UM Army Rio Texas Group Registrations Available

Click Here do download the 2015 UM Army Impact Information Sheet

UM Army Rio Texas group dates for Summer 2016 are scheduled as listed:

2016 Camp Season:

College Mission Opportunity
May 22-28 in Uvalde

Family Mission Opportunity
July 3-7 at Cathedral Oaks Retreat and Worship Center in Weimar

BASIC Mission Opportunities
June 26-30 in San Antonio
July 3-7 in Corpus Christi
July 10-14 in Mercedes

Senior High Mission Opportunities
June 12-18 at Cathedral Oaks Retreat and Worship Center in Weimar
June 19-25 in Martindale
June 26-July 2 in Mission
July 10-16 in Bandera
July 17-23 in Port Lavaca

If you would like to sign-up as a group, please click here. 

Our mission is accomplished every summer when over 1,000 youth and adults throughout Central, South, and West Texas sacrifice a week of their vacation to give to others. Using a local church as a home base for camp, participants spend the week providing work for low-income, elderly, and disabled homeowners in the surrounding areas. Projects include general repairs and clean up, building wheelchair ramps, porches, steps, handrails, painting, mowing, and being Christ’s hands and feet in the world. Daily worship and noon devotionals serve to focus everyone on Christ and promote spiritual development.

"UM Army-Rio Texas is Conference Advanced Special #2026 and we need, appreciate and use your donations to offer scholarships to participants as well as meet client needs; altar rail offerings really help!"

If you would like to participate as a church, please fill out this form. 

If you have any questions, please contact Jenny Monahan. 

Rio Texas Conference Responds to Storm Damage

Rio Texas Annual Conference Disaster Response Coordinator, Gene Hileman, met via conference call with district disaster coordinators, pastors, and District Superintendents from areas damaged by recent storms on Saturday, Oct. 31. Members of the Rio Texas Mission Vitality Center also joined the call. Response plans were made accordingly.

In the Capital District, the Onion Creek area was hit the hardest. Flood buckets, stored in the Bishop Jóel and Dr. Raquel Martinez Disaster Response Center Warehouse in Kerrville, have been delivered to Oak Hill United Methodist Church in Austin. These supplies will then be delivered to Onion Creek. Meanwhile, Oak Hill is gathering response teams while Dripping Spring United Methodist Church has teams awaiting assignments.

Flooding in Wimberley is reported to be more extensive than the Memorial Day Flood.

Flooding in Wimberley is reported to be more extensive than the Memorial Day Flood.

Flooding is widespread in the Hill Country District. Buda, Kyle, San Marcos, Wimberley and New Braunfels have all experienced flooding. Flood buckets have been delivered to the area. The small community of D'Hanis (outside of Hondo, TX) experienced damage from a possible tornado that touched down there early Friday morning. Most of the damage was confined to businesses in the downtown area.

The Crossroads District continues to evaluate the situation in Martindale, an area that was heavily damaged by the Memorial Day flooding.  One member of First United Methodist Church, Seguin had their home destroyed by the storm. 

Damage for the possible tornado is Floresville

Damage for the possible tornado is Floresville

In the Las Misiones district, there was extensive damage from the tornado that touched down in Floresville. According to Peter Aguilar, Pastor of Floresville United Methodist Church, “cleanup began immediately.” Authorities in Floresville were able to lift the nighttime curfew in time for Halloween trick-or-treating. 

The Coastal Bend district did not see much damage from this storm system. However, they are still working on long-term recovery efforts from the May flooding.

In the El Valle District, damage was confined mostly to the Weslaco area. There is a shelter open at Weslaco First Baptist Church. There is damage from flooding due to a previous storm event earlier this year. While things are in motion for long-term relief, some families are still in need of early response teams.

Weslaco saw extensive damage from this round of flooding.

Weslaco saw extensive damage from this round of flooding.

Your help is needed. At this point disaster response coordinators are asking help from trained ERT teams and individuals.

Register Your ERT Team

Register as an Individual or Small Group (3 or less.)

Only trained ERT Team Members with current background checks (up to five years) will be accepted.

Disaster Response Responds to Eagle Pass Flooding

Disaster Response is currently responding to the floods that occurred in Eagle Pass last week.

According to Conference Disaster Response Coordinator Eugene Hileman, 150 homes were flooded and an additional 200 suffered water damage when nearly 10 inches of rain came through leaks in roofs and windows.

209 flood buckets and 80 health kits were delivered to the area immediately.  The supply of flood buckets is still more than adequate due to the great response following the Blanco River Flood last May. 

