Local Church Reports (aka End-of-the-Year Report) due January 22, 2022

It’s that time once again – time to prepare to input your Local Church Report. Every church shall make a report to the Annual Conference each January.

UMCData.net will open for Rio Texas local church reports on January 2, 2022 and remain open through January 22, 2022. Your District office will supply you with your church’s username and password for UMCData.

We are hopeful that 2021 has been more “normal” than 2020 was for your congregation.

2021 Local Church Report instructions.

Worship attendance recording has been a challenge; please remain consistent.

Online worship attendance guidelines.
If your church received a PPP loan, please notice special instructions for lines #27 and #54c.

If you have questions or need assistance filing your church’s Local Church Report, please contact Nan Pyle at npyle@riotexas.org or 210-408-4549.

Race & Culture Task Force Update

The Bishop's Task Force on Race and Culture has been meeting since the spring to engage the task of addressing equity, diversity, and inclusion (EDI) in the Rio Texas Conference. Members of the task force share their vision for this work, as well as plans for an EDI survey of the conference, to be launched soon.

Task force members are: Julie Abiro, James Amerson, Paula Bryant, Marlee Claes, Robert Elizondo, Marcus Freeman, Abby Gutierrez, Laura Merrill, Katie Myers, Juan Osorio, Pamela Benson Owens, Carolyn Pittman, Wade Powell, Nohemí Ramirez, Ralph Thompson, and Valerie Vogt.

2021 Harvest Sunday Offering

Harvest-sunday-2021.jpg

Food insecurity for newly unemployed families, displaced families without secure housing, seniors, single adults, and children has risen throughout the COVID-19 crisis. Disruption in services of the National School Lunch Program, food assistance networks, and food supply chains has been, and continues to be, extraordinarily challenging. These disruptions are duplicated and magnified in particular areas of our country, and throughout the world. 

 1 in 7 Texans (14%) currently experiencing food insecurity. 11% of our world’s population who are undernourished. As followers of Christ, we understand our calling to respond with extravagant grace, to relieve suffering, and to bear one another’s burden.

Harvest Sunday was started as a response to hunger. It is a once-a-year giving opportunity at Rio Texas churches for hunger alleviation programs. Harvest Sunday 2021 is November 7. However, participation may occur at any time (or any Sunday) throughout the months of November and December. Offerings should be sent directly to the local church through online giving or check. Designate your gift as "Harvest Sunday."

The 2021 Harvest Sunday offering funds shall be distributed in the following manner:

 Please save this date and give on November 7th to the Harvest Sunday Special Offering.

If you are interested in promoting Harvest Sunday in your District and can share stories, pictures/videos of your local ministries and how you have risen to the challenges this year, please reach out to our Harvest Sunday Coordinator, Diana T. Woods, BSW, MPA, at bumccommunitypartner@gmail.com or (512) 917-9072.

Rev. Dr. Zan Holmes & Rev. Edlen Cowley to Consult Rio Texas Pastor Cohort at Perkins Center for Preaching Excellence

Rev. Dr. Zan Holmes

Rev. Dr. Zan Holmes

The Perkins Center for Preaching Excellence invited a select group of Rio Texas pastors to participate in a preaching peer cohort. The cohort will be divided into two sub-groups: one for pastors that preach in African American congregations and one for pastors in cross-cultural appointments. Both sub-groups will have an opportunity to learn from Rev. Dr. Zan Holmes and Rev. Edlen Cowley.  

Rev. Dr. Zan Holmes is well known as the narrator-host of the Disciple I Bible Study video series. He is Pastor Emeritus of Dallas St. Luke Community United Methodist Church in the North Texas Conference, and adjunct professor at Perkins School of Theology. He previously served as District Superintendent in the North Texas Conference and was elected to the Texas House of Representatives from 1968-1972.  

As chairperson of the Tri-Ethnic Committee he implemented public school desegregation of Dallas Independent School District. Governor Ann Richards appointed Holmes to serve as the first African American on the University of Texas System Board of Regents in the 1990’s. The National Voting Rights Museum and Institute in Selma, Alabama recognized him in 2001 as one of the “Invisible Giants” of the Civil Rights Movement. He grew up in the parsonages of the West Texas Conference in San Angelo and Austin where he was ordained deacon and elder. He graduated from Huston Tillotson University and the Perkins School of Theology. He was awarded honorary Doctor’s degrees from Huston Tillotson, Dillard University, and Rust College.  

