Month: November 2015

My Grander Vision for Romania | Empowering the Church as a Platform for Change

Catalin from Romania“Leadership is very difficult in Romania because of our heritage of living in a Communist world,” describes Catalin Chicludean, the national producer of GLS sites in Romania. “Romania is part of Eastern Europe, and we are a post-Communist country that came out of a revolution in 1989. While Romania is primarily orthodox, there is still a significant evangelical presence.” As a leader of an organization that focuses on leadership development in Romania, he sees the GLS as a great tool to reach, and equip leaders in his country, especially in the church. “We really believe that our churches need a lot of leadership training. Changing mentality and shifting toward a leadership mindset is still very, very difficult.”

Leaders in Romania have been holding the GLS since 2008. “We really believe this is a very powerful tool that exposes them to new tools, and helps sharpen their skills through this environment.” The impact has been inspiring. “As a result of the Summit, people are changing and a new church is starting,” said Catalin. “Last year, a lady came to the Summit with her team. She had previously turned her back on God for 15 years because her sister died. Coming to the Summit was eye-opening for her, and she came back to God. We keep hearing stories like this from organizations and churches that are really impacted by the Summit.”

Empowering the Church as a Platform for Change

Catalin has seen new opportunities emerge in his city as a result of being a part of the GLS. “I like high intensity environments that display excellence because it helps me sharpen my skills, production, and leadership. I remember a Steven Furtick session a few years back talking about Digging Ditches for your city, and that really impacted me in terms of praying for my city, and opportunities for the church to have an impact,” describes Catalin.We dream of seeing the church impacting the city through social work and through our presence there. We want to see God honored through what the church is doing. The Summit is part of reaching the leaders in Romania who are doing this.”

Catalin tells leaders “Bring your teams to the Summit. You won’t regret it. It’s a wonderful opportunity for teams to grow and sharpen their skills. It’s been amazing for hundreds and hundreds of leaders in Romania, and it can do the same for you, too.”

Thank you for supporting the GLS in Romania

“I’m thankful for your investment in our country through this wonderful tool that we’re providing to hundreds of leaders in Romania. We’re thankful for the time, money, resources and prayers that you’ve poured into the Summit. We’ve seen life change. We’ve seen churches develop and we believe that what you’re doing is having an impact on the Kingdom. Thank you.”

Please continue to pray and support leaders like Catalin in Romania who are seeking to change lives, and impact the Kingdom. You make a difference for hundreds of thousands of leaders through your support and prayer.

To give to the Willow Creek Association,
go online at www.willowcreek.com/give
or mail your gift to PO Box 3188 Barrington, IL 60011

My Grander Vision for Niger | Bringing Change through Leadership

MoctarMoctar is a pastor in Niger, Africa a country that is 80-85 percent desert and the people are approximately 95 percent Muslim. “The people are good people, but it is difficult to be a Christian leader here,” says Moctar. “We have a responsibility to provide spiritually and physically for the people and talk about the Bible. And we also must take care of the new believers, especially with the persecution of Christians in this country. After the attack we experienced on our churches in January, our prayer is that the church would have a great voice in the nation. We don’t want fear to keep us down. We want the church to come together, give a hand to one another, and be strong with one another, winning the nation for Christ.”

As the GLS started to grow in Africa, news of it traveled to Moctor in Niger. He was invited by a friend to attend the GLS in Nigeria, and was deeply impacted. Moctar describes his experience, “The Summit caused a big change in my life, in my family and even the ministry. When people who knew me from years back come to our church, they see something different. All our programs, messages–everything has totally changed.”

The GLS has become a fantastic tool to encourage and train leaders in difficult regions, where leadership development resources are very limited. When Moctar’s friend in Nigeria asked if he would be interested in bringing the GLS to Niger, he knew that it would bear fruit and bless the leaders of his country. “We could make it happen,” he responded. As Moctar began spreading the word, people asked questions. They had never seen a conference done like this before. But Moctar pressed on. News made it to TV and radio stations, and local leaders became more curiously aware about this GLS.

