Earth Day 2016

earth-day-2016

Earth Day Toolkit

Trees for the Earth

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Billion Acts of Green

Countdown to 2020

The movement continues.

We are now entering the 46th year of a movement that continues to inspire, challenge ideas, ignite passion, and motivate people to action.

In 1970, the year of our first Earth Day, the movement gave voice to an emerging consciousness, channeling human energy toward environmental issues. Forty-six years later, we continue to lead with groundbreaking ideas and by the power of our example.

And so it begins. Today. Right here and right now. Earth Day is more than just a single day — April 22, 2016. It’s bigger than attending a rally and taking a stand.

This Earth Day and beyond, let’s make big stuff happen. Let’s plant 7.8 billion trees for the Earth. Let’s divest from fossil fuels and make cities 100% renewable. Let’s take the momentum from the Paris Climate Summit and build on it.

Let’s start now. And let’s not stop.

– See more at: http://www.earthday.org/earth-day/#sthash.IdDpHhGH.dpuf

Also, http://earthdayaustin.com/

BOPA Recycling at Crestview UMC

BOPABOPA (Batteries, Oil, Paint, Antifreeze) Recycling in our parking lot at Crestview UMC, 1300 Morrow on Saturday April 23, starting at 9 am. We’ll close at 11 am or when our trailers are full, whichever comes first. We are conducting this recycling drive in partnership with the Crestview Neighborhood Association. Bring Batteries, Oil, Paint and Antifreeze (the last three in closed containers). We can accept only these items! They will be taken to the city’s hazardous waste recycling depot. Just drive up, give your zip code (requested by the city) and volunteers will unload your vehicle.

A collection of electronic items will go on at the same time and place, to benefit Wooten Elementary School. Items can be working or non-working cables, circuit boards, computers, laptops, LCD screens, modems, monitors, motherboards, networking hardware, telecommunication equipment, telephones, cell phones, printer cartridges and toner cartridges, electronic games.

The Mask You Live In

maskScreening and panel discussion of the film THE MASK YOU LIVE IN

 

St. Andrews Presbyterian Church – Austin

Sunday, April 26, 2015  at 4:00 p.m. in the Sanctuary

 

In 2011, Jennifer Siebel Newsom debuted her first film, MISS REPRESENTATION, which delved into the dangerous ways mass media reflects and enforces our culture’s belief that the value of women and girls lies in their youth, beauty, and sexuality. In a similar approach, Siebel Newsom’s newest film, THE MASK YOU LIVE IN, takes a look at modern masculinity. What are the messages our boys and men receive from popular culture, sports, and the media? What happens to kids when the traits we’ve feminized are devalued over and over again? In this film, men from various backgrounds share the impact of their upbringing, relationships with their fathers, their struggles, and the deliberate choices they’ve made in raising their own children. Experts in the field, including authors, doctors, and educators, provide research as well as observations on the challenges men and boys face in our society’s unrealistic expectations of hyper-masculinity.

This project reveals how our current course of male identity needs to be altered.  Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hc45-ptHMxo

Interfaith Action of Central Texas (iACT)

iact-HopeiACT’s Hope Awards

Monday, May 2, 2016

The Hope Awards celebration and fundraiser provides support for iACT’s outstanding community service programs. Hands on Housing repairs the homes of impoverished seniors and people with disabilities. iACT for Refugees  provides basic educational assistance to newly arrived refugees from around the world. The Red Bench interfaith dialogue program encourages meaningful conversations that matter.

This year iACT will be holding its biggest fundraiser, The Hope Awards, on Monday, May 2, 2016 at Congregation Agudas Achim.  The celebration will honor the Stewart Family – Liz, Duff, Adam, Noah, and Grace, and will highlight the work of Mt. Zion Baptist Church.

 

More information here.

News on Complaint Against Rev. Cynthia Meyer

cynthia_meyerThe Rev. Cynthia Meyer moved a step closer to a church trial after she and Bishop Scott Jones failed to agree on a just resolution to the complaint that she is a “self-avowed, practicing” homosexual.

One option the Great Plains Conference bishop offered Meyer was that Edgerton (KS) United Methodist Church, where she is now pastor, could withdraw from the denomination and retain Meyer as pastor in a new denomination.

Meyer rejected that choice.

“I thought that was a surprising and disappointing request. That he would want those who disagree with the formal position of the church to simply leave the denomination was troubling,” Meyers told United Methodist News Service.

“Certainly, on that point I knew this was not anything I would willingly accept or sign. It does not seem to me to be just.”

Rev. Meyer – a pastor in The UMC for 25 years – also rejected a proposal to delay the proceedings until after the 2016 General Conference votes on human sexuality petitions during the May 10-20 international conference in Portland, Oregon.

More than 800 delegates from across the country and around the world will meet in Portland, Ore. from May 10-20 to consider more than 70 proposals on whether to confirm or rewrite the denomination’s biblical understanding of human sexuality.

From United Methodist News Service reports http://www.umc.org/

Texas Impact – Better Neighbors – Human Trafficking

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[excerpt]

Many consider 1863, the year the Emancipation Proclamation was issued, as the year slavery ended. Perhaps others cite 1981, the year Mauritania became the last country on earth to abolish slavery. However, this ancient form of exploitation continues in our time and in our nation in the form of human trafficking.

Human trafficking is typically divided between two types: labor trafficking and sex trafficking. Labor trafficking can occur in domestic work, restaurant/food services, traveling sales crews, bars/clubs, construction, health/beauty services, and begging rings. Sex trafficking venues include hotels/motels, commercial-fronts, residential brothels, escort services, online ads, truck stops, and bars/clubs. Victims of these illicit markets include foreigners who are brought across international borders as well as U.S. citizens and legal residents who are trafficked within U.S. borders. On a global scale, approximately 600,000–800,000 people are trafficked each year.

