Are you interested in serving on a Conference committee?
You still have time to express your interest! The nomination deadline has been extended until March 8. Visit our Nominations page to learn more and complete the interest form.
Are you interested in serving on a Conference committee?
You still have time to express your interest! The nomination deadline has been extended until March 8. Visit our Nominations page to learn more and complete the interest form.
Join Wespath for a no-cost virtual event for UMC clergy and lay employees on April 10 at 12 pm ET. The event features information and insights from Wespath about General Conference, investments, benefits, and well-being to help assist with navigating benefits and the general UMC environment.
The event will run approximately 4 hours. Registration allows participation in the entire event, or you can drop in for the segment(s) that interest you the most.
Kaleidoscope is a weekend retreat for middle school youth to help them grow closer to God. The retreat includes small groups, worship, camp activities, and the opportunity to connect with God in God’s creation!
Join us April 12-14, 2024, to learn how the Holy Habits can be used as tools to guide us in the darkness and trust the Lord to lead us to a place of being found, known, and heard. The registration deadline is March 29.
Are you a youth pastor, a passionate volunteer, or someone who is looking for ways to deepen your faith and empower others to do the same? Join the TENx10 Relational Discipleship Kickstart and unleash your potential to cultivate a culture of discipleship!
The second set of cohorts will begin in April. If you are interested, please fill out an interest form by March 15.
Follow NC Conference Youth Ministries on Facebook and Instagram.
In 2021, our annual conference adopted a Lay Equalization Plan that helps guide the nomination and selection process for At-Large Lay Members for the NC Annual Conference. The purpose of this plan is to ensure an equal number of clergy (active & retired) and lay members participate and vote in our NC Annual Conference. This plan calls for the District Superintendent, in partnership with the District Lay Leader(s), to nominate professing members from within their district as At-Large Members for participation in the NC Annual Conference meeting.
From now until March 23, 2024, we are actively receiving lay equalization plan nominations. Nominations may come from pastors, congregational lay leadership, or self-nomination. You may also submit the nomination yourself if you have spoken with someone who would like to be considered.
You can absolutely submit more than one nomination! Remember, this is a nomination in addition to the name(s) you have already elected at your annual Charge Conference. All nominations will be reviewed by our Conference Board of Laity, and all who have been nominated will be notified by April 7, 2024, as to their status – either elected or alternate.
Please submit all nominations by midnight on March 23.
Please share the nomination form with anyone who you believe might be interested in serving. We are asking both pastors and laity to help us seek, encourage, and ultimately send lay members of every age, gender, and color to Annual Conference as we work together for our conference and the glory of our Savior.
Please note that elected lay members will be responsible for their own travel arrangements and accommodations. There is no funding available from the district or conference for travel, meals, or accommodations. College Hill Suites at East Carolina University provides very affordable lodging for lay members to Annual Conference. Visit the Annual Conference 2024 page for more information on housing. Please note that all hotel and ECU housing reservations must be confirmed by May 13, 2024.
We are seeking committed and willing hearts to serve as At-Large Members to Annual Conference. Thank you in advance for helping us to ensure that our decision-making members are as creative and diverse as the God who created us all!
John Hall
NC Conference Lay Leader
March is Women’s History Month, and the Methodist Church has a rich history of women’s leadership. Borrow these books to learn about this history and teach it to others. We also have some DVDs on general women’s history to add to your watch list.
Rev. Dr. Donna Fowler-Marchant, a pastor in the NC Conference, joined the Un-Tied Methodism podcast to talk about key women leaders in early Methodism.
The NC Conference celebrates the ministry of Rev. Laure Kalau at Haw River UMC in this video.
UMC.org offers this helpful Timeline of Women in Methodism.
The General Commission on Religion and Race celebrates women of color in our Methodist lineage with a great infographic and a litany of thanks for women of color leaders. They also offer ideas for worship, Sunday School, mission, outreach, and advocacy.
