St. John the Apostle – The Anchor Strategist
Born: c. 6 AD, Bethsaida, Galilee
Died: c. 100 AD, Ephesus, Asia Minor
Age at Death: ~94
Feast Day: December 27
Patronage: Writers, theologians, friendships, Asia Minor
Legacy
St. John the Apostle was the youngest disciple, the beloved insider, and the last man standing. While others were martyred in fire and fury, John endured—writing, watching, and anchoring the early Church with quiet resilience. He authored the Gospel of John, three epistles, and the Book of Revelation, offering both mystical insight and tactical endurance. His legacy is one of spiritual longevity, visionary restraint, and sacred timing.
Why He Belongs in Saints & Sinners
John didn’t rush the mission—he outlived it. He held the line while others broke it, choosing silence over spectacle and vision over velocity. He’s the strategist you call when the fire’s burned out, the leaders are gone, and someone needs to write the next chapter with clarity and calm.
Tactical Profile
- Fixer Archetype: Long-Term Seer
- Modern Role: Vision architect for mission-drifting founders and fatigued spiritual operators
- Key Moves:
- Waited while others burned
- Wrote Revelation in silence
- Modeled sacred rest without retreat
Plug-In Principles
- Velocity without direction is collapse
- Pausing is not weakness—it’s precision
- The ship that passed you might be headed for the wrong port
Metaphor: His exile was his observatory.
Quote: “You’ll catch the ship—if it’s the right ship. And if it’s not, thank God you stopped.”
Jason Bresnehan
Jason is a fixer—of businesses, of broken momentum, and occasionally of entire spiritual frameworks gone sideways. He speaks fluent boardroom and AA, deploys Catholic doctrine with the subtlety of a scalpel, and isn’t afraid to lace his insights with both war-room metaphors and dad-sermon tenderness.
Founder of Evahan, a consultancy built on the idea that legacy and liquidity don’t need to fight, Jason draws on 30 years of commercial grit, tactical leadership, and emotional radar to help people rebuild what entropy took. He works with companies, communities, and recovery misfits alike—often using the same principles to sort both cap tables and chaotic lives.
Jason draws deep inspiration from historical figures who got results—especially those who led from the margins, built with scarce resources, and refused to be shackled by conventional wisdom. He’s known for assembling unorthodox teams of passionate experts to solve complex problems in chaotic environments. Whether in boardrooms, recovery communities, or legacy disputes, Jason’s approach is rooted in common purpose, tactical innovation, and the belief that clarity thrives when paradigms are challenged.