2026 Legislative Event Registration is Open

Texas United Women in Faith invite women of faith from across Texas to the 39th annual Texas Legislative Event! We welcome all who are committed to justice, freedom, and opportunity for all people, especially women and children. Presented in partnership with Texas Impact, the event includes two days of speakers, inspiration, and workshops where you can connect with women like you, who are ready to put their faith into action. On the third day of the event, attendees will visit the Capitol and meet with lawmakers.

 Event Schedule

  • Sunday, January 25: 1:00PM to 8:00PM
  • Monday, January 26: 8:00AM to 7:00PM
  • Tuesday, January 27: 7:30AM to Noon

Start and end times are for both in-person and virtual workshops on Sunday and Monday ONLY. On Tuesday there is no virtual programming, as we will be at the Capitol.

Please note there will generous breaks on all three days!

Register now to explore the issues, be inspired, and learn to advocate for public policies that promote the well-being of all Texans. Sign up using this form to attend in-person or online. Legislative Event will be at the Holiday Inn-Midtown in Austin. In-person registration includes lunch and dinner. Hotel guests receive complimentary breakfast. Guest tickets for meals are available for Sunday dinner, Monday lunch, and Monday dinner. Each meal ticket includes the mealtime speaker presentation.

Registration Deadlines

In-Person

  • Early Bird Discount Registration Deadline: December 14, 2025
  • Priority Registration Deadline: January 16 (to be sure your legislative visits are scheduled)
  • Final Registration Deadline: January 24 or when event capacity is reached

You are responsible for making your own hotel reservations.

Virtual Only

No deadline, but register by January 19 to be sure to receive important event information before the event.

If you choose to participate online, you will receive Zoom links and other information in early January.

Lodging

For those participating in-person, please note that you are responsible for making your own hotel reservations.

The Holiday Inn provides Legislative Event a special room rate of $129/night for 1-2 guest per room, $149/night for 3-4 guests per room. The rate includes breakfast all the days of your stay.  Please make hotel reservations directly with the Holiday Inn-Midtown in Austin. Use code UWF to receive the special room rate. 

Please note that you are not required to stay at the Holiday Inn. If you choose other lodging, you are responsible for your own transportation to and from the event, as well as your own breakfasts.

Scholarships

Scholarships are available for women 15-40 years of age. Contact Registrar Terry Schoenert for more information.

Special scholarships for college enrolled women are also available.

Highlights from Texas Conference 2025 Annual Meeting at Lakeview

United Women in Faith members from across the Texas Conference met at Lakeview Methodist Conference Center on September 26-27 to celebrate the 2025 Annual Meeting. This year’s theme was Carrying Our Faith Forward: Empowering Generations Through Faith.

The festivities began Friday morning when Conference officers met in executive session to hear yearly reports and to look ahead to upcoming events.

That evening we participated in the Friday Night Experience and lived into the theme of Carrying our Faith Forward, highlighting our own stories of generational faith. Our speaker, Rose Brewer, told us how her experiences on the Committee on Native Americans (CONAM) led to a deeper faith. Afterward women shared pictures and stories of those who had helped shape their own faith. Paulette Moore-Hall, Conference Program officer, followed with the story of The Lantern in the Storm. We ended the evening with an ice cream social and lots of laughter.

Saturday began with a Greet the Day service led by Kyle Dahlem who reminded us that when God says he is going to do a new thing, it means change is coming. Get ready.

After breakfast the Annual Meeting began with a welcome from President Theresa Graham and from the Lakeview staff. After the singing of a hymn, a devotion from the Prayer Calendar, and the Response Moment, Stephanie Pounds, who represents the Texas Conference on the UWFaith National Board of Directors, greeted members and introduced our new growth campaign, #unstoppable. She also reminded members of the need to give boldly to Mission Giving to stand in the gap for National Mission Institution who are facing funding cuts. She also announced that the 2026 Reading Program catalog is available.

Stacie Hawkins, President of the South Central Jurisdiction followed and encouraged us to each welcome three new women in the next year to help us reach our growth goal of 30,000 new members this year. She also encouraged everyone to sign up for Assembly 2026 in Indianapolis. Stacie highlighted two online resources, the Leadership Toolkit for officers and the short film, Never Give Up: Cynthia and Michelle’s Faithful Fight Against Mass Incarceration. She finished with an update on the Legacy Endowment Fund which currently stands at $51,183,800, and she recognized the Legacy Builders from within the Texas Conference.

