Monday, June 2, 2025

From the Heart of Brother Jesse – Monday, June 2, 2025 – What Owns You?

Dear Friends,

As we begin this week together, I want to pose a question that cuts to the core of our spiritual walk: What owns you? Is your heart held captive by the love of God or by the lures of this world?

Yesterday’s message reminded us that “when you love the world, you do not have the love of the Father in you” (1 John 2:15, NLT). That is a sobering truth. Loving the world does not always look like evil deeds; often it looks like distraction—busyness, material excess, and misplaced priorities.

The Simplification of Life begins with a decision: to clear the clutter and make room for God. I encourage you today to examine your heart and your habits. Ask the Holy Spirit to reveal what has crept in and taken God's rightful place.

With peace in Christ,
Brother Jesse
Co-founder & Sr. Chaplain
SFIHG Ministries

Sunday, June 1, 2025

Let Go of the World and Hold On to God

In our modern world, it has become increasingly easy to fall in love with the things that sparkle and shine around us. Society tells us that more is better—more possessions, more achievements, more entertainment, more attention. Every day, we are bombarded with messages urging us to upgrade, to compete, and to chase after fleeting rewards. What was once considered a luxury has now become a necessity in the minds of many, and the pursuit of worldly satisfaction has subtly crept into the hearts of believers.

Yet, the apostle John offers us a sobering and necessary reminder in his first epistle: “Do not love this world nor the things it offers you, for when you love the world, you do not have the love of the Father in you” (1 John 2:15, NLT). This verse is not merely a call to detachment—it is a warning and an invitation. A warning that misplaced affection can displace God in our hearts, and an invitation to live a life anchored in eternal truth rather than earthly trends.

This message serves as a firm but loving exhortation to examine what owns us. Are we ruled by the busyness of modern living and the clutter of worldly pursuits? Or have we simplified our lives enough to make room for what truly matters—our relationship with God, the care of our families, and the service we render in His name?

The Third Pillar, The Simplification of Life, calls us to intentionally remove the unnecessary so that we might focus on the eternal. It is a spiritual discipline, not just a lifestyle choice. Simplifying one's life is not merely about discarding material goods—it is about clearing the way for spiritual abundance. It is about making room for the love of the Father to dwell richly within us, unobstructed by the distractions and cravings of this world.

As we journey through this passage from 1 John, let us ask ourselves this vital question: Have the things of this world become more important to us than the things of God? The answer may very well determine whether we are walking in the light of His love or drifting into the shadows of worldly deception.

In 1 John 2:16 (NLT), John writes, “For the world offers only a craving for physical pleasure, a craving for everything we see, and pride in our achievements and possessions. These are not from the Father, but are from this world.”

In this verse, John lays bare the anatomy of worldly temptation. He identifies three dangerous cravings that corrupt the human heart and blind the soul: the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life. Each of these, though clothed in different disguises, works toward one common end—pulling us away from our Heavenly Father and placing our affections squarely on the temporal.

The craving for physical pleasure encompasses more than just immoral indulgence. It includes the relentless desire for comfort, convenience, and self-gratification. The culture around us encourages indulgence as if life’s chief aim were to satisfy every impulse. But when comfort becomes a god, conviction becomes an inconvenience, and we slowly silence the voice of the Spirit.

The craving for everything we see speaks to the deep-rooted disease of covetousness. In a world that thrives on comparison and competition, the eye is never satisfied. We scroll through curated images, lusting after what others possess, thinking we lack what we truly need. It is a lie born in the garden and perpetuated by every advertisement and algorithm we encounter today. As we chase more, we grow emptier, never realizing that the soul cannot be filled with things that perish.

And then there is the pride of life—the most insidious of all. Pride in our accomplishments, titles, possessions, and status. This pride whispers that we are self-made, that we have no need of God, and that our security lies in what we’ve built. But what happens when the job ends, the applause fades, the house loses its shine, and the body grows weak? If our worth is built on sand, it will not survive the storm.

John makes it abundantly clear: “These are not from the Father.” They are imitations, distractions, and counterfeits. They are burdens masquerading as blessings. And they thrive in a life that is cluttered with the noise of the world.

This is why the Simplification of Life is not a suggestion—it is a necessity for every believer. Simplification begins by recognizing these cravings for what they are: chains that must be broken, not treasures to be cherished. It is about discerning the eternal from the temporal and choosing to seek first the Kingdom of God.

Brother and sister, we are not in a playground; we are in a battleground. These temptations wage war against our souls, and if we do not simplify and sanctify our lives, we risk losing sight of what truly matters. The battle is not against possessions themselves, but against the love and dependence we place on them. The more we cling to the world, the less we are able to grasp the hand of the Father.

In a world that measures success by accumulation and praises those who gather much, the words of John serve as a divine interruption: “Do not love this world nor the things it offers you…” (1 John 2:15, NLT). These are not just ancient words—they are a prophetic call to a modern people drowning in abundance yet starving for peace.

This world and all its attractions are passing away. The homes we build, the gadgets we collect, the accolades we earn—they are all fading. But the soul, Brother and Sister, the soul lives on. And it is the soul that must be guarded, nourished, and focused on what pleases the Lord. “But anyone who does what pleases God will live forever” (1 John 2:17, NLT). That is the promise. That is the reward. That is the direction our lives must take.

As we reflect upon the Third Pillar, The Simplification of Life, we must recognize that the true richness of life is not found in the things we own, but in the One who owns our hearts. Simplifying our lives is not an act of loss, but an act of liberation. It is a shedding of the superficial to embrace the sacred. It is choosing faith over fashion, Scripture over screens, stillness over stress, and devotion over distraction.

