eNews

March 2024

MAY THIS BE YOUR FRUIT-BEARING SEASON

Deaconess Community,


Joy has been on my mind, and I can sense that 2024 will be a season of fruit-bearing. In a recurring column published in The St. Louis American this week I shared the following...


The calendar has turned, and the new year is off and running. We have the first months of 2024 to assess if the new year intentions we made are on pace or need a bit more giddyap. However broad or specific our goals, desires, or ambitions may be, they will all require the fuel that only joy can bring. May 2024 be your fruit-bearing season rooted in joy.

 

Joy is a potent force, capable of nourishing us beyond mere happiness which is wonderful and necessary. However, unlike many people, achieving happiness is not my pursuit. Happiness is fleeting and is all too often based on emotions and the satisfaction I feel dictated by my present circumstances.

 

Joy is a fruit that the Holy Spirit produces in us that is not based on outward happenings or inward musings. Joy is a state of being. Joy is an inner contentment and a wellspring meant to bubble up and overflow in and through us. Joy is the armor we must wear given the anticipated challenges that this year poses from elections to climate conditions to workplace struggles and unexpected upheavals of all kinds. Joy is not to be underestimated. Joy is essential. Joy is eternal. The elders remind us that, “This joy I have, the world didn’t give it and the world can’t take it away.”

 

Particularly in the face of this hope-stealing environment that barks at us who we cannot be and the impossibility of trying something radically new, joy fuels faith, destroys doubt, calms anxiety, and roots us in endless possibility. Joy is a magnet that attracts power, inspiration, and peace.

 

Peace is not meant to be chased in an elusive pursuit. The Holy Writ shares that the peace of God is another fruit the Spirit bears that should “rule our hearts.” This kind of peace is viewed as an umpire who calls the balls and the strikes in our lives.

 

Peace moves us from focusing on putting out daily fires to building toward a liberated future. It’s what keeps rest sustainable and in abundant supply. Peace keeps us in tune with one another in beloved community. It’s a defender of joy and an amplifier of purpose. Peace is evidence of shalom which encompasses wholeness, harmony, and health.

 

The elders sang well to us: “When peace like a river attendeth my way...whatever my lot thou hast taught me to say it is well with my soul.” 

 

Faith is another fruit that the just live by. We grassroots organizers, faith leaders, healers, visionaries, disruptors, artists, executives, entrepreneurs, and caregivers are among the just. It takes faith and power beyond eyesight and mortal might to envision it, but this spiritual fruit generates a thriving region and world that moves us from possible to probable to inevitable.

 

Faith serves as eyes to see what is beyond brick and mortar or beyond an election cycle. Faith turns “what is” to “what if.” It carries us through our rage, lamentation, and our losses. Faith is the confident expectation that the well-being of our people and the justice that we fight for is just within reach. Faith is the conqueror of doubt and unbelief. Our bi-state region suffers from a lingering bout of having an inferiority complex rooted in doubt and unbelief. Doubt is questioning what you believe. Unbelief is a determined refusal to believe. 

 

And what if some don’t believe? Faith doesn’t require the permission of the masses. Movement begins with the agreement of two or three or the faithful few. To all the architects of a just future, may this be the year that the hard work pays off. May this be your season of mountain-moving faith that allows you to realize the miraculous in the presence of the naysayers. The elders were unwavering and right when they hummed, “We’ve come this far by faith...”


Originally published: March 10, 2024. See here.

In service to the will of the Spirit and the mission,



Bethany Johnson-Javois

President & CEO

Deaconess Foundation

FROM THE FOUNDATION

Invitation to Attend Peer Learning Sessions


Deaconess is committed to leveraging all of our non-grant assets to complement our financial investments and provide nonprofit leaders peer learning experiences and trainings to refine and strengthen our collective capacity to advance community well-being.


The opportunities for 2024 are outlined below and are offered at no cost to participants. Registration is required for each session. All sessions will be held in-person at Deaconess Center.


Organizational Growth & Succession Planning

This two-day workshop is for organization leaders to deepen their understanding of organizational life cycles to increase effectiveness, adaptability, and sustainability. Sessions will be held:

  • Tuesday, May 7, 2024, 9 a.m. - 12 p.m. and
  • Wednesday, May 8, 2024, 1 p.m. - 4 p.m.

Facilitator: Christy Maxfield, President & CEO, Purpose First Advisors

  

Learn more and register here.


Narrative Advocacy

This workshop is for nonprofit and organization team members interested in gaining a deeper understanding of storytelling in advocacy, public policy, and community organizing as well as digital storytelling. The session will be held:

  • Monday, July 8, 2024, 9 a.m. - 4 p.m.

Facilitator: Dr. Imani M. Cheers, Interim Senior Associate Provost for Undergraduate Education Office of the Provost, Associate Professor of Media and Public Affairs, George Washington University


Learn more and register here.


Nonprofit Financial Basics

Save the Date! More details to come soon. The session will be held:

  • Thursday, October 3, 2024, 10 a.m. - 12 p.m.

Facilitator: Matt Oldani, Vice President, Administration, Deaconess Foundation


Urgent Sign-on Letter Opposing Anti-Diversity Legislation

Missourians continue to face deep disparities in health and economic opportunities and corresponding outcomes based on race, ethnicity and gender. These bills would undermine efforts to understand and address those disparities.


