THE GOSPEL CHANGES US

Perhaps, like many, you were moved to hear that Tim Keller passed from this life. Many didn't know until recently that Kathy Keller was a Young Life kid, Tim & Kathy were committee people who planted Young Life in Hopewell, VA, and that Young Life shaped the ministry approach for Redeemer Church in NYC. Wow! Listen to Kathy's testimony from our All-Staff Conference in 2012. We’ve also included the links to the two messages Tim gave the mission back then.

(Thank you to Mike T from Virginia Beach for sharing this content!)

Alaska 2024 Trip

Join us!

Experience the beauty of Alaska, while learning about local ministry there as well! Get a unique Young Life experience in the middle of Alaska’s iconic beauty.

What?

Saltwater salmon fishing in Alaska. 22 Spots available!

When?

August 1-5 2024, *may require flying in and out day before and day after

Where?

Fly in and out of Sitka, AK. Lodging Accommodations: https://www.talonlodge.com


Price: approximately $5600, does not include flights


Interested? Or want more details? Talk to Brigit Mustaine (bamustaine@gmail.com)

Message & A Bottle Gathering

 WHO:

You & some other fun people!
Hosted by Ken and Shannon Tankersley

WHAT:

This year we will benefit from special guests who have been tied to the larger Young Life community and are doing incredible work in their field of expertise.  Get ready to hear from some ‘Artists’ who are part of the larger YL Community! During our evening you will hear from...

-An Award Winning Filmmaker

-A Musician/Author

-A Watercolor Artist

...and more!  More details to come!

WHAT CAN I BRING?

 Please bring a bottle of your favorite wine/spirit/beverage to share.

WHEN/WHERE:

Thursday, September 28th, 5:00pm-9:00ish
The Downing House  -  3680 S. Downing St, Englewood, CO 80113

Chuck Reinhold - A Life Worth Living

 CORE PRINCIPLES- Chuck Reinhold

A LIFE WORTH LIVING 

THERE IS NOTHING MORE IMPORTANT TO ME THAN MY RELATIONSHIP WITH CHRIST-  Chuck Reinhold. 


About the Author

Chuck Reinhold

January 7, 1939 – January 11, 2023

By Jeff Chesemore

When pushed by the inevitable challenges a life in ministry would present, Chuck Reinhold would thankfully proclaim, “But that pressed me against the Lord!” Chuck is now present with his dear Savior, the One he began every morning with since he was a teenager. Chuck’s daily discipline of reading and memorizing scripture (for nearly 70 years!) helped equip him as one of Young Life’s foremost pioneers. Chuck was by nature a “starter,” whether beginning new clubs, areas, training methods, or the work in a foreign country.

As was true with any accomplishment, Chuck, armed with a twinkle in his eyes and self-deprecating wit, would quickly deflect the praise to his Savior and say how thankful he was to have been used by Him.

Reflecting on his own teenage years, Chuck often said, “I’m glad Young Life didn’t stop before they came to my high school!” This is the quote the larger mission of Young Life associates with Chuck, but there were so many more. Consider this remembrance from Senior Regional Director of the Greater Northeast, Rick Rogan:

“In September of 2016, I sat in a meeting with a dozen other Young Life staff. About a handful of us are on staff and still on staff because of Chuck. Each day over our time together, someone in that room quoted what they learned from Chuck over twenty-five years ago. ‘There is nothing more important than your personal walk with Jesus Christ.’ ‘There are no shortcuts to spiritual leadership.’ ‘The Muslims don’t even think their bible is the Word of God and they memorized it, what about you?’ ‘People are more important than programs.’”

Chuck met the Lord on a Young Life weekend in Bedford Springs, Pennsylvania in 1956. After college, Chuck chose missions work in the wild African jungles over the Pittsburgh Steelers, who informed Chuck of their interest if he declared for the draft.

