From Bethany UMC Austin and World Vision

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.

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.

Follow Jesus
Into the Margins

Bethany UMC-Austin

10010 Anderson Mill Rd

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

Register your Tour Time Now!

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.

Event from Faith & Reason

joan-web-cover

October 14-15, 2016

Houston, TX

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

Peace & Justice Luncheon registration extended to June 8 at 9am

  Where do we go from here?

  Reflections on General Conference 2016

Friday, June 10, 2016 – Noon

American Bank Convention Center – Watergarden A (upstairs)

Corpus Christi, Texas

Sixth Annual Peace & Justice Luncheon

Methodist Federation for Social Action, Rio Texas Chapter

Rio Texas Conference Transforming Communities Vision Team

Featuring

luncheon speakers                   Jay Brim          Rev. Laura Merrill     Rev. Steve Clunn      Jarell Wilson

We are pleased to have these four United Methodists share their perspectives about General Conference 2016.

·       Jay Brim is a member of Westlake UMC-Austin who currently serves as Chancellor to the Bishops of the Rio Texas Conference. He is a lay delegate to GC 2016.

·       Rev. Laura Merrill is District Superintendent of the El Valle District in the Rio Texas Conference. She is a clergy delegate to GC 2016.

·       Rev. Steve Clunn is the coordinator of the Love Your Neighbor Coalition, a partnership of 13 United Methodist Church related Caucus groups working for a just, inclusive and grace filled denomination.

·       Jarell Wilson is a United Methodist candidate for ordination and a May graduate from Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary. This is his first General Conference.

Join us for this on-site luncheon. In addition, we will honor the recipients of the MFSA “Building a Just Community” Awards.

Luncheon Cost: $12.00 in advance (by June 8); $15.00 at MFSA booth (limited number available)

Purchase tickets with credit card Here

See luncheon flyer at: https://riotexasmfsa.org/2016/04/05/peace-and-justice-luncheon-2016/luncheonflyer2016/

MFSA Sponsors One Human Race Workshop in April

one-human-race-workshops-87Rio Texas MFSA is sponsoring the One Human Race Series on three Saturdays in April (16th, 23rd, and 30th) at St. Luke UMC, 1306 West Lynn, Austin, 78703. We will meet once a week or three weeks to create a safe environment to communicate about race using the following resources:

·     Watch PBS Series: “Race: The Power of An Illusion” in one hour segments;

·     Participate in group discussions with trained group leaders;

·     Examine the American concept of race;

·     Share feelings and experiences with a goal of building community and common ground.

You do not have to attend all three sessions. If you miss a session, you can register for it later at another location. Contact Anne Mund, ennadnum@hotmail.com, if you have questions.

Registration Link:

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/one-human-race-series-tickets-21977213437

or: www.onehumanrace.info

We look forward to seeing you on April 16, 23, and 30th.

Peace and Justice Luncheon 2016

 Where do we go from here?

Reflections on General Conference 2016

6th Annual Peace and Justice Luncheon
Sponsored by

Methodist Federation for Social Action, Rio Texas Chapter &

Rio Texas Conference Transforming Communities Vision Team

Friday, June 10, 2016 – Noon

American Bank Convention Center – Watergarden A (upstairs)

Corpus Christi, Texas

We are pleased to have these four United Methodists share their perspectives about General Conference 2016.

  • Jay Brim is a member of Westlake UMC-Austin who currently serves as Chancellor to the Bishops of the Rio Texas Conference. He is a lay delegate to GC 2016.
  • Laura Merrill is District Superintendent of the El Valle District in the Rio Texas Conference. She is a clergy delegate to GC 2016.
  • Steve Clunn is the coordinator of the Love Your Neighbor Coalition, a partnership of 13 United Methodist Church related Caucus groups working for a just, inclusive and grace filled denomination.
  • Jarell Wilson is a United Methodist candidate for ordination and a May graduate from Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary. This is his first General Conference.

Join us for this on-site luncheon. In addition, we will honor the recipients of the MFSA “Building a Just Community” Awards.

Registration form here: LuncheonFlyer2016

Family Detention Update

end familydetention

Monday, March 28

The North Door – 502 Brushy St., Austin

6-8pm

Learn, share, connect.

Gather for an update on refugee families jailed in Texas: what’s happening now, and how you can help. Hear from lawyers, activists, and affected families. Cosponsored by Austin Region JFON.

