Save the Date!
The Groundswell is an event hosted by Augsburg University’s Riverside Innovation Hub
and the Minneapolis Area Synod’s Faith & Neighboring Practices, connecting people of
faith who are invested in place-based ministry and the call to be faithful neighbors.
Attendees will hear stories of faithful neighborhood ministry, develop skills for engaging
meaningfully with their neighbors, and connect with leaders serving the common good
locally and from across the country.
March 14th, 2026 @ Augsburg University
The Groundswell – Look, Now is the Acceptable Time
Our theme this year “Look, Now is the Acceptable Time” comes from 2 Corinthians –
and is a reminder that God is calling us to be part of creating communities of care now –
at this moment, in this place. Now is always the acceptable time, and yet we also know
that this moment in our history carries its own unique opportunities, challenges, and
urgency. While powers and principalities seek to divide, control, and devour, we can
participate in a different story rooted in justice, abundance, and community. Look, now is
the acceptable time!
Registration will go live in mid-December 2025.


Three years ago at this time, our RIH team was making preparations to host 50 young adults on campus at Augsburg University from across the country. The purpose of this gathering was to listen to the stories of younger generations as they shared their experiences of gratitude, hopefulness and frustration in the church. Collectively these stories spoke to the hunger of this generation for a more hopeful and thriving world. The young adults gathered also shared a belief that God is calling the church to engage seriously in that vision, no matter the challenges.
“Rivers carved stones, not by force, but by showing up day after day until Earth remembers.”
Picture this: teams scattered around tables, sharing their stories – not the clean sanitized versions they tell at board meetings, but the messy truth. The breakthroughs mixed with grief. The celebrations tangled up with the spaces where they’re stuck.
There’s something that happens when you stop theorizing about interconnection and start looking at it. Actual roots. Actual water flow. Actual evidence of what thrives and what doesn’t, and why.