People wishing to respond to either the fires or the floods near Smithville should send gifts to the Rio Texas Conference Disaster Fund. 

Can People Find Your Church?

The Rio Texas Media Center has been encouraging local churches to make sure they have a modern, up-to-date, website to serve as a modern "front door" for people looking for a church. If your church is not there yet, I hope you will take advantage of a free an easy way to make sure your church can be found.

United Methodist Communication's "Find A Church" platform is a free resource that allows every United Methodist Church to have a presence on the web. It also lists your church in the "Find A Church" portal meaning that you can be found by people searching for a church through umc.org and riotexas.org.

The good news is that your church already has a listing. The question is "Is your church information correct and up to date?" Why not find out today? Go to "Find A Church" and enter your church's city, town or zip code. Make sure all of your information is up to date. You can also customize your welcome message and add more detailed information about your church. There are even places to add photos, show your social media links and list your events and activities.

Does your church already have a web page? It is still important to update your "Find A Church" page. When people find your church through umc.org or riotexas.org, their first stop will be your "Find A Church" page. Make sure it is up to date and has the correct link to your website.

Need help? Watch this short video on updating your "Find A Church" page.


Announcement from Bishop Dorff

It is with a great deal of sadness I write to inform you that after a four-year battle with Parkinson’s Disease, on October 4, 2015, Mary Lavelle Owen, wife of the late Bishop Ray Owen who served the Southwest Texas and Rio Grande Conferences from 1992-2000, passed away peacefully at home into the glorious presence of God.  At her request and instruction, a private family service is scheduled for Wednesday, October 7, 2015.

Please keep the family in your prayers.

In lieu of flowers, I have been informed that memorials could be made to:

Hospice of Green County
11205 S. Boston Avenue, Suite 200
Tulsa, OK 74119
918-747-2273

Bishop James Dorff
San Antonio Area
The United Methodist Church

More information about Practicing the Art of Self Care "Take A Day Apart" Workshop

The Rio Texas Conference's Office of Leadership Vitality's Clergy Wellness Program is excited to offer a workshop by Reah Ministry. The workshop, Take A Day Apart, will focus on spiritual formation. 

The three-part workshop will be held at the Oblate School of Theology in San Antonio on October 22, 2015; January 28, 2016; and April 28, 2016, respectively. 

Please Click Here to download the flyer above. 

To register, please click here. Ticket sales for Physical Well-Being will end on Oct. 14. 

Clergy Wellness Program Offers "Take A Day Apart" Workshop by Reah Ministry

The Rio Texas Conference's Office of Leadership Vitality's Clergy Wellness Program is excited to offer a workshop by Reah Ministry. The workshop, Take A Day Apart, will focus on spiritual formation. 

The three-part workshop will be held at the Oblate School of Theology in San Antonio on October 22, 2015; January 28, 2016; and April 28, 2016, respectively. 

Please Click Here to download the flyer above. 

To register, please click here. Ticket sales for Physical Well-Being will end on Oct. 14. 

 

Rev. Dr. Ruben Saenz, Jr. Endorsed for Episcopacy

Ruben Saenz Headshot.jpeg

See also: Rev. Dr. Ruben Saenz, Jr.  endoso para el episcopado at  http://hispanic.umc.org/news/preview/rev.-dr.-ruben-saenz-jr.-endoso-para-el-episcopado.

Rev. Dr. Ruben Saenz, Jr. was endorsed this week by the Rio Texas Conference delegation to the General and Jurisdictional conferences as an episcopal candidate. Saenz is a well-known missional church leader that has specialized in church development, especially in populations with a Hispanic majority.

“We joyfully lift up Ruben for consideration by the jurisdiction. Ruben is well-known across the denomination as a bridge-building church leader, speaker and preacher,” said a statement released by the delegation.  

The delegation took three-to-four months of discernment and prayer to make the endorsement. The decision was completed on Sept. 17. 

"Each delegate involved in the discernment process brings their own perspective and experience of these gifts to the discussion; together we discerned that Ruben has the ability for entrepreneurial, transformational leadership with a sense of compassion, joy, and purpose," said General Jurisdictional Conference Delegation Leader Teresa Keese. "He is a visionary who is steady, thoughtful, self-confident yet humble, and passionate about the church becoming spiritually relevant."