They didn’t know how many people would end up attending. “We knew we had to find a place that would hold 500 people,” said Moctar. “At the beginning, I thought if we could get 200 people to attend, that would be good, but to our great surprise, 700 people attended the Summit.” It was evident how hungry leaders are for this kind of training and encouragement.

“The feedback following the Summit was great, and we wondered why we waited so long to start the program,” said Moctar. “Leaders are out doing things, and bringing change. Christian organizations have seen great changes in the life of their staff. I have a great vision for Niger. We want to bring change. The GLS is helping us bring training to other cities in Niger and we see how we can change the leadership.”

 

Thank you from Niger

Thank you for support leaders like Moctar in Niger, who have been incredibly impacted by your support. “I want to thank all the partners and donors for the program in Niger. It is a great blessing that has brought fruit already. We are looking forward to seeing great things moving in Niger. Thank you very much, and God bless you.”

Please continue to pray and support leaders like Moctar in Niger who seek to change lives, impact the Kingdom, and ultimately introduce people to Jesus. You make a difference for hundreds of thousands of leaders through your support and prayer.

To give to the Willow Creek Association,
go online at www.willowcreek.com/give
or mail your gift to PO Box 3188 Barrington, IL 60011

A Deep Gratitude for the GLS in Uganda

“Dear friends,

We greatly praise the Lord so much for you considering us worthy for such a big and great opportunity of sitting under transforming teachings from such great leaders globally. It was and will always be a great privilege to us. We really don’t know those wonderful ladies and gentlemen who contributed to making it possible for us to attend the Leadership Summit Uganda, but may the good Lord always remember their act of kindness towards us.

A little more about us, none of our members could afford such amount to attend the Summit in the midst of the many needs we have, but because of these brothers and sisters in the Lord, we were able to enjoy such a privilege. If I can describe in just one word that can explain and elaborate this year’s Leadership Summit, it would be “TRANSFORMATIONAL”. It is transforming our ways of serving, living and in combination of all matters. Thank you for always considering us worthy friends who could go attend this conference. Great thanks to all others who have sacrificially given to our ministries.

Be blessed. Stay blessed today, tomorrow and forever more. Great and heartfelt thanks.” 

  • Kaitesi Prossy, In love with Jesus, my good shepherd, ministering at Glory Center Church Planting Ministries

“Hello my dear friends. I am so  moved with the love, care and commitment you have towards our ministries. I can now term the leadership of my organization as the ‘Armed leaders of this generation’. We are now armed with knowledge and skills to lead God’s people in a very proper way. With love and respect, dear donors, I would like to send my special thanks to you. The work you are doing and the support you give us is not in vain, but it is a muscle and pillar for the church leadership of tomorrow. Whenever we attend this Summit, we always go up in our leadership.”

  • GLS attendee, Uganda

“Please do not underestimate the huge impact you have made for the GLS in the ministry of Divine Ordained Church – Lweza. In Divine Ordained Church, we have little resources, especially leadership resources. My people are hungry for training and leadership development, but ever since last year 2014, when we started attending this Global Leadership Summit Uganda through the help of my Brother Pastor Charles Kwagala and the ministry of Glory Center Church – Ndejje. It has given us the inspiration, motivation, and confidence we needed to move forward. I myself feel like I am on a mission! My testimony is I was transformed in my leadership skills. May God continue to richly bless you for caring about our developing country! Leaders are being equipped in new and powerful way by the GLS.”

  • Pastor Henry Kabuye, GLS attendee, Uganda

“What a great honor I had to attend this Summit as a leader of tomorrow! I had never, never attended such an extraordinary and executive Summit in my lifetime. Never had I ever been in such a beautiful place like Imperial Royale. On reaching and sitting in this place, I very well knew that my standards of life have changed; there and then I remembered our pastor’s word of the year 2015 about “change”. It is an instant change I got; in my mind, behavior, socially and spiritually. You may not even imagine the positive change you brought in my life! May God richly bless you for bringing to this great honor for preparing me to greater leadership skills. The Summit was a revelation to me via leadership in business, initiation, maximum utilization of resources in my vicinity to reach greater heights in life and it opened windows of socialization with the movers and shakers of the world. The process tool issued to me has turned out to be one of my daily readings for me to be firmly grounded in the Global Leadership foundations. The skills I acquired and I continue to acquire daily are to be applied in my areas of leadership for excellency.