Ask the UMC highlighted the stories of groundbreaking Black women in U.S. Methodist history, including Ida Bell Wells-Barnett, Mary McLeod Bethune, Rev. Sallie Crenshaw, and Bishop Leontine T.C. Kelly.
The history of women in church leadership isn’t always pretty. View and share this video of the sexism experienced by women clergy in the NC Conference.
Pioneer Black Clergywomen: Stories of Black Clergywomen of the United Methodist Church 1974-2016 by Josephine Whitely-Fields. Black clergywomen are pioneers of the United Methodist Church who continue to significantly contribute to making disciples and spreading the good news of the gospel of Jesus Christ. Their stories are inspiring illustrations of the Holy Spirit at work in ordinary people who said yes to ordained ministry. Black clergywomen have endured many individual, institutional, and systemic acts of racism, sexism, and ageism while being subjected to economic discrimination. Their continuance exemplifies their commitment to being the embodiment of Christ-love to all people.
Mothers in Israel: Methodist Beginnings Through the Eyes of Women by Donna L. Fowler-Marchant. Eighteenth-century women like Susanna Annesley Wesley, Sarah Ryan, Mary Bosanquet Fletcher, Frances Mortimer Pawson, Sarah Crosby, and many more were pivotal in the growth of the Methodist movement as class leaders, visitors to the sick, devotional writers, teachers, and even preachers. Discover the richness of their legacy of faithful witness through this exploration of their own theological writings and reflections and their message for the Church today. Rev. Dr. Fowler-Marchant is an elder in the NC Conference.
Nevertheless: American Methodists and Women’s Rights by Ashley Boggan Dreff. This book tells the story of American Methodist women’s efforts to fight for women’s rights, beginning with the Women’s Christian Temperance Union and ending with the #MeToo movement. Each chapter documents particular Methodist women and provides the reader with a basic historic context of the time or situation at hand as it shows how Methodist women engaged and fought for women’s equality or women’s rights in American society and American Methodism. Dr. Boggan Dreff is the General Secretary of the General Commission on Archives and History.
Women Bishops of The United Methodist Church: Extraordinary Gifts of the Spirit by Sharon Zimmerman Rader and Margaret Ann Crain. Bishop Sharon Zimmerman Rader and Dr. Margaret Ann Crain interviewed the women bishops of The United Methodist Church, the first denomination to elect women to the episcopacy. Through the stories they collected, they learned what enabled these women to persevere, claim authority, define leadership in their own ways, and rise to the episcopacy. Retired NC Conference Bishop Hope Morgan Ward is included in this book.
She Offered Them Christ: The Legacy of Women Preachers in Early Methodism by Paul W. Chilcote. This book collects the stories of Methodism’s early women preachers and fosters an understanding of John Wesley’s appreciation of and support for women in early Methodism. Women preachers in John Wesley’s day had his support, encouragement, and formal approval to travel and preach.
Spirituality and Social Responsibility: Vocational Vision of Women in the United Methodist Tradition edited by Rosemary Skinner Keller. Here is a collection of essays and primary source documents that tells the stories of pioneering ministries of United Methodist women–of diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds–from the eighteenth century. Each essay traces the individual faith journeys and self-understanding of its subject. The stories also reveal the sexism and racism that confronted each woman overtly or covertly in church and society, as well as their own attitudes toward it.
The Journey is Our Home: A History of the General Commission on the Status and Role of Women by Carolyn Henninger Oehler. The History of the General Commission on the Status and Role of Women of the United Methodist Church, following by decade from the beginnings in 1944, through the realization in the late seventies, and finally to assessing the situation in 1992. Includes lists of commission members since 1973.
Ten Best Books on the History of United Methodist Women by United Methodist Women. This CD-ROM is a collection of ten outstanding books on the history, programs, outreach, and personalities of millions of United Methodist Women who have been involved in ministries with women and ministries with children and youth for more than a century.