March 28 Family Detention Free Event

MFSA BOPA Recycling Event

DSC06557 (2)Rio Texas MFSA Will Sponsor the 7th Annual BOPA (Batteries, Oil, Paint, Antifreeze) Recycling Event

Saturday, March 5;  8 to 10:30 am
Westlake UMC, 1460 Redbud Trail
Austin, TX 78746

Start cleaning the garage and find those batteries, oil, paint, and antifreeze and bring them to the MFSA BOPA event on Saturday, March 5, at Westlake UMC, 1460 Redbud Trail, Austin, TX 78746, Austin, TX from 8:00 – 10:30 am.

If you would like to help with this event or have questions, please contact Anne Mund, ennadnum@hotmail.com

Special Screening of “An Act Of Love” Documentary

act of love_Poster_3000_URL_RGB

An Act of Love

Documentary screening

Saint John’s UMC

5:30 p.m. Sunday February 21

Free admission

Join us for the screening of An Act of Love, a documentary about the trial that rocked the United Methodist Church and the minister, Rev. Frank Schaefer, who risked it all for his son. Cosponsored by: Saint John’s Reconciling Team, Rio Texas MFSA, and Rio Texas Reconciling Ministries Team.

Why this film is important now

 We now have marriage equality in all 50 States, but the U.S.’s 2nd largest protestant denomination is still sharply divided on this issue.

Full equality for the LGBTQ community cannot exist in the U.S. without the support of the Christian community. Laws may be passed that provide more rights and protections, but those rights will be routinely ignored in places where the community does not agree that LGBTQ citizens should be treated as equals under the law and under God. Just as the struggle for racial and gender equality made huge strides forward once they gained the support of influential religious communities – so will the LGBTQ movement.

We hope that this film will be a strategic and important tool used to elevate the conversation about LGBTQ rights in one of the most significant Christian denominations in the U.S. – the United Methodist Church.

In May 2016, at the denomination’s General Conference, there will be another chance for the rules of the UMC to change and allow for ordination of LGBTQ clergy and for same-sex marriage within the Church. We created this film with this critical turning point in mind.

Act of Love

Austin Crop Walk

CROPLogo2010HiRes-300x195

Austin CROP Hunger Walk 2016

February 28, Sunday
2:00 pm: Registration
2:30 pm:  Step Off

Location for 2016

Camp Mabry

2200 West 35th Street.

Camp Mabry(View Larger Map)

 

Register and Raise Funds Online

 

For more information or assistance with raising funds online, contact at info@austincrophungerwalk.org

MFSA Announces Shoe Drive

MFSA Announces Shoe Drive Drop Locations

The Rio Texas chapter of the Methodist Federation for Social Action (MFSA) is sponsoring a SHOE DRIVE to benefit Redemptive Work, a nonprofit housed at Parker Lane UMC in southeast Austin (RedemptiveWork.org).  RW is part of a social enterprise plugging people into jobs here in Austin and in other countries.

The shoes will be sent to poor communities around the world where they will be repaired, cleaned, and distributed to those in need, or broken into raw materials for micro-industries.  From the revenue earned for donating the shoes, RW will fund its services to the displaced in the Austin area, such as financial management training, job services networking, computer training, cultural coaching, subsidizing of employment opportunities, transportation solutions, and English language practice in professional settings.

Please band your gently used shoes together in pairs and drop them off at Saint John’s UMC, 2140 Allandale Road or Parker Lane UMC, 2105 Parker Lane any time between now and November 22.

It’s a win/win/win situation:  free up some space in your closet by donating shoes you no longer wear, fund services for the down-and-out in the Austin area, and create jobs for the destitute in poor communities around the globe.

Contact Anne Mund (512-343-0803, ennadnum@hotmail.com) or Rev. Dr. Mindy Johnson-Hicks (806-252-1534, redemptivework@gmail.com).

Save the Date – One Human Race Workshops

one-human-race-workshops-87The Rio Texas MFSA Chapter will sponsor the One Human Race Workshops in April 2016.

Three workshops focused on race reconciliation using materials from the PBS Series: Race: A Power of An Illusion. Materials have been updated and modified. If you are looking for a safe and friendly environment to start on continue a conversation about race reconciliation, this may be the ideal solution for you.

