
If you’re interesting in taking the fight to the next level, shoot me a message and we will get you started. There’s no fees, no franchising, no shell game. We connect with other people of the light to affect change. Period.
So, you want to start a Hub? Well, what do you do?
First off, a Hub is a living outpost of the Light — a self-sustaining, community-driven cell of The People’s Revival.
It isn’t a “church,” a “club,” or a “campus.” It’s a base of operations for mercy, justice, and mutual aid.
Each Hub exists to:
Reclaim abandoned places of empire — homes, hearts, and neighborhoods neglected by the system. Redistribute power and resources — directly, not through bureaucratic charity. Build solidarity among the working class, the poor, the outcast, and the spiritually exiled. Train People of the Light to live truth in public — to feed, heal, protect, and expose corruption wherever it hides.
A Hub is a front line, not a sanctuary.
It’s where people learn, labor, and live the Light together.
Principle: The Ground Rules of a Hub
No Lords, No Ladders. Leadership is based on who you want to lead. Teachings are done and stand or fall by anointing, if you are equipped to teach, teach.
Every person brings gifts; no one owns the pulpit.
The Table Before the Pulpit. Shared meals and shared burdens come before teaching. We eat together before we speak together.
No Money Without Mission. Funds go straight to tangible need — rent relief, food, repairs, transport, medical aid. Transparency is non-negotiable.
Faith Is Proven by Flesh. The Light is visible through labor, not talk. Every Hub has an action rhythm: feed, build, heal, teach, repeat.
The Gospel Belongs to the Streets. Gatherings must always have a public face — open forums, outreach nights, or street-level action.
Stand-Out Truth
Wherever the Light gathers, empire trembles.
A Hub is a threat precisely because it heals what institutions profit from breaking.
The church industrial complex sells performance. The Hub practices resurrection.
The state sells dependency. The Hub practices solidarity.
The market sells distraction. The Hub practices focus.
Every act of collective good — every meal shared, every worker defended, every child clothed — is a spiritual assault on darkness.
Call to Action: How to Launch a New Hub
1. Scout the Territory
Walk the neighborhood. Talk to people — not with a clipboard, but with your ears open. Identify what’s broken and who’s already doing something about it. Make friends with baristas, bartenders, mechanics, single moms, veterans, addicts, workers — the real congregation of Christ.
2. Gather the Core
Start with 2-5 People of the Light who share the fire. Commit to a rhythm: weekly open-table meals, biweekly planning, monthly outreach. Read from Mark and pray aloud in plain speech — no religious theater.
3. Claim a Space
Use what’s available: a living room, garage, public park, old storefront, or foreclosed home. The Hub’s power comes from visibility — occupy without apology.
4. Launch Publicly
Hold a “People’s Night.” Food, music, testimony, call to action. Tell the truth: what this is, who it’s for, what it’s not. Collect needs and resources that night — post them publicly for accountability.
5. Begin the Work
First week: feed the hungry.
Second week: fix something broken.
Third week: teach something useful.
Fourth week: gather the people again and tell what the Light has done. Repeat the cycle monthly.
Practical Suggestions
Use a mutual aid ledger (visible to all members). Record stories of transformation — not testimonials for branding, but archives of truth.
Form direct lines of defense: if one member faces eviction, job loss, or abuse, the Hub responds collectively.
Partner only with those who share your ethics of transparency and redistribution.
End every meeting with this question: “Who around us still sits in darkness — and what will we do about it this week?”
Closing Charge
“The Light does not beg for permission to shine.”
When you start a Hub, you’re not founding an organization.
You’re lighting a fire in the ruins.
You’re proving that the kingdom still belongs to the poor, the meek, and the merciful.
Let’s do this thing.
