Our church’s outreach ministry includes both face-to-face direct care to people in need and justice advocacy. We have a long history of working with homeless youth and young adults, providing them with food, shelter, and services, and advocating for affordable housing and other supportive services. We also advocate for living wages, just immigration and refugee policies, and equal rights for everyone regardless of race, gender, religion, or sexual orientation. Because of our commitment to direct service and advocacy, members of our church are familiar with shelters and dining rooms, City Hall and the State Capitol. The following is a list of our outreach ministries.
We are an active member of Micah 6 of Austin, through which the University area churches serve the needs of low-income and homeless people. Our church members serve on the Micah 6 Board of Directors, and in the Micah 6 food pantry and Sunday Drop-In for homeless youth and young adults.
On Christmas Day, we celebrate Jesus’ birth with a brief communion service in our sanctuary, and then open our doors to anyone who would like a Christmas meal of ham, turkey, stuffing, vegetables, and desserts. We typically serve 100 to 150 people on Christmas day. We welcome volunteers and food contributors. Contact the church for details.
Our church provides space throughout the week for Street Youth Outreach Ministry to serve meals, lead Bible Studies, do job-search counseling, and provide basic care and support to homeless youth.
In response to the rise of Islamophobia in our nation, our church is participating in the Interfaith Action for Human Rights “Banner Project” by hanging a banner that reads, “We Stand With Our Muslim Neighbors,” and by developing closer relationships with Austin’s Muslim Community.
We are a member of Austin Interfaith, a faith-based political organization affiliated with the Industrial Areas Foundation. Through Austin Interfaith, local religious, labor, and community organizations organize to promote equity and justice on a host of issues in Austin.
We support the Equal Justice Center, which provides legal services to low-wage workers and immigrants, supports workers seeking to defend their workplace rights and recover stolen wages, and advocates for just US immigration policies. Our church hosts several Equal Justice Center educational events every year.
We are members of Texas Impact, a faith-based legislative advocacy organization that supports justice and sound environmental stewardship policies on the state level.
The Austin Sanctuary Network is a coalition of faith communities, immigrants and other community members of civil society in and around Austin. ASN supports and protects undocumented asylum seekers and immigrants, and advocates for just immigration policies.
We support Equal Exchange, an organization that purchases coffee, cocoa, and tea directly from coops around the world at fair and just prices, and then sells it directly to consumers. We sell Equal Exchange products in church after worship on many Sundays.
We support The Care Communities, an organization that provides basic care and assistance to people living with AIDS and other terminal diseases. Our church has a “care team” that provides this support to a Care Communities client, and members of our church ride on the Care Communities Cycling Team to raise money for the organization in the Hill Country Ride for AIDS.
We participate in the United Church of Christ Global Ministry’s Child Sponsorship Program by sponsoring a student who attends the Rawdat El Zuhar school in East Jerusalem.
We support Back Bay Mission, a leader in economic development, affordable housing construction, and hands-on Christian work camp ministry on Mississippi’s Gulf Coast. We provide annual financial support to Back Bay Mission, and we have sent member to participate in work projects.
We support Interfaith Action of Central Texas, an interfaith organization that cultivates peace and respect through interfaith dialogue, service and celebration.
We invest in the Calvert Social Investment Fund, a micro-lending agency that provides low-interest credit to people in the United States and the developing world.
Each January a group travels from our church, along with groups from UCC churches in Ohio, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania, to Alegria, El Salvador, to work with the people there. They take medical and school supplies, work with the people there on various building projects for the community, and learn about the political and economic issues affecting them.
Below is a link to a presentation made by Dennis Murphy during a church service that describes people served by the Center. It is a beautifully written, poignant story of the clients at the center, their struggles and the efforts to serve them. Voices from the Serving Center
Kinship is an ethic that requires us to be proximate, consistent, and vulnerable. It’s costly and inconvenient, but draws us into true relationship. Instead of power, we offer presence. Differences are celebrated and dignified. Compassion is not a gesture, but an overflow of the love we’ve received from the Father.
We join our local and global partners in the good work God is already doing around the world and in Portland. Each week, we commit to pray for them—their leaders and the communities they serve. To see all of our justice partners and to discover more ways to participate in their work, click on a partner’s name below.