Bishop Robert Schnase to Serve as Bishop of Rio Texas

Friday night, the South Central Jurisdictional Conference approved the appointment of Bishop Robert Schnase as the bishop of the San Antonio Episcopal Area serving the Rio Texas Annual Conference. Schnase is no stranger to Rio Texas having been elected to the episcopacy from the former Southwest Texas Annual Conference. More recently he has served on the Episcopal Leadership Team as Rio Texas awaited the appointment of a new bishop. He was the presiding bishop at this year's gathering of the Rio Texas Annual Conference.

Read More

Rev. Dr. Ruben Saenz, Jr. Elected to Office of Bishop

Rev. Dr. Ruben Saenz, Jr. has been elected to the office of bishop by the South Central Jurisdictional Conference of the United Methodist Church. Saenz was elected on the third round of balloting at the conference being held in Wichita, Kansas.

Until his election, Saenz served the Rio Texas Director of Connectional Ministries and the Executive Director of the Mission Vitality Center, developing systems and programs that help local churches reach the rapidly changing mission field. Saenz has a passion for creating new places to reach new people with the Gospel. Prior to this, Saenz served as the Director of New Church Development for the Southwest Texas Conference. During his four years, he successfully implemented the Healthy Church Initiative and resourced districts and local churches to start 11 new faith communities. He was also an integral part of the team that created the unification plan that led to the merger of the Southwest Texas and Rio Grande annual conferences.

Prior to his conference level work, Dr. Saenz demonstrated his ability to bring vitality and growth to the local church through reaching out to the community by raising and training lay leadership.  Under his leadership, 345 persons were incorporated into the congregational life of La Trinidad/El Divino Redentor, El Paso (65) and El Buen Pastor, Edinburg (275) by profession of faith and baptism during Saenz’s 14-year tenure at both appointments. During his tenure, he led his congregations to address the issues of generational, social, and systemic poverty that plague the region. The average worship attendance at his La Trinidad / El Divino Redentor two-point charge grew by 200% in four years and at El Buen Pastor, worship attendance grew by 150% over ten years. Giving increased by over 300% in both appointments as well.  

Saenz is a graduate of Stephen F. Austin State University in Nacogdoches, Texas and received his Master of Divinity and his Doctor of Ministry degrees from SMU Perkins School of Theology. He has been married to Maye for 34 years; they have four children, all of which are active in the life of the church with his two sons Aaron and Ruben III serving in the Rio Texas Conference.

Bishop Saenz will receive his first assignment as a bishop later this week when the Jurisdictional Episcopacy Committee meets.

South Central Jurisdiction 2016 Meeting Begins Wednesday

South Central Jurisdiction 2016 Meeting Begins Wednesday

The quadrennial meeting of the South Central Jurisdiction of the United Methodist Church runs  July 13-16 in Witchita, Kansas. The South Central Jurisdiction covers eight states: Arkansas, Kansas, Louisiana, Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas. Delegates from twelve annual conferences will gather to elect and assign bishops. Delegates also select members of boards and agencies. The 2016 gathering will be of special interest to members of the Rio Texas Annual Conference since this conference will be receiving a new episcopal leader. 

Read More

Statement from Rio Texas Interim Bishops

Brothers and Sisters of the Rio Texas Annual Conference,
 
Grace and peace to you in the name of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. We woke yesterday to news of more senseless violence and death. Words fail to express the shock and grief felt this week across our state and nation.
 
Our response is to ask you to join us in prayer. Prayer is not the end of our response to violence and injustice; it is only the beginning. However, it is an essential beginning. We ask you to pray specifically for the families of all the victims, in Baton Rouge, St. Paul and Dallas. Join us in prayer for the healing and comfort only God can bring. While debates will continue as to the meaning and circumstances of these violent acts, our first response as Christians is to recognize the very real pain of human loss.

Read More

Texas United Methodist College Association (TUMCA)

Darrell Loyless, Ph.D., introduces the Texas United Methodist College Association to the Rio Texas Conference. 

All Rights Reserved. Rio Texas Annual Conference. United Methodist Church. June 2016. 

I’m fond of saying that two of the oldest institutions in Western Civilization are the church and the university.

Hand in hand they have sought to provide the knowledge and seek the truth that the Scriptures tell us will set us free.

In that regard, the Texas United Methodist College Association or what we fondly call “TUMCA,” has been the organization that has helped facilitate that relationship through scholarships.

Through the generous gifts of our conferences and the churches that make them up, TUMCA has sought to open the doors of our colleges and universities with scholarship grants.

These resources are used to make possible an education for individuals who might not otherwise be able to afford a Methodist-related college education.  So we see them going to our universities and in many cases learning leadership skills, a profession, but I think equally important, they are given the opportunity to search their own minds and hearts and discover what their true values are.

Often times, this discovery strengthens them in their spiritual journey.

On behalf of some young man or woman, or maybe yourself, please feel free to contact one of our universities.  Call their financial aid office. They are the ones who set down the guidelines for scholarship awards. 

The only requirement we have is that a candidate for the scholarship be a Methodist in one of our churches.

So, let me thank you for your time, and I look forward possibly to meeting you and talking more about the relationship between the church and our colleges.

