Month: July 2015

A Place Where God’s Story Becomes Your Story in Zambia

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“I started attending the GLS in 2010. I remember the first session that I attended, and hearing one of the speakers talk about how he started, and had a big dream—he wanted to love people and transform people. And I remember one particular story that he told about how the men in the church rose up, and have weekends where they get together to fix cars for single moms, and change oil, and give out stuff to people in need. That idea was actually already in my heart to do, but I just didn’t know how I would do it. When I heard someone else tell their story, it became my story.

Today, I run a non profit organization, and right now we have a school that caters to orphans and the less privileged. We have 156 kids that we’re reaching. Apart from that, we reach out to widows, and we also reach out to local pastors. That dream was really ignited at the Summit. God has really touched my heart by being a part of the GLS.

Because of some of the business leaders who spoke at the Summit, last year, along with my wife, I got my church to register at a consultancy firm. Now we’re in a consultancy firm that works in training and development; we go into the marketplace and provide godly leadership training. I believe for Africa to be transformed, it has to be Africans rising up, transforming Africa. For me, that’s a big dream. This is just the beginning. The best is yet to come.

I want people to know that the GLS is not just another event, but it is a place where you can contact God. It’s a place where God’s story becomes your story, and your story changes other people’s lives, and gives them hope.

It gives them extraordinary courage to do what they’ve always wanted to do, but thought they couldn’t do because of circumstances, or because of the political atmosphere, or economic struggles. Receiving extraordinary courage is life changing. It’s empowered me, and it’s encouraged me to step up in faith and bring transformation. Are you wondering if the GLS is something for you? The GLS is for everybody! It is transforming, and you have to be there to experience it. Be a part of what God is doing on this earth in this generation.”

  • Davies Malambeka, Zambia

Janine Takes a Leap of Faith to Start a Non-Profit

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At the 2014 Global Leadership Summit, Janine heard a tough call from God that challenged her in ways that stretched her faith. She said yes to God and He continues to work in amazing ways through her life:

Before attending the Summit, I didn’t really have a vision for what the Lord wanted to do through me. I first attended the event because our local church hosted a private viewing and they invited all of the church leadership. The Summit has helped me overcome the obstacle of believing that I didn’t have anything to offer the world, but rather was meant to be a servant all my life.

At the end of the event, our Pastor asked each of us to stand and ask the Lord what He wanted us to take away from what we had heard. I did as asked, and while praying, God said “Quit your Job.” This floored me, so I spent some time in prayer over it, and when the thought wouldn’t go away, I asked my pastors if I could meet with them and pray about it.

As we prayed over this together, God told me he wanted me to start a non-profit organization to help small ministries with their finances. Well, I did quit my job and God has miraculously provided for me and my family while I have been starting this non-profit. It has taken almost a year and The Summit 2015 is rolling around, but I can say with God’s grace and direction Hope Reborn Consulting, Inc. is up and running.

God used the Summit to propel me forward and believe that I could do what He asked me to do. It gave me the vision to become the leader He knew I could be.

It has been a wild ride of listening to the Lord and stepping into the calling He has been preparing me for over the last decade. That calling is helping other ministries with their financial management and organization.

God will provide if He asks you to do something! If it gets hard, don’t give up; just keep on working toward what God has given you and He will see it to fruition.

-Janine Hammond, Summit attendee, California

God Taps a Leader on the Shoulder for Prison Ministry

God Tapped Me on the Shoulder

God was preparing me for what I would hear and experience at the 2014 Global Leadership Summit.

I’ve been serving on the Employment Services team at Willow Creek. Last spring, my ministry leader asked a question at a team meeting: “I wonder if anyone on our team might be inclined or interested in getting more involved with prison and jail ministry?”

She got me thinking, and then God tapped me on the shoulder.

God, What Are You Doing?

Before the Summit, I volunteered at Statesville Prison to help sign up Dads to receive Angel Tree Christmas gifts, and God began to move in my heart. I registered to attend the Summit in the Lakeside Auditorium at the main campus at Willow Creek in South Barrington, and was moved to Willow’s Main Auditorium where I ended up sitting right in front of several Kane County Prison guards who were attending the Summit. I was blown away, and just thought, “God, what are you doing?”

It felt like God prompting me to take a next step in the prison ministry.

Summit Promptings

During the Summit, I was moved by speakers who confirmed this calling on my heart:

Once a problem in your community is revealed we must fill in a gap to the glory of God.  Get out of the huddle!—Pastor Wilfredo De Jesus

 

When you feel your weakest is when you truly are your strongest.—Ivan Satyavrata

 

The highest call of a leader is about unlocking the potential in others.—Carly Fiorina

 

Because of the Summit, and the promptings I received, I started attending Prison & Jail Ministry monthly meetings at Willow. I listened, and asked others for input and prayer. I wanted to be sure God was leading me to get more involved.

A Miracle Story

I met a woman at one of the meetings in early October (who had just come home after serving eight years at Logan). Because I serve on the Employment Services team, I invited her to come. She did, and I was able to help her with her resume. She also connected with one of our temporary agencies at “Wednesday are Workdays” in the Care Center, and by the end of the month, she has secured a position. God had His hand on this! It doesn’t happen this quickly most of the time. This is a miracle story! She is now involved in the jail ministry and attends Willow. She had actually received a gift pack at Christmas, was so touched, and knew then that she would seek out Willow when she got out of prison.  Only God.

