"I looked for someone to stand in the gap on behalf of the land… but I found no one."
— Ezekiel 22:30
I've always been a builder. Whether it was systems, businesses, or people, I've been wired to see what's exposed and want to fortify it. I'm naturally more comfortable doing the work than talking about it, but over time God made it clear that silence wasn't an option — not when responsibility was involved. Strength, I've learned, needs structure. Safe spaces only work when they're built on solid foundations.
God didn't call me to start another men's ministry. He called me to raise watchmen — spiritual sentinels who refuse to be silent when the enemy advances. Men who stand in gaps, guard what matters, and reclaim their role as priests of their households.
And I'll be honest — I'm building this because I needed it too.
I know what it's like to carry weight quietly. To lead, build, and show up while still feeling the absence of real brotherhood. I didn't need more noise or surface-level fellowship. I needed men who would actually stand with me — men submitted to God, devoted to prayer, honest about the fight, and willing to stay on the wall when it gets uncomfortable. I also believe brotherhood doesn't have to be stiff or performative. Men should be able to work hard, pray seriously, laugh freely, and fight together without pretending.
Division One was born from that tension.
This is a place where men are known, not just noticed. Where accountability feels like protection, not exposure. Where iron sharpens iron without competition or posturing. It is a safe space with solid foundations, built for men who want to grow stronger in the spirit and steadier in the natural.
The Watchmen is a prophetic mandate — not about programs, platforms, or performance, but about real transformation. The kind that happens when men receive heaven's instruction, reject passivity, and rise together.
I'm a builder of men and a king-maker by conviction. I believe men are meant to rule well — with wisdom, restraint, and strength — starting in their own homes. But no watchman was ever meant to stand alone.
That's why we're building walls city-to-city across Hampton Roads. Not monuments. Brotherhoods. The kind we all needed before we knew how to ask for them.
The call is clear.
The gap is real.
And none of us were meant to stand in it alone.