Women Called to Ministry: A Six-Session Study for The United Methodist Church by Delia Halverson, Kabamba Kiboko, Laceye Warner, and M. Lynn Scott. This six-session study explores our understanding of women’s roles in The United Methodist Church. Why are women ordained? Why are they included in all areas of leadership? How did we arrive at those understandings? Produced by the General Commission on the Status and Role of Women to mark the 50th anniversary of women’s ordination, the series is designed primarily for use by local congregations. Study guides, leader’s guides, and supplemental materials are available for free download in PDF format.
May She Have a Word with You? Women as Models of How to Live in the Poems of Charles Wesley with Commentary by S. T. Kimbrough, Jr.; foreword by Laceye C. Warner. Entries in Charles Wesley’s MS Journal indicate an extremely positive relationship with women who are his coequals in mission and in the Methodist societies, and much of the work depended on them. Furthermore, Charles wrote numerous poems about women, often occasioned by death, which lift up individual women as models for the community at large and the church. Discover a literature that helps us to see the values which women had in the early Methodist movement and how those values were acknowledged, recorded, and fostered or encouraged by Charles Wesley, particularly in his poetry.
We Pray With Her: Encouragement for All Women Who Lead by Emily Peck-McClain, Danyelle Trexler, Jen Tyler, J. Paige Boyer, and Shannon Sullivan. As female leaders, our journeys are littered with obstacles and pitfalls unique to our gender. But we do not need to walk through life alone; we need to support and encourage our fellow women as we forge ahead in our work to leave a positive mark on the world. This book is a collection of 100 inspiring devotionals written by the women who formed the grassroots movement of the same name.
The Methodist Defense of Women in Ministry: A Documentary History by Paul W. Chilcote. More than fifty documents from the history of Methodism chronicle the tortuous journey leading to biblical equality in this family of churches. At a time when the ministry of women is under serious attack in a number of quarters, yet again, we all have much to learn from the witness of Wesleyan Christians who argued for women’s ministry. This story illustrates how faithful women, when they knew they had the Lord’s approval, stood “like the beaten anvil to the stroke.”
Journey of Women Toward Ordination in the United Methodist Tradition: An Examination of the Efforts of Women to Become Ordained in the Methodist Tradition Since the Mid-nineteenth Century by Carrie W. Parrish. A history of the ordination of United Methodist women with special attention to the North Carolina Conference. Includes a forward by Bishop Hope Morgan Ward, a report on the 50th anniversary of the ordination of clergywomen in the NC Conference, and lists of women bishops in the UMC, women ordained elder in the NC Conference, NC Conference clergywomen highlights, and the 2005 women clergy members of the NC Conference. Also includes statistics and “firsts” from 1956-2006.
A Journey In Song: Lenten Reflections on Hymns by Women by Joyce D. Sohl. Published by United Methodist Women, the songs (lyrics only), reflections, prayers, and scriptures in this booklet are for use during Lent. The poems, hymns, and writings are by women. Some of the music is available on the companion CD, Songs of Women.
Nevertheless, She Preached: Story of the Two Earliest Methodist Clergywomen in Virginia by Margaret T. Kutz. The never-before-told story of Reverends Lillian Russell and Mildred Long, the two earliest clergywomen in Virginia Methodism, is based on years of research of primary sources. As you follow these women through fifty years of service to their God, you will laugh with them, cry with them, and feel their hurt, rage, faith, exhaustion, and strength. You will be inspired to nevertheless live your own destiny.
Breaking Barriers: An African American Family & the Methodist Story by Angella P. Current. On July 19, 1984, Leontine Current Kelly was elected bishop of The United Methodist Church, making her the first African-American woman to become a bishop within a major American religious denomination. This book recounts the story of her journey while also illustrating the experience of African Americans within United Methodism, and the important roles that faith, the church, and family played in molding the character and work of numerous individuals throughout the denomination.