Legacy Builders from the Texas Conference

Priscilla Patterson, Chair of the Nominations Committee of the South Central Jurisdiction, brought greetings and encouraged everyone to attend assembly and to consider stepping up to be an officer at the jurisdiction level.

Treasurer Kathy Aubin lit the Mission Candle. Members collected $2123.55 for the Candle in memory and honor of special people, so the candle burned for 3 hours and 22 minutes.

Keynote speaker, Bee Morehead, was unable to attend in person and so addressed us via Zoom. She reminded us that the Texas Health and Human Services department will be under that microscope in the next session the Texas Legislature as part of a sunset review. She also reminded us that work to protect voting rights is ongoing. Check out her short voting rights video. After Bee’s talk, Theresa Graham presented Bee with a Special Mission Recognition pin.

The first session ended with the procession of the feminine hygiene kits, which were presented to the United Methodist Mission Center located in Conroe. Members brought 621 kits to Lakeview, and more are expected to be donated in the next few weeks. In addition, $1857 was given to help buy and distribute kits.

The annual business meeting took place during the second session. During the meeting we adopted new standing rules, approved the budget for 2026, and elected two new officers, Rhonda Carpenter, First UMC Huntsville, Membership Nurture and Outreach, and Evette Warren, Friendship UMC, Communications.

Kathy Kraiza took a moment to remind us where the money goes (and where it doesn’t). We recognized Gwen Mason who retired as the Membership Nurture and Outreach officer, and then Linda Elms led the installation of the two new officers.

At the conclusion of the business meeting, Kathleen Spangler led us in our first focus group, Faithful Footsteps: Learning from Women’s Leadership in Christian Social Action. Kathleen reminded us that our foremothers had a “both…and” faith that stressed both individual piety and social action by telling us the stories of Jarena Lee, Lucy Rider Meyer, Georgia Harkness, and Minerva G. Carcaño.

After lunch we participated in table talk facilitated by Rev. Thea Curry-Fuson during her focus group, Ashamed and Redeemed. Rev Curry helped us apply our theme scripture 2 Timothy 1:5 and the surrounding text. We were reminded to remember and rekindle the gift of God and that community is powerful.

Closing worship followed as musicians Mark Williams and Florence Snyder led us in song, Rev Curry-Fuson extended the Eucharist to each of us. The meeting ended with hugs and smiles as we sang “God Be With You Til We Meet Again.”

Do you have pictures you’d like to share? Send them to news@uwfaithtx.com.

2025 Annual Meeting Registration is Open

All women are invited to join us for the Texas Conference Annual Meeting to be held at Lakeview Methodist Conference Center in Palestine, TX on September 26-27, 2025. Download the Program Guide here.

Registration

Registration should be completed by September 12. If you are registering by mail, the treasurer should receive your check by September 12.

Schedule

Friday

3:00-5:00 pm
5:30 pm
7:00 pm

Registration – Great Hall
Dinner – Sparling Cafeteria
Gather in Song & Ice Cream Social – Great Hall

Through the Lens of Faith: Stories That Shape Us
Join us for an evening of reflection, storytelling, and sweet fellowship. This special event invites you to bring a photo, keepsake, or treasured item that represents a moment of faith, transformation, or spiritual heritage. 

Saturday               

7:15 – 7:45 am
8:00 am
8:15 am
8:45 am
9:00 am
12:00 noon
1:15 pm
2:45 pm
3:15 pm

Greet the Day
Breakfast
Registration for those arriving after breakfast
Gather in Song
Program/Annual Meeting
Lunch
Focus Group
Closing Plenary/Communion
Depart 

Housing

There are two options for housing this year.

  • Dorm Housing – Many people to a room. You’ll need to bring your own linens for bed and bath, pillows and a flashlight.
  • 1st Class Housing – Single or double occupancy. Linens & pillows are provided.

Food

There will be three meals available–a Friday meal, a Saturday breakfast, and a Saturday lunch. Your registration can include meals or you can bring your own food.

Speakers

Bee Moorhead

Bee is the Executive Director of Texas Impact and its sister organization, the Texas Impact Foundation. Since taking on this role in 2000, she has led Texas Impact to become one of the most respected interfaith advocacy networks in the country.