So, I ask you to consider this: What is cluttering your heart today? What is stealing your peace and obscuring your view of the eternal? Perhaps it is time to part with the unnecessary. Perhaps it is time to make space—space for prayer, for service, for Scripture, for family, for God.

Let go of what is fading, and hold fast to what is forever. Reclaim your life from the grip of the world, and place it firmly in the hands of the Father. There, and only there, will you find the fullness of joy and the abundance of purpose.

So, I say to you, “May the Lord strengthen your faith and use it for His glory, as you walk humbly in His presence.”

Saturday, May 31, 2025

📣 Ministry Message Announcement – Saturday, May 31, 2025

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

I invite you to join me this Sunday, June 1, 2025, at Noon (ET) for a powerful and timely message titled “Let Go of the World and Hold On to God,” based on 1 John 2:15–17 (NLT).

As we continue our journey through the Four Pillars of a God-Centered Life, this message will emphasize the Third Pillar: The Simplification of Life. In a world driven by materialism and endless distractions, it is all too easy to become entangled in the very things that pull us away from God. This Sunday’s message is a heartfelt call to release the burdens of worldly craving and refocus our lives on what is eternal, sacred, and pleasing to the Lord.

You will be encouraged, challenged, and equipped to examine what may be cluttering your walk with God and rediscover the freedom that comes from a life devoted fully to Him.

Please mark your calendars and share this message with your family, friends, and faith communities. Use your social media platforms to invite others to read, reflect, and return to a life centered on Christ. You never know whose heart might be touched simply by an invitation to read God's Word.

Let us prepare to cast off what fades and cling to what is forever.

In Christ’s love,
Brother Jesse
Co-founder & Sr. Chaplain
SFIHG Ministries

Friday, May 30, 2025

From the Heart of Brother Jesse – Friday, May 30, 2025 – Building a Legacy of Faith

Dear Beloved in the Lord,

One day, our time here will end. And when that day comes, may our children and grandchildren not only remember what we said—but how we lived. May they remember that in our homes, Christ was King.

Building a legacy of faith does not require wealth or fame. It requires consistency, humility, love, and the daily decision to live out our faith within the walls of our home. Our legacy is not in what we leave behind—it is in the faith we pass forward.

Let us build homes where faith is not an accessory, but the foundation. Where prayer is not occasional, but essential. And where every act of love bears witness to our Savior.

In eternal hope,
Brother Jesse
Co-founder & Sr. Chaplain
SFIHG Ministries

Thursday, May 29, 2025

From the Heart of Brother Jesse – Thursday, May 29, 2025 – Honor Your Parents

Dear Faithful Friends,

Paul’s instruction in 1 Timothy 5:8 also applies to how we treat our aging parents and relatives. We live in a time when the elderly are too often forgotten, their wisdom dismissed, and their needs ignored.

Scripture calls us to something higher. “Honor your father and mother” was not a suggestion—it was a command. And in honoring them, we honor the God who gave them to us.

Call them. Visit them. Care for them. Listen to their stories. Let them know they are still loved, valued, and needed. In doing so, you reveal the living Christ.

With compassion and conviction,
Brother Jesse
Co-founder & Sr. Chaplain
SFIHG Ministries

Wednesday, May 28, 2025

From the Heart of Brother Jesse – Wednesday, May 28, 2025 – Reclaiming the Table

Dear Family in Christ,

Have you noticed how quiet the dinner table has become—not for lack of presence, but because everyone’s attention is buried in a screen? We are sitting together, but we are miles apart in heart and mind.

Reclaim the table. Make it sacred again. Share meals, not just food—share Scripture, stories, laughter, and prayer. Turn off the TV, silence the phones, and bring your family back to one another.

The table is not just a place to eat. It is a place to reconnect, to forgive, to love. It is where hearts are knit together in Christ.

Let’s return to it—together.

In His love,
Brother Jesse
Co-founder & Sr. Chaplain
SFIHG Ministries

Mid-Week Message - The Peasant and the Visitor

"So the Word became human and made his home among us.  He was full of unfailing love and faithfulness.  And we have seen his glory, the glory of the Father's one and only Son."  John 1:14 (NLT)


He was the poorest of the poor.  His crudely built shack was at the foot of the mountain upon which sat the King's castle.  The peasant hated the King because he knew that the King could end the hardships that he experienced every day, if only he desired to do so.  

Day by day, the poor man toiled in a garden that yielded only the weakest of crops, walked over a mile to collect water from the stream that was almost running dry and sat in loneliness as he looked up the mountain with animosity.  

One day there was a knock at the peasant's door.  This had never happened, not even once.  He opened it to find a man in rags.  The visitor was dirty, hungry and in need of a place to lay his head.  Cautiously, the peasant let him in.  He shared his meager rations and made another trip to the stream so that he could serve cool water.  At night, he allowed the visitor to sleep on the only straw bed in the shack, listening as the only person he had ever shared his space with drew breath.  

When the sun rose the next morning, the two men worked in the garden together and talked.  The peasant told the visitor all about the King on the mountain and how much he despised him for allowing him to live in such poverty.  

"If only he would come down from his lofty throne and experience this life for himself, then surely he would help me," the peasant moaned.  

At this, the visitor turned and started walking toward the mountain.  Confused, the peasant asked him where he was going and urged him to stop because the King might be angry if his castle was approached.  The visitor continued to climb and called to the peasant to follow him.  Side by side they trudged upwards until finally they were facing the lowered drawbridge.  

As the visitor entered the castle, the peasant tentatively followed.  His eyes grew wide as he beheld the opulent contents.  The floors were pure gold.  The walls were covered with beautiful tapestries woven with threads that appeared to be made of every gem he had ever heard about.  As he marveled at his surroundings he became aware that he was alone.  The visitor had vanished and he was fearful that he would be found where he should not be.  

