The Rules governing admission to the Bar for Texas (Rule V: PROFESSIONAL RESPONSIBILITY EXAMINATION REQUIREMENT) "No person, whether an Applicant under Rule IX or under Rule XIII, shall be issued a license to practice law in Texas until such Applicant has furnished to the Board evidence that (s)he has passed the Multistate Professional Responsibility Examination (MPRE) with a scaled score of 85. A passing MPRE score is valid for five years from the date the MPRE is taken." --> see here:
http://attorneys.uslegal.com/admission- ... sion-laws/
Baylor's site,
http://www.baylor.edu/law/cs/index.php?id=74692, confirms that: "Applicants for the Texas bar must pass the MPRE before they are eligible to be licensed."
But this site gives a conflicting report (
http://www.lawyeredu.org/texas.html) which says "you must pass the MPRE no later than two years after you pass the Texas Bar Exam or you will not be allowed to practice law in Texas." So you may need to do some further digging on the issue to confirm.
As to passing that blasted test, I'd recommend retaking it in July. You won't be any less busy when you start practicing. Just take all the practice tests on Kaplan/Barbri etc (should take less than 1 week). If you can get 70%+ on those, you'll pass easily on the MPRE.
ETA: Scooped, but now that I read the other post, I realize that you have 2 years after passing the bar to take the MPRE (and that score can last 5 years), but you still have to take it BEFORE you can get licensed.