$155,000 in Ethnic Local Church grants
$12,000 Human Relations Day funding By Wayne Rhodes, Editor, Faith in Action WASHINGTON, D.C. — The directors of the United Methodist General Board of Church & Society (GBCS) awarded at their fall meeting more than $150,000 in Ethnic Local Church grants. The awards were to 15 programs ranging from a literacy and livelihood program in the Philippines to a immigrant mother and children retreat in Germany.
The directors also approved $12,000 from the Human Relations Day United Methodist Special Sunday offering for a justice education and leadership development program in the Baltimore-Washington Conference.
The program is to produce committed, social justice-oriented United Methodist young adults for leadership in the church and society.
GBCS’s 30-year-old Ethnic Young Adult Summer Internship program received $30,000. The program is designed to produce committed, social justice-oriented United Methodist young adults for leadership in the church and society. The program is administered by Inter-Ethnic Strategy Development and GBCS.
As interns, ethnic young adults travel from around the world to work as interns in social justice placements in Washington, D.C., including at GBCS. In 2008, 12 interns came from the United States, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Cote d’Ivoire, Gambia and the Philippines.
Literacy and Livelihood Program
The board awarded $7,450 to First United Methodist Church in Davao City, East Mindanao Conference of the Philippines for its response to extreme tribal poverty. The grant is for “Literacy and Livelihood Program toward a Church Planting in Tamayong.” This new church start empowerment project seeks to support self-reliance, stewardship of creation, sustainable agriculture and health care through religious education and summer vacation Bible school. The program focuses on agriculture, gender and leadership in church and society.
The grant is for a new empowerment initiative to establish a cross-jurisdictional, historical training center in the Northeastern Jurisdiction.
Ten thousand dollars was awarded to the African-American Heritage Center, Largo, Md., for an educational training program. The grant is for a new empowerment initiative to establish a cross-jurisdictional, historical training center in the Northeastern Jurisdiction. Goal is to preserve oral and written history and artifacts of United Methodist African-Americans who have had an impact in the general church. The center will involve partnerships with agencies and annual conferences to develop experiential education and training resources and events.
The board approved $7,000 to help underwrite a United Methodist Seminar in Washington, D.C., for leaders of the National Assn. of Filipino-American United Methodists (NAFAUM). The national caucus is sponsoring a four-day public policy and leadership event involving 25 adult and young adult clergy and laity. The seminar will address the United Methodist Social Principles, especially as they relate to U.S. immigration issues and solidarity with responses to the extrajudicial killings in the Philippines. Goal is to raise awareness of methods for developing trainers for advocacy within local churches and the caucus itself.
Women in Pursuit of Peace with Justice
A new conference initiative in the Philippines, “Women in Pursuit of Peace with Justice,” received $7,000. The grant is to the Board of Women’s Work to promote the value of peace, justice and human rights among indigenous, peasant and urban peoples. The initiative places an emphasis on education and formation, biblical and theological formation, and grassroots mobilization over a two-year period.
Intent is to help immigrants and refugees adapt to life in German society through the church as a safe center.
In South Germany, a new five-day hospitality retreat offering sanctuary to African migrants and asylum seekers received $3,000. The Peace Church Mother and Children Retreat is a program of Peace International United Methodist Church.
The program will help single mothers in Germany acclimate to the systems of health care, language skills, social networks, trust building, and social services. At the same time, the intent is to help immigrants and refugees adapt to life in German society through the church as a safe center.
A literacy project in Cote d’Ivoire in West Africa received $30,000. Besides literacy, the project in the Missionary District of Korogho addresses education in human rights and gender issues.
The leadership development initiative is a response to the social and economic crisis in Northern Cote d’Ivoire. Over a 12-month period, it will provide basic literacy education to 200 women for economic empowerment, marketing of products, and management of small businesses. Components include training 10 gender-competent literacy trainers, and education on gender and human rights issues by 2010.