Silently and with trepidation, he searched for his friend.  Finally he came to a jeweled door.  He opened it just enough to peek through.  The light from inside was almost blinding but he thought he heard a familiar voice so he tiptoed in.  As his eyes adjusted to the brightness, he could just make out a person sitting on a throne at the far end of the enormous room and he realized in terror that he was in the king's chamber.  

"Come closer," said the voice.  Shaking, the peasant inched forward and fell on his face in fear before the throne.  

"There is no need to fear me,"  said the voice as the peasant felt a hand upon his shoulder.  As he cautiously lifted his head, the peasant gazed upon the face of his visitor friend who was no longer in rags, but in a kingly robe, and he as smiling.  

"I do not understand," said the peasant.  "Surely I am seeing things."

"Your eyes do not deceive you," spoke the king.  "I am the same person that knocked upon your door.  I became as you were in order to win your faith and bring you here to live with me forever."  

This simple story is a reminder of how dear we are to our Lord and Savior, Jesus.  He loved us so much that he left Heaven and became human in order to live among us and, ultimately, to sacrifice Himself so that we can live with Him in Heaven forever.  Just as the peasant, we toil and struggle and wonder why life has to be so difficult.  Jesus came to give us hope and to make sure we know that we are not alone.  His love, his grace, will see us through the trials of this life if we turn to Him.  As the visitor knocked upon the peasant's door, so the Son knocks upon our hearts.  All we have to do is open them and let Him in.  

I pray for each person reading this that your heart will be open and you will know the joy of His glorious presence.  God bless. 

Tuesday, May 27, 2025

From the Heart of Brother Jesse – Tuesday, May 27, 2025 – Fathers, Arise

Dear Brothers in Christ,

Today I speak directly to the fathers, grandfathers, and men of faith. The call to spiritual leadership within the home is not optional—it is biblical. It is time we reclaim our God-given role as protectors, providers, and spiritual shepherds.

We cannot outsource discipleship. Our sons and daughters must see us pray, hear us read the Word, and witness us loving their mothers with patience and devotion. That is how they will know what Christlikeness looks like.

Brothers, it is not too late. Begin today. Pray with your family. Speak life into your children. Be present. Be intentional. Be Christlike.

In faithful brotherhood,
Brother Jesse
Co-founder & Sr. Chaplain
SFIHG Ministries

Monday, May 26, 2025

From the Heart of Brother Jesse – Monday, May 26, 2025 – A Sacred Mandate

Dear Friends in Christ,

There are few Scriptures as sobering as 1 Timothy 5:8. Paul does not mince words when he writes that those who neglect to care for their own family have “denied the true faith.” That statement should stop every believer in their tracks.

God ordained the family before He established the Church. The family is the soil in which faith is to be planted, nurtured, and grown. Yet too many today have allowed other pursuits—careers, devices, entertainment, and even good intentions—to replace their first ministry: the home.

This week, let us realign ourselves with this sacred mandate. Reassess your priorities. Reclaim your time. Restore your home as the sanctuary it was meant to be.

In grace and truth,
Brother Jesse
Co-founder & Sr. Chaplain
SFIHG Ministries

Sunday, May 25, 2025

Faith Begins at Home

Before there were churches, before there were kings, and before any human institutions were formed, God, in His infinite wisdom, ordained the family. In the garden of Eden, God declared, “This explains why a man leaves his father and mother and is joined to his wife, and the two are united into one” (Genesis 2:24, NLT). The family, therefore, is not a product of culture or human design—it is divine in origin.

As Paul writes to Timothy, a young pastor charged with shepherding the church in Ephesus, he does not shy away from the foundational matters of the faith. In 1 Timothy 5:8 (NLT), we find this sobering declaration: “But those who won’t care for their relatives, especially those in their own household, have denied the true faith. Such people are worse than unbelievers.” These words are not simply a command—they are a piercing indictment of what it means to neglect the sacred calling to care for one’s family.

The Second Pillar of a God-Centered Life, The Importance of Family, is not just a value we hold dear; it is a responsibility woven into the very fabric of our faith. Our homes must reflect our devotion to God, not only in prayer and worship but in compassion, provision, and everyday sacrifice. A strong and faithful walk with the Lord begins not in public worship but in the quiet, unseen moments of familial faithfulness.

In this message, we will explore why Paul placed such high importance on caring for one’s household, how this care is directly tied to our profession of faith, and what it means today to live out the Gospel starting at home. For if we fail to love and lead within our own walls, how can we expect to be credible ambassadors for Christ beyond them?

The Apostle Paul, under divine inspiration, does not mince words in 1 Timothy 5:8. The verse is a striking admonition: “But those who won’t care for their relatives, especially those in their own household, have denied the true faith. Such people are worse than unbelievers.” Such language demands our full attention, for it draws a line not merely between belief and unbelief, but between genuine faith and hypocrisy.

At the heart of Paul’s instruction is the understanding that our care for family is not optional—it is spiritual. To neglect the needs of those within our household is not merely a failure of responsibility; it is a denial of the very faith we claim to possess. In a world where faith is often seen as what one professes with their lips, Scripture reminds us that faith is more accurately measured by what we practice with our lives.

Paul was addressing a specific context in the early church—how to care for widows and dependent family members—but the principle applies universally. A person who claims to follow Christ but fails to meet the needs of their own family brings reproach upon the Gospel. In fact, Paul says that such a person is worse than an unbeliever—not because they have sinned more grievously, but because their conduct undermines the truth they claim to uphold.

