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Finding Our Collective Voice

January 22, 2026 by Rev. Dr. Kelly Jackson Brooks. LPCC Uncategorized 0 comments

In recent weeks and months, the steady stream of headlines has felt relentless and left us breathless. Communities fractured by violence, policies that disproportionately harm the most vulnerable, and the quiet and systematic erosion of dignity that seems to have embedded itself in our day-to-day. For many of us, the weight of it all is suffocating. We feel the pull to stay informed and the temptation to turn away. Somewhere between outrage and numbness, our voices tremble.

And yet, this is precisely the moment when finding our voice matters most.

Justice is rarely advanced by a single, heroic voice. More often, it emerges when ordinary people choose to speak together—naming what is happening, refusing silence, and insisting that the suffering we witness is not inevitable or acceptable. Finding our voice in times like these is less about having the perfect words and more about refusing to let harm go unchallenged.

Too often, silence is framed as neutrality or wisdom. But perpetual silence, especially in the face of injustice, has a way of aligning itself with what some have deemed the status quo. When communities are targeted, when systems fail to protect the vulnerable, when truth is distorted or erased, choosing not to speak is still a choice. Advocacy invites us to examine whose voices are missing—and why.

Finding a collective voice requires humility. It asks us to listen deeply to those most affected by injustice, rather than rushing to speak over or for them. It challenges us to recognize how our own comfort, privilege, or fear may keep us quiet. Collective advocacy is not about centering ourselves – it is about standing in solidarity and amplifying the voices that are too often dismissed or ignored.

Faith traditions remind us that justice is not abstract. It is embodied, relational, and deeply human. The prophets spoke not only as individuals, but as part of a larger movement calling people back to covenant, compassion, and accountability. Jesus did not confront injustice alone – he gathered a community shaped by shared values, shared risk, and shared hope.

Finding our collective voice does not require uniformity. We will not all speak in the same way or from the same place. Some will write, some will march, some will organize, some will offer care and healing where harm has already been done. What matters is that we resist isolation and choose connection—that we remember our voices carry more power when joined with others.

In times of deep division and ongoing injustice, advocacy becomes an outpouring of faith. It is a declaration that suffering is not invisible, that dignity is non-negotiable, and that hope is sustained not by silence, but by shared courage. When we find our voice together, we participate in the sacred work of justice—trusting that collective truth-telling can still bend the world toward healing.

Blessings to you on this collective journey,

Kelly

Photo Credit: TheSceneABQ

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