We are relentlessly committed to building a movement of people of faith empowered to lead transformative change in society

Awareness

We engage congregations and faith leaders to understand social challenges and embrace their role as leaders of change.

Education

We develop community and church leaders to tackle the root causes of community challenges.

Mobilization

We mobilize people of faith to build community power and amplify their prophetic voice in the public square.

Empowering Churches for Lasting Community Transformation
See how our Leadership Development Program equips churches to lead sustainable change.

Our Impact

  • Mobilized 800 Latino church leaders and pastors to the Florida State Capitol since 2022, strengthening the Church’s prophetic voice on issues that shape daily life and the future of our communities—from immigration to criminal justice.

  • Equipped over 2,000 pastors and lay leaders through our Justice Leadership Institute, prayer gatherings, regional and statewide convenings.

  • Organized more than 100 bishops representing 48,000 churches and 4.8 million members through pilgrimages to historic civil rights sites,

  • Amplified faith-based prophetic advocacy nationwide through annual public policy reports and engagement that generated coverage in leading media outlets, including the Tampa Bay Times, Christianity Today, Associate Press , PBS and The Washington Post.

  • 68 million Latinos live in the U.S. — Activating our powerful voice for change.

  • 11 million undocumented immigrants live in fear of family separation.

  • In 45 states an estimated 69,300 non-U.S. citizens were held in public and private state prisons (as of December 2017).

  • Over 13 million U.S. children struggle with hunger.

  • In the U.S., Latinos make up about 20% of the population but represent roughly 23–24% of those incarcerated, reflecting a disproportionate impact within the criminal justice system.

  • Nationwide, Black adults are about 12% of the U.S. population but represent approximately 33% of the prison population—an unjust and disproportionate nearly 3× overrepresentation.

  • About 10–12 million Latinos nationwide lack health insurance.

  • In the United States, Black and Latino youth are disproportionately represented in juvenile incarceration: Black youth are about 15% of the youth population but 35% of residential placements, while Latino youth are about 25% of youth but 30% of placements—reflecting unjust disparities in the juvenile justice system.

  • Nationwide, approximately 26 million Americans lacked health coverage, including nearly 9 million Latinos—highlighting persistent healthcare inequities.

The Need

Compassionate Guide for Immigrants 

A practical guide for Christians to respond with compassion, offering clear information on immigrant rights and emergency preparedness.

Engaging with Black History

Mission Talk deepens justice work by connecting Latino Evangelicals with Black and Indigenous history through pilgrimages to historic sites.

Join Our Work Today

Together, we can impact public policy and transform communities across Florida and beyond.