A deep heartfelt thanks to our donors for considering us. May our good God be good to you, may He shine His face upon you.”

  • John Bosco Lutaaya, GLS attendee, Uganda

“By the grace of God, I am an elder at a church in Butogonya. I appreciate with all of my heart for the great chance given to me to attend the Summit 2015. Thank you so much for all the resources you have put into raising our leadership status.  Where else would we have gotten all these materials from deep down in our village? We could never expect to get this quality of teaching and materials in the remote area where we live. May the loving God bless you with many more resources so this can also be extended in other areas of the Nation like Butogonya.”

  • Galyanga Robert, GLS attendee, Uganda

“As a mother, children’s leader and a minister in God’s house, I learned that leadership is moving people from one place to another. Had I missed GLS 2015, I would have missed a change. I sincerely bless the people that made it possible for me to attend GLS 2015. Special thanks goes to the Almighty, All-wise, All-powerful and All-knowing God that uses His servant leaders to see that all those leadership skills reach  Africa particularly Uganda my home country.”

  • Kwagala Faith, GLS attendee, Uganda

Sea Planes

Bob Goff (TGLS 2015) always has a fun way of grounding us with what is truly important in life. The inspirational author of Love Does is also an attorney and founder of Restore International, the international non-profit human rights organization operating in Uganda, India and Somalia. In this 60-second video, he draws an insightful comparison between our lives and sea planes. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GIeheSaJ6O8

My Grander Vision for Kathmandu, Nepal | Winning the City

“To be a pastor in Nepal is quite challenging work,” says Samuel Karthak, a pastor in Kathmandu, Nepal. “We used to be a Hindu kingdom, and in 2006 Nepal became a republic, giving us a president, and now religious freedom. Still, 80 percent of people of Nepal are Hindu and a large number are Buddhists. Christians are a very small number. Nepal is now in the process of drafting a constitution, and a group there wants Nepal to return to being a Hindu kingdom. There are a lot of things happening including protests.”

Leaders like Samuel, passionate about spreading the Gospel in his city and his country, are grateful the Global Leadership Summit that has been able to equip him and his church for a grander vision. “It has been such a great opportunity to gather the leaders together in one place, and to be a part of a vision that God has placed on our country.” After a three year journey of trying to launch the GLS in Nepal they held their first event last year in English, just before the large earth quake that hit their country. Since last year, they have expanded to three sites this year, adding the Nepali language.

A Prayer for Nepal

“In 2000, someone actually prophesized that there was going to be a big earthquake in Nepal,” explains Samuel. “We thought he was talking about a spiritual earthquake. Later after four or five years, the government started to tell us they had awareness programs for earthquakes. We had earthquake drills at the church for the safety of our people. The government warned that in an earthquake, 80 percent of our houses could collapse, and if it happened on a weekday, three to four million of our children could die in the schools and colleges where they study. We were expecting a huge disaster. However, when it happened, [April 2015] we saw the hand of the Lord in it. It happened on a Saturday, so all the schools were closed, and families were together. When we heard the government reports, they said that 8,000 people had died, and 450,000 houses collapsed. But it could have been the other way around. So many more people could have died. God has reminded us of our responsibility to reach out to those people who have been kept safe.”

The GLS took place just before the earth quake occurred last year, gathering key leaders and pastors, and equipping them with the leadership tools to face what was to come. In their relief work since, they are being the hands and feet of Jesus to their community. “Pray for us as we reach out to those people. The local people have seen the difference in the relief work done by the Christians because there was the love of God in their work. It has softened the hearts of our people. We see a great harvest because people have seen the love of God, and have experienced it through our testimonies and our doings.”

