The Guardian Foundation

The Guardian Foundation It is a non-governmental, non-profit making Christian organization that exist to create an enabling environment where kids learn, know God and and love Him

14/02/2026

Set me as a seal upon thine heart, as a seal upon thine arm: for love is strong as death…Song of Solomon 8:6. Love is not a passing feeling, it is a seal. In ancient times, a seal marked ownership, protection, and permanence. And here, God paints love as something engraved on the heart, not written in pencil, but pressed in deep. This is not merely romantic poetry; it is a glimpse of divine love. The kind of love that does not fade when feelings fluctuate. The kind that remains when seasons change. The kind that holds fast when everything else lets go. “Love is strong as death.” Death is unavoidable, powerful, undeniable, and Scripture dares to say that real love is just as strong. That is the love God has for each of us. A love that pursued us before we knew Him. A love that refused to let sin have the final word. A love that chose sacrifice over comfort. On Valentine’s Day, beyond flowers and words, the deepest heartbeat truth is this, we are loved with a fierce, covenant-keeping love. And this love calls us higher. To love faithfully. To love purely. To love sacrificially. To place those we cherish as a seal upon our hearts, not casually, not temporarily, but intentionally. Today let us have our hearts rest in this:- You are sealed in love by God Himself. And the love He gives us is strong enough to endure, to forgive, to fight for what is holy, and to last beyond every season. This is the greatest Valentine of all. 💗. All for Jesus.

20/01/2026

Arise, get thee to Zarephath, which belongeth to Zidon, and dwell there: behold, I have commanded a widow woman there to sustain thee. 1 Kings 17:9. Beloveds, in our journey of faith, God often calls us to move before He shows us the means. Notice where the Lord sends His prophet, not to a place of visible abundance, not to a royal storehouse or a wealthy patron. He sends Elijah beyond the familiar, into a region of scarcity, into the unknown. And there, God declares, provision has already been arranged through a widow. A widow. In that time and culture, she represented the margins, one of the most vulnerable. She did not look like provision. Her jar of flour and jug of oil were nearly empty. Yet heaven had already spoken over her home what earth could not yet see.
This is the gracious, surprising way of our God. He wraps His provision in packages the world overlooks. He places His promises in places of apparent weakness. What looks like “less” in human eyes is precisely where He releases “enough” by His Spirit. He is not limited by our shortages, our fragile vessels, or our trembling faith. Elijah did not need abundance to be sustained, he needed alignment. He needed to walk in obedience toward the place God named. The widow did not need a surplus to give, she needed to offer what little she had in trust. And in that sacred intersection of their faithful steps, God’s command became their daily bread.
When God speaks provision, no scarcity can cancel His word. When He ordains sustenance, no earthly lack can hinder it. What He commands, He also supplies.
Perhaps today we feel we are in our own Zarephath, a place of uncertainty, where resources are thin and the way forward is unclear. Or perhaps we feel like the widow, aware of our own limitation, wondering how we could ever be a source of help for anyone else.
Take heart. God is still the God of jars that do not run dry and oil that does not fail. His grace flows where our strength runs out. Our part is not to have it all figured out, but to arise and go where He leads, to offer what we have, and to trust that He has already commanded everything we need for the journey.
We are sustained not by what we see, but by what God has spoken. We are carried not by our own store, but by His faithful command. And in His hands, our little becomes much. Our weakness becomes a vessel for His strength. Our obedience becomes the channel for His miracle. Friends, let us walk in that hope today. He has already gone before us. Less is enough when God is in it. All for Jesus.