“To learn from Dr. Zan Holmes is to learn from a living legend who is one of the most effective preachers and pastors in our time,” said Crossroads District Superintendent Rev. Dr. Marcus Freeman. “He was my primary professor for preaching [at Perkins School of Theology] and I studied many of the basics under his guidance. His influence and support did not stop after I graduated and moved on. He has always been available to provide keynote presentations and serve as guest preacher at a number of programs end events at churches and ministries that I have been a part of. He is one of the key influences for the whole Church of this era.”  

“I hope to learn different ways of engaging people in a changing society with the good news of the kingdom of God,” said Austin Simpson UMC Senior Pastor Rev. Aaron Carter. “While I can’t be Dr. Holmes, through this privileged opportunity I can glean perspectives, methods and practices he has used to be an effective preacher throughout his extensive ministry.” 

Rev. Edlen Cowley

Rev. Edlen Cowley

Rev. Edlen Cowley also served alongside Rev. Dr. Holmes at Dallas St. Luke Community UMC as an associate pastor. He also served several appointments around the North Texas Conference in multi-ethnic, white, and black congregations. He is a Coach and Consultation Team Member for the Healthy Church Initiative and is a Hardin Family Preaching Mentor at the Perkins Center for Preaching Excellence. Rev. Cowley is passionate about small group ministry and uses the 3D seminar on Designing, Developing, and Delivering Sermons & Overall Preaching Strategy. His annual Cross-Racial/Cross-Cultural Ministry Training Camp is popular within the connection. He is currently a District Superintendent in the North Texas Conference.

Leadership Development & Clergy Excellence - Learn and Lead Together

learn lead.jpg

Leadership Development and Clergy Excellence is always a high priority in Rio Texas. 

To that end, the Office of Clergy Excellence, now directed by Rev. Dr. Robert Lopez, and the office of Creating / Vitalizing Congregations and Developing Leaders, directed by Rev. Karen Horan, want to offer some incentives for clergy and laity to learn and lead together

There are several Leadership conferences offered in the fall of 2021 both in person and online - Robert Lopez and Karen Horan have already registered for Leadership Institute in September and would love for you to join them! Also in the past, some have attended conferences such as Leadership Institute, Exponential Regional Houston, and New Room just to name a few. Our combined offices can offer up to $75 for each clergy who attends and up to $75 each for 2 laity when they attend with their pastor. 

Here is how it works – clergy and up to 2 laity register and pay for the Leadership Conference of their choice.  Click on the registration link and fill out the formone form per receipt and we will mail the reimbursement amount as directed. That’s all!  There will be some follow up questions sent to you after the event so we can hear what all you learned and how it will strengthen you and your church. 

Questions? 
Contact either Karen Horan (khoran@riotexas.org) or Robert Lopez (lopeza2b@riotexas.org)

https://leadershipvitality.wufoo.com/forms/leadership-conferences-attendee-form/

So, You Got Your 2022 Apportionment Notice...

Written by Nan Pyle

money-doctor-M3EC68X.jpg

Earlier this month the 2022 Apportionment Notices were emailed to the clergy and snail-mailed to the churches. Thank you for your attention to the notices. Marvelous questions have already been asked!

Q: “Where did you get these numbers?”

A: Most of the numbers come from the Local Church Report to the Annual Conference provided by each local church every January. The only numbers that do not come from the Local Church Reports are the Fund Name numbers at the bottom of the page; these numbers are adopted each year at Annual Conference for the conference budget and at District Pre-Conference meetings for the district budgets.  

Q: “My church’s finances got hit hard by the pandemic, but apportionments increased. How is that possible?”

A: The apportionment formula uses two-years of your church’s operating expenses, plus the statistics lag behind the calendar-year. The 2022 apportionments are based on operating expenses for 2019 and 2020.

Q: “My church’s operating expenses were almost exactly equal in 2019 and 2020. Why isn’t the apportionment amount the same?”

A: In order to compare 2021 and 2022 apportionments, you have to consider 2018 operating expenses. If 2020 operating expenses are lower or higher than 2018 operating expenses, apportionments will see a decrease or increase.

Q: “The Annual Conference budget is lower in 2022 than 2021. Our expenses have remained steady for several years. Why did our apportionments increase instead of decrease?”

A: There are two factors at play: 1) Your church is one piece of the picture. Other churches have stayed steady with you; while still others have seen volatility in their operating expenses—some decreasing and some increasing. Each church affects every other church; and 2) Churches close, open, merge, or transfer to a different Annual Conference. This change in congregation numbers shifts every church’s portion of the total.

