Together, we empower financial well-being for faith-inspired living.
Special features and events

Visit our booth
Stop by during exhibitor hours for giveaways and to learn more about integrating your faith and finances!
- Tuesday, July 8, 8–10 p.m.
- Wednesday, July 9, 12:15 – 2:15 p.m. and 8–10 p.m.
- Thursday, July 10, 12:15 – 2:15 p.m. and 8–10 p.m.
- Friday, July 11, 12:15 – 2:15 p.m.


Mobility assistance

80 years of impact
2025 marks 80 years of Everence®, and to celebrate, we’re embarking on a company-wide initiative to conduct more than 80 acts of service throughout the year.
Everence seminars
- Wednesday, July 9
- Thu., July 10
- Friday, July 11
Pastor finances: The now and not yet
Wednesday, July 9, 2025
92:30 p.m., Sandpiper Room
Adults
Kent Miller, financial consultant
Every pastor hopes to approach their finances with a focus on good stewardship now and as they look to the future. We’ll explore tools to help pastors work at organizing their personal financial cash flow and discuss questions about retirement, housing allowances, and how to be as charitable as you want to be, both now and into the future.
Find the joy: A generosity journey
Wednesday, July 9, 2025
3:30 p.m., Auditorium I
Youth
Rachel Swartzendruber Miller, Vice President, National Markets
“God loves a joyful giver,” but what should we do when the joy is a little hard to come by? We save and manage our money and try to be good stewards, but we often fail to get real about how we feel about it all. What happens when we are giving more out of obligation? Where is the joy in it? This seminar will review Scripture and provide examples and ideas about how you might unlock the joy within your generosity. Join us and FIND THE JOY!
What’s your thing? How to talk about yourself without feeling weird
Thursday, July 10
10:15 a.m., Blue Ashe
Youth
Madalyn Metzger, Chief Marketing Officer, and Hannah Heinzekehr, Senior Director for Strategic Communications, Notre Dame
Networking is a word that often gets thrown around as something that you "should" do in order to find internships, volunteer, and employment opportunities, but it can also feel intimidating to know where to start. At its best, networking is about finding authentic ways to build new connections and about telling the story of what drives you and gives you energy. Join Madalyn and Hannah, both mid-career leaders for nonprofit organizations, who have had to navigate a wide variety of career and professional development spaces, to gain some tips to help you feel more confident when sharing your own story.
Can you be a rich Christian?
Thursday, July 10
11:15 a.m., Auditorium I
Youth
Lyle Miller, Stewardship Consultant & Franco Salvatori, Stewardship Consultant
Money plays an important part in our life's journey, but what does it mean to manage money as a follower of Jesus? Learn about four financial fundamentals that help us consider why and how we should talk about money and explore tools that help us integrate our faith with our decisions about money.
Seen and known: Faith, identity, and belonging between worlds
Thursday, July 10
2:30 p.m., Auditorium IV
Youth
Madalyn Metzger, Chief Marketing Officer
Straddling multiple cultures and identities can feel like living in a wilderness – never fully belonging to one place or another. Drawing from personal experience as a multiracial, multicultural individual, this workshop explores the challenges of navigating different worlds and the exhaustion of constantly translating between them. Through the story of Hagar in Genesis 16, participants will reflect on what it means to be truly seen and known by the God who sees, even when the world struggles to define them.
Find the joy: A generosity journey
Thursday, July 10
3:30 p.m., Tanglewood
Intergenerational
Rachel Swartzendruber Miller, Vice President, National Markets
“God loves a joyful giver,” but what should we do when the joy is a little hard to come by? We save and manage our money and try to be good stewards, but we often fail to get real about how we feel about it all. What happens when we are giving more out of obligation? Where is the joy in it? This seminar will review Scripture and provide examples and ideas about how you might unlock the joy within your generosity. Join us and FIND THE JOY!
Necessary conversations: Let's talk about money
Friday, July 11
11:15 a.m., Tidewater
Intergenerational
Lyle Miller, Stewardship Consultant, and Rachel Swartzendruber Miller, Vice President, National Markets
A dollar bill is neither male or female, old or young, but studies have identified generational, gender and other tendencies that can contribute to each of us having different experiences when it comes to money. In this session, we will look at some data about these and other patterns, consider why and how we should talk about money and explore tools that help us integrate our faith with our decisions about money, no matter our age and stage of life.
Small pockets, big responsibilities
Friday, July 11
2:30 p.m., Augusta Room
Intergenerational
Emily Miller, EFCU Member Relations Manager
How do we talk to kids about money? It's possible to instill in children a spirit of generosity and allow them to learn how to earn, save, give and spend wisely. As they acquire new skills, they can better manage their possessions and learn to use available tools and resources responsibly. By fostering these habits early on, we empower the next generation with essential skills for lifelong financial wellness.
Seen, known and called: Faith and identity
Friday, July 11
2:30 p.m., Auditorium IV
Intergenerational
Madalyn Metzger, Chief Marketing Officer
Straddling multiple cultures and identities can feel like living in a wilderness – never fully belonging to one place or another. Drawing from personal experience as a multiracial, multicultural individual, this workshop explores the challenges of navigating different worlds and the exhaustion of constantly translating between them. Through the story of Hagar in Genesis 16, participants will reflect on what it means to be truly seen and known by the God who sees, even when the world struggles to define them.
More about Everence

Financial services

Everence Federal Credit Union

Youth Savings Celebration

Live your values
When you work with Everence, you become part of a community that's all about working together to make the future brighter. Learn more about how you can be part of something bigger than yourself.
Disclosure
Investments are subject to market fluctuations, may lose value, and are not subject to any company or government guarantees.
1 The investment advisor fee schedule is reduced for fund accounts over $100,000. Additional fee arrangements may be available to fund accounts of $500,000 and more. To participate in the impact investing options, donors must work with an Everence representative.
2 The impact investing option requires an additional $100 setup fee.
3 Assets contributed to the donor advised fund become the property of Mennonite Foundation (an affiliate of Everence), and the donor retains no legal control over the gift. Instead, the donor is entitled to give non-binding advice to the foundation about the distribution of the funds.