Let us be clear: the faith we carry into the world must be born in the home. It is not enough to serve on church committees or speak eloquently of theology if one is neglectful, dismissive, or absent when it comes to the well-being of their spouse, their children, or their aging parents. If our faith is real, it will first manifest in daily, tangible acts of love and provision within our household.

There is a sacredness to family care. Whether it is ensuring food is on the table, listening with patience, or praying with and for your loved ones, each act of love becomes a living testimony of Christ’s love within us. The spiritual weight of this responsibility cannot be overstated—it is a foundational expression of true, Christ-centered discipleship.

If the Church is the body of Christ, then the family is its beating heart. It is within the sacred space of our homes that the Gospel is first seen, heard, and either confirmed or contradicted. Yet in our modern age, the nuclear family faces relentless assault—not only from cultural norms that devalue marriage and parental roles, but from a spirit of distraction that fractures unity and silences godly engagement.

Paul’s warning in 1 Timothy 5:8 is not isolated from today’s realities. Fathers, once recognized as spiritual heads of the household, are often absent—physically, emotionally, or spiritually. Mothers, overwhelmed and under-supported, struggle to carry burdens they were never meant to bear alone. Children are frequently raised by digital devices instead of parents, and shared meals have become times of isolation, where faces glow not from candlelight or conversation, but from cell phone screens.

This was not God’s design.

The family was intended to be the first sanctuary, the first classroom, the first congregation. It is within the home that children are to be taught the Word of God (Deuteronomy 6:6–7). It is where husbands are to love their wives as Christ loved the Church (Ephesians 5:25), and where wives respect and support their husbands (Ephesians 5:33). It is the very soil in which the next generation of disciples is to be planted and nurtured.

And yet, we see the sacred undone by the secular. We see commitment traded for convenience. Conversations replaced by notifications. Covenant love dismantled by casual living.

If we are to reclaim our homes for Christ, we must restore the family as our first ministry field. That means fathers must rise and reclaim their God-given role as spiritual leaders—not through domination, but through devotion. It means families must carve out time to read Scripture, pray together, and speak life to one another. It means putting down devices, turning off the noise, and being fully present in the sacred fellowship of home.

Our homes should echo with hymns, with laughter, with loving correction, and with grace. This is not a fantasy—it is a holy calling. The Church will never be stronger than the families that compose it. The Second Pillar—The Importance of Family—is not an accessory to faith. It is its very proving ground.

The enemy is subtle. He does not always attack the family with a sword—sometimes he does so with a screen, a schedule, or a subtle shift in values. One of the greatest challenges of our time is not open rebellion, but quiet neglect. Families are not always torn apart by storms—they often drift apart slowly in silence.

We live in a world where busyness is worn like a badge of honor. Parents are stretched thin, chasing after promotions, extracurriculars, social obligations, and digital distractions. But in this relentless pursuit of more, something sacred is often left behind: the intentional care and spiritual nurturing of the family. Paul’s words in 1 Timothy 5:8 expose this danger. We may be busy “doing good,” but if we are failing our family, we are failing our faith.

How many fathers have sacrificed spiritual leadership for career advancement? How many mothers are so overburdened that they have no time to reflect on their own spiritual well-being, let alone guide their children in it? How many children are being raised not with God’s Word, but by YouTube, TikTok, and whatever ideology comes through their feeds? And how often do families sit in the same room, each lost in their own digital world, strangers to one another in heart and soul?

This is not just a cultural concern—it is a spiritual crisis.

The Word of God does not conform to the times—it confronts them. We are called to steward our families with reverence, attentiveness, and sacrificial love. Stewardship means more than providing financially—it means being emotionally available, spiritually engaged, and relationally invested. It means saying no to the good so we can say yes to the godly.

Our faith must interrupt our routines. It must reclaim our time and rearrange our priorities. If our family life does not reflect our faith, then we are not truly living by faith. Paul’s rebuke is a holy warning: when we neglect our family, especially those in our own household, we do violence to the Gospel we profess.

But there is hope. Always hope. The Holy Spirit empowers us to reset, to return, to restore. The first step is recognizing that our home is not a side concern—it is the front lines of spiritual warfare. We must rise with courage, humility, and conviction to take it back.

If ever there were a moment when a person could be excused from concern for family—when the weight of divine mission, physical suffering, and eternal consequence might overshadow earthly relationships—it would be at Calvary. And yet, Jesus, from the cross, paused amid His agony to ensure the care of His mother. In John 19:26–27 (NLT), we read: “When Jesus saw his mother standing there beside the disciple he loved, he said to her, ‘Dear woman, here is your son.’ And he said to this disciple, ‘Here is your mother.’ And from then on this disciple took her into his home.”

Let the weight of that moment rest upon us. Jesus, pierced and dying, still fulfilled His duty as a Son. He modeled for us a love that does not forsake family, even when burdened with the salvation of the world. That is more than a gesture—it is a divine testimony to the sacred bond of family.

Our Savior did not only preach love—He lived it, and in His final breaths, He honored it. We are to do the same.

Today, many seek to live out their faith in public spaces, in platforms, in ministries, and missions. But our first and foremost calling is to live out our faith in our homes. That is where love must first be seen. That is where forgiveness must take root. That is where Christ must be enthroned.

Every word we speak to our spouse in love, every prayer whispered over a sleeping child, every tear shed in intercession for a wayward son or daughter—these are the true marks of a living faith. A family rooted in Christ is a witness that preaches louder than any pulpit ever could.

Paul’s charge to Timothy was not about institutional caretaking alone—it was about embodying Christ in the most personal and practical way: by honoring those whom God has placed in our charge. Whether aging parents, young children, or struggling relatives, the home is where our theology becomes our testimony.