Media Advisory: Ribbon Cutting Ceremony for San Antonio Region Justice for Our Neighbors Opening at Emanual United Methodist Church featuring State Rep. Diego Bernal and Bishop Joel Martinez

 
 

MEDIA ADVISORY / PHOTO OPPORTUNITY

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tuesday, June 21, 2016

Contact: Rev. Suzanne Isaacs
Director, San Antonio Justice for Our Neighbors
revsuzanne4u@gmail.com
 


Ribbon Cutting Ceremony for San Antonio Region Justice for Our Neighbors Opening at Emanual United Methodist Church featuring State Rep. Diego Bernal and Bishop Joel Martinez

WHAT:
San Antonio Region JFON (Justice for Our Neighbors) Legal Aid Clinic will celebrate its grand opening with special guests. Clinic offers free legal aid. 

WHEN:
Thursday, June 23, 2016, 6 p.m. – 8 p.m

WHERE:
Emanual United Methodist Church
3225 W. Poplar
San Antonio, Texas 78228

WHO:         
Texas State Rep. Diego Bernal, District 123

Bishop Joel Martinez, Bishop (Retired, United Methodist Church) of San Antonio Episcopal Area

Rev. Carl Rohlfs, Las Misiones District of United Methodist Church Superintendent 

Melissa Bowe, National Justice for Our Neighbor

WHY:
Justice for Our Neighbors, a faith-based immigration-assistance legal aid service, will offer its first clinic on Saturday, June 25, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., at Emanuel United Methodist Church, 3225 W. Poplar Street, San Antonio. Immigrants who are presently legal residents wanting citizenship must call 210-847-7245 to schedule an appointment with the lawyer on that day. Appointments are required. 

Saturday, June 25 will be just the first of Justice for Our Neighbors clinics planned for this same location and time the last Saturday of every month. 

The San Antonio Region Justice for Our Neighbors is one of a nation-wide organization operating at 30 different locations throughout the country with the mission of “providing affordable, high quality immigration services to low-income immigrants.” More information is available at their website, sarjfon.org or by calling 210-847-7245. 

        ###

June 2 Update: ERT Teams, Small Groups, Individuals Needed

200 Flood buckets were taken to ingleside umc for distribution due to this week's floods. 

June 2 update: We now need ERT-trained individuals and teams in the following counties: Bastrop, Medina, Nueces. Please contact Eugene Hileman for more information. 

Considerable flood damage has occurred during the May 16 flooding in the Coastal Bend district. 

Disaster Response Coordinator Eugene Hileman is asking for the deployment of ERT teams, small groups, and individuals. 

We are only accepting individuals with ERT certification. Contact Eugene Hileman for more information

Click Here to register your individual/small group

Click Here to register your ERT Team

Click Here for ERT certification training

Don't forget to bring your flood buckets to Annual Conference in June or the Conference Office in San Antonio. You can also arrange with Mr. Hileman to bring your flood buckets to the Martinez Disaster Response Warehouse in Kerrville. 

Kits to be Assembled at Annual Conference

Health Kits and Sewing Kits will be assembled during Annual Conference 2016 in Corpus Christi. Delegates will be asked to donate the cost of the kit, then they will be invited to assemble the kits. Disaster Response will provide the supplies. 

"Health kits provide basic necessities to people who have been forced to leave their homes because of human conflict or natural disaster," according to UMCOM. "Health kits are also used as learning tools in personal hygiene, literacy, nutrition, and cooking classes."

"Sewing kits foster independence rather than dependence. Women can make clothing in their own size and in the style of their culture," according to UMCOM. "Cottage industries often grow out of the sewing classes where women use these kits to practice valuable income-generating skills.

An Important Message from Emmaus & Chrysalis Community

This month the Rio Texas Emmaus & Chrysalis Community will celebrate its 1,839th Walk, 34th year of spiritual enrichment, and the development of Christian leaders in the church and community. 


The Rio Texas Emmaus & Chrysalis Community is an oddity in the international Emmaus community.  Not only are we one of the oldest Emmaus communities in existence, but we are the only regional community that acts as an umbrella or governing body for other communities.  In this structure, for the entirety of our existence, we have served as an intermediary between the Emmaus Ministries Office at the Upper Room International and the 30 Emmaus and Chrysalis groups in the Rio Texas region.


As with all organizations, there comes a time when we must step back and evaluate the health of the organization - structurally and financially.  Over the past two years, the Executive Committee of RTECC has bathed the Community in prayer, asked tough questions, made critical choices, and worked to create autonomy and health within the 30 groups. 

After much prayer, counsel, and careful examination of the financial impact RTECC has and would have had on the groups, on April 15, 2016, the Executive Committee made the voluntary decision to dissolve.  This dissolution will include a transition period in which the Executive Committee is committed to walk alongside the Rio Texas Emmaus and Chrysalis groups to support their emergence as healthy, viable, independent communities.


We believe that this will be a positive step forward for the Emmaus and Chrysalis community. Thousands of lives have been transformed by God's grace through the Emmaus and Chrysalis movementand we believe God will continue to transform thousands more.


De Colores,
Heather Adair, Lay Director, Rio Texas Emmaus & Chrysalis Community