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Faith, Focus, and Fulfillment: How Holistic Mentorship and Professional Coaching is Transforming Today's Leaders

Rise Up Kings was founded by Skylar Lewis, a dedicated man of faith. Rise Up Kings specifically focuses on helping men level up in the RUK 4 Pillars: Faith, Family, Fitness, and Finance. Rise Up Ki...

Faith, Focus, and Fulfillment: How Holistic Mentorship and Professional Coaching is Transforming Today's Leaders

In Dallas, Rise Up Kings is doing the kind of patient, relational work that produces real community change - not single interventions, but the steady, year-after-year presence that builds trust and shifts outcomes.

Why This Matters Now

Nonprofits and community organizations remain the backbone of how American communities solve problems too large for any single household and too local for federal programs to address efficiently. The U.S. nonprofit sector employs roughly 10 percent of the private workforce and contributes more than $1 trillion to the economy each year - but its real impact shows up in outcomes that don't fit on a balance sheet: housing stability, child welfare, civil rights, economic mobility, and dignity for people on the margins.

Generational change rarely comes from a single big intervention - it comes from organizations that show up year after year, build trust in the communities they serve, and connect the dots between housing, education, healthcare, legal protection, and economic opportunity. The strongest community organizations measure success not just by services delivered but by whether the people they serve regain stability, agency, and the capacity to help others.

Inside the Work: Rise Up Kings

Rise Up Kings was founded by Skylar Lewis, a dedicated man of faith. Rise Up Kings specifically focuses on helping men level up in the RUK 4 Pillars: Faith, Family, Fitness, and Finance. Rise Up Kings has now evolved into one of the fastest-growing Christian business training programs in the country.

What separates effective community organizations from well-meaning ones is rarely budget or branding - it is proximity. The groups that produce real change live alongside the people they serve, hear about problems before they show up in data, and adapt programs in real time. That granular, relational work doesn't scale glamorously, but it is what actually moves the needle.

What That Looks Like in Practice

It is a movement of men who are committed to becoming the best husbands, fathers, business owners, and men of faith on this planet. It has become a hub of successful Christian men who live intentional and abundant lives. There has been such a strong demand from women who also want to develop and tap into their God-given femininity, that Jessica Lewis, Skylar Lewis's wife of many years, launched Rise Up Queens.

Who This Is For

Anyone who has wondered what a single donation, a few volunteer hours, or a sustained commitment can actually accomplish will find concrete answers here. The work is rooted in Dallas, but the lessons - about how change really happens at the community level - are portable to any community.

Frequently Asked Questions

How can I tell whether a nonprofit is actually effective?

Look at outcomes, not just activities. Strong nonprofits publish annual impact reports, articulate a clear theory of change, are transparent about overhead, and accept independent third-party review. GuideStar, Charity Navigator, and ProPublica's Nonprofit Explorer all let you check financials and track records.

What's the most useful thing I can give a nonprofit - money, time, or attention?

Unrestricted financial support is almost always the most useful single contribution because it lets the organization deploy resources where they're most needed. Skilled volunteering - legal, financial, design, technical - is the next-most-valuable form of help.

How do small, local nonprofits compete with large national ones?

Local organizations win on trust and relationships. They know the families by name, understand local context that national funders can't see, and adapt faster. Most national funders increasingly look for proven local partners rather than building parallel infrastructure.

Key Takeaways

  • Lasting community change comes from consistent local organizations, not single interventions.
  • Trust and relationships are the real currency of effective nonprofit work.
  • Unrestricted giving and skilled volunteering are the highest-leverage forms of support.
  • Outcomes - not activities - are the right way to evaluate impact.

Watch the Full Segment

Watch the full Be The Change segment on The Balancing Act on Lifetime to see the work in action - and consider what role you might play in supporting it.

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