Anna Howard Shaw: The Work of Woman Suffrage by Trisha Franzen. Acknowledged by her contemporaries as the most outstanding woman suffrage orator of her time, Anna Howard Shaw was also one of the first women to be ordained in the Methodist Church. Challenging traditional gender boundaries throughout her life, she put herself through college, worked as a doctor, and built a tightly-knit family with her secretary and longtime companion Lucy E. Anthony.
Sojourner Truth: A Life, A Symbol by Nell Irvin Painter. Sojourner Truth was a freedom fighter for Blacks and for women. She was also, for a time, a Methodist. This biography explores her transformative life and its effect on those who encountered her, as well as the legacy that remains today.
A Wheel Within a Wheel: How I Learned to Ride the Bicycle with Some Reflections by the Way by Frances E. Willard. Frances Willard, founder of the Women’s Christian Temperance Union, fought for women’s suffrage and other social justice issues for workers and women. In 1888, she was one of five women elected as delegates to General Conference, but they were replaced by male reserves. She wrote this book after she took up bicycle-riding at the age of 53.
Susanna Wesley: The Mother of John & Charles Wesley by Arnold A. Dallimore. A biography of Susana Wesley.
Susanna Wesley: Mother of Methodism by Mary Greetham. A short biography of the mother of John and Charles Wesley.
Women Speak of God by Amy Oden. This eight-session course introduces us to the voices of six women who struggled with issues of identity, character, and calling and who were able to attest to God’s living presence amidst their struggles. This course is for both women and men who want to grow in faith and see how God works in difficult times and places. It includes sessions on Perpetua, Juana Inés de la Cruz, Susanna Wesley, Georgia Harkness, and more.
Portrait of Susanna: The Story of Susanna Wesley written and performed by Lynette Bennett Danskin. The mother of John and Charles Wesley, founders of Methodism, is profiled in this one-act play. Amidst the hardships of an impoverished early eighteenth-century English home, Susanna trained her sons in a style of Christian discipline and spirituality that would forever leave its mark on world Christianity.
Julian of Norwich. This program looks at Julian of Norwich, recognized today as one of 14th century England’s most compelling mystics. A contemporary of Chaucer and survivor of the black plague, Julian received sixteen startling images of the crucified Christ that forever changed her life. Her descriptions of her visions in Revelations of Divine Love have given birth to enduring images of God’s nurturing and familial love that continue to inspire seekers today.
Not for Ourselves Alone: The Story of Elizabeth Cady Stanton & Susan B. Anthony by Ken Burns and Paul Barnes. Together, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony fought for women everywhere, and their strong willpower and sheer determination still ripple through contemporary society. Ken Burns’s Emmy® Award-winning documentary recounts the trials, tribulations, and triumphs of two pioneers striving to give birth to the women’s movement. A companion book to this movie is also available.
One Woman, One Vote. Birthed in a small Methodist Church in upstate New York, the women’s suffrage movement is documented in this PBS video. Witness the 70-year struggle for women’s suffrage. Discover why the crusaders faced entrenched opposition from men and women who feared the women’s vote would ignite a social revolution.
The featured image is of a 14-foot-tall bronze monument honoring women’s rights advocates Sojourner Truth, Susan B. Anthony, and Elizabeth Cady Stanton in New York’s Central Park. Photo by Linda Bloom, UM News. |
Each month, we publish this flyer to share timely Conference resources available to clergy and laity in local churches in the North Carolina Conference. It includes upcoming events, grant deadlines, Conference news, and more.
The monthly theme for March is Women’s History Month. The flyer includes related resources that can be borrowed from the NC Conference Media Center, along with information about the Commission on the Status and Role of Women. The flyer also includes information on serving at General Conference.
Feel free to print or share this flyer with your congregation. Click either of the images below to download the two-page PDF flyer.
Pastors, congregations, and church members are invited to two webinars designed to provide hospitality and legal information for immigrants living in the United States.
919-779-6115
800-849-4433 (Toll-Free)
NC Conference of
The United Methodist Church
700 Waterfield Ridge Place
Garner, NC 27529
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