No items found.
August 22, 2018

A Race to Ignite the Church to Feed Its Community

Contributor
Global Leadership Network
Global Leadership Network
GLN Staff Writer
|
globalleadership.org
A Race to Ignite the Church to Feed Its Community

We can do this

“My wife and I love running races,” says Steve Coburn, a Detective Sergeant with the Ontario Provincial Police in Ontario, Canada. “We’re always participating in different races in our community.” While participating in a charity race in the fall of 2013, Steve was thinking about the beneficiaries of the race and about what his church did to raise money for community needs. “Something hit me. I heard a whisper from God saying ‘we can do this’.”

I left with the idea that love is action, and you just have to move forward and ‘land the plane.

Steve had just returned from his first Global Leadership Summit where he heard Bob Goff speak on the concept of Love Does. “I left with the idea that love is action, and you just have to move forward and ‘land the plane’”, says Steve.

The team is forged

Just three months later, a small group of people gathered at Compass Community Church in Orangeville, Ontario to put Bob’s message into action and make God’s whisper a reality. Bonded by Steve’s conviction, the Compass Run for Food Team was forged and planning began.

Organizing and hosting a charity race is a huge event that requires the coordination of many volunteers, runners, sponsors and beneficiaries to make sure needs are met and goals are reached. Rational people hesitated to launch the event on such a large scale in its first year. The team pressed on with the conviction that God wanted them to stay true to the original vision and ‘land the plane’.

Serving the community

In June 2014, the first Compass Run for Food raised over CDN 10,000 (USD 7,560) for the local food bank. In 2017, the team expanded the list of beneficiaries to include local school breakfast programs. “I was training for a race, and having hamstring problems,” says Steve. “My physiotherapist told me about all the needs in the schools, and I realized we could use this race to benefit the educational community.”

Through his years of service as a police officer, Steve was well aware of the relationship between positive community support and crime reduction. For school boards, collaborating with a church, even for a good cause, can be politically sensitive. Steve learned that “when we can provide for our schools with no strings attached, the schools are open to embracing the church. We’re also involved with the local corporate community, and people from various sectors are coming together to meet the needs of our community.”

In five years, the annual run has raised $126,000 to feed the community!

https://vimeo.com/277085800

A new definition for leadership

Going to the Summit has helped me put so many things into perspective, and I’m a better leader at work, in my church and in my community.

Steve has learned a lot through his experience. In his early years as a young police officer, Steve encountered leaders that said, “If you don’t do what I say, you’re going to count paper clips.” Police leaders have changed significantly since then but the Summit, and his subsequent call to action, further enriched Steve’s own understanding. He now defines a leader ‘as one who serves’. “Working in a church in a volunteer role is a whole different dynamic, and it’s changed me,” says Steve. “Going to the Summit has helped me put so many things into perspective, and I’m a better leader at work, in my church and in my community.”

If Steve hadn’t been ignited at the Summit to take action in this way, he admits he would be doing nothing. “I would be sitting on my couch – and yes, organizing this race is a lot of work, but it’s life giving!” says Steve. “We’re igniting the church in a new way to serve the community. Five years ago, when we were in that first meeting, we wouldn’t have imagined we would be here now. We don’t know where we’re going, or where God is leading this, but there’s a community buy-in factor. Every year, we go into the unknown, and we keep raising the bar. God is on the move!”

No items found.
No items found.
February 20, 2026
Leading the Spark: 5 Books on the Intersection of Creativity and Leadership
These five books on creativity and innovation for leaders will help you craft environments where they thrive.
No items found.
February 18, 2026
“Thank You for Seeing Us as People”: Leadership and Hope Inside Graham Correctional Center
In a place where men are often defined by their worst mistake, something quietly countercultural happens each year at Graham Correctional Center in Illinois.
No items found.
November 18, 2025
The Tech CEO who sold his home to live with the formerly homeless
Larry Smith, a former semiconductor executive, left his comfortable life to live in an RV at Community First! Village in Austin, where he and his wife built deep relationships with formerly homeless neighbors and lived out their faith in radical community. Now retired, Larry works to expand the model nationally, advising government leaders one day and equipping churches to serve marginalized people the next.

Leadership That Lasts

Team365 isn’t just a platform. It’s a commitment to grow, lead and live with purpose — every single day. Whether you’re here for content, community or clarity, you’re in the right place. Your leadership matters. Let’s keep going.

Join Team365