This Moment Matters: A call for compassionate giving

Your end-of-year gift offers healing and hope to many around the world.

ATLANTA – As the end of the year approaches, Global Ministries and the General Board of Higher Education and Ministry invite you to participate in an end-of-year giving campaign inspired by our new granting and giving initiative, This Moment Matters. This Moment Matters is a faith-based response to the current context of global instability, humanitarian crises, attacks on equitable education programs and shifting political landscapes. Sponsored jointly by Global Ministries and Higher Education and Ministry, it has five areas of focus: agriculture and food security, education, global health, migration and peace.

The suspension of most U.S. foreign aid and many safety-net measures has left millions vulnerable, especially in Africa, where nutrition and health systems are collapsing from the lack of resources and support. We are forging new alliances and partnerships among faith-based organizations and regional NGOs to “stand in the gap” to bring hope and healing to vulnerable communities in the U.S. and around the world.

Whether you’re a congregation looking to make a collective impact or an individual seeking to give a meaningful gift, your support helps us respond to God’s call to feed the hungry, welcome the stranger and care for the sick.

Visit ThisMomentMatters.org to learn more about our areas of response, explore giving options and choose a mission that speaks to your heart. View and share this video.  Use church giving campaign resources to plan and spread the word, then start a fundraising challenge in your church or community.

Let’s make this season one of generosity, compassion and purpose. Because this moment truly matters – and so does your gift.

Media Contacts:
Susan Clark
Chief Communications Officer, General Board of Global Ministries
Communications@umcmission.org

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UMCOR Campaigns

Six Years, No Solution: A 500-Gallon Tank Carries Hope to West Virginia’s Forgotten

McDowell County is one of the poorest in the U.S., and the communities of Anawalt, Leckie and Gary are some of the hardest hit by the current six-year water crisis. All have Methodist churches that are part of the Welch Charge.

To ease the burden of residents who have to purchase many gallons of drinking water weekly, the Welch Charge contacted the West Virginia Conference Disaster Response Coordinator, Jim McCune, for help. McCune’s United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR) connection put him in touch with Global Ministries’ Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) program. 

A WASH grant allowed them to obtain a 500-gallon “water buffalo.” The conference disaster response team arranged to fill the portable water buffalo from the Welch water system, the county seat of McDowell, and transport it to Gary, where residents have been supplied with refillable containers. Residents of all three towns can come to get water, and volunteers will also continue deliveries for those who need it. Meanwhile, residents, including church members, continue to advocate state and local officials for a permanent solution to their aging, compromised water infrastructure. Full Story