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Guests experience first hand what it’s like to live in World Vision sponsorship regions such as South America, Africa, and South Asia through audio and visual aides in the World Vision Experience mobile exhibit at Faith Community Church in Hopkinton, MA.
Thu Oct 27 11:00am – 5:00pm
Fri Oct 28* 3:00pm – 8:00pm
Sat Oct 29 1:00pm – 6:30pm
Sun Oct 30 9:00am – 2:00pm
*Oct 28, 5:30-7:30 PM ONLY:
Free music by Bethany Guitar Pull
Food available by Melted Food Truck
FREE
This award-winning mobile exhibit from World Vision offers a unique opportunity to journey among those suffering in the margins of our world, and emerge transformed.
During the 20 minute journey, visitors will witness despair and hope in a brothel in Southeast Asia, see how God is working in the midst of the Syria refugee crisis, and join Christ in the midst of extreme poverty in Africa.
Reservations are recommended, but not required. Attend Thursday – Saturday for shorter lines.
Click Here to Register Your Tour Time Now!
Parental discretion is advised for children under 13.
Parental Discretion Information Here
website: www.bethany-umc.org/experience.
Thursday, October 6, 12:30-2 pm
Sexual Violence: Women’s Issue, Men’s Problem
Recent attention to the problem of sexual violence on college campuses raises inevitable questions about how men and women are trained to understand gender, sex, and power. While enacting and enforcing policies that can help ensure the safety of students is crucial, it is also important to deepen the discussion to confront the history and contemporary reality of institutionalized male dominance. What social norms and values create an epidemic of sexual violence?
A panel discussion on these questions will be led by Dr. Diane Rhodes, who teaches courses in social justice in the University of Texas School of Social Work and has extensive experience in domestic violence and sexual assault prevention agencies, including service as Chief Program Officer at SafePlace in Austin; and Ted Rutherford, Communications Program Director at the Texas Association Against Sexual Assault.
The program is sponsored by the Senior Fellows Honors Program of the Moody College of Communication and the Voices Against Violence program at the University of Texas.
Location: Belo Center for New Media, BMC 5.208, 300 W. Dean Keeton, Austin
Tuesday, October 11, 7:15 pm
“Faith, Inequality, and the Pursuit of the Common Good”
Anderson is the author of Just a Little Bit More: The Culture of Excess and the Fate of the Common Good, which describes commerce, materialism, and consumerism as the prevailing religion of the land. The book promotes egalitarianism as the best way forward from the excesses of this overreaching religion.
Location: St. John’s/San Juan Lutheran Church, 409 W. Ben White Blvd., Austin, 78704
Thursday, October 13, 8:30 am-4 pm
Building Green Justice Forum: Race, Health, and the Environment
Huston-Tillotson University will host the third annual Building Green Justice Forum, this year focusing on “Race, Health, and the Environment” from scientific, sociological, political, and historical perspectives.
Keynote speakers will include Mario Sims, social epidemiologist with the Jackson Heart Study and a professor in the University of Mississippi’s Department of Medicine, addressing the Jackson study’s research on the greater prevalence of cardiovascular disease among African Americans and the reasons for the disparity.
Also delivering a keynote address will be Paula Flores-Gregg from the Environmental Protection Agency and the Rev. Eugene Keahey, pastor of the Mount Zion Missionary Baptist Church, who will discuss the fight for environmental justice in Sandbranch, a community southeast of Dallas that has been battling for water rights for over 30 years.
A panel will report on public health interventions and environmental hazard investigations from Argentina to Austin. Moderated by Dominique Bowman Vining of HT, the panel will include Emily Spangenberg from the University of Texas’ Department of Sociology and Shannon Jones, director of Travis County Health and Human Services.
Other presentations will feature activists, community members, students, and researchers working on issues of environmental justice and health.
Registration and coffee begins at 8:30 am, with speakers, panels, and workshops throughout the day.
The forum—which is sponsored by Green is the New Black, The Dumpster Project, and the Third Coast Activist Resource Center—is free but please register online. For more information, contact Karen Magid, kmagid@htu.edu, or Amanda Masino, ammasino@htu.edu.
