United Thank Offering Grants
The 2024 United Thank Offering grant application materials are now available. Over the next 3 years, The United Thank Offering, in the spirit of Matthew 25:36, will focus on areas of ministry that serve those who society has left out and left behind. The UTO grant focus for 2024 will be on “the stranger” Jesus mentions, offering welcome and inclusivity.
The application process is currently closed.
Contact: The Rev. Canon Heather Melton, Staff Officer for the United Thank Offering
From Public Affairs
- United Thank Offering: Over $1M awarded for projects welcoming ‘the stranger’The Episcopal Church Executive Council approved more than $1 million in United Thank Offering grants supporting 20 innovative mission and ministry projects during its April meeting.
- United Thank Offering matching grant nets $187K for Jerusalem dioceseThanks to generous gifts to a recent United Thank Offering matching challenge, the Episcopal Diocese of Jerusalem will receive more than $187,000 to help meet immediate needs and ease suffering in the Holy Land.
- Matching grant challenge to support ministries of Episcopal Diocese of JerusalemThe United Thank Offering—in partnership with the Good Friday Offering—will match up to $100,000 of donations given through Dec. 15 to help sustain outreach ministries in the Episcopal Diocese of Jerusalem, which operates across several countries or territories and includes churches, schools, medical facilities, and other ministries.
- United Thank Offering invites 2024 annual grant applicantsThe United Thank Offering Board is pleased to announce the availability of its 2024 UTO Annual Grants, with a focus on projects that welcome and include “the stranger.” Application deadlines are Dec. 1 for Anglican Communion partners and Jan. 19 for dioceses of The Episcopal Church.
- United Thank Offering: Over $1M awarded for projects addressing incarceration crisisMore than $1 million in United Thank Offering grants—designated for 22 projects related to the worldwide incarceration crisis within The Episcopal Church and Anglican Communion—was approved by the church’s Executive Council during its June meeting.