Partner Missouri Budget Project has drafted a sign-on letter for organizations to express their concerns to lawmakers regarding several bills that would restrict public and private entities from conducting training or providing initiatives that include diversity, equity, and inclusion. The consequences of these bills would be wide-ranging and undermine the state's health, economic and workforce priorities. This could result in a loss of $2.6 billion in Missouri's annual gross domestic product and a corresponding loss of 23,842 jobs by 2030.


Join Deaconess Foundation and many other organizations by signing this letter to oppose efforts that limit diversity, equity, and inclusion in Missouri law. After signing, please share this information with your networks.

Sign the Letter

Congratulations to Deaconess Foundation Board Trustee Senator Brian Williams


The Construction Career Development Initiative (CCDI) named Senator Williams as its executive director in hopes of expanding its mission of opening opportunities for young people. Established in 2015, CCDI has a goal of connecting underrepresented students in North County to career development opportunities and bringing diversity to design and construction industries. Learn more.

PARTNER SPOTLIGHT

The Missouri Organizing and Voter Engagement Collaborative (MOVE) exists to empower ordinary people to reclaim democracy in the state of Missouri. MOVE’s role is behind-the-scenes, supporting grassroots movement organizations in developing and executing strategic integrated voter engagement (IVE) plans.


As part of MOVE's strategy, they are broadening the number of voters who champion issues that support vulnerable families and children and they are deepening the leadership of those they engage, particularly in Black, brown, and low-income communities. MOVE strives to shift the balance of power in democracy away from partisan and corporate interests and towards the traditionally marginalized—including regular working parents and their children. 


Deaconess supports MOVE through our Movement Transformation Grants. Learn more about MOVE here.

PARTNERS IN THE NEWS

Thousands could be eligible for part of $4.5M Ferguson debtor's prison lawsuit settlement


Brent Solomon | KSDK | February 28, 2024


FERGUSON, Mo. — Hundreds of dollars could soon be headed to thousands of people who were incarcerated in Ferguson. A court granted preliminary approval for a settlement to move forward after a civil rights group accused the city of throwing people in jail to make money.


The local protests following the death of Michael Brown not only gave people a chance to be heard, it also prompted action.


"It's thousands of people who Ferguson put in jail,” Maureen Hanlon with the ArchCity Defenders said.


The group filed suit against seven localities in the region: St. Ann, Normandy, Florissant, Edmundson, Jennings, Maplewood and Ferguson. Read more.

PARTNER OPPORTUNITIES & EVENTS

Upcoming Events


March 14: "Monthly Fatal State Violence Meeting" by Faith For Justice and ArchCity Defenders. Learn More.


March 19: Deadline to apply for "Elevate Youth Voice Academy" by East Side Aligned. Learn more.


March 19: "Monthly Membership Assembly" by Metropolitan Congregations United St. Louis (MCU). Register.


March 19-21: "Spring Break 2024 at the Boathouse in Forest Park" by River City Outdoors. Learn more.


March 23: "Demystification of Home Visitation" by Generate Health STL and Da Hood Talks Podcast. Register.


March 26: "Missouri Immigration Policy Advocacy Day in Jefferson City" by St. Louis Inter-Faith Committee on Latin America (IFCLA). Register.


March 26: "Monthly Renters Meeting" by Arch City Defenders and Action St. Louis. Register.


April 1: Deadline to apply for "Imagine Summer Success Academy" by SIUE School of Nursing. Apply.


April 12-13: "Centering Joy in the Black Birthing Experience Conference" by Black Nurses Association of Greater Saint Louis and Saint Louis Integrated Health Network. Register.


April 16: "Early Childhood Advocacy Day 2024" by United for Brighter Futures. Register.

Opportunities



Power Up Your Campaign Communication

A dedicated communication effort is instrumental to making sure your advocacy efforts are a success. Learn how to mobilize your audience by winning over their hearts and minds. Explore Campaign Communication on the W.K. Kellogg Foundation's hub. Learn more here.

Now Hiring


MEDIA THAT HELPS US GROW

How to fund narrative ecosystems | Nonprofit Quarterly | February 2024


The vision for Black lives: an economic policy agenda | Nonprofit Quarterly | February 2024


As DEI policies come under legal attack, philanthropic donors consider how to adapt | AP News| February 2024

UPCOMING ELECTIONS & VOTER REGISTRATION INFORMATION

Missouri


Illinois

Find Your Election, Registration, & Ballot Info

ICYMI: LUCKY ZIP CODES

Amy Hunter's TEDxGatewayArch talk on "Lucky Zip Codes" demonstrates how our zip codes and where we live are directly correlated to the resources our schools have.


Hunter dives into the complexity of systems and their intersectionality. Discrimination in schools, housing, and policing exist on their own. The combination of these systems reveals the intersectionality of how the experience of oppression transforms and the unique challenges we face.

 

To eliminate racism Hunter says we should view problem-solving the same way we view falling in love. Instead of turning away in discomfort when situations are difficult, we should run toward each other to solve problems together. It is our lack of falling in love with one another that puts us in situations where we are not working together to solve problems.

 

Hunter encourages us to use an artist's lens and imagination to create a more equitable society. View the talk here.

View TEDxTalk

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