And so, we are reminded that the Second Pillar—The Importance of Family—is not an accessory to faith but an essential fruit of it. Our families are not perfect, but when they are grounded in Christ, they become places of grace, discipleship, restoration, and peace.

We have heard the Word. We have felt its weight. Now we must respond—not merely with agreement, but with action. For the family, as God designed it, is not a social convenience; it is a sacred covenant. It is where faith is forged, where love is lived, and where Christ is first known.

Paul’s charge in 1 Timothy 5:8 stands not as a relic of ancient instruction, but as a burning standard for today. “But those who won’t care for their relatives, especially those in their own household, have denied the true faith. Such people are worse than unbelievers.” These are not words to gloss over—they are words to awaken us. For what good is it to profess Christ if we deny Him in our homes?

So today, I call upon you—fathers, rise up and become the spiritual leaders of your families. Your children need more than provision—they need prayerful direction. Your wives need more than support—they need to see your faith in action, lived out in humility and strength.

Mothers, your nurturing hands shape the soul of the household. Never underestimate the power of your love, your prayers, your perseverance. You are not just raising children—you are raising future disciples.

Sons and daughters, honor those who raised you. Whether you are still under your parents’ roof or now raising families of your own, do not forget the commandment: “Honor your father and mother” (Exodus 20:12, NLT). Let respect, gratitude, and reconciliation be the fruit of your walk in Christ.

And to all—put down your phones at the dinner table. Turn off the noise. Reclaim conversation. Rediscover what it means to share a meal, to pray aloud, to weep together, to laugh without distraction. Let your homes ring not with the silence of disengagement but with the sound of godly fellowship.

If your family has fractured, pray. If communication has dried up, speak. If leadership has been abdicated, return. The Lord is merciful and ready to restore what the world has tried to tear down. But we must act—deliberately, urgently, prayerfully.

Let today be the day you recommit to the sacred stewardship of your home. The Second Pillar—The Importance of Family—demands no less. For in caring for those within your household, you proclaim a faith that is not only confessed with the lips but lived with the heart.

So, I say to you, "May the Lord strengthen your faith and use it for His glory, as you walk humbly in His presence."

Saturday, May 24, 2025

📣 ANNOUNCEMENT: A Message for Our Time – “Faith Begins at Home”

Dear friends, brothers, and sisters in Christ,

Please mark your calendars and prepare your hearts for a powerful and urgent message that speaks directly into the heart of our generation. On Sunday, May 25, 2025, at 12:00 Noon (EDT), our ministry will release a message entitled:

“Faith Begins at Home”

Based on 1 Timothy 5:8 (NLT) and grounded firmly in the Second Pillar of a God-Centered Life: The Importance of Family.

This message is more than just a teaching—it is a clarion call to the Church, a gospel proclamation to the modern family, and a sacred challenge to believers everywhere. As society grows increasingly distracted and fragmented, and as the nuclear family faces cultural erosion and spiritual neglect, God’s Word remains steadfast and clear: If we neglect our homes, we undermine our witness. If we fail to lead our families, we fail to honor our faith.

We live in a time when:
  • Conversations around the dinner table are replaced by glowing screens.
  • Fathers have surrendered spiritual leadership.
  • Families are fractured by busyness, brokenness, and misplaced priorities.
This message boldly addresses these modern struggles, and it shines the light of Scripture into our homes, reminding us that the first church is not the building down the road—it is the household God has entrusted to each of us.

This message draws deeply from the truth of 1 Timothy 5:8, and ties directly into our Four Pillars of a God-Centered Life. Specifically, it strengthens:

  • The First Pillar by calling us to keep God at the center of our households.
  • The Second Pillar by reaffirming the sacred role of family in our faith walk.
  • The Third Pillar by challenging us to simplify life and return to what truly matters.
  • The Fourth Pillar by encouraging us to be spiritually and emotionally present to serve those within our homes.
We urge you to not only read this message, but to share it with others—your family, friends, neighbors, and church community. Let it serve as a holy reset. A divine realignment. A reminder that faith is not fully lived until it is lived at home.

📅 Join us on Sunday, May 25th, at noon EDT and invite others to do the same.

📲 Use your voice, your social media, your prayer groups—spread the Word.

Together, let us build homes where Christ is exalted, where love is practiced, and where faith is not only spoken—but seen.

In Christ’s unwavering love,
Brother Jesse
Co-founder & Sr. Chaplain
SFIHG Ministries

Friday, May 23, 2025

From the Heart of Brother Jesse – Friday, May 23, 2025 – A Life Marked by Devotion

Dear Friends,

As we bring this week to a close, I invite you to pause and reflect on what your life is truly centered around. Not just in theory or on paper, but in your everyday thoughts, habits, and decisions—what or whom do you serve? What captures your highest affection and deepest trust?

The first of God's commandments in Exodus 20:3 (NLT) rings with eternal truth: “You must not have any other god but me.” This is not only the beginning of God's law, but the beginning of life itself. For without God at the center, all else eventually falls apart.

A life marked by devotion is not a perfect life—it is a surrendered one. It is a life where the Lord is not only acknowledged, but enthroned. Where prayer is not a duty, but a delight. Where God's will outweighs our own desires. Where the heart is guarded against idols, and the soul is refreshed daily by the presence of the Almighty.

The first pillar of a God-Centered Life reminds us of this: the foundation of everything we are and everything we do must be God Himself. Not God and something else. Just God.

So I urge you, as I urge myself—live a life that testifies to undivided devotion. Let your witness be clear, your focus be firm, and your love for the Lord be unwavering. This is the kind of life that honors the command, the calling, and the covenant of the One true God.