“In Ethiopia, I prayed every day, ‘Lord, what’s the most important thing I could do for you?’ The Lord spoke loud and clear to me that high schools were lost tribes and Young Life was a mission to them. I’m absolutely positive God took me to Ethiopia to help me see the lost tribe of teenagers, a tribe that has few missionaries.”

Chuck returned to the states and began his career with Young Life in 1962. His first assignment was in Baltimore, where he met his eventual wife (and ministry companion) of 55 years, Linda. Three years later he moved to Rochester, New York, where he began the work there, and then back to Prince Georges County Maryland in 1969 to start the work there as well as a brand new training program for incoming staff. He lovingly called the program “a graduate school for Christ'' and set the bar high. The principles born out of this time left an indelible mark on the hundreds of staff who have sat under Chuck’s teaching.

By the age of 59, Chuck had spent 30 years on staff (another seven were spent serving at National Presbyterian Church in Washington D.C.). Feeling he owed the country of Ethiopia a debt of gratitude for all he received in his year after college, he and Linda moved across the Atlantic in 1998 to start Young Life there.

In the end, the couple stayed for more than seven years, and since returning to the states in 2005, the work in Ethiopia (and so much of the continent) has indeed flourished.

Young Life’s Old Dominion Regional Director, Joe Marks, shared this telling story:

“At Young Life’s Global Leadership Conference, I was in a room with several African staff. I was talking with one of them and found out he was from Ethiopia. I told him my Young Life leader was Chuck Reinhold and that he had helped start Young Life in Ethiopia. The man next to him, who was not from Ethiopia, held up his hands dramatically and said, ‘Oh no, Chuck Reinhold is the father of Young Life in all of Africa!’”

In 2019 Chuck’s family and friends helped him “tell” his story in the book, A Life Worth Living. The work addresses Chuck’s life of adventures and the many life and leadership principles (below) he shared with kids and leaders all over the world. The title came from another of his favorite sayings: ‘In Christ we all have a life worth living!’”

Chuck followed Linda into glory one month to the day after her passing, Dec. 11, 2022.



A LIFE WORTH LIVING  

10 CORE PRINCIPLES- Chuck Reinhold


  • THERE IS NOTHING MORE IMPORTANT TO ME THAN MY RELATIONSHIP WITH CHRIST- 

    • JOHN 15: 5     5 “I am the vine; you are the branches. If you remain in me and I in you, you will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing.

  • OBEDIENCE AND LIVING OUTSIDE YOUR COMFORT ZONE IS THE ‘KEY’ TO EXPERIENCING CHRIST-

    • JOHN 14:  21 21 Whoever has my commands and keeps them is the one who loves me. The one who loves me will be loved by my Father, and I too will love them and show myself to them.

  • I BECOME WHAT I THINK ABOUT.  WHAT AM I THINKING ABOUT? 

    • ROMANS 12:  2 2 Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will.

  • I COMMUNICATE IN OVER 750 WAYS OTHER THAN VERBAL.  WHAT AM I SAYING? 

    • 1 JOHN 3: 18 18 Dear children, let us not love with words or speech but with actions and in truth.

  • I LIVE FOR CHRIST WHEN NO ONE IS AROUND 

    • COL 3: 23-24 23 Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as working for the Lord, not for human masters, 24 since you know that you will receive an inheritance from the Lord as a reward. It is the Lord Christ you are serving.

  • NOTHING ETERNAL IS ACCOMPLISHED EXCEPT THROUGH PRAYER

    • MATT. 6:6 6 But when you pray, go into your room, close the door and pray to your Father, who is unseen. Then your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward you.

  • MEDITATING ON GOD’S WORD AND LISTENING WITH OBEDIENCE IS THE “KEY” TO SUCCESS

    • JOSHUA 1:8 8 Keep this Book of the Law always on your lips; meditate on it day and night, so that you may be careful to do everything written in it. Then you will be prosperous and successful.

  • HUMILITY AND SERVING OTHERS IS THE “KEY” TO GREATNESS.

