As Wyoming faith leaders, we are deeply concerned by potential cuts to federal funding for Medicaid. The program provides health care coverage to tens of thousands of our low-income Wyoming neighbors who are disabled, children, pregnant, seniors or otherwise unable to access medical services. This program is essential.
Opinion
We call on our congressional delegation representing us in Washington, D.C., to remember the Christian gospel message from Matthew 25:36 as they consider these cuts: “I was sick, and you took care of me.” Jesus identifies care for the sick as an act of faithfulness. Ensuring access to health care is not just policy, but a way of living out Christ’s call to love and serve.
The U.S. House and Senate have both recently passed a budget resolution that could require taking away Medicaid health coverage from millions of Americans, including our Wyoming neighbors. Unfortunately, all three of our delegation’s members — Sens. John Barrasso and Cynthia Lummis, and Rep. Hageman — voted for the budget framework.
Lawmakers must weigh the harm and benefits when making decisions like this and understand their true and real impacts on the lives of God’s children.
Medicaid specifically helps those who need it most: Wyoming has some of the strictest requirements in the nation for enrolling in our Medicaid health insurance program. A person must not only be poor to qualify. They must also have some other condition, such as blindness or a disability, or be pregnant, a child or a senior citizen. There are no “able-bodied adults” receiving Wyoming Medicaid, aside perhaps from the low-income new mothers who can qualify for a single year of coverage after giving birth. This is a program that serves people who truly need assistance and who have no other option for accessing health care.
Still, more than 60,000 Wyoming residents depend on Medicaid for their access to health care. The program covers more than 70% of nursing home stays for our elderly residents, and a third of Wyoming births. It covers care for people with severe disabilities and new mothers who face postpartum health complications and depression. Waiver services, for example, provide essential services, such as group homes and adult caregivers, to adults with severe intellectual and/or physical disabilities who cannot live independently. Withdrawal of community-based services would require nursing home placement, a much more costly option.
Medicaid helps keep our most vulnerable people healthy in Wyoming, but Congress is poised to dramatically cut its funding this month to pay for tax breaks that will primarily benefit the richest people and corporations in America. This would put our neighbors, our communities and even our hospitals in Wyoming at serious risk.
We, faith leaders in Wyoming, call upon our members of Congress — Barrasso, Lummis and Hageman — to vote against current proposals to dramatically cut funding for Medicaid. Doing so would cause serious harm to people in our state, whose only ability to access health care they desperately need comes from the health insurance program.
We’re reminded in 1 Corinthians 12:12 that “For just as the body is one and has many members, and all the members of the body, though many, are one body, so it is with Christ.”
Wyoming is one body and our lawmakers must do what they can to keep that body well.
Signatories May 6, 2025
Rev. Jordan Bishop, Trinity Episcopal Church, Lander, WY
Rev. Jessica Boyce, Whole Soul, Casper, WY
Rev. Loren A. Boyce, First United Methodist Church, Casper, WY
Rev. Mark Calhoun, United Methodist Church Wyoming District Superintendent, Lander, WY
Rev. Annemarie Delgado, Church of the Good Shepherd, Sundance, WY
Rev. Camie Dewey, St. Mark’s Episcopal Church, Casper, WY
Rev. Mary Erickson, St. John’s Episcopal Church, Jackson, WY
Rev. Mike Eisenman, Our Saviour’s Lutheran, Casper, WY
Rev. Mike Evers, St. Peter’s Episcopal Church, Sheridan, WY
Rev. Canon Bobbe Fitzhugh, Canon for Mission, Outreach and Evangelism, Douglas, WY
Rev. Janita Krayniak, United Methodist Church, Powell, WY
Rev. Dee Lundberg, United Church of Christ, retired, Casper, WY
Rev. Warren Murphy, Episcopal Church, retired, Cody, WY
Rev. Megan Nickles, St. John’s Episcopal Church, Powell, WY
Rev. Dan O’Dell, United Methodist Church, Casper, WY
Rev. Dr. Sally Palmer, United Church of Christ, retired, Laramie, WY
Rev. Katherine Saxbury, Shepherd of the Hills Presbyterian Church, Casper, WY
Rev. Lynn Williamson, Presbyterian Church, retired, Casper, WY
Debbie Bovee, United Church of Christ Member, Casper, WY
Mariah Bovee, United Church of Christ Member, Casper, WY
Katrina Bradley, Bahai Community Member, Laramie, WY
Charlie Powell, United Church of Christ Member, Casper, WY
Loraine Powell, United Church of Christ Member, Casper, WY
Scott Sissman, Shepherd of the Hills Presbyterian Church Member, Casper, WY
Sandy Thiel, St. Peter’s Episcopal Church, Sheridan, WY


We have to take care of them you know, the less fortunate. It is a small cost in being a human. Those of us who are blessed with making our way through life through our own wits are obliged to take care of the less fortunate. Poor people with circumstances less fortunate than are own deserve care from the more fortunate. Whether that be from our own charitable giving, personal dedication in serving the poor, or simply giving that up to government services. That is, and always will be, a cost to us who are more fortunate. Do not be a bane to the less fortunate.
Catholic church just sent out their own powerful message. Welcome Pope Leo XIV. Corporate Jesus is not going to be happy with this news.
Well intended but facing strong headwinds. Keeping the very wealthy happy is more important than health care for commoners. Tax cuts are number one for the current political rulers.
If the GQP is proposing massive cuts to both Medicaid and Social Security (which they are), would that mean they blatantly lied alongside trump when they campaigned on a message those programs were safe?
Faith leaders seeking help from today’s society to care for our most vulnerable will find their most ardent allies in the agnostics and atheists. WY’s White Christian Nationalists see no personal gain in following the woke saturated NT Gospels. They worship at the alter Mammon. The dollar bill, crypto and USDA subsidies for them, bootstraps for everyone else. Americans have been abandoning the pews for a few generations now, because letters like this imploring empathy and kindness for our neighbors are increasingly rare. There’s very little Christ in our modern Christianity.
Medicaid Covers:
41% of all births in the US (United States ranks 55th in the world in maternal mortality rates, at 22.3 deaths per 100,000 live births. Canada is 7.4 deaths per 100,000 live births, and in Australia it is 6.7 deaths per 100,000 live births. Elbows up)
61% of long term care (WY’s geriatric population and their offspring may take note here)
38% of healthcare for children (the alt-right is pro-birth, NOT pro-life)
Fantastic book titled “The Enchantments of Mammon: How Capitalism Became the Religion of Modernity” by Eugene McCarraher for anyone interested in the centuries long rise of WY’s one true church.
These faith leaders are giving me hope. Sadly, we won’t be able to count on the three grifters. Even though congress doesn’t / can’t do their job, they have a pretty good safety net. Alas, in the end the voter must be held accountable.
Great point, Gordon. WY’s trifecta of fail will continue to receive top shelf healthcare, on the taxpayer dime, while denying any form of health care to the rubes who elected them. The irony would be hilarious if not so deadly and pathetic.