In full surrender to His glory,
Brother Jesse
Co-founder & Sr. Chaplain
SFIHG Ministries

Thursday, May 22, 2025

From the Heart of Brother Jesse – Thursday, May 22, 2025 – Returning to the One True God

Dear Friends,

Every one of us, at some point in life, has allowed something else to take the place that belongs to God alone. Sometimes it happens subtly—a shifting of priorities, a season of spiritual dryness, or a growing affection for things that fade. But thanks be to God, He never leaves us in that state. He lovingly calls us back to Himself with mercy and conviction.

The first commandment is clear and unwavering: “You must not have any other god but me” (Exodus 20:3, NLT). It is a command born not from dominance, but from love—a desire that we might walk in fellowship with the One who created us, saved us, and sustains us.

If we have wandered, we are not without hope. The first pillar of a God-Centered Life urges us to fix our eyes once again on the Author and Finisher of our faith. The world may tempt us with idols, but only God offers life, peace, and purpose.

Today is the perfect day to return to Him. Tear down the altars of distraction. Silence the voices of false gods. Realign your heart, your home, and your habits around the One who alone is worthy. He is not waiting with anger, but with open arms. And in that return, we find what we were truly seeking all along.

With a heart renewed in devotion,
Brother Jesse
Co-founder & Sr. Chaplain
SFIHG Ministries

Wednesday, May 21, 2025

From the Heart of Brother Jesse – Wednesday, May 21, 2025 – When Good Things Become False Gods

Dear Friends,

Not every idol comes wrapped in evil. In fact, some of the greatest threats to our spiritual walk are not wicked things, but good things that have taken the wrong place in our lives. A career, a family legacy, financial security, a hobby, or even ministry work—each of these can become a “god” to us when it begins to demand our focus, our loyalty, and our trust above the Lord.

As we reflected on in Sunday’s message, God commanded in Exodus 20:3 (NLT), “You must not have any other god but me.” The weight of this verse is not only in what it forbids, but in what it prioritizes—God must be first, always. There is no room on the throne of our hearts for two rulers.

The first pillar of a God-Centered Life, The Importance of God and Keeping Him as Your Focus, reminds us to examine not just what is evil, but what is excessive. Has something—even something good—begun to consume your thoughts more than the Lord? Has it edged out time for prayer, worship, or study?

If so, be encouraged—not condemned. God is gracious and merciful to receive us when we return. Ask Him today to reorder your affections. Place Him back at the center, where He alone belongs. Every truly good thing in life flows not from our own efforts, but from our surrender to His will.

In the service of Christ alone,
Brother Jesse
Co-founder & Sr. Chaplain
SFIHG Ministries

Tuesday, May 20, 2025

From the Heart of Brother Jesse – Tuesday, May 20, 2025 – The Danger of the Divided Heart

Dear Friends,

One of the most sobering truths in Scripture is that a divided heart cannot stand. It wavers between the sacred and the secular, between the things of God and the distractions of the world. In Exodus 20:3 (NLT), God speaks with unmistakable clarity: “You must not have any other god but me.” This is not a gentle suggestion—it is a divine command meant to protect our souls and preserve our relationship with Him.

But how often do we find ourselves pulled in two directions? We want to follow God, yet we cling to things we know we should surrender. We profess faith with our lips, but our hearts are entangled in pursuits that offer no eternal value. Whether it’s the pursuit of wealth, the fear of missing out, or the obsession with image and recognition, these distractions erode our devotion and weaken our witness.

The first pillar of a God-Centered Life urges us to make God our only focus—not one among many. When He is not first, He is not truly present at all. A heart shared with idols is not a heart that honors the Lord.

Let us pray today for undivided devotion. Let us ask God to expose the false gods we have entertained, and by His strength, tear them down. There is peace and power in a life wholly surrendered.

Faithfully yours,
Brother Jesse
Co-founder & Sr. Chaplain
SFIHG Ministries

Monday, May 19, 2025

From the Heart of Brother Jesse – Monday, May 19, 2025 – Small Choices, Eternal Consequences

Dear Friends,

In the quiet moments of our daily lives, we make decisions that shape our hearts and ultimately our eternity. Some of those choices appear insignificant—what we prioritize, where our time goes, what fills our thoughts. But as I shared in Sunday’s message from Exodus 20:3 (NLT), “You must not have any other god but me,” those small decisions add up, and they reveal what we truly worship.

It’s easy to assume we are free of idols because we don't bow before carved images. But idols in our modern world are far more subtle and, often, far more dangerous. They take the shape of desires we won’t surrender, addictions we justify, ambitions we protect, or comforts we place above obedience.

A God-centered life does not drift toward devotion—it must be directed there, intentionally, prayerfully, and faithfully. That’s why the first pillar of a God-Centered Life—The Importance of God and Keeping Him as Your Focus—is not simply a theological point. It is the anchor for every other pillar. It is the difference between walking in the light or stumbling in the dark.

Today, let us resolve to make better decisions, not based on what we want or what is convenient, but based on Who God is. Let our lives declare daily, “You alone are my God.”

With a heart devoted to Him alone,
Brother Jesse
Co-founder & Sr. Chaplain
SFIHG Ministries

Sunday, May 18, 2025

No Other Gods: The Sole Focus of Our Lives

When God led the children of Israel out of the bondage of Egypt, He did not merely liberate them for the sake of freedom itself. He delivered them so they might worship Him, serve Him, and walk in covenant relationship with Him. At Mount Sinai, God revealed His holy commandments—ten divine instructions that would shape not only the moral structure of a nation but the very heart of each individual who would call upon His name. The very first of these commandments thunders from the heavens with piercing clarity and eternal authority: “You must not have any other god but me” (Exodus 20:3, NLT).

