School boards
Curriculum, budgets, and the formation of the next generation — decided in rooms with empty seats.
Faith-informed civic leadership · Texas
We are raising up a generation of principled public servants — men and women grounded in faith, family, constitutional liberty, personal responsibility, and the courage to lead in their communities. It starts where you live: school boards, city councils, county offices, and the elections almost no one shows up for.
Nonpartisan. We do not endorse candidates or parties — we equip citizens to serve.
Why local matters
Local decisions shape daily life — what your children learn, how your streets are kept, what your community builds and protects. These offices are won by handfuls of votes and often go uncontested. Faithful presence starts here, not in Washington.
Curriculum, budgets, and the formation of the next generation — decided in rooms with empty seats.
Zoning, public safety, taxes, and the daily order of your neighborhood.
Elections administration, courts, commissioners — the machinery of local self-government.
The most local unit of civic participation, where showing up is most of the battle.
The calling
Called to Office equips Christians to serve with courage, conviction, and integrity — rooted in faith, constitutional literacy, personal responsibility, strong families, free enterprise, religious liberty, and local service over centralized dependency. Public office is a form of neighbor-love. We train people to carry it faithfully.
Plain-English education on how school boards, councils, county government, and precinct conventions actually work.
The Small Group Toolkit and the six-session Faith & the City series for churches and living rooms.
How to attend a meeting, how to speak, and — when called — how to run for local office with integrity.
We do not tell you who to vote for. We help you understand where to serve.
Guides & resources
Plain-English guides and small group resources that move you from understanding to participation. Free to read, free to use, nonpartisan throughout.
School boards, city councils, county government, and precinct conventions — and where you fit.
Discern the call, confirm eligibility, file, run, and serve with integrity. Texas-specific.
Gather a few people around a table and move from study to faithful civic participation.
A six-session study — biblical foundations through a clear next step into local service.
The Texas civic map
A public, nonpartisan directory of Texas county election offices, precinct and district boundaries, and source-backed civic contact records — built county by county, with the source trail published for every record.
County election offices, official GIS files, and public contact pages form the source trail. Every record carries its source URL and retrieval date.
County, precinct, district, office, name, public contact, source, and confidence — one neutral data model across all 254 counties.
Enter your address, see your precinct and districts, and find your county election office and public civic resources in one place.
Coverage ledger
We publish our progress like a county ledger — what is sourced, what is pending, and when it was last updated. No overstated completeness.
Data sources
Statewide precinct geometry comes from the Texas Capitol Data Portal. District plans come from the Texas Legislative Council. Election records come from the Texas Secretary of State and county election offices. Every published record links back to its source.
Our promise
Called to Office is a civic education project. We hold convictions openly — faith, constitutional liberty, personal responsibility, strong families, and moral courage in public life — and we draw a hard line at the same time:
We equip citizens to participate, to serve, and to vote with knowledge and conscience.
County coverage milestones, local election calendars, new guides, and small group resources. Nonpartisan, useful, and never spam.