In the past three years, Huston-Tillotson University has introduced an Environmental Studies major; created the Center for Sustainability and Environmental Justice with a full time Sustainability Director; made green improvements to campus such as a 240kW rooftop solar array and organic food garden; and supported student environmental leadership development through campus organization Green is the New Black. HT also just launched, in partnership with the University of Texas at Austin Dell Medical School, the Sandra Joy Anderson Community Health and Wellness Center, which will focus on access and disparities in HT’s historically diverse neighborhood.
Location: Dickey-Lawless Science Building, Huston-Tillotson University, 900 Chicon St., Austin, 78702, with free parking in the Chalmers Avenue lot and free street parking around campus.
Friday, October 21, 4-6 pm
Rob Nixon on “Environmental Justice and the Anthropocene”
Princeton University professor Rob Nixon, author of Dreambirds: the Natural History of a Fantasy and the award-winning Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor, will speak on “Environmental Justice and the Anthropocene.”
The event is co-sponsored by Environmental Humanities, Department of English, and the Bernard and Audre Rapoport Center for Human Rights and Justice of the School of Law at the University of Texas.
Location: University of Texas, Liberal Arts Building (CLA 1.302E), Austin
Presented by
Christ Church Cathedral
Hines Center for Spirituality and Prayer
with
St. Paul’s Methodist Church
St. Andrew’s Episcopal in the Heights,
St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church
Grace Episcopal Church
Plymouth United (UCC)
St. Mark’s Episcopal Church
Trinity Episcopal Church
Covenant Baptist Church
The Center for Contemporary Theology
Memorial Drive United Methodist Church
The Joe B. and Louise P. Cook Foundation
Register here: http://faithandreason.org/index.php/main/seminar/spirituality-self-society?utm_campaign=email
November 19, 2016 at First United Methodist Church, Austin
6:30 p.m. Welcome Reception
7:00 Dinner and Music
Individual Tickets $50
Table Leaders $500 (One table for 8)
Shepherds $2,000 (One Table for 8 and other benefits)
Business Casual Attire
For tickets, tables & more information, visit Eventbrite
http://www.eventbrite.com/e/giving-thanks-for-our-neighbors-tickets-27758629809?aff=eac2
During the upcoming year, the Rio Texas Methodist Federation for Social Action (MFSA) will focus our programming and action on Creating a Culture of Nonviolence. On Thursday, September 8, join us at Saint John’s UMC Austin, 2140 Allandale Rd, to learn about the work being done by Texas Gun Sense to reduce gun violence. Our speaker will be Andrea Brauer, Executive Director at Texas Gun Sense, providing information about the organization.
From the website http://www.txgunsense.org/:
“The shootings of innocent people are becoming far too common, and we are dismayed by the lack of response from our government.
Texas Gun Sense works to reduce gun violence by promoting effective gun laws through research and public awareness.
We use “gun sense” because we recognize citizens’ right to own guns, but also believe our laws could be strengthened to include more sensible policies that would protect the general public from avoidable accidents and injuries from guns.”
Join us at 6:30p for snacks. The program begins at 7p. All are welcome.
If you cannot attend our meeting, consider attending the Concert Across America to remember the victims of gun violence at Threadgills, 301 Riverside Dr. on Sunday, September 25 – 3-8p. With special musical performances from: Jimmie Dale Gilmore & Butch Hancock, Guy Forsyth & the Riveters, and others.
https://org2.salsalabs.com/o/5610/c/1428/p/salsa/event/common/public/?event_KEY=82362
Gun violence takes a devastating toll on Texans daily. The number of gun deaths in Texas has been rising annually, and it is time we speak up to say that it is unacceptable. Show your support for ending gun violence by attending the Austin event and donating to Texas Gun Sense. For more information on how you can sponsor or partner for the event please contact Megan Russell at megan@txgunsense.org or 512-465-2162.
On Sunday, September 11, 2016, march to honor the justice struggles of farm workers 50 years ago—and to commit to the justice struggles that remain unfinished today.