This first command is not a suggestion or an optional recommendation. It is the immovable foundation upon which the entire structure of faithful living is built. It is God's divine claim to exclusivity in our lives. Before we are called to honor others, respect life, or avoid covetousness, we are commanded to fix our hearts and our eyes upon God alone. He is not to be one among many; He is to be the only One.

In this holy commandment, we see the direct connection to the first pillar of a God-Centered Life: The Importance of God and Keeping Him as Your Focus. Without this pillar, the rest of our spiritual house will collapse. If our attention and affection are divided, if other pursuits are placed alongside or above the Lord, then we are building on sand, not on the Rock. God’s voice calls out through the ages: “You must not have any other god but me.” His call is not just to ancient Israel—it is to us, here and now. The question we must each answer is this: Have we truly made God the only focus of our lives?

When the Lord declared, “You must not have any other god but me,” He was not only speaking against the worship of false deities made of stone or gold. He was speaking against anything that might compete for His rightful place in our hearts. God’s command is one of undivided devotion—a call to cast aside every rival and enthrone Him alone as Lord of our lives. But, sadly, the human heart is prone to wander, and if we are not watchful, even good things can become god-things.

In today’s world, idols rarely look like ancient statues or pagan altars. Instead, they come cloaked in modern forms—material possessions, selfish ambitions, unchecked addictions, and the never-ending pursuit of more. A prized automobile, polished and protected more than our own time in prayer, can silently take God's place. An addiction—whether to substances, habits, or pleasure—can master our attention and erode our spiritual discernment. Money, though neutral by nature, can become a god when our security and worth are measured by what we have rather than Who holds us. Fame and power, though alluring, are fleeting shadows that can consume the soul and blind us to eternal truth.

Jesus warned in Matthew 6:24 (NLT), “No one can serve two masters. For you will hate one and love the other; you will be devoted to one and despise the other.” Our Lord made it plain: we cannot claim God as our Master while giving our loyalty to something—or someone—else. The heart has only one throne, and only God is worthy to sit upon it.

Our lives reveal what we truly worship. Is God the first voice we seek in the morning and the last One we thank at night? Do we chase after Him with our energy, time, and thoughts—or are our days spent in pursuit of lesser things? It is in the little choices, the unseen decisions, and the silent longings of our hearts that we reveal who truly reigns within us.

To live out the first pillar of a God-Centered Life means that we must conduct spiritual inventory and be honest about what has crept into our lives. It is not enough to say we believe in God; we must live as though He alone is worthy of our worship and trust.

To keep God at the center of our lives is not a one-time declaration—it is a daily decision, a continual act of surrender and intentional focus. The first pillar of a God-Centered Life challenges us to build every part of our being—our thoughts, our choices, our relationships, our priorities—around the living presence of Almighty God. He is not to be confined to a corner of our Sunday mornings or called upon only in times of trouble. He must be the central, guiding presence in all that we do.

Living with God at the center means choosing, every single day, to look upward before looking outward. It means beginning each morning not with our to-do list, but with His Word opened before us and our hearts bowed in prayer. It means weighing every decision—large or small—through the lens of His will, asking not “What do I want?” but rather, “What would the Lord have me do?”

When God is not the center, disorder quickly follows. The idol of busyness may masquerade as productivity, but it keeps us distracted and spiritually malnourished. The idol of self-reliance tells us that we are strong enough, wise enough, and capable enough without God—but it eventually leaves us weary and empty. The idol of comfort whispers that we deserve ease, luxury, and indulgence, yet it ultimately distances us from sacrifice, humility, and the cross.

But when God is at the center—when our lives orbit around Him—we find clarity, purpose, and peace. We no longer serve the shifting standards of the world. We are no longer blown about by the winds of culture or consumed by the need to impress others. Instead, we live to honor the One who sees in secret, who rewards the faithful, and who walks with us through every valley and every victory.

In my own journey, I have discovered that keeping God at the center requires vigilance. There have been times when the noise of the world tried to drown out His voice. There have been moments when ambition, distraction, or even ministry itself attempted to occupy the throne reserved for Him alone. But God, in His mercy, always calls me back—not with condemnation, but with grace. He reminds me that my purpose is not to be great in the eyes of men, but to be faithful in the presence of my King.

A God-centered life does not happen by accident—it is built intentionally, deliberately, and prayerfully. It is shaped by quiet moments, surrendered hearts, and a longing to please God more than self. And in this daily discipline, we honor the first commandment: “You must not have any other god but me.”

When we fail to keep God as the sole focus of our lives—when we allow other things to take root in our hearts—we must understand that there are real and lasting consequences. Every decision, no matter how small, either brings us closer to God or leads us away from Him. The danger of misplaced devotion is not always immediate or dramatic. Sometimes, it begins with a single compromise, a subtle shift of priorities, a neglected time of prayer, or a heart distracted by worldly gain. But the result, over time, is a slow drift from the very presence of the One who gives life.

Scripture warns us clearly and repeatedly of this spiritual danger. In Exodus 34:14 (NLT), God declares, “You must worship no other gods, for the Lord, whose very name is Jealous, is a God who is jealous about his relationship with you.” That jealousy is not like human envy—it is the holy, righteous zeal of a loving God who refuses to share His glory with idols. He knows that anything we place before Him will ultimately destroy us, because nothing else can sustain us.

When we allow our hearts to serve money, we become consumed by greed and fear of loss. When we chase after power, we are poisoned by pride and a thirst for control. When we seek fame or affirmation from the world, we become slaves to approval and fragile egos. Even seemingly harmless pursuits—such as hobbies, entertainment, or comfort—can, if left unchecked, become idols that lead us into spiritual dullness and distance from God.

