© Rex Alan Davis 2026 – All Rights Reserved
The Four Fires Tribe
The Four Fires Tribe is a Christian nonprofit focused on helping men live intentionally and fully—spiritually, relationally, physically, and professionally. Their aim is simple but demanding: to equip men to become the kind of leaders their families, churches, and communities need.
At the heart of Four Fires is a practical metaphor. Each day, every man is given an armful of “logs”—his time, energy, and resources. The question isn’t whether those logs will be spent, but where. Four Fires exists to help men place those logs wisely, building lives marked by strength, clarity, and lasting impact.
The “four fires” represent four essential areas of life that must be tended together.
The Purpose Fire centers on a man’s relationship with God. It asks foundational questions about identity, meaning, and eternity, and invites men to live from a deep sense of peace rooted in who they are as sons of God. This fire shapes the motive behind every other area of life.
The People Fire focuses on relationships—marriage, family, and authentic friendships with other men. It emphasizes homes marked by strength rather than stress, leadership expressed through love and responsibility, and the kind of brotherhood where men are truly known and sharpen one another.
The Physical Fire is about honoring God with the body. It encourages discipline, self-control, and stewardship of health—not for vanity, but so men can serve well, work hard, and remain present for the people who depend on them.
The Professional Fire addresses vocation, work, and provision. It helps men identify how God has gifted them, pursue excellence in their craft, provide responsibly for their families, and live generously. This fire recognizes that work and money are deeply spiritual matters, shaping both character and influence.
Four Fires teaches that when these four areas are developed together, men are able to give out of strength rather than depletion. And when men live this way, the effects ripple outward—changing family trees, strengthening churches, shaping workplaces, and renewing communities.
Four Fires is not about quick fixes or destinations. It’s a journey—one meant to be lived day by day and decade by decade. Rex supports and serves alongside this work because it aligns closely with his own conviction: that lives, like stories, must be stewarded well to leave a lasting legacy.
For those interested in learning more or taking next steps, Four Fires offers resources and pathways designed to help men begin—and continue—their journey toward becoming four-dimensional men.