17/01/2026

Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth, where moth and rust doth corrupt, and where thieves break through and steal. But lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt, and where thieves do not break through nor steal: Matt. 6:19,20. Jesus speaks these words not as a warning born of fear, but as an invitation born of love. “Do not lay up for yourselves treasures on earth…”Earthly treasures are not condemned because they are evil but because they are fragile. Moth, rust, decay, inflation, illness, time, everything here has an expiration date. Even our best achievements can be forgotten. Even our most guarded possessions can be lost. Jesus is reminding us of a hard truth: what we trust most eventually owns us. When our hearts are tied to earthly treasure, anxiety follows. We worry about losing what we have or never getting enough of it. We measure our worth by what can be seen, counted, or praised. But then Jesus lifts our eyes, “But lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven…” Heavenly treasure cannot be stolen, corrupted, or diminished. Every act of obedience, every quiet prayer, every sacrifice made out of love, every moment of faithfulness when no one is watching, none of it is wasted. Heaven keeps perfect records. Heavenly treasure is built when we choose integrity over convenience, forgive when it costs you pride, we give generously when it stretches our faith, we obey God even when the reward isn’t immediate. These treasures are not abstract, they are eternal investments. Jesus is not asking us to despise the world, but to live with eternal priorities. To hold earthly things loosely and eternal things firmly. To use what we have on earth to glorify God rather than replace Him. Just a few verses later, Jesus says, “For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also. Our hearts always follows our treasure. If our treasure is temporary, our peace will be temporary. If our treasure is eternal, our joy will be unshakable. Heavenly Father, teach me to value what You value. Free my heart from attachment to things that cannot last. Help me invest my life in what matters for eternity. Let my treasure be found in You alone. Friends you are welcome to make the same prayer with me this morning. All for Jesus.

09/01/2026

Give, and it shall be given unto you; good measure, pressed down, and shaken together, and running over, shall men give into your bosom. For with the same measure that ye mete withal it shall be measured to you again.Lk 6:38. Jesus did not begin this verse with a promise, He began with a posture. “Give.” Not invest. Not lend. Not wait until you have extra but simply, give. Giving in the Kingdom of God is never first about money; it is about trust. It is the outward evidence that the heart believes God is enough. When Jesus speaks of giving, He is addressing a life that is open handed rather than clenched, generous rather than guarded, surrendered rather than self protective. The imagery He uses is intentional and deeply cultural. In ancient marketplaces, grain was poured into a container. A dishonest merchant would pour loosely. An honest one would press it down, shake it together, and then keep pouring until it overflowed. Jesus is saying, This is how heaven responds to a generous heart. Notice something powerful: Jesus does not say “God will give into your bosom.” He says, “men shall give into your bosom.” Why? Because God often uses human channels to deliver divine supply. A generous life attracts God’s favour expressed through people, opportunities, relationships, and provision we could never orchestrate ourselves. But there is a deeper truth still. The measure we use determines not whether we receive, but how we receive. If we give cautiously, we receive cautiously. If we give sparingly, we receive sparingly. If we give joyfully, freely, and sacrificially, we receive in ways that overflow beyond our original expectation. This is not a transaction, it is a principle of alignment. Giving aligns our hearts with God’s nature, because God is a Giver. The moment we give, we step into His flow. And here is the holy paradox. When we give to get, we limit the harvest. When we give because we trust God, the harvest pursues us. God is not trying to take something from us. He is trying to get something through you. A clenched hand cannot receive. An open hand never lacks. Now the questions are: What measure do we currently use when weI give, fear, calculation, or faith? Is there an area where God is inviting us to loosen our grip and trust Him more? Do we see giving as loss or as participation in God’s abundance? Our heavenly Father, free my heart from fear and scarcity. Teach me to give as You give, freely, joyfully, and in faith. I choose to trust You as my Source, not my circumstances. Let my life be a channel of blessing, and align me with Your abundance. Friends will you join me in the same prayer? We never outgive God. We only discover how faithful He really is. Let’s give when we have opportunity and watch heaven measure back in overflow. All for Jesus.

05/01/2026

We would like to sincerely thank everyone who partnered with and shared with Guardian Foundation over the past year. Your generosity, prayers, and support have made a meaningful impact in the lives of the children and communities we serve. We are deeply grateful for your commitment, and we look forward to a continued partnership as together we shape the future of children, bringing hope, opportunity, and lasting transformation to their lives.

Merry Christmas!!!
24/12/2025

Merry Christmas!!!

Wishing you all a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year
27/12/2024

Wishing you all a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year

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P. O. Box 1924
Ruiru
00232

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