We recommend you attend at least the first workshop. Attendance to all workshops is not required, but recommended. To learn more about this movement, visit: www.OneHumanRace.info

Presented by: The Myra McDaniel Chapter, which is an affiliate of the national organization, the Union of Black Episcopalians. The Chapter advocates for and encourages greater involvement and participation of members of the African Diaspora in all levels of the Episcopal Church.

ARJFON Fundraiser – Save the Date!

jfon-logo-1 (1)

Fundraising Event Dinner

“Stand With Us”

Saturday, November 14,  6:30 PM 

First UMC Austin

Family Life Center

Please save the date and make plans now to attend.

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/stand-with-us-austin-region-justice-for-our-neighbors-dinner-tickets-18282956816

The Lee and Mae Ball Award

In the 1950s, the Methodist Federation for Social Action came under attack during the days of the Red Scare and McCarthyism. Labeled “Methodism’s Pink Fringe” by an essay in Reader’s Digest, the Federation was asked to no longer be the Church’s voice for social justice.

With no apportionment funds from the general Church and no strong support from the denomination, MFSA was kept alive by the work of Lee and Mae Ball.

Noting the importance of an independent advocate for social change in the Church, Lee and Mae led MFSA by knocking on parsonage doors, participating in civil rights protests, corresponding with prison inmates, and publishing a newsletter, the Social Questions Bulletin (SQB). All of this laid the ground work to help the Federation become stronger for years ahead.

Lee and Mae Ball were never content to remain within the walls of a Church building because they knew they could only find Jesus in the company of the poor and oppressed. They engaged those who were “spiritual, but not religious” long before the Church had words to describe such a belief. And so today, the Methodist Federation for Social Action recognizes those individuals who have that same Spirit for peace with justice, for being the Church beyond the walls, and lifting up the best practices of the Methodist Federation for Social Action.

The 2015 Ball Award recipient has been a life-long advocate for justice and peace, through the church and in the community.  In the mid 60s he was one of the pastors named by the National Council of Churches to go to Mississippi to help with the freedom schools and voter registration.  He was an early protester against the Vietnam war, and has demonstrated against the B1 bomber, nuclear weapons, war in general, the coming of a drone base to Des Moines and on many other peace issues, and has been arrested several times for his witness. He worked with Rabbi Jay Goldberg and Roman Catholic Bishop Maurice Dingman to create a Peace Garden in the premier park in downtown Des Moines.  More recently he was the driving force to be sure that Peace Garden was remembered and restored as the city did a major remodel of that park.

DSC09835 The Methodist Federation for Social Action is proud to present The Ball Award to Rev. Chet Guinn of Des Moines, Iowa. The award was presented to Chet at Gather at the River in San Antonio, TX.   Thank you, Chet Guinn, for all you do to make the city of Des Moines, the state of Iowa, and the United Methodist Church a place where peace with justice is central to the minds of all people!

Gather at the River! August 6-9, 2015

GATHERlogoWEB2

Thursday, August 6 – Sunday, August 9, 2015
pre-day forum begins at 9AM on Thursday
Event begins with Worship at 7PM Thursday

www.gather2015.org

Gather at the River is a national conference that will meet at Travis Park United Methodist Church, an historic, open and justice-seeking community of faith in downtown San Antonio, steps away from the renowned River Walk entertainment and cultural district. Housing and additional meeting space will be at the Sheraton Gunter Hotel next door.

Methodist Federation for Social Action and Reconciling Ministries Network members and friends in the Rio Texas Conference are preparing to provide extravagant hospitality for Gather at the River participants. Gather at the River will also include the participation of kindred groups in the Love Your Neighbor Coalition. Gather at the River is a multi-generational gathering. Program activities for children (ages 3-rising 6th grade) and youth (middle and high school) will be led by professionally-trained staff.

Register Now at www.gather2015.org !

The lineup of worship leaders, preachers, speakers, and entertainment is AWESOME!

Worship Leaders:  Marcia McFee & Mark A. Miller

Preachers:  Rev. Peter Storey, Rev. Theon Johnson, Nikilas Mawanda, Rev. Sarah Thompson Tweedy

Speakers: Bishop Minerva Carcaño, Rev. Grace Imathiu, Bishop Melvin Talbert, Rev. Frank Schaefer

Entertainers:  Jennifer Knapp, IlluMen, Campanas de América

Youth & Children’s Programs:  Shelley Walters, Carol Kohrs

Hosts:  Chett Pritchett (MFSA), Matt Berryman (RMN)

If you have been to convocation or one of the joint MFSA/RMN events such as Sing a New Song in 2011, you know what a treasure it is to have this conference in our backyard!