Under her leadership, the organization mobilizes tens of thousands of Texans from diverse faith traditions to advocate for policies that support vulnerable communities, local development, and environmental sustainability.

Bee’s expertise spans a wide range of policy areas, including health and human services, climate change, immigration, public budgets, and civic engagement. She has served on numerous state agency working groups and task forces, addressing issues from nursing home care to hurricane response. Additionally, she is a credentialed observer to the United Nations climate policy negotiations, attending the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change’s annual Conference of the Parties since 2015.

Bee Moorhead has played a pivotal role in Texas Impact’s partnership with the Texas United Women in Faith for their annual Legislative Event. This long-standing collaboration brings together women of faith and conscience from across Texas to engage in policy advocacy, leadership development, and community building. The event provides a platform for participants to meet with lawmakers, attend workshops on key social issues, and explore ways to put their faith into action through legislative engagement.

Under Bee’s leadership, Texas Impact has worked closely with Texas United Women in Faith to ensure that the event remains a powerful force for justice, freedom, and opportunity, particularly for women and children. The partnership has strengthened faith-based advocacy efforts, equipping attendees with the tools and knowledge to influence public policy in meaningful ways.

Bee Moorhead and her husband, Robert Moorhead, share a life filled with purpose, advocacy, and community engagement. They are proud parents to three adult children and two grandchildren. As a former professional costumer, Bee loves sewing and knitting, as well as cooking, gardening, reading, singing, and travel. She is an ordained ruling elder in the Presbyterian Church USA, and a member of University Presbyterian Church in Austin since 1983.

Kathleen Spangler

Kathleen Spangler works for a technology company helping to address the social issues that affect health. She attends Klein UMC and is currently in her third year of seminary at Perkins School of Theology at Southern Methodist University. She is a certified candidate for deacon in the United Methodist Church.

Rev. Thea Curry-Fuson

Rev. Thea Curry-Fuson is an Ordained Elder in the United Methodist Church. After growing up unchurched, Thea had a relational experience with God overseas that sparked her call towards pastoral ministry, eager to be a part of the Jesus mission. She is passionate about having authentic conversations about Jesus and hearing how God is moving in others. Thea has an MDiv from Southern Methodist University and a previous career in nonprofit management before entering ministry. She and her husband, Wayne, live in Pearland TX.

Voting

On Saturday, we will be voting to approve our 2026 budget.

We will also be voting on some new officers. Note that all women are invited to join us at our Fall Meeting (invite your friends!); however, non-members will not be able to vote.

Hands-on Mission Kits

We will be collecting our hands-on mission kits at Lakeview, so don’t forget to bring them. You can read more details here.

Mission u 2025 Registration Open

Interested in deepening your faith in community? Gaining experience interpreting Scripture? Working toward healing for yourself, your community, and all of creation? Mission u is for you!

Mission u is a transformational study that is open to all who are interested in learning together for the transformation of the world.

The theme is Practicing Hope, and it will take place via ZOOM on July 11-12, 2025, from 9:30-3:15 each day. Registration is $20.

This year we will explore hope, particularly when hope seems hard to find. The curriculum asks questions such as: What is hope in the face of neofascism? What is hope in a time of genocide? How do we imagine a future for the next generation as our planet grows hotter by the season? What tools do we have to face these hard realities? How does Christ teach us to embody hope when our backs are against the wall? 

This study’s purpose is to allow all of our communities to cultivate hope that is honest about our current conditions (refugia), hope that is restorative when everything feels urgent (rest), and hope that is possible even when we transgress (repair). 

Our study leader this year is Linda Elms. In addition to being a previous Mission u leader, Linda has served as a Conference President, Spiritual Growth Coordinator, and Program Resource Officer. She was also a two-year member of the Program Advisory Group and served as Vice-President of the South Central Jurisdiction. Linda is a member of St Peter’s UMC in Katy.

This year’s Mission u Dean is Ashley Mayho. Ashley currently serves as the Program Resources coordinator and the Language Coordinator for the Texas Conference UWFaith. She is also the serves as the Social Action coordinator for Literacy for her local unit. Ashley is a member of Klein UMC in Spring.