12 p.m.: Program on the Quad at St Edward’s University
1 p.m.: Start of 4-mile march to the Capitol
4 p.m.: Arrive at Capitol for a rally
Background
In July and August of 1966, hundreds of people—including whole families—marched 400 miles from Rio Grande City to Austin to call attention to the plight of farm workers in Texas. On Labor Day, more than 10,000 supporters, including Cesar Chavez, walked with marchers the last four miles from St. Edward’s University to the South Steps of the Capitol. Texas religious leaders were among key supporters of the march, “La Marcha”—and of the movement for better pay and working conditions for farm workers.
The Rio Grande Melon Strike started in June, 1966, when workers who were paid between $.40-$.85 per hour called for a minimum hourly wage of $1.25. Rebecca Flores, former director of the United Farm Workers in Texas, notes: “It has been 50 years since the farmworker march and strike called attention to harsh working conditions and microscopic pay in Texas, but the issues of the minimum wage, poor working conditions, and substandard housing for migrant farmers are just as relevant in Texas in 2016. Remembering what the farmworkers did in 1966 is much more than a lesson in history.”
A United Methodist deacon at the time, Bishop Joel Martinez participated in La Marcha and has been instrumental in supporting this year’s commemorative march. “If we forget the previous generation’s struggles,” he warns, “we’re not going to do the justice work in the present generation. We have a lot of unfinished business in the state of Texas in terms of justice work around the issues of fairness in the workplace, educational opportunity, healthcare, and immigration policy. All of that is unfinished business for this generation and the generation yet to come.”
Wednesday, September 7, 2016, 7:00-8:30pm
Congregation Beth Israel
3901 Shoal Creek Blvd.
Austin, TX 78756
Light refreshments will be served.
Featuring guest speakers:
Jennifer Smith, Executive Director, Congregation Beth Israel
Charlene Heydinger, President, The Texas PACE Authority
Your congregation can finance energy efficiency improvements through the PACE Program! Learn how at IEN’s September Symposium!
A new, state-sponsored financing option enables nonprofits—including houses of worship—to obtain affordable, long-term loans covering up to 100 percent of the cost for energy efficiency, water saving, and onsite generation technologies. The PACE (Property Assessed Clean Energy) program is now available in the cities of Dallas and Houston, Travis County, Williamson County, and two counties in the Rio Grande Valley: Cameron and Willacy. http://us2.campaign-archive1.com/?u=d7a51146eae6d77f15b01e5f6&id=387a92072e&e=4b6d4fac8f
One congregation in Austin became the first in Texas to benefit from PACE financing. Come hear their story and learn how PACE might work for your congregation!
This event is co-sponsored by: The Texas PACE Authority & Interfaith Environmental Network
On September 12, people of faith and moral courage will gather at state capitols in 25 states to deliver the “Higher Ground Moral Declaration”, which calls on governors, senators, state legislators, and candidates for office to move away from extremist politics and policies that benefit the few and move toward policies and laws that are just and fair and guarantee a better life for the majority of the people.
We declare that the deepest public concerns of our nation and faith traditions are how our society treats the poor, those on the margins, the least of these, women, children, workers, immigrants and the sick; equality and representation under the law; and the desire for peace, love and harmony within and among nations.
Together, we lift up and defend the most sacred moral principles of our faith and constitutional values, which are: the economic liberation of all people; ensuring every child receives access to quality education; healthcare access for all; criminal justice reform; and ensuring historically marginalized communities have equal protection under the law.
Our moral traditions have a firm foundation upon which to stand against the divide-and-conquer strategies of extremists. We believe in a moral agenda that stands against systemic racism, classism, poverty, xenophobia, and any attempt to promote hate towards any members of the human family. We claim a higher ground in partisan debate by returning public discourse to our deepest moral and constitutional values. Please add your name to call on our 2016 presidential candidates, senate candidates, and governors to advance a moral agenda.
http://www.breachrepairers.org/
September 12 at 11:00am-12:00pm in each time zone at the State Capitol.