Samuel’s Grander Vision – Win the City

As Samuel described, being a leader in Nepal is difficult work, but his vision is huge. Encouragement and inspiration are key in keeping him going in his ministry. “I stay encouraged in my relationship with the Lord, which is the main thing. As pastors, we can lead our churches and use other sources, but it’s our relationship with the Father—opening up our ears to hear a word from God—that is the most important thing. That is what has encouraged us to go on in our ministry.”

The GLS has become a place where leaders have been encouraged by what God whispers to them in each session. “God has placed a desire in our hearts to reach out to the un-reached people, and to win the city.  The local church is the hope of the world when it works right. That has really given me a boost to train leaders and bring them together and impart the vision to win the city. God is in control, and he will do it in his time. This is the time for us to prepare ourselves to reach the goal. I think we will be able to reach the city, because God is with us, and he is leading us step by step. This is not just our desire, it is God’s desire. We are working together and we are his co-workers. I believe it will come true.”

 

Thank you for your support in Nepal

“I would like to thank all the donors and sponsors for the GLS in Nepal. God bless you. Thank you.” Please continue to pray and support leaders like Samuel in Nepal who seek to change lives, impact the Kingdom, and ultimately introduce people to Jesus. You make a difference for hundreds of thousands of leaders through your support and prayer.

 

To give to the Willow Creek Association,
go online at www.willowcreek.com/give
or mail your gift to PO Box 3188 Barrington, IL 60011

7 Things We Are Thankful For in 2015 – From Your Friends at the WCA

Happy Thanksgiving!

We love this season as we rest in the shared hope we have in Jesus. He is the reason for everything we do at the Willow Creek Association, and the reason so many of you have joined in the efforts to equip leaders for their Grander Vision, and spread the hope of Jesus across the globe.

2015 will be marked as a year to remember.

In this season of thanks, we want to thank you for being a part of changing lives around the world through the Global Leadership Summit. It’s extremely humbling to see how God speaks through this event. We’ve heard so many stories about how churches are being revitalized, people are growing closer to God, leaders are being encouraged and empowered, the poor are being cared for, relationships are being healed, businesses are giving back and communities are being transformed.

Your partnership, prayer and faithful support are some of the biggest reasons why we are able to celebrate the impact. We have so much to be thankful for.

  1. Thank you to the 2015 Summit Faculty – Jim Collins, Ed Catmull, Dr. Brené Brown, Adam Grant, Salle Krawcheck, Albert Tate, Horst Schulze, Sheila Heen, Brian Houston, Sam Adeyemi, Liz Wisman and Craig Groeshel. Thank you for your teaching, encouragement, challenge and inspiration. Thank you for the impact you’ve had on more than 260,000 leaders all around the world. You may never know how much you have blessed a leader, or even an entire country. Thank you!
  1. Thank you to our Summit Host Sites here, and across the globe – Do you know more than 875 cities around the world host the Summit? This is no small feat. Without the pastors, church staff, event managers, promotional strategists, marketing managers, producers, technical directors and so many others (most of them volunteers!), the Summit would not have been delivered to encourage and inspire hundreds of thousands of leaders this year. It is a great honor to partner with these leaders and change agents as they seek to transform their cities and their countries. Thank you!
  2. Thank you to our Volunteers – Thousands of volunteers here and around the world make the Summit possible. In addition to their regular jobs, many of them sacrifice their time and dedicate it to serving leaders at the Summit by directing traffic, providing resources, serving food, opening doors or even executing the entire event for their city. You may never know the lives you’ve touched by putting a servant’s towel over your arm. What an honor to serve with you. Thank you!
  1. Thank you to our Attendees – In 2015, more than 260,000 leaders will have attended the Summit—each one of them representing a life of beautiful influence. Your life and leadership are so valuable. We are so thankful to leaders like you who want to better themselves to better our world. Thank you for embracing your leadership calling!
  1. Thank you to our Prayer Warriors – Hundreds of prayer warriors around the world have lifted up in prayer everything we do—from the uphill battles to the triumphant celebrations. Thank you for your dedication to surrounding Willow Creek Association and the Global Leadership Summit in prayer. It is so important that we continue to come back to God for our strength, encouragement and wisdom. God has done miracles through us and in spite of us. Thank you!
  1. Thank you to our Donors and Partners – As the Summit has grown internationally, so has the need for funding to give leaders in under-resourced regions access to world-class leadership tools. More than 50 percent of the countries we’re in require additional support – many of them often facing difficult circumstances of poverty, persecution or corruption. Thank you to our donors who have given gifts large and small, sacrificing their own resources to empower and encourage leaders around the world. You may never know the depth of your impact. Thank you!
  1. And last but certainly not least, we are thankful to God for giving us the incredible opportunity to join Him in this ministry of serving leaders around the world. His love and goodness is the reason we do what we do.