Of the 14,500-17,500 people who are trafficked into the United States each year, the U.S. government believes that 80 percent are women and approximately 50 percent are minors. While human trafficking occurs in many places both nationally and globally, rates of trafficking are alarmingly high in our state. Texas is a hub for international human trafficking because of its many busy interstate highways, international airports, bus stations, shipping commerce through the Gulf of Mexico, and its shared border with Mexico. Specifically, Harris County and the North Texas region serve as major areas for trafficking. In addition, Texas is home to the I-10 corridor, which the U.S. Department of Justice recently designated as the number one route for human trafficking in the U.S.

Vital Conversations Series

GCORR-UMC-logo-1000px-e1459883406347The General Commission on Race and Religion of The United Methodist Church (GCORR) presents Vital Conversations on Realities of Race and Racism: A Guide to Small-group Discussions about the Video Series.  This Vital Conversations series features contemporary theologians, sociologists, laity, clergy, and other thought-leaders dealing with challenges of race, culture, and oppression in the Church and world today.  http://www.gcorr.org/series/vital-conversations-series-1/

San Antonio Explores MFSA Connection

Recently, officers of the Rio Texas Chapter of MFSA met with more than a dozen interested persons at Travis Park UMC in San Antonio about the possibility of establishing an MFSA group in that city.  The overall organization of MFSA was described, as well as possible activities the SA group might be interested in pursuing.  The Austin contingent expressed willingness to share expertise and ideas to help get this group started.

If you are interested in the prospect of having a MFSA presence in San Antonio – specific events, programs, or projects, please contact Rev. Dale Tremper of Travis Park UMC, dtremper@travispark.org for more information

Faith and Reason Seminar

 

New Seminar

Joan Chittister, Benedictine Sister, famed author and international ambassador for human rights will return to Houston October 14 & 15 to speak at Christ Church Episcopal Cathedral.  Chittister will address the topic: “Spirituality, Self and Society,” based on her latest book, “The Rule of Benedict: A Spirituality for the 21st Century,” in which she boldly claims that St. Benedict’s sixth-century text is the only one of the great traditions that directly touches today’s issues: stewardship, conversion, communication, reflection, contemplation, humility and equality.  Sr. Joan expands the principles of the Rule into the larger context of spiritual living in a secular world and makes the seemingly archaic instructions relevant for a contemporary audience

New Voices

We’re proud of our ongoing relationship with scholars like John Dominic Crossan and Sr. Joan Chittister, among others. We’re also proud to showcase insights from thinkers like Joerg Rieger, Keri Day, and Robin Meyers. Follow us on Facebook for more exposure to their important work. We’ll also soon be releasing a survey to learn from you what issues in the church and the world are important to you, to guide our future endeavors

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 sponsors One Human Race Workshop at St. Luke UMC Austin

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The Rio Texas MFSA chapter is sponsoring The One Human Race Series at St. Luke UMC-Austin, 1306 W Lynn St., on three Saturdays in April – 16, 23, 30 -from 12:30-3:30pm.

In this three-week series, you’ll learn, listen, and share about the concept of race in the U.S. in a safe and productive environment. There is no fee, but donations are welcome.

You must register to participate – http://www.onehumanrace.info. While, it is not a requirement that you attend all sessions, the first session is mandatory. Registration is limited to 60 people, so register soon to secure your space.

Thanks to the Union of Black Episcopalians – Myra McDaniel Chapter for this ministry and to Rev. Jay Cooper and St. Luke UMC for hosting the event.

ONEHUMANRACEFlyerStLukeApril2016

Chapter Meeting in March to be at Tarrytown UMC

The March meeting of the Rio Texas Chapter of the Methodist Federation for Social Action will be Thursday, March 10 at Tarrytown UMC, 2601 Exposition, in Austin.  (NOTE CHANGE IN VENUE.) The program is entitled “What to Expect at General Conference 2016”.  General Conference is the quadrennial gathering of United Methodists from around the world at which policies are set and decisions made that will impact United Methodists for the next four years.  GC2016 will be in Portland, Oregon from May 10-20 this year. The MFSA meeting will feature Jay Brim, a member of Westlake UMC who currently serves as Chancellor to the Bishop of the Rio Texas Conference.

Snacks and mingling begin at 6:30p, followed by the program at 7:00.  Bring friends of any (or no) faith tradition.  We hope to see you there!

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

Courageous Conversations on Race

Courageous Conversations On RaceStEdwards

Date:  March 3, 2016

Time:  6:30 pm to 8:30 pm

Location:  Robert and Pearle Ragsdale Center, Mabee Ballroom A

Spurred by the numerous shootings of blacks by law enforcement, these monthly discussions seek to unpack the presence of systemic racism within our communities and how Catholics and all people might participate in un-doing racism in our communities.

Join others from the Austin community in this on-going discussion, sponsored by: the Roman Catholic Diocese of Austin’s, the Diocese Office of Black Catholics, the Diocese Office of Life/Charity/Justice, Pax Christi, Holy Cross Parish, St. John Neumann Parish, and St. Edward’s University Campus Ministry.
Kindness and Truth shall meet; Justice and Peace shall kiss. Psalm 85:11

St. Edward’s University (3001 S. Congress Avenue, 78704) in the Ragsdale Center on the 3rd Floor (Mabee Ballrooms A & B). Park in the Parking Garage or in Lot P next to the softball field.