“The Revival: Time for a Moral Revolution of Values” is a national tour to redefine morality in American politics and challenge leaders of faith and moral courage to be more vocally opposed to harmful policies that disproportionately impact the poor, people who are ill, children, immigrants, communities of color, and religious minorities. The first part of the national revival tour has over 19 stops from April 2016 to January 2017 including New York, North Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Texas, Mississippi, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, South Carolina, Wisconsin, Missouri, Washington DC, Tennessee, Indiana, Minnesota, New Mexico, Kentucky, and Virginia.
The Revival is co-led by the Rev. Dr. James A Forbes Jr. and the Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II, architect of the historic Moral Monday Movement in North Carolina. They will be joined in some states by other national social justice leaders, including the Rev. Dr. Traci Blackmon, acting executive minister of the United Church of Christ’s Justice and Witness Ministries, and Sister Simone Campbell, leader of the “Nuns on the Bus” and executive director of the Catholic social justice lobby NETWORK in Washington, DC. Sponsoring and supporting organizations include:
In each state, we will lead revival services and hear testimony from people who have been impacted and hurt by regressive policies. Prior to the revivals, the leadership team will train hundreds of faith and moral leaders in each state to strengthen local and state activism from the bottom up. Lastly, local faith leaders, citizens, and persons impacted and hurt by regressive policies are invited to participate in direct actions in their state capitals during three Mondays in September, and sign on to the “Higher Ground Moral Declaration” calling on our political system to rise above hatred, fear, and left and right politics, in order to reach our highest values of love and justice.
| Just Mercy – Book Studies |
A book study of Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption by Bryan Stevenson will be offered this fall with multiple meeting options in Austin. This book is a powerful true story about the potential for mercy to redeem us, and a clarion call to fix our broken system of justice.
“Just Mercy” was named by TIME magazine as one of the “10 Best Books of Nonfiction” for 2014, a Notable Book of 2014 by the New York Times, and it won the 2015 Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Nonfiction, among many other awards. It is on this year’s reading list for United Methodist Women. Just Mercy is available on Amazon for participants to purchase. If you want a preview, check out Bryan Stevenson’s TED Talk here.
One Book, Multiple Meeting Options Sundays, September 11, 18, 25 Tuesdays, September 6, 13, 20 Wednesdays, September 7, 14, 21, 7:00-8:00 p.m. Tuesday, September 27 October
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| On September 13, it’s time to rally at the State Board of Education — please join Texas Freedom Network to demand the rejection of the offensive and inaccurate Mexican-American Heritage textbook.
What: A rally calling on the Texas State Board of Education to #RejectTheText. The textbook, titled Mexican American Heritage, was written to support a new elective course for high schools. It’s described as being offensive because of several passages. One links Mexican Americans to illegal immigration stating; they have “caused a number of economic and security problems in the United States,” problems such as; poverty, drugs, crime and non-assimilation.” UT professor Emilio Zamora would like TEA to have a do-over. Zamora says, “I think we should try it again, I think they should either make a call that gives more time to historians or commission a group of top Texas historians to produce a fair rendition of Mexican American history in the US.” http://www.fox7austin.com/news/local-news/144142516-story For more information about the rally, contact Val Benavidez, Outreach & Field Director at tfn@tfn.org.
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National Perspective on Voting Rights & Texas Voting Rights
LBJ School/Library Bass Lecture Hall, UT Campus |
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| Hosted by LBJ School of Public Affairs Student Organizations: Feminist Policy Alliance, Public Affairs Alliance for Communities of Color, Graduate Public Affairs Council
Nationally Recognized Speakers: National Perspective on Voting Rights Nancy Abudu, Director of Legal Operations, ACLU of Florida Voting Rights in Texas Chad Dunn, Chief litigator for plaintiffs in the Teas Voter ID case Cassandra Champion – Texas Civil Rights Project litigator on Texas Motor Vote Act voter registration enforcement
4:00 Volunteer Deputy Registrar Training for interested attendees.
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Join us on Tuesday, September 20 at St. Matthew’s Episcopal Church for a courageous conversation on the topic of Privilege.
Please RSVP in advance!
September 20, – 6:30 pm – 8:30pm