Author: kathy

Get Proximate: The Art of Radical Mercy and Staying Hopeful in COVID Times

Get Proximate: The Art of Radical Mercy and Staying Hopeful in COVID Times

“Hope is our superpower. It reorients our spirit. We cannot do justice without hope.” Bryan Stevenson In his powerful book Just Mercy, Bryan Stevenson shares how his struggle for justice and ability to understand the complexity of mass incarceration is rooted in “getting proximate” to 

Crying Out: A Response to George Floyd

Crying Out: A Response to George Floyd

VJN Steering Committee member Dave Hanson offers his response to the killing of George Floyd, the recent wave of protests and unrest, and the sin of systemic racism. My name is Dave Hanson, I am a local Pastor at the Yakima Vineyard in central Washington. 

Forgive Us: A Pastoral Letter from Our National Director

originally published on VUSA site on June 2, 2020 Dear Vineyard Leaders, Wow, 2020 – and we are not halfway through it yet. How is that for a positive greeting? Right now, there are so many feelings, thoughts, laments, ideas, and convictions being expressed through 

NURTURING RECONCILIATION: THE ASIAN-AMERICAN EXPERIENCE

NURTURING RECONCILIATION: THE ASIAN-AMERICAN EXPERIENCE

NURTURING RECONCILIATION: During this time of COVID-19, many people in Vineyard churches have shared their personal experiences with anti-Asian racism. Dennis Liu, pastor of Vineyard of Harvest in CA, a majority Asian-American church, shares his story as a third-generation Asian-American in the U.S. and the 

Together, for Ahmaud Arbery | A Letter From Black Vineyard Pastors

Together, for Ahmaud Arbery | A Letter From Black Vineyard Pastors

Vineyard Justice Network continues our song of lament for Ahmaud Arbery and all the brokenness, violence, fear, and injustice that his murder exposed.

We humbly seek to listen well to our Black Vineyard pastors who cry out, in one voice. This voice invites our churches to yoke the efforts of naming the trauma of white supremacy to doing the Spirit-led work necessary to “uplift black lives.”