministry Indian Creek Foundation’s Monthly Prayer Fellowship on April 3, 2026 at Blooming Glen (PA) Mennonite.  

Dr. Tim Barksdale, CEO of Indian Creek Foundation (ICF), and Pastor Jeff Wright at the April ICF prayer fellowship event.

On a rainy night in September 2004, I was in Atlanta at a gathering of Mennonite urban ministry leaders. For 12 years, I had been at the center of a whirlwind of action—developing leaders, teaching Anabaptist theology and urban missiology among immigrant church planters in Los Angeles, organizing incubation efforts for neighborhood ministries of relief and repair, preaching, fundraising, budgeting, and leading a constantly shifting staff team. It was a rich season of kingdom work. But strains were showing. Petty jealousies and passive aggression from those with greater access to resources left me stressed, in conflict, and unable to attend to what mattered most.

That night, I found out that Jacob had been unexpectedly born into our family. My son and his girlfriend had kept the pregnancy a secret. And there I was, away again, leaving my family in crisis – again.

But this was more than an unexpected birth. Jakie had suffered an umbilical cord prolapse, aspirated meconium, and endured perinatal asphyxiation and stroke. The result was severe, lifelong disability.

Things turned dark fast. An ambitious (and unfit) associate pastor publicly suggested that Jake’s birth was proof of how unfit I had been as a father and how Jake’s deficits were God’s judgement on me and my ministry. Jake’s arrival hastened the end of that season of my ministry.

I was broken. I felt ashamed–that I probably was unfit as a father and my ministry was a fraud–and there weren’t a lot of people that knew how to stand with my wife Debbie and me. In that season, I found solace in two places: siting in the NICU holding Jake, and in reading Ecclesiastes.

The book of Ecclesiastes is often called the “black sheep” of the Bible because it refuses to offer easy answers. For those connected to disability—whether through diagnoses like cerebral palsy or experiences of birth injury—the Teacher (Qoheleth) feels less like a philosopher and more like a weary friend who tells the truth. In Ecclesiastes 9:11–18, we find a profound meditation on the randomness of life and the unrecognized value of those the world considers weak.

The passage begins with a jarring observation: “The race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong.” This confronts the myth of meritocracy—the belief that effort guarantees outcomes. In the world of disability, that illusion collapses early. When a child experiences brain injury from lack of oxygen, it is not because they or their parents failed. It is what the Teacher calls “time and chance.”

By acknowledging that “evil times fall unexpectedly,” Ecclesiastes offers a strange validation. It removes the burden of “why” and “whose fault.” It loosens the grip of “why” and “whose fault.” The world is not a vending machine where good behavior yields predictable results. This creates space for grace. If success is not proof of virtue, then disability is not proof of failure. It is part of the hebel, the vapor, the mystery of human life.

The Teacher then tells of a poor wise man who saves a city, yet is forgotten. “No one remembered that poor man.”

This is a familiar reality in the disability community. Those whose bodies or communication differ from cultural norms often carry deep wisdom and perspective. Yet their contributions are overlooked because they do not match the world’s definition of strength or speed.

Ecclesiastes makes a radical claim: wisdom is better than might. The poor man’s insight surpasses the king’s power. The tragedy is not his poverty, but a world too blind to remember him.

Few remember Frank Lanterman. A concert organist turned conservative California state senator, he set out in the 1960s to uncover waste in state institutions. Instead, he found thousands of children and adults warehoused without dignity, stimulation, or care. At the time, parents had two options: keep a child at home without support or send them away to an institution, often for life.

Lanterman fought to change that system. He argued that the state had a moral and legal obligation to care for vulnerable citizens within their communities. His work led to the creation of California’s regional center system, making services for people with developmental disabilities a legal entitlement.

In a surprising turn, the bill was signed into law by Ronald Reagan. Through political wisdom and persistence, Lanterman convinced a similarly conservative governor to support an entitlement program in exchange for deinstitutionalization and local control.

Without that unlikely partnership between a “poor wise man” and a “great king,” I do not know what would have become of Jacob, his parents, or our family. Because of that work, Jacob has been able to live at home. His parents have built meaningful vocations in service to others. His brothers have grown up alongside him.

The passage concludes with a sober warning: “Wisdom is better than weapons of war, but one sinner destroys much good.” In medicine, we see how a single moment of oxygen deprivation can alter a lifetime. But in a social context, this “one sinner” is often the person who creates an inaccessible building, an exclusionary policy, or a stigmatizing comment. These small acts of “folly” can dismantle the “good” of a person’s hard-won independence.

