How many times does someone...
Illustration
Object:
How many times does someone share an idea in a Sunday school class or committee
meeting and people respond? Jessica read an article in the newspaper that she found
alarming. When people are released from prison after having served their time, there is
nowhere for them to turn for help or training. As a result, more often than not, the person
returns to a life of crime. She shared the distressing statistics with her Sunday school
class. She said that it was not acceptable. Someone asked if what she described was true
in the county jail just ten miles from their church.
The following week there was more discussion on this subject. They realized that they needed to do more than discuss the problem. Several people checked with social agencies in the community to see if there were programs for people released from prison. The statistics shared earlier proved to be true in their community.
"What if we would find a place for the former prisoner to stay and then teach a useful skill?" someone asked. And that is exactly what this class did. They would make a difference in one person's life at a time, by providing a place to stay, then others in the church would teach a skill and help the person find a job. After the first one, another came and then another. The whole congregation supported this project. They did more than provide a place to stay; they offered the person their love and support. For some, it would be the first time in their life that they felt such love and support.
These ex-offenders knew well what the apostle Peter was talking about, "You know that you were ransomed from the futile ways inherited from your ancestors ... with the precious blood of Christ."
The following week there was more discussion on this subject. They realized that they needed to do more than discuss the problem. Several people checked with social agencies in the community to see if there were programs for people released from prison. The statistics shared earlier proved to be true in their community.
"What if we would find a place for the former prisoner to stay and then teach a useful skill?" someone asked. And that is exactly what this class did. They would make a difference in one person's life at a time, by providing a place to stay, then others in the church would teach a skill and help the person find a job. After the first one, another came and then another. The whole congregation supported this project. They did more than provide a place to stay; they offered the person their love and support. For some, it would be the first time in their life that they felt such love and support.
These ex-offenders knew well what the apostle Peter was talking about, "You know that you were ransomed from the futile ways inherited from your ancestors ... with the precious blood of Christ."
