Day 8 :: Living Stone of FORGIVENESS

Join us for the 12 Day YMCA Devotion Series – LIVING STONES: LEAD, CARE AND SERVE LIKE JESUS

How can we be ‘like Living Stones’ used by God to strengthen the presence of Christ where we lead?

Recently, 24 YMCA leaders with the OnPrinciple program visited 12 places throughout the Holy Land where Jesus taught about how to live and lead in God’s kingdom.

From this experience comes 12 spiritual leadership principles – or Living Stones – (inspired by 1Peter 2:4-5) that Christ-followers can embody as we are being built up to lead, care and serve everyone, like Jesus.

by Melissa Logan, CEO & President with the YMCA Blue Ridge Assembly in North Carolina

Have you ever felt judged? Have you ever been hurt? Have you ever hurt someone’s feelings?

If you are like me, your answer is yes to all of the above: judgment, shame, embarrassment, anger and hurt. 

The hurt replays in my head, and even worse, lays a heavy burden in my heart.

Unfortunately, I’m not without sin; my actions and words have wreaked the same havoc on someone else, too. 

And yes, those replay and cause great regret.

We aren’t always going to make the best choices or do the right thing.

Thankfully, we have a great model to look to; we can look to the life of Jesus.

Recently I walked through the temple court area and sat on the steps leading up to space where Jesus met a woman accused of sin.

The scene replays in my mind of Jesus facing the scared woman there, writing on the ground with a non-judgmental attitude towards her.

Jesus makes it seem so simple; don’t judge others – give grace.

Let’s pause on the words of grace and forgiveness. 

We might think these just happen in our minds when we say, “I forgive you.” 

However, it’s deeper than that. 

Grace and forgiveness are also heart issues. 

Hurt, shame, sin – these happen in the heart, are costly, harmful and so heavy.

I find that while I’m able to give grace to others, I’m not as generous with myself. I’m working on it. 

How about you? What forgiveness of sins do you need to give yourself?

Releasing the emotional heart-hurt is freeing; it’s uplifting in spirit, mind, and body. 

Our hearts and mind (and lives) were meant for joy, gratitude, love, and peace.

We have a choice on how we show up every day to ourselves, our family and friends, to the world, and most importantly to Jesus.

Choosing to show up with the grace of Christ allows you to shine the light of God’s forgiveness in the world.

May you be the light, like living stones who you drop the judge-stones, and may you choose grace every day.

At dawn he appeared again in the temple courts, where all the people gathered around him, and he sat down to teach them.

The teachers of the law and the Pharisees brought in a woman caught in adultery.

They made her stand before the group and said to Jesus, “Teacher, this woman was caught in the act of adultery. In the Law Moses commanded us to stone such women. Now what do you say?”

They were using this question as a trap, in order to have a basis for accusing him.

But Jesus bent down and started to write on the ground with his finger.

When they kept on questioning him, he straightened up and said to them, “Let any one of you who is without sin be the first to throw a stone at her.”

Again he stooped down and wrote on the ground.

At this, those who heard began to go away one at a time, the older ones first, until only Jesus was left, with the woman still standing there.

Jesus straightened up and asked her, “Woman, where are they? Has no one condemned you?”

“No one, sir,” she said. “Then neither do I condemn you,” Jesus declared. “Go now and leave your life of sin.”

Jesus near steps to the temple court in Jerusalem [Gospel according to John, 8.2-11]

This YMCA devotion series brought to you by onPrinciple – click here to learn more about it – a new leadership development program to strengthen the presence of Christ in the YMCA

Click here for the entire devotion series as a downloadable PDF booklet.

Click here to access entire devotion series on YouVersion

Beauty From Brokenness: World YMCA & YWCA Week of Prayer Announcement

Since 1904, the World YMCA and the World YWCA have traditionally come together to deliver the World Week of Prayer and World Fellowship. Celebrated each year in the second week of November, the Week sees both organisations joining forces to produce a booklet with a theme, a set of Bible studies for each day, and an annual Bible reading plan so that communities around the world can unite in prayer for a specific cause linked to current realities.

You are invited to join Christians across the world to pray with the YMCA and YWCA.

Pray with us at noon (click here for the blogpost series) – or whenever works best with your schedule – and lift up our brothers and sisters across the globe to the Lord, that we might be light in the darkness and healers to the broken.

Click here to download the prayer guide or subscribe to this blog to get posts in your email inviting you to pray.

Day 3 :: Living Stone of RESPONSIBILITY

Join us for the 12 Day YMCA Devotion Series – LIVING STONES: LEAD, CARE AND SERVE LIKE JESUS

How can we be ‘like Living Stones’ used by God to strengthen the presence of Christ where we lead?

Recently, 24 YMCA leaders with the OnPrinciple program visited 12 places throughout the Holy Land where Jesus taught about how to live and lead in God’s kingdom.

From this experience comes 12 spiritual leadership principles – or Living Stones – (inspired by 1Peter 2:4-5) that Christ-followers can embody as we are being built up to lead, care and serve everyone, like Jesus.

by Jorge Perez, CEO & President with the YMCA of Greater Cincinnati

On a trip to Bethlehem, we visited fields believed to be where angels announced the birth of Jesus to shepherds watching over their flocks.

What you need to know about shepherds is they are a gritty bunch; hardworking, calloused hands, 24-7, and never-say-die folks.

Their daily tasks of tending, herding, feeding, or guarding made them synonymous with the leadership principle of Responsibility.

As a five-year-old boy, I understood Responsibility because I needed to take care of my three sisters while my mother worked to provide for our basic needs.

In my early teens, I became a wage earner, a mechanic, a plumber, a carpenter, an interpreter, and a surrogate parent; my familial duties left little room for school.

Although I remember feeling proud of my contributions, I struggled with the accountability placed on my way-too-young shoulders. 

For me, Responsibility was a set of duties and obligations that added to my life’s burdens.

But this was not how Jesus described Responsibility; he counterbalanced duty and obligation with love and faithfulness.

This is highlighted in Jesus’s story of a shepherd who searched for a lost sheep, leaving behind ninety-nine.

When he found the lost lamb, joy replaced drudgery: “Rejoice with me! I found my lost sheep.”

But if leadership and service are only out of duty and obligation, the work will become a burden.

Leaders have a responsibility to shepherd individuals in their care.

However, if love and faithfulness are incorporated, we can step into the rest-giving, weary-lifting sphere of cause-driven, living-stone of Responsibility.

Try these three ways to lead with cause-driven Responsibility, like the Good Shepherd:

Embrace duty and obligation. Without it, love and faithfulness are unproductive; a gritty commitment to excellence is not optional.

Align what you do (duty) with why you do it (love). As embodied by Jesus, the never-say-die shepherd, the combination of obligation and faithfulness refreshes our soul and those we serve.

Take time to rest. Responsible shepherds who work hard and love sacrificially need to be led by the Good Shepherd; he will give you rest.

“The Lord is my shepherd, I lack nothing.

He makes me lie down in green pastures, he leads me beside quiet waters, he refreshes my soul.

He guides me along the right paths for his name’s sake.

Even though I walk through the darkest valley, I will fear no evil, for you are with me; your rod and your staff, they comfort me.”

Psalm 23.1-4 NIV

This YMCA devotion series brought to you by onPrinciple – click here to learn more about it – a new leadership development program to strengthen the presence of Christ in the YMCA

Click here for the entire devotion series as a downloadable PDF booklet

Click here to access entire devotion series on YouVersion