In this brief speech, Dr. Gladish provides a compelling overview of the YMCA, it’s origins, accomplishments in the United States of America, and how the Christian faith is intregal to it all.
Enjoy this friendly, informative, personal accounting of the Y in 2001; see how the C is described and embodied in the YMCA history, institution, and future.
Here is the concluding paragraphs to the speech:
Herein may lie the secret ofthe association’s success and the power of its impact on rising generations of Americans, their families and their communities.
The enterprise, openness, and values of the YMCA were seeded long ago in the American Christlan conscience which gave birth to our nation’s revolution in civic association, charitable action, and moral commitment.
If the “spirit of the Lord” was upon the founding generation of the YMCA, we might well ask where it is to be found today.
And today, of course, is a different day, both for America and for the YMCA.
In a complex and increasingly diverse America, the YMCA is still called to change lives.
In this work we are compelled by faith and history, as well as experience and conviction, to affirm what we know to be true – we are called at our best to do the work we were created to complete.
Like the prophet Isaiah in the Hebrew scriptures, and Jesus of Nazareth in the Christian gospels, we will find the right “spirit” in our own work when we:
“Preach good news to the poor; Proclaim release to the captives; Seek recovery of sight to the blind; and Set at liberty those who are oppressed.”
As students of these sacred texts understand, of course, we are all in some way poor, captive, blind, and oppressed.
The reversal of these conditions and the realization of our full and blessed potential as individuals depend on the unified development of our spiritual, intellectual, and physical personalities.
This has been and must remain the work ofthe YMCA as it touches thelives of men and women, boys and girls, in the new century which lies ahead.
Gladish, p18-19