Gather At The River Workshops Announced!

Workshops are intended to provide hands-on training opportunities to learn and hone skills for vital congregational ministries, advocacy for LGBTQ equality, engaging persons in the intersections of justice issues, and/or preparing a progressive witness for the 2016 General Conference.
Workshops will happen on Friday afternoon, August 7, and will be 75 minutes in length.

BEING CHURCH

A1: Creating Rituals for Life Passages of Individuals and Communities – Marcia McFee

A2: Twenty-First Century Worship Leading and Soul Justice Singing – Mark Miller

A3: Breaking Down Barriers: Practicing Inclusion
Sharon McCart

A4: REFUEL: A Filling Station for the Overworked
Ruth Airhart

A5: Inclusion from Inception: Church Planting for Today
Brittany Isaac

A6: The Reconciling Process – Using the “Building An Inclusive Church Toolkit” – Helen Ryde

A7: “Where Do I Belong?” Creating Vital Communities of Accountability & Responsibility Across Difference
Vernice Thorn, Robyn Morrison, cathy knight

A8: Making God’s Vision Ours – Rev. Max Blaylock

CHANGING CHURCH

B1: Southern Initiative in RMN Organizing – Laura Young & Helen Ryde

B2: Hate, Hope and Religion in Africa & USA – Dennis Apopka, Bishop Joseph Tolton, Ann Craig, M.Div.

B3: Troubling the Waters–Disruption 101: Basics of (Non)violent Direct Action – Rev. Amy E. DeLong & Rev. Dr. Julie Todd, Love Prevails

B4: Troubling the Waters- Disruption 201: Strategies and Techniques of (Non)violent Direct Action – Rev. Amy E. DeLong & Rev. Dr. Julie Todd, Love Prevails

B5: Preparing for General Conference – Rev. Steve Clunn and Kevin Nelson

B6: Building Bridges with Evangelicals and Moderates – Dave Nuckols & Giselle Lawn

B7: Who Ya Gonna Call? Navigating the Complaint/Legal Process in the UMC – Rev. Scott Campbell, Rev. Paul Fleck & Kevin Nelson

DOING JUSTICE

C1: Cultural Competency – Rev. Amy Stapleton

C2: Reproductive Justice: What’s Faith Got To Do With It?
Rev. Kathryn Johnson

C3: Palestinian & Israeli Voices: Impact of the Israeli Occupation on their Lives – Hashem Abushama & Dalit Baum, Ph.D.

C4: United Methodists and the Global Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) Movement – David Wildman & Lisa Bender

C5: The Widow, the Orphan, the Stranger: Legal Ministry from a Spiritual Perspective – Piper Madison, Austin JFON

C6: Ending Mass Incarceration – Get Your Church/Campus Involved – T.C. Morrow

C7: Not Just a One Night Stand: Expanding Ministry with the Poor and Marginalized – Dr. John Flowers & Rev. Karen Vannoy

C8: Todos Somos Esperanza/We Are All Hope: Nepantla Strategies for Overcoming Injustice – Graciela Sánchez & Rachel Jennings

QUEERLY FORWARD

D1: The Gay Family Next Door – Rev. Sara Thompson Tweedy

D2: Queer Voices of Color – Rev. Theon Johnson III ( moderator) and panelists Bridget Cabrera, Rev. Dr. Pamela Lightsey., Jorge Lockward, Dr. Mark Miller, Dr. Randall Miller & Alex Shanks

D3: Transgender Basics – Paula Buls, C. Kristian Clauser & Colin Jon david Stewart

D4: Deepening Ministry with Gender Diverse Persons – Giselle Lawn & Alex Shanks

D5: Family Acceptance Project: Revolutionizing How We Support LGBT People in Families & Faith Communities – Caitlin Ryan, PhD, ACSW

D6: LGBTQI Asylum and Global Congregations – Seeking Global AFFIRMATION – Ann Craig, M.Div.

D7: Communities of Color Journey Toward Full Inclusion – Jorge Lockward & Rev. Vicki Flippin