Jorge Acevedo's youngest son spent a decade as a chef in fine dining restaurants, mastering incredible seafood dishes. But here’s the kicker—he never ate his own cooking. How often do we do the same thing when it comes to accountability? We talk about it, maybe even enforce it for others, but do we truly live it? In his latest article, Jorge explores what accountability really looks like—not as a burden, but as a gift. John Wesley understood this well. He didn’t just preach accountability; he built deep, formational communities where people could grow together. And he didn’t exempt himself from it—he “ate what he cooked.” Do you have a circle of trusted people who help you stay faithful to your calling? If not, maybe it’s time to step into the kind of accountability that brings life, not legalism.
Posted by Paulo Lopes at 2025-03-28 14:02:23 UTC