Our Regional Church is pleased to announce that Rev. Patricia “Cisa” Payuyo has been appointed as Associate Regional Minister for Clergy Care, effective Monday, January 22, 2024.  A member of All Peoples Christian Church, Los Angeles, CA. Rev. Cisa has deep roots and leadership experiences within the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) Pacific Southwest region. She previously served as Associate Director of Church Relations at Chapman University, Orange, CA for twenty years, and helped to oversee the Disciples on Campus program, the only Progressive Christian Group on the Campus. During that time, Rev. Cisa also served as a Campus Chaplain and an Advisor to the Student Interfaith Council. Rev. Cisa has been helping to Co-Chair our region’s Anti-Racism/Pro-Reconciliation Committee, which coordinates Anti-Racism education for our clergy and congregations.

Rev. Richie Sanchez, Regional Minister shared, “Rev. Cisa and I had been praying about this role for months, now is the time! Last year, our Clergy Summit had a great attendance and response. We heard and listened to new needs. I am grateful for the many gifts Rev. Cisa has brought to the life of our region and look forward to working with her, bringing about a continuing focused effort to serve our clergy with care, not only responsively, but more proactively and intentionally. We are experiencing unimaginable changes in the church, and this will be one more way to help bring attention and increased care for our Clergy, those active, and retired. Let us pray for abundant and bountiful blessings in this newest chapter of ministry for Rev. Cisa and our region.” Please join us in celebrating Rev. Cisa’s appointment to this new position.  

Bio for Cisa Payuyo

Rev. Patricia “Cisa” Payuyo (she/her pronouns) is a retired active ordained minister with the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ). She has served the Disciples denomination in several capacities: Pacific Southwest Regional Moderator from 1999 – 2001, First Vice Moderator to the 2003 Regional Assembly, North American Pacific Asian Disciples (NAPAD) board member from 2014-2016, and NAPAD Young Adults Minister. Cisa served as Associate Director of Church Relations at Chapman University in Orange, California for twenty years, and helped to oversee the Disciples on Campus program, the only Progressive Christian group on the campus. During that time, Cisa also served as a campus chaplain and an advisor to the student Interfaith Council. Cisa is currently co-chair of the PSWR Anti-Racism/Pro-Reconciliation committee and the coordinator of Anti-Racism education for clergy and congregations in the region.   

In 2003, Cisa was part of the first cohort of the Certificate of Ministry Studies program, a collaborative venture between the of Pacific School of Religion and Disciples Seminary Foundation. She attended the second campus of the San Francisco Theological Seminary in Pasadena, California, and later transferred to Claremont School of Theology. She was ordained in 2019.  

This year, Cisa joined the Board of Directors of Disciples Home Missions, the PSWR Committee on Ministry, and became Moderator at her home church, All Peoples Christian Church. 

Before working at Chapman University, Cisa was a case manager at Search to Involve Pilipino Americans (SIPA), an urban non-profit center where she gave guidance to underserved middle school students and their parents.  

Cisa and her family are inhabitants near the Yaanga Village of the Kizh/Tongva Territory (City of Los Angeles, California, near Historic Filipinotown). She is married to Ed Ramolete, who is also an Anti-Racism educator. Their three adult children, Donovan, Nikolas, and Nina, son-in-law Chris, grandson Kennedy, along with their dog Moe help keep their lives grounded and full of joy.  

Posted
AuthorAlisa Mittelstaedt

“Where’s your church?” It’s an innocent question, usually prompting a geographical answer such as “At the corner of Moorpark Street and Colfax Avenue.” While that’s a standard answer, we in the PSWR’s Church in Society Committee take the prepositional phrase “in society” very seriously: we recognize we are called to be the church, the living Body of Christ, beyond the walls of any building. 

Our 2021 MLK Scholarship Awardee Jaimyon Parker, a Graphic Design major, created our CIS logo with input from our Committee: 

The benevolent blue wings of the Holy Spirit support a Green urban environment framed subtly with a cursive “CIS” (like eyeglasses to watch over us) while lifting up the DOC Chalice, all demonstrating our active, Spirit-led involvement in the world outside the church walls. 

We achieve our mission by overseeing the annual PSWR Martin Luther King, Jr. Celebration (set for 21 January 2024), the MLK Jr. Scholarship, and the Disciple of the Year award. Additionally, CIS receives and reviews applications, then awards the PSWR Reconciliation and Camile Christian Church grants every year. CIS also promotes the Ecumenical Advocacy Days in Washington, DC, every April. (See below for links.) 

This past year, our MLK Scholarship recipient Keshun Elijah Valentine of Abundant Life CC and a freshman member of a suburban college football team, faced some direct racial discrimination on campus from older folks in the area. In his scholarship application, he wrote: "I believe that this scholarship award can push me to further my education at this school and show the [suburban] community . . . that black men could succeed and perform at a high degree at a University such as [this]." We in CIS very well know the maxim of American poet Walt Whitman from “Song of the Open Road”: 

(I and mine do not convince by arguments, similes, rhymes, 
We convince by our presence.) 

Keshun’s integrating presence beyond his church’s geographical home helps the campus transform and overcome racism, and we are proud to support him. 

One of our Reconciliation grants went to BeLOVED CC, pastored by Rev. Dale Suggs, and helped support this important 3-part series: 

In addition, after receiving a CIS Camile CC grant, Rev. Dr. Linda Barkman wrote: 

“Thanks to God’s grace and to the Camile Christian Church Grant, the Christmas gift bag project for the women incarcerated at the California Institution for Women (CIW) prison in Chino, California, was a total success. Nine hundred sixty bags were delivered to the prison on Tuesday, December 20th. It has now been confirmed by correspondence from current CIW prisoners that the bags were actually distributed prior to Christmas, and that there were a sufficient number for each and every woman who was incarcerated at CIW on that date. 

Approximately fifty volunteers participated in the December 17, 2022, bag stuffing event. . . . [T]his year each bag also contained a Christmas postcard on which a handwritten message of care, hope, and respect had been individually written by a volunteer.” For many of the incarcerated women, this was the ONLY Christmas greeting they received, and CIS helped make it possible. 

As you can see, the Church in Society Committee takes our outreach mission with delight as we spread the Gospel guided by the Holy Spirit, upon Whose wings we find support. So, where’s your church? We answer, “Wherever the Holy Spirit is present.” 

For full information, applications, and submission dates, use these links: docpswr.org/grants-scholarships 
https://advocacydays.org/ and cis@docpswr.org 

Posted
AuthorAlisa Mittelstaedt