Thank you! Happy Thanksgiving to you and your families!

Keep the Promise – Part Two

The words occupy one whole wall in the Canlis wine cellar:

Keep the Promise

Besides a great deal of rare and very expensive wine, what’s behind those words? Canlis is an iconic, world class fine dining legend in Seattle, Washington, delivering impeccably choreographed, unforgettable food and service experiences to its guests. It might be about one of the last places we think to look for customer service insights.  Winner of the James Beard Award, guests on Top Chef, recognized by Gourmet Magazine as one of America’s top 20 restaurants, Zagat-rated, Canlis has been recognized countless times over its 64 year run for providing remarkable, memory-making—and pricey–dining experiences for its guests.

In Part One of this article, we wrestled with a fundamental customer service question. To what extent have our customers and attenders become a commodity to us? Has a mindset crept in that people and relationships are, like commodities, replaceable?

Our collective scorecard isn’t impressive, according to Accenture’s latest Global Consumer Pulse Survey:

“Despite having more data and insights into consumer desires and preferences, companies in the U.S. have failed to meaningfully improve customer satisfaction or reverse rising switching rates among their customers.”

Something is flawed in the implied promise we make when we commit to serve people.

When we get that inner sense that our customer service efforts are lacking, we often go to fixes and tactics—when a pause for deeper reflection might serve us better.

So that brings us back to Canlis and this idea of promise making and keeping.

An evening at Canlis is about experiencing an enterprise that has radically resisted commoditizing its relationships. They have cracked the code not just in serving winsome, contemporary Pacific Northwest cuisine, but also sustaining incredibly high levels of customer service.

Walk around Canlis and you soon sense a level of peace and order among the staff, as if everyone is following a rhythm only they can hear.

Surely, we think, a tabloid-style expose’ would reveal this to be an organization ruthless about all the current customer service fads: obsessing over every touchpoint with guests, plotting and replotting the customer service experience from end to end, demanding zero defects, a one and done stance with staff screw-ups.

Actually what distinguishes Canlis is none of these things. It is something different. Deeper. More revolutionary. And more easily missed.

As I got to know owners Chris and Alice Canlis, I saw they were actively responding to an invitation that came their way:

“Walk with me and work with me—watch how I do it. Learn the unforced rhythms of grace. I won’t lay anything heavy or ill-fitting on you. Keep company with me and you’ll learn to live freely and lightly.” –Jesus (Matthew 11:28-30, The Message)

Their goal was to develop an unforced rhythm of putting others first like Jesus taught. Their empathetic care and feeding of staff and customer relationships became the goal.

“Early on we determined to live out a Proverb from the Bible, Chris said. ‘Do not withhold good from those to whom it is due, when it is in your power to act.’ (Proverbs 3:27). He added, “For us generosity is not a decision; it’s a function of character.”

The headwaters of Canlis’s commitment to deliver impeccable fine dining and rich customer service can be found here—not in chasing fads but in a decision to live an unforced rhythm of serving people generously.

The reins of Canlis leadership now are squarely in the hands of Chris and Alice’s sons, Mark and Brian.

“Our goal remains the same as that of our parents and grandparents–to understand what matters to you, when you come to Canlis,” Mark Canlis says.

So a new generation of younger leaders must surely be focused almost exclusively on customer relationships in a new era, right? Wrong.