Saenz began his call to ministry in 1993 after successful tenures in the education and small-business sectors in Rio Grande City, Texas. He graduated in 1997 with a Master of Divinity degree from SMU Perkins School of Theology and was awarded the Perkins Faculty Award for the student who best exemplified the goals and mission of Perkins. He would later receive his Doctor of Ministry Degree from Perkins in 2009.

Saenz served as Student-Intern Pastor at Oak Cliff UMC in Dallas from 1995-97. He served his first appointments within the Rio Grande Conference at La Trinidad UMC and El Divino Redentor UMC in El Paso from 1997-2000, where he increased worship attendance by 200 percent over four years. He served as Senior Pastor for El Buen Pastor UMC in Edinburg from 2001-2011. When Saenz left in 2011, the church became known as the largest Hispanic-American United Methodist Church in the country with over 900 members. Worship attendance grew by 150 percent over ten years. Giving increased over 300 percent during both of those appointments. Saenz focused his ministry toward facing the issues of generational, social and systemic poverty in those regions.

One of Saenz’s most gratifying accomplishments was the initiative called the “Levantate – Get Up” computer literacy program. The program offered technology courses and resources to single mothers in El Paso who lost their jobs due to factory shutdowns in the United States and relocation to Juarez, Mexico. He helped launch a faith community through trained lay leadership in impoverished colonias. The colonia ministry provided pastoral oversight, worship, faith formation and discipleship, musical instruments and instructions to underprivileged children; as well as free courses on budgeting and family life.

Saenz lent leadership to the six-year Rio Texas Conference unification process from beginning to end. As Executive Director of the Mission Vitality Center, he continues the unification work by overseeing the strategic direction and outcome delivery of the conference’s missional objectives for congregational vitality, starting of new faith communities, clergy and lay leadership vitality, uniting peoples, and transforming communities.   

 

In 2010, Saenz was appointed to serve as the Southwest Texas Director of Congregational and New Church Development. He helped start 11 new faith communities for the Conference. He held that appointment until 2014. He was named Director of Conference Connectional Ministries and Executive Director of the Mission Vitality Center in January 2015.

Saenz looks forward to working with an annual conference to creatively and effectively address critical issues and opportunities for the United Methodist Church.

“There are several critical opportunities facing the United Methodist Church,” said Saenz. “The first opportunity I consider to be critical is the UMC’s ability to reach and disciple new people, younger people, and more diverse people. Related to this opportunity is how the UMC will engage and embrace the country’s multi-ethnic and multi-cultural reality. A necessary component of the church’s future vitality depends on the resolution of this pressing reality and opportunity.”

San Antonio Episcopal Area Bishop James E. Dorff, who will retire at the end of August 2016, is pleased with the endorsement of Saenz.

“Dr. Saenz brings a deep commitment to Christ and the church,” said Bishop Dorff. “He also has a proven track record of fruitful ministry in the local church, the annual conference and the general church. He has and will continue to actively look for ways to reach new people in new places for the spreading of Good News.” 

If elected, Saenz would serve one of the Episcopal areas within the South Central Jurisdictional Conference of the United Methodist Church. The jurisdiction includes the states of Arkansas, Kansas, Louisiana, Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas. The Rio Texas Conference will be expecting to receive a new bishop September 1, 2016. Bishops usually serve in one area up to two terms of four years each. The jurisdictional conference can grant a third term. Bishops are elected for life and serve in their assignment until retirement. 

Case Management Begins at Rio Texas Conference

The Rio Texas Conference has begun its case managing project thanks to UMCOR’s $100,000 grant. A supervisor and two part-time case managers will be working out of Martindale United Methodist Church to help with the projects. 

The Disaster Response Case Managers’ purpose is to organize and help relief efforts for the Blanco River Regional Recovery Team and in surrounding areas affected by the Memorial Day 2015 floods. The team has twelve months to finish as many cases as possible. Cases include destroyed property and community support.

The grant will be supplemented by $27,000 from gifts made to the Rio Texas Conference Disaster Response fund. 

UMCOR will be hosting a Case Management Training on Tuesday, September 15-16 in San Marcos. Rio Texas is asking for volunteers to help with the case managing efforts. Click Here to register for UMCOR Case Management training.

The conference is need of volunteer case managers. They will need to attend the UMCOR Case Management Training on September 15-16. There are also volunteers needed for data entry and office assistance. Please contact Thomas Monahan for more information by e-mailing him.  

As the work of long-term recovery continues, The Rio Texas Disaster Response Team needs your help as part of the long-term recovery effort. Click Here to register.

Respond to the next natural disaster at ERT Training. Click Here to register.