Mission u 2025 Agenda

Friday, July 11

  • 9:30-9:45 am – Gathering Time
  • 9:45-10:15 am – Opening Worship
  • 10:20-11:20 am – Session 1
  • 11:25 am-12:25 pm – Session 2
  • 30-minute lunch break
  • 12:55-1:55 pmSession 3
  • 2:00-3:00 pmSession 4
  • 3:00-3-15 pmClosing & Announcements

Saturday, July 12th

  • 9:30-9:45 – Gathering Time
  • 9:45-9:55 amAnnouncements
  • 10:00-11:00 amSession 5
  • 11:05 am-12:05 pmSession 6
  • 30-minute lunch break
  • 12:35-1:35 pmSession 7
  • 1:40-2:40 pmSession 8
  • 2:45-3:15 pmClosing Worship

Mission u Resources

The Adult Study Book is not required for to attend the study, but if you would like to purchase a copy for yourself, you can get order your own copy. You can also download invite posters/flyers for free.

Mission u Author

Tabatha Holley is the former pastor of New Day Church in Bronx, New York, a writer in the 2024-2025 Sojourners Opinion Writing Cohort, and founder of A Space to Land, LLC, which provides holistic, interfaith services to individuals and communities ranging from funerals and weddings to workshops, curriculum development, and conflict mediation.

Mission u on Faith Talks Podcast

The UWFaith podcast Faith Talks recently featured the authors of Practicing Hope on one of their episodes. You can listen to the recording on UWFaith Digital or on the UWFaith website.

How do you Mission u?

Mission u will be presented this year via Zoom, but if watching a computer screen by yourself isn’t your cup of tea, consider gathering your friends and watching the presentation together. When the agenda calls for small groups to discuss, your group can be its own breakout room. Each participant is asked to register independently, but there is an option to register as part of a group.

UWFaith Luncheon Planned for Annual Conference

Be completely humble and gentle; be patient, bearing with one another in love. Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace.
Ephesians 4:2-3 (NIV)

The 2025 United Women in Faith luncheon will be held Monday, May 26, at the Hilton Americas Hotel in downtown Houston from noon to 1:30 p.m. The hotel is located at 1600 Lamar St. All women from across the Texas Conference (and friends from further away) are invited to attend.

The theme of this year’s event is Together We Rise: Faith, Love, and Unity, Celebrating at the Table. The keynote speaker will be Rev. Elizabeth Duffin, the Southwest District Superintendent. This year’s Hazel Decker Award will also be announced.

Elizabeth Duffin has served as the District Superintendent of the Southwest District since 2023.  She previously served as the senior pastor of First UMC Missouri City.  Other appointments include the Associate Director in the Center for Clergy Excellence, and pastoral positions in northwest Houston and Beaumont.  She is a graduate of Duke Divinity School and Davidson College.  She serves on the Board of Ordained Ministry and was a General Conference delegate.  Elizabeth is married to Seann, the senior pastor of Memorial Drive UMC, and they have two children.

2025 Day of Giving – March 23

On March 23 of each we celebrate the birthday of United Women in Faith with a special Day of Giving offering. This year we plan to meet via Zoom to celebrate with a special Texas version of the event. Everyone is encouraged to wear their best western gear. Hats on, ladies!

Register here.

Why March 23?

On this date in 1869, a group of eight intrepid women founded the Woman’s Foreign Missionary Society, the forerunner of United Women in Faith. Their vision was to create educational opportunities and provide health care to women in India. These founding women invited others to join their mission through their prayers and two pennies. Thus, a movement of faith and generosity in action was born.

The Legacy Endowment Fund

The Legacy Endowment Fund of United Women in Faith is a permanently invested endowment that supports the work of improving the lives of women, children, and youth at home and abroad.

Ways to Give

  • Online
  • By phone: 800-278-7771 (8 am – 5 pm EST, Mon-Fri and Sunday, March 23)
  • Text: Text “FUTURE” to 20503
  • By Check:
    Make checks payable to:
    United Women in Faith
    Attn: Legacy
    Church Center for the United Nations
    777 United Nations Plaza, 11th Floor
    New York, NY 10017
    (Write “Day of Giving” in the memo section)

Join Us in Giving for Generations to Come

  • Become a Legacy Builder by pledging to make a monthly donation of $18.69 or more.
  • Become a Friend of Legacy by making a gift of $5,000 or more. For more information, please contact Development at 800-278-7771.
  • Join the 1869 Society by making a planned gift through a will bequest, gift of stock or securities, or donation of other non-cash assets.
  • For more information about The Legacy Endowment Fund, visit: Legacy Fund | United Women in Faith, call 1-800-278-7771, or email legacy150@uwfaith.org.