Mark Canlis shares,

“In the restaurant business almost everyone starts with the customer or say they do when the conversation turns to customer service. But in my experience, many restaurants are self-serving. I, the owner, am going to take care of me first. Then comes the customer.

At Canlis we see it a bit differently. Our mission is:

To live out and grow the belief that it’s worth putting other people first.

Actually, we have bet the farm on one very counter-intuitive idea in the expression of our mission. We are going to exercise emotionally intelligent leadership by taking care of our staff, in front of taking care of our business. Our goal is to make sure all 95 employees are living out the values of this business. And we have lots of temptations to break that promise to them. But staying true to it seems to have such a positive impact on our business (let alone the lives of the people we work with) that those temptations have slowly been exposed as hollow, devoid of any real value. Saltless.”

Mark is making us think here that keeping the promise to a guest without first keeping it with our staff, is hypocritical.

“If we focus on winning awards for the edginess of our menu, or the accolades of guests or profit—all of which are wonderful—we lose. But IF we focus on staff well-being, there is plenty of money to make and guests to please and joy to have…If I can strongly influence my staff and change and affect who they are, this lasts long after the awards and the money.”

Mark goes on,

“If we use staff, then the staff will turn around and use the guest. It becomes transactional. Relationships aren’t built on transactions. Too often fine dining can be like prostitution—the corrupted use of one’s talent for personal or financial gain. ‘I’m an actor. I do this for a paycheck. I give you what you want. You pay me. But emotionally I am not present.’ At Canlis, we aren’t interested in pimping people out. Imagine if every employee knew that the employer’s number one job was to take care of that employee. When people know the boss has their back it gives them the space to focus on guests.”

Younger brother Brian Canlis says,

“We hire very carefully. When we interview, we ask people, ‘How will working at Canlis help you become who you hope to become?’ We don’t hire blank stare people. Who they are becoming and how they are doing in the context of working at Canlis is an essential component of effective customer service. The people we hire aren’t the ones you’d expect. We are hiring for character–for people who get excited about caring for other people. We can train technique and the Canlis way of doing things. We make mistakes and may hire a bad apple. But when they screw up, we take people back to our first meeting: ‘This is who we are and who we are trying to become. Can you become who you want to be here?’ We want people who want to change.”

Not surprisingly then, Canlis guests are the ones who benefit from this counter-intuitive approach of leaders serving and investing in staff.

“The last thing we do in our inspirational meeting before opening is say to each other in one voice, ‘Keep the promise’.”

Brian goes on,

“Keeping the promise is insuring guests come first with what is fragile and precious to them on that particular evening. How dare we put ourselves in the spotlight when what is important for our guests is what is on their minds and hearts when they come.”

“We took a call one day from a daughter. ‘Our mom is dying of cancer and she has made the decision to end her treatments. My five sisters and mom want to eat together one last time and do that at Canlis. Can you help us?’ They are really asking, ‘Is it safe here? They come in fragile or a bit anxious or full of hope for the evening ahead. And they hold it out to us and say, ‘Can you take care of this important thing for us?’”

It seems putting others first is neither a rule nor a strategy at Canlis. It’s a rhythm. An unforced rhythm—the kind Jesus invites all of us to. A way the Canlis team moves through each day right up to when they turn out the lights and go home.

Yes, the right stemware matters at Canlis, and profit and parking and food presentation, their new 20–something head chef from New York with his magical menu ideas and a thousand other details. But it all sits on a bedrock of putting others first by serving and investing in them—first staff, then customers.

We aren’t moving the needle much when it comes to delivering better and better customer service. Let’s try something different.

Imagine if each of us who lead people were to carve out this next season as one where we work to develop a promise of serving and putting our staffs and volunteers first, in pursuit of service to our customers or attenders.

As leaders, we too have the privilege of responding to the same invitation from Jesus the Canlis organization already has—“Walk with me and work with me—watch how I do it. Learn the unforced rhythm of grace.” But if our starting point is pursuing customer service tactics, we will likely miss out on the joy and the results that come with investing in and serving our staffs first.

