There are many online resources for United Methodists. Published by UMC agencies and partner organizations, these resources can be accessed online and used any time that fits in your ministry context or personal spiritual growth plan. The NC Conference Media Center is highlighting five new online resources that were recently published.
70th Anniversary of Women’s Ordination
The General Commission on the Status and Role of Women published a worship resource celebrating 70 years of full clergy rights for women in the church.
The Garrett Collective
This online platform from Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary includes free prayers, liturgies, and webinars, as well as microcourses and cohorts to learn with others.
The Canopy of Creation
This resource from Creation Justice Ministries equips congregations to address tree injustice through theological reflection, worship, storytelling, and practical action. Download it to find sermon starters, prayers, original songs, children’s activities, advocacy guides, and stories of communities already doing this work.
Can Living God’s Love Lead Us to Faithful Resistance?
Fuller Youth Institute’s Can I Ask That? curriculum empowers youth leaders to start conversations about hard questions and lead students toward discovering their own faith convictions. In this session, students will explore what it means to follow God in times when that may mean questioning human rules.
Project Transformation’s Summer Camp Curriculum
Project Transformation National has partnered with BeADisciple.com for their summer camp curriculum. Participating churches will receive the curriculum overview and 9 components, supply lists, and consultation time with Dr. Julie Wilke to coach your church organization through the implementation of the curriculum
People & Pronouns: Language That Sees Us
This guide from Reconciling Ministries Network is a practical, theologically grounded resource designed to help churches embody welcome through faithful, inclusive language. Rooted in Scripture and Wesleyan tradition, it moves beyond debate and into discipleship — inviting individuals and communities to practice naming one another with dignity and care.


