May 2026

Voting Rights

tom-barrett-v-ZYXLIiioM-unsplash[In a world that seems increasingly chaotic and broken, many of us feel helpless and afraid. We may question what we can do to make a difference. To build collective courage, in this space we will share examples of how individual members of GEC are practicing the way of Jesus, in private action or in the public arena. How might you find inspiration and hope in the small steps others are taking?]

Voting rights are under attack!

The All Roads Lead to South website says:

"Our parents and grandparents marched, organized, bled, and won. The Voting Rights Act was theirs. The fight to keep it is ours."

"Right now, state by state, that law is being dismantled. We know that we cannot fight the same battles the same way. New times demand new tactics — economic pressure, political organizing, community action, culture, and faith. But we know what we know: organizing works. And we have unfinished business."

Check out their website at allroadsleadtothesouth.org

The site covers ways to volunteer, organize locally, stay updated, and check your own voting status all in the effort to preserve voting rights.

—Joe Lex

[ photo credit ]

A Note from Huldah

Screenshot 2026-05-31 at 2.21.17 PM

Friends,

Thank you, friends, for coming together in worship this weekend -- on Saturday to sing our friend Steve Spencer back to God, and on Sunday to celebrate the feast of Pentecost, when we baptized Eleanor Joan.

On Sunday we also blessed Huldah Niles as she takes her next steps toward the diaconate. Huldah's internship time with us is over, and she'll take a summer of rest before her assignment at St. David's in Minnetonka officially begins. We'll keep you posted about opportunities to join in her ordination service as we get the news!

With love,
Susan+

A Note from Huldah Niles, Deacon Candidate
Dear beloved people of Grace Episcopal Church,

Thank you from the bottom of my heart for welcoming me into your beautiful community this past year. What a gift it has been to pray, learn, organize, laugh, worship, and dream alongside you all.

A very special thank you to Grace’s incredible Rector, Rev. Susan Daughtry, and to the amazing staff: Adam Reinwald, Sheila Foster, and Randy Bauer. It has been such a joy to work with loving, competent, and deeply kind people who answered my endless questions with patience and always made me feel that my voice mattered. I will genuinely miss our weekly staff meetings.

I also want to thank my wonderful Companion Team: Dick Justman, Jill Swanson, and Kurt Hall. Thank you for walking with me so faithfully during my time at Grace and for helping shape this important season of discernment and formation.

And to the Mission Team (formerly Faith in Action): thank you for welcoming me as a leader and collaborator in this work of outreach and justice. It was a true joy to help bring people to the table, build relationships, and discern next steps together. I remain deeply inspired by your compassion, creativity, and commitment to loving your neighbors well.

To the entire Grace community: thank you for taking the time to talk with me, share your stories, ask hard questions, and build authentic relationships. Those conversations mattered deeply to me and will continue to shape the kind of Deacon I hope to become.

I have now completed my nine-month internship with you all and have officially transitioned from Postulant to Candidate for the Diaconate. God willing and the people consenting, I will be ordained a Deacon in the Episcopal Church in Minnesota this fall. Once an ordination date is finalized, I will absolutely share it with all of you. I would love to see you there!

As Susan mentioned on Sunday, once ordained, Bishop Loya has assigned me to serve as the Deacon at St. David’s Episcopal Church in Minnetonka. While saying goodbye to Grace is certainly bittersweet, I also feel a deep sense of peace and excitement about this next call.

I also plan to continue organizing with Isaiah, and I sincerely hope to see many Grace folks at future Isaiah meetings, trainings, and public actions. The work of justice, compassion, and holy troublemaking continues!

Please know you will always have a friend in Minnetonka who is ready for coffee, conversation, organizing, laughter, and some good trouble.

Embrace the rainbow!

With love and gratitude,
Huldah Niles

What Do We Do When the World is Burning

haiti-schoolchildrenFriends,

On Sunday, the Rev. Matthew Johnson preached about his experience of traveling to Bigonet, Haiti, where our congregation has a partnership. You can listen to the sermon here.

Here's what else you'll find below:
A book recommendation from Jane Peck.

With love,
Susan+

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Book Recommendation
From Grace Member Jane Peck

I thoroughly recommend Choctaw Native Bishop Steven Charleston’s book, “We Survived the End of the World, lessons from Native America on apocalypse and hope.” Though written in 2023 it is more timely in 2026 as we in the majority culture experience occupation and real peril. Who better to teach us about managing occupation and mass threat than the native Americans?

The bishop tells true stories of four tribal prophets who began strong and hopeful movements against occupation and genocide. The stories come from the Seneca, Shawnee, Paiute, and Nez Perce tribes. The bishop then pulls lessons for us all from each story as well as summarizing a path forward. Be prepared for inspiration !

Steven Charleston, a member of the Choctaw nation of Oklahoma, was the Episcopal Bishop of Alaska, and dean of the Episcopal Divinity School. has has authored many books.