Seeing her get a job and watching her thrive—with God’s help—inspires me and helps me know that God might use me again to help others in the future.

I feel like God is confirming each tiny step I take.

My Stretch of Faith for 2015

I signed up to be part of the McHenry County Jail Team, and have gone into the prison several times now. I’m shadowing more seasoned people until I am equipped to be able to go in on my own one day. Actually, that’s my stretch of faith for 2015…and it feels like a really big stretch to me. Since I also serve as a team leader and a one-to-one counselor on the Employment Services, I hope to be able to help more people with job opportunities after they are released. I am also doing a Bible study next month at McHenry Jail on finding your identity in Christ. Perhaps I will plant a seed with somebody for the future, and help them think about rededicating their life to Christ, or tell them how to come to Him for the first time.  Whatever God wants to happen…one person at a time.

My favorite part of being in prison ministry is being able to share the hope and love of Jesus with women and tell them that they matter to God and that NOTHING they did or will do, will EVER change that!

-Mary Berthiaume, Summit attendee since 2000

Is God tapping you on the shoulder? Tell us your story!

Henry Cloud on How Tears Serve Different Purposes in Our Emotional Life

Henry Cloud (TGLS 2013, 2011, 2009, 2005, 1996) has helped many of us understand the connection between emotional self-awareness and effective leadership. On a recent Facebook Post, he described the fascinating results of recent research proving all tears are not alike. Read the original post here.

I found these pictures fascinating and wanted to share them with you guys, thinking you might as well! Our different tears have very different molecular structure! But when you think about it, it makes perfect sense as our tears have very different functions depending on the kind of emotion they are carrying. In these pictures, we see grief, change, onions and laughing.

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One thing they have in common:
They all carry experience.

They come as you express how you are metabolizing events in your life, heart, mind and soul. So, each one of them is doing its own work, carrying the message of what you have been and are going through to move forward.

So what is the work these tears carry in their various molecular structures?
Why are they all different?

Grief says that you have lost something you were attached to, invested in, depended on, and most probably loved. In the tears of grief, the message is “it is gone. I have to let go.” These tears are doing an important work of taking the pain from letting go out of your system. They are helping you value what or whom you have lost…reinforcing the power of love, reminding you to never forget the importance of that person or investment of your heart. At the same time, they are making space for new investment. They are clearing a room inside for what life is going to bring to you to invest your heart in next. This dance of valuing the past, holding on to what is good from it, and taking it forward into the next investment of the heart, making room for the heart’s next chapter, is some of the best work of grief. Where do you need to express some loss and let grief do its work of healing your heart?

Change is a different kind of pain. It rips in a different way, as change gets to patterns and structures that were holding us in tact. Ways that we were doing life, maps we negotiated whether in life for ourselves, with others, or in some area of functioning. Changes mean that we have to take in new data, information and ways, rip out the frame and walls of the old “buildings,” and begin to try to remodel the house. If you have ever been through a remodeling effort, it is messy. It is dusty. It becomes loud, painful, and you feel like you can’t figure out where anything goes or how to do anything you used to be able to do. At the same time, it stretches you to new abilities and heights as you develop new muscles and ways to adapt to what you have not seen before. It can be incredibly good, yet incredibly painful. A basic law of growth is change. We cannot grow without it, and we cannot change and grow without “growing pains.” What pain of change do you need to lean into now and let the tears do their work?

Onion tears to me are the tears of something invading our system that does not belong there. It is toxic. We reject it. Our chemistry says, “go away, get out. You do not make me feel good.” We are wired in that way, to know what is toxic to us, what burns us, what we want to “get out of us.” It can be the poison of a person, group, organization or almost any aspect of life. Any experience that has a toxic effect on our system is going to feel not good to us. We want it away…it burns. These tears help us get the toxic out. What toxins in your life do you need to cry out now?

Laughing tears are our favorite, for sure. What is laughter except the expression of various positive emotional states…it is mainly just goodness! You have taken in an experience or realization that has made life lighter. Your body is expressing it as it releases the energy of that joy, and your tears carry that message. An interesting tidbit about them is that they release some chemicals that can cause depression, and lighten the internal load. Laughter is certainly good at that, and the energy release is your body letting go. Your tears are good for you…emotionally, physically, spiritually, relationally, and in making life work. Embrace them.

One more thing……have you ever wondered why your tear ducts are in your eyes? Why aren’t they in your armpits? If they were there, you could use some anti-tear deodorant, but no one would see them, smell them, or even know you were in pain. But, they are in your eyes for that very reason. Your pain, your tears should be SEEN by someone who is looking right into your soul as you go through that pain. Your pain needs to be seen and loved in order to completely heal.

So, when you cry…make sure you are crying with someone who cares. It will help!

Follow Henry Cloud on Facebook and read the original post here.

Making a Change because of the Leadership Summit

Watch this video:

Making a Change because of the Leadership Summit

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