Angela F. Williams
If you are currently asking God to change your situation you should also be willing for him to change you.
With this prayer, “Lord, melt me so that You can mold me,” show total surrender.
Understand that transformation is not automatic. It is intentional. It is ongoing. And it often comes through discomfort. When pressure comes, return to the Word. Speak life. Talk yourself through it with truth.
As long as you have breath, God is still shaping you.
02/18/2026
Reverend Jesse Jackson’s life was a testament to courage, conviction, and unwavering faith in the promise of this nation. For decades, he called America to its highest ideals. He reminded us that democracy requires
participation, that dignity belongs to everyone, and that hope is a discipline.
As the daughter of a civil rights leader, I grew up understanding that justice is lived and it’s costly. It requires courage. Leaders like Reverend Jackson shaped the world my parents fought to change, and the world I was called to serve.
As a civil rights lawyer and public servant, I understood early that many of the doors I walked through had been pushed open by leaders like him. He challenged systems and insisted that justice be reflected in policy, in communities, and in everyday life.
“The Lord requires you to act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God.” -Micah 6:8
Reverend Jackson lived that charge out loud. May we honor him not only with our words, but with our work.
Rest well, Reverend. Thank you for the courage.
02/17/2026
A pleasure being on the all about change podcast with Jay Ruderman. Please take a listen.
“I believe that neighbors are always willing to reach out and lend a hand” says outgoing United Way Angela F. Williams That is how she keeps hope in the face of challenges.
Listen now: https://link.podtrac.com/aac-fb
01/22/2026
As I move through 2026, my word for the year is grace.
Grace for myself as I continue becoming who I am meant to be in this season of life, learning in real time, leading through uncertainty, and holding both ambition and tenderness at once. Grace for the days when growth feels heavy, when progress isn’t obvious, and when the path forward requires patience instead of speed.
Grace for others, too.
Because none of us are walking simple paths. Because connection deepens when we soften our assumptions. Because community is built when we meet each other with compassion instead of judgment.
What would change if we gave ourselves more grace this year?
What might heal if we extended grace freely to one another?
Here’s to a year of becoming, grounded in grace. What is your word for 2026?
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