The Bronx New Church will get $5,000 for its Abundant Social Justice Ministries initiative. The urban, multi-racial/ethnic congregation has strong community public and private partnerships in a densely populated area. The initiative will establish an advocacy ministry to support racial justice, immigrant and civil rights, and increase employment and housing. Program components include research, discipleship training, educational workshops and festivals.
Maryland mental health ministry
In the Baltimore-Washington Conference, $1,000 has been approved for Clinton United Methodist Church, a congregation in Maryland comprising primarily African-Americans and Hispanic/Latinos. The grant is for the congregation’s Mental Health Ministry, which is planning a five-month effort to address the crisis of domestic and family violence. A focal point of the program is to address the effects of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.
Grant is for a new public policy initiative to identify multi-racial, urban youths to confront racism in church and society.
In the Minnesota Conference, $5,000 will be awarded to Park Avenue United Methodist Church in Minneapolis to develop young leaders for small group discussion and service. The local church leadership development project will recruit a diverse set of young leaders. The grant will be applied toward three-month stipends, a retreat setting and service stipends.
In the Nebraska Conference, the Missouri River District’s “Strategy for Dismantling Racism” will receive $8,000. The grant is to United Methodist Ministries for a new public policy initiative to identify multi-racial, urban youths to confront racism in church and society. Components include a Martin Luther King Jr. celebration and development of an area strategic plan. Grant funds will cover stipends for an artistic coordinator, artists, materials and consultants.
In the North Carolina Conference, Apex United Methodist Church will receive $3,500 for a community and Latino ministry start-up program. The new program is targeted at developing local church leaders. It will enable Latinos to participate in small group social empowerment groups, English as a Second Language and computer classes, esteem workshops, and immigration advocacy. The Ethnic Local Church funding will be applied toward community organizing training.
Also in the North Carolina Conference, $27,000 will be awarded to Rockingham District Partners in Ministry’s “Youth Empowered to Succeed.” This is an ongoing two-year, multi-generational congregational initiative, to provide leadership training and mentoring. It builds on this past summer’s mentoring ministry and small group leadership training.
Virginia reconciliation project
In the Virginia Conference, $6,000 has been approved for Farmville United Methodist Church’s reconciliation project. The project is an effort to address local issues of racial division. Objectives of this project include racial dialogue and awareness training; collection of oral histories and attempts at restorative justice; communication; education; fellowship; and worship.
The project is an effort to address local issues of racial division.
In the Oregon-Idaho Conference, a new leadership development program will receive $5,600. “Adelante! Hispanic Ministry Training Institute” builds on ongoing components that address racism, restrictive immigration laws, and developing leaders through the eight “first steps” of the National Plan for Hispanic and Latino Ministries. The institute also will focus on development of pastor-mentor relationships, workshops on the church’s response to immigration, advocacy and the Social Principles.
The Human Relations Day Grant of $12,000 is to Gethsemane United Methodist Church for its “Justice Education and Leadership Development Program (JEALD). This is a congregational effort to engage young adults in community organizing efforts through two Gamaliel Foundation organizing workshops, as well as restorative justice training. JEALD will address domestic violence prevention and juvenile offender ministries. The grant will be used to train five persons and provide peace with justice materials.
Grant application process
Purpose of GBCS’s grant program is to strengthen ethnic local churches through education, advocacy or leadership development as they engage in social justice. Grants are awarded twice a year: Jan. 10 is deadline for the March funding cycle; Aug. 10 is deadline for the October cycle. An application form with grant description and steps to qualify is available on GBCS’s website, www.umc-gbcs.org.
Grants are administered through the board’s Ministry of Resourcing Congregational Life.
For more information about applying for an Ethnic Local Church or Human Relation Day grant, contact the Rev. Neal Christie, Assistant General Secretary, Education and Leadership Formation, General Board of Church & Society, The United Methodist Church, 100 Maryland Ave. NE, Washington, D.C. 20002, via e-mail nchristie@umc-gbcs.org, or phone (202) 488-5611. Date: 11/3/2008 ©2005-2008
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