Q: “There is a mistake on my church’s operating expenses for 2019 and/or 2020. How do I fix that mistake so my apportionments can be reduced?”

A: Once the apportionment calculations have been made, the numbers are fixed and there is no way to change the amount apportioned since any adjustment would change every local church’s responsibility. Mistakes on the Local Church Report can be corrected in the spring. Senior Pastors and others who signed the UMCData online data entries received an email in March with the 2020 numbers attached and a request to check those numbers. If I thought something looked like a probable error, that line was specifically mentioned in the email. After the April 30 deadline, it becomes complicated to make a change; although changes are still possible through mid-July. Statistics for this year were locked on July 15 in order for the apportionments to be calculated.

Q: “What?! I didn’t get a 2022 Apportionment Notice!”

A: It is possible that I don’t have your most current email address. It is also possible that I skipped your church accidentally. Please contact me so that you can receive your email.


Thank you for paying your apportionments each year! It is a blessing to see how much ministry the Rio Texas Conference supports through both apportionments and advance giving. Every day I am humbled to witness the giving and compassionate nature of the people of the Rio Texas Conference. I am honored to be in ministry with you.

Written by Nan Pyle

UM Army Partners with Texas Ramps Project

um army texas ramps project Aug 2021.jpg

U.M. ARMY and the Texas Ramps Project are pleased to announce their successful partnership from this summer’s mission season. Together, they were able to complete 34 wheelchair ramps for community members in: San Antonio, Brownsville, Orange, Bryan, Jacksonville, Shermann, Denton and Bonham.  Volunteers pictured below are constructing one of the wheelchair ramps in San Antonio during July.

This partnership combines funding from both U.M. ARMY and the Texas Ramps Project for building materials. U.M. ARMY teams of student and adult volunteers proceed to build the ramps and connect with the families who need help.

U.M. ARMY mission weeks took place during the months of June and July with volunteers serving many communities throughout Texas, Louisiana, Florida and the Northeast Region of the USA. U.M. ARMY provides Christ centered missions that serve people in need and promote spiritual growth and leadership development in youth and young adults.  

For more information about U.M. ARMY go to umarmy.org

For more information about Texas Ramp Project go to texasramps.org

A comfortable and nurturing place for philanthropic visitors to the San Antonio community

Written by Kercida McClain

Maybe a pro bono attorney, a nurse learning about healthcare in our context, a missionary on furlough, an itinerant preacher…

Project Transformation’s permanent home is ready to receive overnight guests. Community is core to who PT is, and we are glad to fold you into that community.

The PT Home looks like a dorm, housing the college interns during their summer running PT camps for kiddos and during the year a hotel for visiting guests making a difference in our community.

We would love to show you around, talk to you about folks you know who could benefit from staying here, and offer this space to build the kingdom. Guests are invited to donate to the ministry of Project Transformation and the building.

Written by Kercida McClain

Everything You Never Knew You Wanted to Know About Delegates to Annual Conference

A delegate votes during Rio Texas Annual Conference in Corpus Christi in 2019

A delegate votes during Rio Texas Annual Conference in Corpus Christi in 2019

Written By Nan Pyle

Do you know who qualifies to serve as a delegate to Annual Conference and why? Based on my experiences over the last three years, I realize that many United Methodists, lay and clergy alike, have no idea. So, here’s the scoop!

Most clergy (2016 Book of Discipline ¶32) are members of the Annual Conference; for every clergy member, there is an equalizing Lay Delegate. Basically, this means that if your local church has a Senior Pastor and an Associate Pastor, the church will be asked to elect two Lay Delegates at Church/Charge Conference each year.

Also, there are laity who serve as lay delegates under a position they hold within the District or the Conference. These are Ex-Officio Delegates with voice and vote. Since Rio Texas Conference has a significant number of retired elders and deacons, these Ex-Officio Delegates help to even out the number of clergy vs. lay.

The remaining number of Lay Delegates needed to equalize the clergy are distributed as At Large District Delegates, based on the membership in each District (and this is where the biggest misunderstandings occur). At Large District Lay Delegates have the same rights and responsibilities as Local Church Lay Delegates. However, an At Large District Delegate is elected by the District, not the Local Church. 

As an example: if you are asked to serve as an At Large District Delegate, and you agree and are elected, and then decide on the week before Annual Conference that you cannot or do not want to participate, your church cannot hold a Church/Charge Conference and elect a replacement; only the District can vote in a replacement.

