For the man who is considering applying, this is what is waiting for you on day five. For the wife, child, or pastor who sent this, this is who comes home. For the man who has already applied, this is where it leads.
What is the Covenant
The full daily schedule is provided after acceptance and enrollment. What follows is the arc the movement every man makes from who he arrives as to who he leaves as.
Phone surrendered at intake. The first breath without the device. First introductions in the cohort — the room of men who will know his full story before he leaves. The performance stops here. The forge begins with the first honest answer to the first honest question.
The PURPOSE cornerstone. Who did God make him? What has he been building, and for whom? The gap between his identity in Christ and his identity in his company is surfaced — and the PATH to closing it begins.
AUTHORITY (how he leads his family) and TENACITY (how he treats the body God gave him). The hardest day for most men. What has his family been living with while he was at work? What has he let go that belongs to God? This is often the day that breaks a man open — and builds something better inside him.
HONOR (how he conducts his business before God) and the forging of the brotherhood that will hold him for life. The mission statement begins to take shape. The men in the room stop being strangers and become brothers, the men who will hold the standard with him long after Montana.
The day everything he has faced becomes who he is now. Personal mission statement delivered. Brotherhood pod assigned. Graduation gifts presented. Commission enrolled. A commissioned Battleworn man walks out of Montana different, not because he was inspired, but because he was changed.
What every man receives at graduation
Everything issued during the Convergence belongs to the man who received it. He leaves with what he was given including what no gear bag can hold.
The commissioning ceremony on day five is not a graduation party. It is a charge. Every man who stands in that room has been through the same fire, knows the same truth about himself, and is being sent out under the same standard.
He does not leave Montana as the man who arrived. He leaves as a commissioned Battleworn man with a mission, a brotherhood, and a standard that does not expire.
Every man stands and reads his personal mission statement written over the five days, refined in the fire. The purpose God gave him, spoken out loud for the first time, in the presence of brothers who will hold him to it.
The cohort stands together. The standards are spoken. The charge is given. Once a Battleworn man, always a Battleworn man. This is not a motivational moment. It is a commissioning.
Everything issued over the five days plus graduation gifts is formally presented. What a man carries out of Montana is not just gear. It is the physical representation of what he surrendered, what he faced, and who he became.
Brotherhood pods are announced, the small group of brothers from the cohort who will be his primary accountability for life. Commission enrollment is complete. The forge is not over. It is permanent.
The last act. The phone comes back to a man who no longer needs it the same way. Most men say the first thing they do is call their wife. Then they go home.