The consequences are not merely emotional—they are eternal. A life built around anything but God is a life built on sand. When the storms of trial and hardship come—as they surely will—such a life collapses under the weight of false security. Marriages falter. Relationships fracture. Faith dries up. Joy vanishes. Purpose is lost. And what began as a small decision—to place something else before God—leads to spiritual emptiness and separation.

One poor decision made today may not feel significant, but when repeated tomorrow, and the day after, it becomes a pathway of compromise. Left unchecked, it becomes a lifestyle of disobedience. And the heartbreaking truth is this: many who once walked closely with the Lord are now distant from Him, not because of one great failure, but because of many small choices that placed other “gods” above the One true God.

But thanks be to God—He does not leave us without hope. His Spirit convicts us not to shame us, but to restore us. His grace is still available, and His mercy is new every morning. But we must be willing to see the idols, tear them down, and return to the One who says, “You must not have any other god but me.”

When we choose to give God His rightful place—above all else—we discover that true blessing flows not from abundance, but from alignment. A heart solely devoted to the Lord is not without trials, but it is never without peace. It may face hardship, but it stands firm in hope. It may lose the world, but it gains eternity. The blessings of a God-centered life are not always visible in bank accounts or accolades, but they are deeply rooted in the soul: contentment, direction, joy, and unwavering strength.

To live with undivided devotion is to walk with clarity. No longer are we tossed about by confusion or led astray by the opinions of men. Our purpose becomes clear: to glorify God in every moment, every word, every choice. The heart that belongs entirely to God is no longer cluttered with conflicting loyalties. It has peace because its focus is singular. As Psalm 16:8 (NLT) reminds us, “I know the Lord is always with me. I will not be shaken, for he is right beside me.”

This kind of focused life is what the first pillar of a God-Centered Life demands—a life that says "no" to idols so it can say "yes" to the fullness of God’s presence. It is a life built daily on the solid rock of God’s Word, one decision at a time, one surrendered moment after another.

And now, dear friends, I offer you this call to action:
Take a spiritual inventory today. Look not only at the obvious sins but at the subtle distractions—those creeping idols that rob God of the devotion that belongs to Him alone. Is there something you have placed above the Lord? Is there a habit, a possession, an ambition, or even a fear that has crowded out the majesty of God in your heart? If so, cast it down today. Surrender it. Confess it. Turn away from it.

Let this be the day you declare with renewed fervor: “You must not have any other god but me.” Let God have the throne of your heart without rival. Let your life reflect the first and greatest command: to love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, and all your mind.

So, I say to you, “May the Lord strengthen your faith and use it for His glory, as you walk humbly in His presence.

Saturday, May 17, 2025

📢 Message Announcement – Saturday, May 17, 2025

Dear brothers and sisters in Christ,

I warmly invite you to join me this Sunday at 12 PM (ET) as we open God’s Word together and reflect on the powerful truth found in Exodus 20:3 (NLT) — “You must not have any other god but me.” This message, titled “No Other Gods: The Sole Focus of Our Lives,” will examine the foundational commandment that calls us to undivided devotion and wholehearted worship.

As we revisit the first pillar of a God-Centered Life—The Importance of God and Keeping Him as Your Focus—we will be reminded how easily the things of this world can become idols in our lives. From material possessions and hidden addictions to the constant pursuit of money, power, or approval, anything that takes God's rightful place in our hearts must be surrendered.

This message will challenge and encourage us all to examine our hearts, clear away the distractions, and return to a singular focus: God alone. Please mark your calendar, set a reminder, and most importantly—share this message with your family, friends, and those who may need to hear God’s truth.

Let us remember, even in a world full of noise and idols, the voice of the Lord still calls out: “You must not have any other god but me.”

May we respond with faith, humility, and total devotion.

In His service and grace,
Brother Jesse
Co-founder & Sr. Chaplain
SFIHG Ministries

Friday, May 16, 2025

From the Heart of Brother Jesse – Friday, May 16, 2025 – “Live as One Who is Free”

Dear Friends,

Freedom in Christ is one of the greatest truths of the gospel, and yet many still walk as if they are bound. Paul’s words in Romans 6:14 are clear: “Sin is no longer your master… you live under the freedom of God’s grace.”

Freedom, my friends, is not the right to do whatever we wish. It is the divine gift to live as we ought—to live righteously, to walk in peace, to love sincerely.

When I finally understood that I did not have to obey sin, a burden was lifted. I wasn’t just forgiven—I was free. Free to speak truth. Free to serve. Free to walk in holiness.

So today, live as one who is truly free. Let the world see the joy of grace in your life. Let them see the light of Christ shining from every step you take.

In Christ’s service,
Brother Jesse
Co-founder & Sr. Chaplain
SFIHG Ministries

Thursday, May 15, 2025

From the Heart of Brother Jesse – Thursday, May 15, 2025 – “Grace, Not License”

Dear Friends,

There is a dangerous misunderstanding circulating in many hearts today—the idea that grace permits us to sin because we are no longer under the law. But Paul confronts this head-on in Romans 6:14: “Sin is no longer your master… Instead, you live under the freedom of God’s grace.”

Grace is not moral leniency. It is moral empowerment. It does not whisper excuses; it roars with victory.

When I first grasped the depth of grace, I was brought to tears. Not because it gave me permission to fall, but because it gave me power to stand. We no longer serve sin. We serve a living Savior.

Live boldly under grace today. Walk away from temptation, not because you fear judgment, but because you love the One who has freed you.

In Christ’s service,
Brother Jesse
Co-founder & Sr. Chaplain
SFIHG Ministries