Presbyterians for Disability Concerns welcomes those who affirm, support and advocate for the gifts, rights and responsibilities of persons with disabilities in the total life of the church.
Join PHEWA and take part in this ministry.
Four consultants are available to help with questions about welcoming persons with disabilities.
Meet our Disability Concerns Consultants.
PC(USA) Disability Inclusion Sunday 2016
Pioneers and Prophets: Moving Toward the Inclusive Church
Presbyterians for Disability Concerns (PDC) invites you to join us in a prophetic ministry that affirms that every person is created in the image of God and has gifts to bring to the church. With thanksgiving and a challenge, PDC, a network of the Presbyterian Health, Education & Welfare Association (PHEWA), is offering Pioneers and Prophets, our resource for 2016 Disability Inclusion Sunday on June 12. We challenge you to make every Sunday – and every day of every week – a day when no one is excluded, when all are welcomed.
We have also excerpted selected pieces out of this year’s Disability Inclusion Sunday resource packet to provide a streamlined Introductory Packet of Resources.
Previous years' resources remain timely...
Download Packets from previous years
- 2015 packet: Better Together: Transformed by God's Variety of Gifts
- 2014 packet: The Seasons of Life in the Family of Faith: Resources for Worship and Inclusion full version OR condensed version
- 2013 packet: Before and Beyond the Benediction condensed version OR download the full packet of materials online
- 2012 packet: A Variety of Gifts: Inclusion of People with Disabilities as We Age (Download as a PDF) OR read the materials online
- 2011 packet: Inclusion from the Inside Out: Welcoming God’s Children of All Abilities
- 2010 packet: The Wounds of War: The Church as a Healing Community
Walking with wounded warriors
Presbyterian chaplain works with soldiers, families to provide healing, hope
by Toni Montgomery
MONTREAT, N.C. - When we hear about casualties of war, we tend to think about those who don’t return home. But many in the military do return home with wounds of various types and degree.
For the Rev. Lucy Der-Garabedian, who serves with a wounded warrior unit, helping these men and women has been part of her job for the past two years.
Der-Garabedian, an active duty Army chaplain with 16 years of service, was among the chaplains who recently took advantage of a chance to connect and relax at Montreat Conference Center during the Aug. 6-9 Presbyterian Council for Chaplains and Military Personnel retreat.
Read a book review from the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI)
Life After War
The Blue Cascade: A Memoir of Life After War
by Mike Scotti
Grand Central Publishing (2012), $26.99
Prayer Litany for Celebrating Abilities and Love
Written by Eric W. Edwards (with a little help from his Mom, Christine Cornell)
Eric and Christine are members of Memorial Presbyterian Church in Appleton, Wisconsin. Eric is an active deacon, sharing God’s love with members of his “neighborhood.” He especially likes to go with a deacon buddy to deliver flowers making people happy. Eric also sends cards, makes calls and visits, offers hugs and prayers and never misses a meeting of the Board of Deacons.
Congregational Audit of Disability Accessibility & Inclusion
This Congregational Audit of Disability Accessibility & Inclusion was prepared by the Presbyterians for Disability Concerns (PDC) leadership team, in consultation with the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) Disability Consultants.
Living into the Body of Christ: Towards Full Inclusion of People with Disabilities
This disabilities paper was approved by the 217th General Assembly (2006), includes a study guide.
Offering Our Gifts
New From Presbyterians for Disability Concerns (PDC)
Now there are varieties of gifts, but the same Spirit; and there are varieties of services, but the same Lord; and there are varieties of activities, but it is the same God who activates all of them in everyone.
I Cor. 12:4-6
Offering Our Gifts is a PowerPoint presentation with pictures and audio that features the personal experiences of persons with disabilities. Included are “Access Your Heart,” by poet Sarah Nettleton, and “Beatitudes for an Inclusive Church,” by Bebe Baldwin. The resource celebrates the valuable gifts people with disabilities bring to the Body of Christ and offers practical suggestions for including people with disabilities in the church’s life.
Originally developed by the PDC Leadership Team for orientation of Commissioners to the 219th General Assembly (2010), the PowerPoint is appropriate and recommended for all church gatherings.
2010 Nancy Jennings Award
Presbyterians for Disability Concerns (PDC)
The Nancy Jennings Award honors a person or congregation or PC(USA) entity that affirms, supports and advocates for the gifts, rights and responsibilities of persons with disabilities in the total life of the church. With an unwavering sense of life’s joy and a broad lens for justice, Nancy Jennings, a founding member with an eight year presidency of PDC, was instrumental in turning emotional pain and exclusion from church participation because of her disability into advocacy and positive change for inclusion of all people in the life of the church and society.
Presbyterians for Disability Concerns is pleased to announce that this 2010 Presbyterian Church (USA) General Assembly Ministry Award has been awarded to the Reverend David E. Young in recognition of his involvement with Arc of Midland’s Arc Faith Group and specifically the AFIRE (Accessing Faith in Religious Environments Experiential) Program.