(For a deeper dive into the Canlis way, you might enjoy this or this and this.)

The First GLS in Mozambique | “I have never heard anything as wonderful”

Thanks to our partners in the field, generous donors and volunteers, we can mark 2015 as the first year for the GLS in Mozambique. There were three events–one in Maputo City, one in the Maputo Village and one in Chimoio. Three events allowed the local team to reach leaders in the city as well as leaders in the rural areas. We are celebrating the impact and the opportunity to reach even more leaders in the future!

Highlight from Maputo City

While Craig Groeschel was speaking, a pastor, overwhelmed with emotion, interrupted the session and said, “I have never heard anything as wonderful.”

Highlight from Maputo Village

Following Albert Tate’s session, God intervened as more than 125 leaders re-dedicated their lives to God and to their leadership call.

Highlights from Chimoio

Chimoio is located in central Mozambique, where peace is fragile and there are frequent gun battles. Most of the transport areas were suspended due to attacks on the bus system, but this did not stop more than 200 church, political and business leaders from attending the GLS. In fact, so many people showed up, that they reached capacity and had to turn away people at the door.

After the first session, leaders began asking, “Why have you kept this best-kept secret from us?” Some leaders who had been to the Summit in Maputo followed the event to Chimoio, exclaiming, “We simply have not seen anything like this! That’s why we came again.”

One of the most powerful moments was when 239 leaders stood up to Albert Tate’s challenge, and re-dedicated their lives to Christ. One leader stood up and declared that she was ready to give up, but decided to re-dedicate her leadership role to God, and she challenged everyone else to do the same.

 

Thank you for your prayers and support for the GLS in Mozambique! Please continue to pray for the impact as leaders apply what they’ve learned and the inspiration and encouragement they received.

 

My Grander Vision for Mexico | Serving Leaders who Serve God

Luis Mellado 1We believe that churches have a greater impact when they are led by greater leaders, who are not only gifted, but also equipped to lead. Before the Global Leadership Summit came to Mexico, Luis Mellado, GLS organizer in Mexico, describes a lack of leadership in the church. However, he is excited to see that over the last 10 years since the GLS has been held in Mexico, leadership has developed, and there is a growing hunger for it. In 2015, we celebrate that there are now 18 GLS sites in Mexico, and the demand is growing.

Luis says that God has opened many doors. “The Willow Creek Association has grown to a point where we are experiencing great momentum. More doors are opening for us to go into additional cities and we’re very excited about that possibility. We believe that in the future, we will see more fruit coming out of the GLS.”

The Church Reaching its Full Potential

Luis said it’s their desire for the church to reach its full potential, which requires two important elements. First, they need to be biblically based, and offer solid biblical teaching. Second, they need good leadership. “That’s where the vacuum is. That’s where I think God uses the GLS for the benefit of the church, the nation, and the world. I believe I’m called to do what I do,” says Luis. “I believe God has called me to serve him with my life, and at this stage of my life, it’s a privilege to be a part of the WCA, and serve those who serve God—the leaders and pastors.” Luis said he if could offer encouragement to other Christian leaders, it would be for them to continue learning. “The most dangerous thing for leaders is to think that we have arrived,” says Luis. “It’s very healthy to keep in mind how much more there is to learn, and how much more there is to do.”

Thank you for your support in Mexico

“I’m very thankful for all the people who have invested in the GLS – time, funds, support, guidance and so many components that are involved in making the GLS happen around the world,” says Luis. “In Mexico, we are very, very grateful. If you’re up with the news, you know that Mexico faces many challenges. But we believe that the local church is the hope of the world. It’s not just a saying. I believe in strengthening the church, especially those who lead the church. We can bring hope and change. We are so grateful to all the people who have supported or been a part of taking the GLS globally.”

Please continue to pray and support leaders like Luis in Mexico who seek to change lives, impact the Kingdom, and ultimately introduce people to Jesus. You make a difference for hundreds of thousands of leaders through your support and prayer.

