Every Day. Not Just on Sundays

ustice work is hard. Some days it feels lonely. But Rev. Cheryl Jefferson Bell holds onto a promise Jesus made right after the great commission — one she believes is for every person doing the work of justice today. It hasn’t expired. It has no exceptions.
RESURRECTION HOSTS BRIGHT FUTURES EVENT FOR FOSTER TEENS

n April 11, Resurrection welcomed 151 teenagers aging out of the foster care system to the Leawood Student Center for Bright Futures: Fostering Financial Literacy, a half-day event designed to equip young adults with practical skills and resources as they prepare for independence.
What Happens When Families Serve Together: Omaha 2026

They packed 500 lunches in a hotel hallway, sorted clothes for women experiencing homelessness, and planted garden beds in Omaha. By the end of two days, the kids had new best friends and the adults had worshipped together. That’s what a Resurrection family mission trip looks like.
Grown from a Dream: The Story of the Giving Garden

Before Katy Nall had the job, she had the vision — a garden on church land that would feed neighbors and bring generations of volunteers together. That dream nearly fell apart before it started. Four years later the Giving Garden has donated over ten tons of produce.
You Already Have What It Takes

Most of us will smile at a stranger’s baby or stop to pet a dog. But we walk past the person on the sidewalk. A Resurrection local missions leader says you already have everything you need to make a difference — and it costs nothing.
Showing Up: What Happens When You Just Say Yes

Resurrection’s local missions team fights hunger every day through a food pantry, Food Mobile, and more. But none of it happens without people willing to show up. Meet John — a Resurrection Brookside volunteer whose reason for serving might surprise you.
What Does Justice Look Like to You?

Dr. Cornel West says justice is what love looks like in public. Rev. Cheryl Jefferson Bell believes he’s right — and she’s calling Resurrection’s justice ministry partners and congregation to prove it together. On April 28, over 2,000 people will gather at Resurrection Leawood to do exactly that.
Each of Us Belongs at God’s Table

Rev. Cheryl Jefferson Bell opens with a prayer the violence would stop — then grounds her response not in politics, but in scripture. Every person carries the image of God. And because of that, she says, we don’t just belong to God. We belong to each other.
Love Thy Neighbor — A Poem for the New Year

Rev. Cheryl Jefferson Bell will be the first to admit that loving her neighbor is something she still struggles with. Then she met a typewriter poet named Nika Renee — and walked away with a poem that’s been a mirror and a challenge ever since.
Proudly Serving in the War on Injustice

Rev. Cheryl Jefferson Bell spent Martin Luther King Jr. weekend at a celebration where the preacher declared we are in the second civil rights movement. She believes he’s right. And she’s calling Resurrection’s justice ministry — and you — to respond with intention in 2026.