    • MARK 10: 33-35 33 They came to Capernaum. When he was in the house, he asked them, “What were you arguing about on the road?” 34 But they kept quiet because on the way they had argued about who was the greatest.35 Sitting down, Jesus called the Twelve and said, “Anyone who wants to be first must be the very last, and the servant of all.”

  • CONSISTENT, MEANINGFUL FELLOWSHIP IS A NON-NEGOTIABLE FOR GROWTH IN CHRIST 

    • HEB 10:24-25 24 and let us consider how to stimulate one another to love and good deeds, not forsaking our own assembling together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another; and all the more as you see the day drawing near.

  • AM I DOING THINGS THAT I WOULD NEVER DO WITHOUT CHRIST-OR DO I RELY ON MYSELF? 

    • PHIL 4:13 13 I can do all this through him who gives me strength.

Summer 2023 Devotional

MISSION-WIDE SUMMER DEVO 2023

Jesus The Suffering Servant

All Work Crew, Summer Staff, and Assigned Team receive a copy of this mission-wide devo when they arrive at camp. This summer's devo looks at the life of Jesus, the suffering servant, as portrayed in Mark's gospel. Each day includes a gospel reading plus engagement, discussion, and reflection.

Anyone can join in and study alongside our camp staff!


Windrider & Young Life

Young Life staff have participated in the Windrider Institute's programs for many years now. They hold programs for organizations like ours to engage with the intersection of faith and culture.


The Best Chef in the World

The French Laundry, run by legendary chef Thomas Keller, has often been recognized as the best restaurant in the world, but few know the story of its original founder, Sally Schmitt. In an emotional final interview before her passing in March 2022, Sally tells her own story as a pioneering chef of California cuisine and sets the table for another way to look at life: where balance, rather than recognition, is the ultimate prize.

View the film on Windrider’s site and check out their Exploration Guide and discuss the film with those in your own community:


This film from our friends at Knights of Columbus left a powerful impression on us. Mother Teresa carried out many of the values near to the heart of our generation as she sacrificially cared for "the least of these" in tangible ways — the fact that her work continues now worldwide is both encouraging and inspiring.

Mother Teresa embodied the hands and feet of the gospel through her radical love, and we as the next generation are called to love this way today. In our families, workplaces, church homes, and wherever we find ourselves, we can all be a part of loving and serving our communities.

We hope that you are inspired by this film as much as we were.

Be sure to check out a short personal reflection from our Director of Programming, Ryann Heim, on Windrider Studios.


As society's belief systems are seemingly changing, or even reverting in time, one Ohio artist is challenging his community by saying, "bring me your mistakes". Inspired by recent events, Billy Joe White and his Red Rose Tattoo Studio are promoting one simple concept…ERASE THE HATE. Beneath the Ink is a timely look at hate and racism in the western foothills of this Appalachian region that reveals heartfelt stories of change and redemption.


Kintsugi is a 16th century process of mending broken shards of pottery. Visual artist Mako Fujimura and Kintsugi Master Kunio Nakamura, invite us to imagine how this ancient artform might help us find healing in the midst of trauma and come to a deeper understanding of the redemptive character of the Gospel.

Watch & Discuss:

  1. Why can it be hard to see the beauty from broken things?

  2. Where have you seen an example of beauty from brokenness in your life or the lives around you?

  3. How do you think culture and the church would look different if we didn’t immediately discard things and people that are broken, but were willing to “behold the fragments?”


Five friends recount what life was like in Brooklyn in the nineteen-seventies—from the games they played in the street to the criminal elements they tried to avoid—in this short film by Cristina Costantini and Alfie Koetter.

Watch & Discuss:

1. Describe the neighborhood you grew up in. What did you love? What did you miss? What do you find yourself taking with you wherever you are now?

2. How have things changed in the neighborhood that you live in now for better/worse?

3. How do you come to know the people in the neighborhood you live in now? What did you do?

4. If you could, what would you change about ‘communities’ today?