 

To give to the WCA, go to www.willowcreek.com/give
or mail your gift to PO Box 3188 Barrington, IL 60011

A Road Less Traveled | Developing Servant Leaders in a Maximum Security Prison

“I was in prison and you visited me.”  Matthew 25:36

 

GLS Staff4John Wade leads the prison ministry for La Croix United Methodist Church in Cape Girardeau, MO and is also a professor of Criminal Justice at Southeast Missouri State University. “Almost every trip to the institution results in at least one remarkable story and sometimes several,” says Wade. “Witnessing offenders as they reconnect with their families is huge. We have participants who have been estranged from parents, siblings and children for several years, and when they share stories of reconnecting with them it brings tears and prayers of thanks. We’ve also seen men step up and volunteer to facilitate programs in the prison. Seeing the men grow, not only spiritually but emotionally, is one of the things I love about working in prison ministry. Frequently, on the 40-mile drive home, we comment that we aren’t sure who is ministering to whom. They touch our hearts in so many ways.”

Ever since the first time John attended the GLS and heard Chuck Colson, Catherine Rohr and Gary Haugen speak, he’s had a dream to bring the GLS to the maximum security institution of Southeast Correctional Center in Charleston, MO, and build up servant leaders within the prison walls.

John believes that the messages of GLS and other programs build self-confidence and unleash potential that the offenders often didn’t realize they had. His vision is to change the culture of prison from the inside out, using the GLS as one of the tools to make that a reality. “We hope to do this by reaching offenders, modeling Christ-like behavior and equipping them to reach their fellow inmates by modeling those same characteristics. In turn, each new Christ-follower has the potential to impact others and so on. The GLS gives potential leaders the skills and confidence to make a difference inside the prison walls.”

This year, with God’s help, John’s dream to bring the GLS to the prison became a reality. Forty offenders, twelve volunteers, and three prison staff members participated in the first GLS at Southeast Correctional Center. Next year they plan to expand attendance to 80 by inviting each participant to recommend another offender to join them at the GLS in 2016. “Our dream is that they will become equipped and empowered to impact the values and lifestyles of other offenders to the point where good dominates inside prison walls.”

Attendees came from a mix of backgrounds, but the impact is universal. One attendee described the conference as, “Awesome in spirit and presentation. We had Muslims, Hindus, Wiccans, a Buddhist, and non-faith practitioners.” Each man was impacted by the values and skills presented, no matter their background. After conducting a post-event survey analysis, it was discovered that the GLS brings out characteristics of servant leadership.

Here are just a few of the comments from attendees describing an action plan they would apply based on what they learned through the GLS:

“Make a bigger commitment to my community as a leader in prison, and make a bigger more positive impact on society.”

“Apply all that I’ve learned daily—specifically learn to love and be more concerned for each individual in my life.”

Researchers believe that the growth of servant leadership characteristics establishes human capital and has a potential positive impact toward reintegration. It’s believed that developing servant leaders and transforming followers into leaders may strengthen resistance to temptation and deter participants from reoffending. “Patrick Lencioni said it best in his 2014 GLS presentation,” Wade said. “He talked about how there is no other kind of leadership, true leadership anyway. Servant Leadership, coined by Robert Greenleaf in the 1970s, is a philosophy and a set of practices where one is a servant first and makes the needs of others the highest priority. It is people serving people, often those less fortunate.”

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At the prison, the La Croix team aspires to instill the ten characteristics of a servant-leader, identified by Larry Spears: listening, empathy, healing, awareness, persuasion, conceptualization, foresight, stewardship, commitment to the growth of people and building community. “Building community is the deal breaker—the ultimate goal,” Wade said. “Offenders often, as a means of self-preservation, live very private and isolated lives inside. We believe that by helping offenders acquire the first nine characteristics, the establishment of community will be the end result. We attempt to build community inside prison walls. The mutual love and support enjoyed in community is key to offender transformation in both earning release and making it on the outside.”

Please pray for the impact of the GLS at the Southeast Correctional Institution, as well as ten other prisons that experienced the GLS this year. Thank you for your support!