And yet, the good endures. Systems like those Lanterman helped create continue to support families like ours, even amid ongoing pressures and threats.

For those connected to disability, Ecclesiastes 9: 11–18 is a call to radical candor. It gives permission to grieve the randomness that reshapes our lives. But it also calls us to remember the forgotten, to honor wisdom where the world does not look. In a world where the swift stumble and the strong fail, the measure of a life is not output or efficiency.

Jake Wright—bedfast, unable to speak, nourished through a feeding tube—demonstrates to his whole community that he is a young man with a soul, beloved by God. He laughs at the sound of singing or his grandpa preaching. This world is better because of both Jacob Gabriel Barriga Wright, and concert organist turned state senator Frank Lanterman. Thanks be to God for their hearts.

The author’s oldest grandson, Jacob Gabriel Barriga Wright, born in Upland, CA. Photo by Celina Wright.

Jeff Wright

Jeff Wright is a Mosaic Conference Leadership Minister. He is also a member of the Missional Priority Team and the official old curmudgeon of the conference staff. When not reading, or cheering for his beloved Los Angeles Dodgers, he is serving as interim pastor at Blooming Glen (PA). He has dreams of batting 9th and playing backup catcher for the Mosaic Conference baseball team.

Mosaic values two-way communication and encourages our constituents to respond with feedback, questions, or encouragement. To contact Jeff Wright, please email jwright@mosaicmennonites.org.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Indian Creek Foundation, Jeff Wright

Mosaic Conference Partners with GRACE to Strengthen Abuse Prevention and Response

April 30, 2026 by Cindy Angela

Mosaic Mennonite Conference has contracted with GRACE (Godly Response to Abuse in the Christian Environment) to develop a comprehensive abuse policy for the conference.

GRACE will begin by meeting with conference representatives to better understand the structure, identity, and current challenges within Mosaic Mennonite Conference related to sexual abuse and misconduct. This process is designed to ensure that the resulting policy reflects the conference’s unique context while aligning with best practices for safeguarding and response.

Following the initial meeting, GRACE will provide a draft policy for review. The draft will be reviewed from a variety of viewpoints, including people with experience in this area from different cultural backgrounds, board members, the ministerial committee, pastoral leaders, and staff. Feedback and questions will be discussed with GRACE, and the policy will be revised through an iterative process until it is contextualized to Mosaic Mennonite Conference and well-suited to guide the conference in preventing abuse, supporting survivors, and responding to allegations with integrity, responsibility, and care.

In addition to policy development, Mosaic Conference will engage GRACE to conduct independent investigations should an individual come forward with an allegation of abuse involving a credentialed leader. These investigations will address both the allegations themselves and the broader organizational response, helping to ensure transparency, accountability, and a trauma-informed approach.

GRACE is an independent organization that works to equip Christian communities to recognize, prevent, and respond to abuse with integrity. Its mission emphasizes cultivating authentic community marked by responsibility, accountability and compassion, where caring for children and adult survivors of abuse is non-negotiable.

Through this partnership, Mosaic Conference seeks to foster a safer environment for all and to embody these shared commitments in our life together.

Mosaic values two-way communication and encourages our constituents to respond with feedback, questions, or encouragement. To share your thoughts or send a message to the author(s), contact us at communication@mosaicmennonites.org.   

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Church Safety, grace

  • Go to page 1
  • Go to page 2
  • Go to page 3
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 172
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

  • Home
  • About Us
    • Our History
    • Vision & Mission
    • Staff
    • Boards and Committees
    • Church & Ministry Directory
    • Mennonite Links
  • Media
    • Articles
    • Newsletters
    • Video
    • Audio
    • Bulletin Announcements
  • Resources
    • Conference Documents
    • Missional
    • Intercultural
    • Formational
    • Stewardship
    • Church Safety
    • Leaders’ Resources
    • Request a Speaker
    • Pastoral Openings
    • Job Openings
  • Give
    • Leadership Development Matching Gift
  • Events
    • Pentecost
    • Delegate Assembly
    • Faith & Life
    • Youth Event
    • Women’s Gathering
    • Conference Calendar
  • Mosaic Institute
  • Vibrant Mosaic
  • Contact Us

Footer

  • Home
  • Contact Us
  • Delegate Assembly
  • Vision & Mission
  • Our History
  • Formational
  • Intercultural
  • Missional
  • Mosaic Institute
  • Give
  • Stewardship
  • Church Safety
  • Leaders’ Resources
  • Articles
  • Bulletin Announcements

Copyright © 2026 Mosaic Mennonite Conference | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use
Aligned with