That brings us to Alternate Lay Delegates: each local church and district is encouraged to elect Alternate Lay Delegates. Those alternates are elected by the district or local church along with the lay delegates and their information is submitted on the same form. An Alternate Lay Delegate can be substituted in the place of a lay delegate who has become unable to participate in Annual Conference. There is a process for this substitution; if it is not followed, the alternate will not have the authority to vote. Please contact the Rio Texas Conference if a substitution is needed so the process can be implemented properly.

The clergy members and the Lay Delegates make up the legal representation of the Annual Conference. That’s right – it’s a legal thing. All Lay Delegates are elected; the names and contact information are submitted under the signature of the pastor. The Lay Delegate position is a conference-level position, so while the form is included with the other Church/Charge Conference forms that each church gives to their District Superintendent, the form must also be submitted to the Conference Secretary. The instructions are on the bottom of the lay delegate form.

Here are some simple answers to frequently asked questions:

FAQs:

  1. What is a Delegate to Annual Conference?

    Delegates are the legal representatives of their Local Church, District or Annual Conference who hold the right and responsibility to vote on the business of the Annual Conference.

  2. Who serves as a Delegate to Annual Conference?

    Most (2016 Book of Discipline ¶32) clergy serve as clergy delegates. Each church elects 1 lay delegate at their Charge/Church Conference. Plus if a church has more than 1 appointed clergyperson, 1 additional lay delegate is elected for each clergyperson. So if First UMC has 3 appointed clergy, they receive 1 lay delegate because they are First UMC + 2 additional lay delegates to equalize their clergy.

  3. Why can’t each local church send 20 Lay Delegates to Annual Conference?

    The number of lay delegates must equal the number of clergy delegates per Book of Discipline.

  4. What is the difference between an At Large District Lay Delegate and a Local Church Lay Delegate?

    Both At Large District Lay Delegates and Local Church Lay Delegates hold the same responsibilities. The difference is that an At Large District Delegate is elected by the District while a Local Church Lay Delegate is elected at the Local Church/Charge Conference.

  5. I want to serve as an “extra” delegate; how do I do that?

    There is no such thing as an “extra” delegate! Unfortunately, this term continues to be used and creates confusion on a massive scale. All clergy delegates are defined by the Book of Discipline. All lay delegates are defined in the Rio Texas Conference Standing Rules and Book of Discipline. They are elected by their Local Church or District. Each local church and district is assigned the number of lay delegate seats that they can fill in order to meet the requirements of the Standing Rules and Book of Discipline.

  6. So, if I am elected at my church’s Church/Charge Conference in October of 2021, when do I represent my church?

    A delegate’s term runs from June 1 following the election through May 31 of the next year. In this case, June 1, 2022 through May 31, 2023.

  7. I provided a new email address last year but the Annual Conference information was still emailed to my old email address! Why?

    Email addresses are an ongoing challenge. Especially in this time of Internet attacks, email addresses are changed frequently. Remember to update your email address!  

    Laity: The church or district that elected you as Lay Delegate provided your name and contact information. If that contact information is different than the contact information in the conference database, the conference assumes that you moved or changed your email address or telephone number. Please make sure that your church has your current information.

    Clergy: Please update email and phone number changes with the conference office as they happen. Also, when you change appointments and are not living in a parsonage, remember to update your home address.

  8. I called the conference office to ask why I had not received an email about registration as a Lay Delegate from my church and was told I wasn’t my church’s Lay Delegate. How did that happen?

    There are so many reasons…

    You were not elected as delegate for this year (see #6)

    Your email address is incorrect in our system (see #7)

    We do not have an email address for you.

    When you called, you asked about being Lay Delegate from First UMC. I looked up First UMC and you are not listed as the delegate. If you had asked about being an At Large District Lay Delegate, I would have found you and we would have worked through the issue together.
    Your church did not email, FAX, or snail mail a signed copy of your church’s Lay Delegate form to the Conference Secretary. 

    Remember to follow the directions on the Lay Delegate form.


If you have a question or need assistance with your Lay Delegate procedure or form, please contact Nan Pyle. See you at Annual Conference 2022 in McAllen, June 8 through June 11!

Written By Nan Pyle

Wespath responds to request for comment on climate-related financial disclosure

In a recent letter from the Chief Investment Officer of Wespath, Dave Zellner, to the securities and exchange commission regarding investment disclosure around climate change we get to see just how large our Benefits organization is and the affect they can have over the behavior of companies and even legislation. Read the full letter on the position they are taking and in their advocacy for reversing climate change.