Registration Open for 2025 Spring Spiritual Growth Retreat

You are invited to attend the Texas Conference Spring Spiritual Growth Retreat being held via Zoom on March 1.

The keynote speaker this year is Ilka Vega, a transfronteriza from El Paso / Cd. Juarez borderlands. She serves as the Executive for Economic and Environmental Justice at United Women in Faith.

You’ll also be able to attend two workshops: Soul Care led by Abby Gutierrez and Discover the Divine Connection with Nature led by Paulette Moore-Hall.

Rev Soledad de La Cerda will lead the closing worship and Love Feast.

Agenda

7:30 am – 8:00 amMorning Praise
8:00 am – 9:00 amGathering Time
9:00 am – 9:30 amOpening Plenary
9:30 am – 10:00 amKeynote Address
10:00 am – 10:10 amBreak
10:10 am – 11:00 amWorkshops – 1st Session
11:00 am – 11:15 amReturn to the main room
11:15 am – 12:05 pmWorkshops – 2nd Session
12:05 pm – 12:15 pmBreak
 12:15 pm – 1:00 pmClosing Plenary

Biographies

The keynote speaker this year is Ilka Vega, a transfronteriza from El Paso / Cd. Juarez borderlands. She serves the Executive for Economic and Environmental Justice at United Women in Faith. She holds a B.A in Sustainability, Culture, and Social Justice and a B.A. in Business from Southwestern University and a M.Sc. in Innovation, Human Development, and Sustainability from the University of Geneva. She is a graduate of Lydia Patterson Institute and has over 14 years of experience working on human rights and different advocacy issues including migration, climate and racial justice. She has worked as an educator and campaign organizer developing social and climate justice curriculum for faith-based audiences. She has also worked on mainstreaming sustainability policies and educational resources across different UN and international organizations including the Office of the High Commission for Human Rights and the 2050Today initiative in Geneva.

Abby Gutierrez has grown up in the United Methodist Church as a Pastor’s kid alongside strong, encouraging and empowering United Methodist Women, now known as United Women in Faith.  The most influential of these women has been her mother, Minerva Briones, who through powerful examples always encouraged the growth of our organization in every church her father and family were appointed to.  Abby has served as a Program Advisory Group Member representing the Rio Texas Conference United Women in Faith and is now a member of the Board of Directors.  She is also a part of the Charter for Racial Justice Support Team where she supports Conference presidents in the South Central Jurisdiction in their ongoing Racial Justice work.  She also served as the Chair for the Texas Legislative Event planning committee for 2024.

Abby, her husband Brian and daughters Hannah & Sarah, are members of La Trinidad United Methodist church in San Antonio, TX where she serves as Lay Leader. 

Rev. Soledad de la Cerda holds graduate degrees in Theology and Divinity from Southern Methodist University in Dallas. She was ordained as a Deacon in 2022. Balancing the responsibilities of being a devoted mother to five children with her role as Associate Pastor at CrossRoads UMC in Houston, Texas, Soledad also preaches as the assigned pastor at Beneke Memorial UMC on the first and third Sundays of each month.

Soledad embodies a deep commitment to both family and spiritual leadership. Born in Santiago, Chile, she encountered Christ while studying at university. She married on May 12, 1988, and is the mother of Claudia, Andres, Kevin, Dylan, and Annahi. After 33 years of marriage, she divorced in 2021.

Recently, she published her first book titled “La inclusión de las personas con discapacidad en la iglesia”, which was edited by AETH (Association for Hispanic Theological Education). The book, based on her experience as the mother of a child with disabilities, creates a moving and compelling narrative.

Paulette Moore-Hall is deeply committed to her faith and the mission ministry of United Women in Faith. She recently completed her 2020-2024 term as a member of The United Women in Faith Program Advisory Group and the United Women in Faith Legacy Endowment Fund Steering Committee. She has faithfully served in prior offices such as President and Treasurer of the Texas Conference United Women in Faith, and the former Central North District United Women in Faith. Also, Mission u study leader. She is the current president of the John Wesley Unit, United Women in Faith. In addition, she is the Chairperson for the 2025 United Women in Faith Texas Legislative Event and serves on the Board of the Spring Interfaith Council as Treasurer.

