Registration for the 2025-2026 year is OPEN!
Check our Registration page for details!

Supporting all moms through connections, community and shared experiences in every stage of motherhood.
Our values:
- We welcome you, as you are
- We celebrate each other as moms and friends
- We are a refuge and support for all moms (working moms, stay-at-home moms, single moms, married, moms, faith-based moms, non-religious moms, LGBTQIA+ moms, moms to be, and moms who have suffered a loss. If you are a mom, this is your place.)
- We have fun
- We cultivate a culture of gratitude and support
- We focus on simplicity
The MomCo (The Mom Community) exists to meet the needs of every mom—urban, suburban, and rural moms, stay-at-home and working moms, teen, single and married moms—moms with different lifestyles who all share a similar desire to be the very best moms they can be!
We are better together. Whether you need a friend to compare stories with, a shoulder to lean on (and sometimes to cry on), or ideas to help you become a better mom—Beaverton MomCo is the place for you! Come join us and know that you are not alone on your mothering journey.
We welcome all people, regardless of color, gender, religion, ethnicity, sexual orientation, socioeconomic status, and nationality.
What is The MomCo?
Here at The MomCo, we gather and support moms. We believe in the simple but revolutionary idea that remarkable things happen when moms come together, face to face. That’s why we rally women to come together in their own neighborhoods and help each other through motherhood, one gathering at a time.
The MomCo encourages and equips moms of young children to realize their potential as mothers, women, and leaders in partnership with the local church. For more information about The MomCo, please visit http://www.themom.co.
2025-2026 MomCo Theme
Own Your Story
Revelation 12:11, NIV
This is the year to share your story. The compassionate witness of brave women is life-changing. Our stories find healing in community, and we help others heal when we are honest about what we have experienced. The moments of failure, frustration and imperfection are often where God’s grace shows up most profoundly. It means forgiving others who have hurt us and also forgiving ourselves for the mistakes we’ve made. Vulnerability may feel awkward, but it’s how we heal and invite others into their own journey of freedom. Your story matters. This year, we will resist insecurity, choose to forgive and share our stories boldly in community.
Speak Kindness
Proverbs 31:26, ESV
We live in a time where we are constantly bombarded with words, which cheapens
them and makes us forget just how powerful they truly are. A kind word spoken at the right moment is life-altering. A home filled with encouragement instead of yelling and criticism is medicine to the soul. Our kids are listening, and the words we speak over them will shape who they are becoming. Words change the atmosphere; they impact our biology, and they can bless and curse. This year let’s reclaim the power of our words by choosing kindness.
Speaking kindly isn’t only about how we communicate with others but also how
we talk to ourselves. The voice inside our heads can often be the harshest critic, saying things far crueler than any enemy ever could. True kindness must extend both outward and inward in equal measure. Let’s release ourselves from harsh self-criticism and step into the truth of who God says we are: beloved and worthy. When we accept God’s kindness, it overflows, enabling us to extend the same gentleness to those around us.
Audacious Faith
John 14:12-17, NIV
Jesus often called people to defy logic—to stretch out a withered hand, dip in the water seven times or cast nets on the other side—which shows us that our effort matters. Take a risk, learn a new skill and dare to grow. Our action speaks louder than frustration. This year, posture your life around expectation and allow God to stretch your faith. Trust him with the wildest dreams of your heart. As Christine Caine says, “Don’t be afraid to ask your Father for anything.” Dare to do something new. Remember God’s pattern of providing more than we could have hoped for.
The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over, expecting different results. So mom? Wife? Friend? If there’s something in your life you deeply, desperately want to change, something you feel in your soul that God has for you, it’s time to try something different.
This year, when God calls us to do or say something, we will respond with confidence: “Because you say so, I will” (Luke 5:5, NIV).
Enjoy the Joy
Psalm 16:8-11, NIV
For too long, we’ve lived afraid, fending for ourselves and letting fear dictate our lives. But anxiety was never meant to be our guide. It may have protected us in moments, but it has also built walls that kept joy out. To be absorbed by joy means releasing the constant need to control, defend and strive.
We’ve bought the lie that if certain things in our life were different, then we could relax and enjoy ourselves. But you don’t actually need to buy that red-light mask, to upgrade your kitchen, or for your kid to “make good choices” to be filled with joy. Joy is a relief. It is enjoying the small things, and it is a defiant resistance to darkness. It’s time to enjoy the joy.



