real people making
REAL IMPACT
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For Todd Stewart, experiencing generosity began at a young age when he encountered a pastor who taught him how to share his faith clearly and courageously. That early discipleship gave him a heart for evangelism— and over time, God turned that heart into a life that truly Gives Generously.
From Salvation to Stewardship
As Todd took the reins of his father’s logistics company, he sensed a calling to a very different type of ministry. One that would occur inside the business.
As he lived out his faith and shared it openly, the culture shifted from one of non-believers to a place of discipleship, prayer, and spiritual growth. Todd’s leadership wasn’t just about profit, it was about people meeting Christ. He even had the privilege of leading his own father to faith in Jesus before his dad passed away in 2017.
Delivering Hope, One Story at a Time
As he processed the loss of his dad along with the growth and unexpected sale of his business, he sensed God asking him to put it all on paper. The result is a book that exposes what was really going on behind the scenes— spiritually, personally and professionally. A written account of God’s faithfulness through difficult seasons.
Todd knows many leaders struggle with what comes after a business sale or major transition. His story offers both a testimony and a roadmap, helping them discern their own next assignment with God.
After selling his company, Todd sensed a clear call not to retire from ministry, but to expand it. He created Hope Legacy Collective to help catalyze and multiply gospel-centered organizations. HCL helps connect ministries, foundations, and leaders by creating networks where resources and opportunities can fl ow more freely to increase Kingdom impact locally and nationally.
What It Means to Give Generously
In Todd Stewart, we see that giving generously isn’t a moment—it’s a posture. It’s surrendering your story, your business, your wealth, and your future to the Lord and trusting Him to use it all to deliver hope. Selling his business wasn’t an end. It was a springboard into deeper discipleship, greater generosity, and even wider evangelism.

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Building Ramps Shaping lives
When you ask Tom Comstock about volunteering, he doesn’t talk about ministry or legacy; he simply shrugs and says, “This is just what people ought to do.”
For more than two decades, Tom has spent countless weekends organizing teams to build wheelchair ramps for people who can’t safely get in and out of their homes, including one recent project for a woman who lost both of her legs and could no longer access her home. In about four to five hours, Tom’s crew gave her something priceless: independence and dignity.
A Calling Beyond The Empty Nest
Tom’s journey started at his home church, where he volunteered for years with the youth group, working on repairing homes and building ramps once a year. But once a year wasn’t enough.
Tom and the youth minister asked each other, what if we did this year- round? That simple question led them to partner with the Texas Ramp Project and later The Restoration Team, building about five to six ramps a year—sometimes as many as eight or nine.
Even after his own kids graduated from the youth group, Tom didn’t see a reason to stop. The joy for him wasn’t
just in the finished ramps; it was in watching the students grow—learning to use tools, to work as a team, and, most importantly, to see a side of Houston that looks very different from their own neighborhoods. Those ramps became classrooms for life skills, compassion and perspective.
What It Means to Give Generously
For Tom, generosity looks like connecting the dots—churches, nonprofits, volunteers, and families in crisis—and making sure no one falls through the cracks just because funding is tight or attention has shifted to the next disaster.
His life is a powerful reminder that when generosity becomes a way of life, ramps get built, communities are restored, faith is strengthened, and future generations learn what it looks like to love their neighbors well. That is Give Generously lived out —in lumber, in sweat, and in lives radically changed.