Paulette has a passion for serving ministries and is an active member of John Wesley Methodist Church in Houston, TX, ministries include Prayer Ministry Coordinator, Choir member, substitute Sunday school teacher, bible study facilitator and actively participates in her local unit mission projects and ministry outreach.

Food, Faith, Fellowship — and Fun!

Ask anyone who attended the 2024 Annual Meeting at Lakeview, and they’ll tell you that a great time was had by all.

Officers met on Friday morning to approve a budget to present to the membership, discuss the coming year’s events, and to get an update on all the work being done in the Conference.

In the evening attendees gathered at Bagley Hall and got to know each other by playing several fun games centered around food and the recipes that women brought from home. With bingo cards in hand and wearing our aprons, we tried to find someone who brought a soup recipe, someone with a salad recipe, and someone who cooks Sunday dinner on Saturday among other descriptions. Finding that person in the crowd was most of the fun. Prizes were awarded to the winners of the food word search and word scramble. (Most of us are still trying to figure out how they got the answers so quickly!)

All the fun was followed by an emboldened word from Rev Ellen Thornburg, Associate Pastor at Love UMC in Baytown. She encouraged us to remember that we can rely on Lady Wisdom from Proverbs as we move throughout our important work.

We ended the evening by watching the 25-minute film, Food Access Revolution in South L.A. Roy Choi’s Inspiring Journey, a look at food deserts in the Los Angeles area and how different people are trying to solve the problem.

Saturday’s session began with a blessing the hygiene kits that units assembled this year. At final count we donated 610 kits, $550 in miscellaneous supplies, and $1347 in cash donations to be used by the UMC Mission Center in Conroe for women in schools and shelters.

Greetings were brought by Stacie Hawkins, South Central Jurisdiction President, and Stephanie Pounds, National Board of Directors. The Prayer Calendar and devotion was given by Gwen Mason in English and by Ashley Mayho in Spanish. Treasurer Kathy Aubin lit the Mission Candle for 1 hour and 40 minutes representing the $1650.88 raised.

President Theresa Graham presented General Secretary Sally Vonner with a certificate for a Special Mission Recognition pin which was warmly received. After that Stacie Hawkins reported that the Legacy Fund has raised $40,806,698.00 so far and that the Texas Conference had contributed $205,783.06 of that.

Sally Vonner brought the keynote speech. She challenged us to help the organization reach 500,000 people in membership, generate $10+ million/year in revenue, and meet or exceed $60 million Legacy Endowment Fund 2014 goal.

After a short break, the business meeting began where we elected and installed new officers, adopted a 2025 budget, completed the pledge service, and took an offering.

Pledges for 2025 totaled $82,000:

  • Metro District – $12,000
  • Northeast District – $10,000
  • Northwest District – $10,000
  • Southeast District – $25,000
  • Southwest District – $25,000

Lunch followed, and then we split into two workshops on Food and Faith led by Rev. Eleanor Colvin, Senior Pastor at Westbury UMC, and Rev. Jennifer Hodson, Pastor at Bryan Community Church.

Gathering one last time in Bagley Hall, Rev Colvin led us in Communion and the sending forth. We believe love in action can change the world–now it’s up to us to go home and do just that.

Living the Charter for Racial Justice

The Charter for Racial Justice is a crucial document adopted by the United Women in Faith (UWFaith) of the United Methodist Church. It was created to address and combat racism within the church and society. The charter emphasizes the belief that all people are God’s children and that racism is a rejection of Jesus Christ’s teachings.

The Texas Conference United Women in Faith actively supports and promotes this charter. We are committed to eliminating institutional racism, creating opportunities for honest discussions about racism, and working together to create a world where every person has a voice, rights and opportunity for an abundant life.

Please register to join us on October 12, 2024, 9:00 – noon, at Ebenezer United Methodist Church, 7302 N. Main St, Houston, as we highlight examples of Living the Charter for Racial Justice.

Download this flyer and invite your friends.

Dorothy Ringer Sumner
Social Action