Friday, March 06, 2026

Role of Faith Leaders - Sample Sermon

I created the graphic below many years ago to show how leaders can support youth-serving organizations via sermons given at four strategic times each year.   

We're in 2026 with still too few volunteer-based tutor, mentor and learning programs reaching youth in high poverty areas of Chicago and other places.

What's a message that faith leaders might be delivering to draw support to individual youth-serving programs in different parts of a city like Chicago?  I asked Google Gemini to look at this speech, by the CEO of a company, then create a sermon, delivered by a Faith leader. It's posted below.

--- begin Gemini version ---

From Prayer to Purpose: A Unified Covenant for Chicago’s Future Presenter:
[Leader Name/Title], [Faith Community/Organization Name]
Audience: Chicago Interfaith Council & Regional Religious Leadership

The "Why": Beyond Charitable Almsgiving
Friends and fellow laborers, we are all familiar with the call to "clothe the naked" and "feed the hungry." We pass the plate, we run our food pantries, and we offer our prayers. But if we are honest, our current approach is fragmented. We are tending to the wounds, but we are not stopping the violence that causes them.

If we were building a new sanctuary, we would not lay a single brick without a sanctified blueprint. Yet, when it comes to the "living stones" of our city—the children growing up in the shadows of systemic neglect—we often operate without a shared vision.

I am here today to ask our congregations to adopt a specific strategic blueprint: The Tutor/Mentor Connection Strategy Map.


 The Blueprint: A Map for Mercy and Justice
This is more than a diagram; it is a systemic path to redemption for our neighborhoods. You can view this concept map here: http://tinyurl.com/tmc-strategy-map.

As faith leaders, we understand the "Cradle-to-Calling" journey. If a child’s path is blocked by the thorns of poverty and a lack of guidance, the divine potential within them is stifled. This map shows us a way we, as a community of faith, can help mend it.

The Sacred Site: Our Buildings as Bridges
The research is clear: relationships save lives, but relationships need a place to grow. We cannot rely on informal or school-based connections alone. We need organized, site-based programs that serve as "hubs" of social capital.

Look around at our houses of worship. These are not just buildings; they are underutilized sanctuaries for the youth in our "service deserts." By hosting organized programs, we provide a safe, consistent space where a child knows a mentor will be waiting every week. These sites become the "glue" that attracts both the child and the volunteer, offering access to technology, quiet study, and a community of peers that many cannot find elsewhere.

The Four-Part Ministry of Presence
To make Chicago "mentor-rich," we must apply the same discipline to our outreach that we apply to our liturgy:

* Bearing Witness (Data): We must map where the light is shining and where the darkness remains. We must identify the neighborhoods where organized programs don't exist and ask ourselves: Why not here?

* Prophetic Voice (Public Awareness): We must use our pulpits. I am challenging you to record a video "reading" this strategy map to your congregants. We must signal that mentoring is a core tenet of our faith, not a side project.

* Stewardship of People (Resource Distribution):
We don’t just give tithes; we give ourselves. We must drive our most valuable asset—our people—into the zip codes that have been forsaken.

* Cultivating the Vineyard (Continuous Improvement):
We must share our collective expertise in administration and stability to help small, neighborhood missions move from "surviving" to "thriving."

The "Village" Cluster: Our Sacred Role
Look at the "Village Clusters" on the map. Whether you lead a mosque, a synagogue, a cathedral, or a storefront church, you are a pillar of this village. I am calling for "Moral Signaling." When a faith community adopts this map, they are committing to a 20-year covenant of support—a "long obedience" in the same direction.

 "Enough is enough. We cannot simply pray for a better Chicago while standing still. We must adopt a strategy that matches the scale of the giants we are facing.

The Closing Challenge: Anoint the Strategy
At the top of this map is a blue box. It is currently empty. It is waiting for the seal of your faith community.

By placing your identity alongside this strategy, you are telling the people of Chicago that your house of worship is a bridge to the future. You are vowing that a child born today in a high-poverty neighborhood will have a spiritual family and a physical "site" of support walking beside them until they reach their full, God-given potential twenty years from now.

My Next Step: I have already integrated this strategy map into our community’s mission portal and opened our doors for these sessions. I would like to show you how to do the same.

---- end Gemini ----

I wish I could point to faith leaders who actually have taken the "Next Step" shown above.  

I think one of the best ways to honor the memory of the Rev. Jesse Jackson would be to adopt the strategies I've shared in this post, and share your commitment at least four times a year with a sermon based on what you've read here, or that you create by using Gemini yourself. 


 You can become the YOU in the graphic shown above.  

Form a learning circle and read and discuss ways you can apply the ideas in this visual essay.


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