Reflections from Holden Village: Pride and Justice

Holden Village embraces a deep call to justice, inclusion, and transformation. Holden publicly affirms and celebrates people of all sexual orientations, gender identities, and expressions. Pride is not just a season in the Village, it is an ongoing expression of Holden’s values: to uplift those historically marginalized and welcome the full diversity of God’s creation. During Pride and throughout the year, Holden lifts queer voices, tells stories of resistance and belonging, and works to create a sacred space for all.


This month comes as a reminder that Pride began as a protest--the first Pride marches, held in 1970, were a direct response by LGBTQIA+ people to the Stonewall Uprising, a series of demonstrations against police raids. These protests are considered a turning point in the fight for LGBTQIA+ rights. Today, amidst injustices against immigrant communities, trans siblings, continued racial injustice, and disparities in the criminal justice system, Holden Village remains steadfast in our commitment to justice in order to become the community for which God longs.


In pursuit of justice, Holden also reckons with the privileges it holds, acknowledging the need for ongoing reflection, reparative action, and partnerships that embody equity. Holden strives to be a beacon of hope, dignity, and joy for all. This summer as we celebrate Life Anew, we are continuously reminded of our commitment to transformation alongside the ever-changing world.

A God Beyond Understanding


Studying theology in undergrad, I spent a lot of time trying to understand God. It wasn’t until a particular lesson that I realized; I didn’t need to understand God, nor could I expect to. This is when I fell in love with the term apophatic theology. To simplify the theory, apophatic theology means that God is beyond our human understanding. In the midst of reckoning with my trans identity, this idea resonated deeply–realizing and coming out with my nonbinary identity was something that equally felt so right and true to me, but felt incredibly challenging to explain to my cisgender friends and family members, especially knowing that Genesis is often used to discredit the gender nonconforming community.  


Apophatic theology, however, pushes beyond those binaries. It is part of the force behind ideas such as God’s creation of day and night, dawn and dusk. So, when I hear that God made humankind in their image, I feel confident that God is beyond race, gender, sex, nationality, ableness, etc. Because I know that God is beyond everything and anything, it means that I am created in God’s image as someone who is beyond male and female. Because, really, knowing that God is all knowing, all powerful, and all present means that the entire web of humankind is working together to weave this one image of God.


-Brynn Conway (they/them), Carpenter

The Wilderness Has Always Been Queer

A Pride Month Benediction from the Cascades


The wilderness has always been queer—

not just in its wild defiance,

but in its sacred refusal

to be anything other

than wholly, fully,

itself.


Out here,

where the wind threads through hemlock limbs

and snowmelt hums beneath the earth,

nothing asks permission to belong.

Everything just is.


The lichen does not apologize

for being neither one thing nor the other—

it survives by being many,

by being both.

The trees do not worry

that their limbs grow twisted.

They lean toward what gives them life

and call it holy.



There are no closets in the Cascade range.

Only caves that echo your name back

in a thousand dialects of thunder and birdsong.

Only trails that ask nothing of you

but your truth.


The marmot sings shrill and unfiltered.

The fireweed dares to bloom

long after the burn.

The forest floor makes no distinction

between seed and spore,

between root and resurrection.


-Scout Vaughn (he/him), Staffing Lead

Act Now



"Because God redeems us through Christ, we are made new to love and serve all neighbors. Loving neighbors includes working for justice in our personal and public lives. Together as church and as individual Christians, we are called to love neighbors as we love ourselves." -ELCA

OPPOSE MASS DEPORTATIONS


Tell Congress you oppose the detention and separation of immigrant families.



OPPOSE CUTS TO MEDICAID AND LOW-INCOME HEALTH PROGRAMS


Protect Medicaid from devastating cuts that disproportionately impact communities of color.

More resources for action:

Queer Renewal: Wilderness and Homecoming

September 26-29, 2025


Join Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries and Proclaim to retreat at Holden Village as we explore Queer Renewal in times that challenge us. Through art, hiking, poetry, and community, there is a place for your Queer self to thrive here. All are welcome to attend.

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PHOTOS: Ellen Callender, Kathie Bach, Berit Kirkegaard, Carl Norquist 

Newsletter edited by Ellen Callender