Founder / CEO Lendio (largest SMB loan originator in U.S.), Husband, Father of 4, Member of Church of Jesus Christ of LDS, Bishop @ BYU 🙏🏽, & avid BYU fan

Joined August 2007
196 Photos and videos
Brock Blake retweeted
Sometimes the Lord asks us to step into responsibilities that feel bigger than we are. In those moments, I treasure the counsel, “Trust in the Lord” (Proverbs 3:5–6) and the Savior’s promise, “Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you” (John 15:16). When you feel you are not good enough for the task you have been called to do, remember: The Lord’s confidence gives you the ability to boldly move ahead. President Thomas S. Monson taught, “Whom the Lord calls, the Lord qualifies.” Trust in the Lord. Offer what you have and let Him make it perfect. Move forward with humility and courage. He will strengthen your works and magnify your consecrated efforts.
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We got you @erc95. Plans install are in the works. They’ll be located right next to the J-Dawgs, Cubby’s, Zupas development.
Jan 12
If there was a Tesla supercharger station on Lehi, Utah then @elonmusk would triple his net worth 👀🙏🏻😂
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28 Dec 2025
This! 🙏🏽
If you’re struggling right now in any way, skip the life hacks for a minute. Go to church this Sunday. Even if you don’t normally go. Even if you’re “spiritual not religious.” Even if you have PTSD from the religious boredom of church as a kid. Just go sit in the back row and be still for an hour. Almost everything in your life right now is optimized for production or consumption. Slack, spreadsheets, TikTok, email, sales calls. All output and input. Almost nothing is sacred, quiet, or unmonetized. Church is one of the last places left that isn’t trying to sell you something or steal your attention. It’s an hour built around the idea that you are more than your revenue, or your value. It's one of the few places where the only goal is to confess your flaws, let them go and have some faith. It's a place that will welcome everyone, even and maybe especially if you hate yourself right now. Sit, stand, sing, or just listen. Let someone read words that have outlived every empire and every market cycle. Let your brain remember: money is a tool, not a god. You are not the sole author of your story. You’ll walk back out into the same world, same problems, same bank account, but it will feel a little less loud and a little less about you. That’s insanely useful if you’re carrying heavy stuff right now. Tomorrow, you can go back to your problems. Today, give yourself permission to just be a human. If things are brutal right now, consider this your permission slip: Close the laptop. Go to church. Let God be bigger than your to‑do list for one hour.
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20 Dec 2025
😱😱😱
20 Dec 2025
AJ DYBANTSA DUNK OF THE YEAR CANDIDATE 🤯
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17 Dec 2025
Locked in? Or oblivious?! 😂😂 Maybe a little bit of both! 🤷🏽‍♂️
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Following the tragic shooting targeting the Jewish Community in Sydney, Australia, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has issued the following statement: We are deeply saddened by the tragedy that took place in Sydney targeting people of faith as they gathered. We condemn, and feel acutely the pain of, such a senseless act and mourn with our brothers and sisters in the Jewish community around the world. May we all come together in peace and love to comfort those in need. As followers of Jesus Christ, we look to His example and pray that His love will soften hearts and inspire harmony and compassion during this holy season. newsroom.churchofjesuschrist…
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10 Dec 2025
🤯😲🙌🏽💙🤙🏾🔥
WINNER WINNER 🤫 📺 ESPN
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This is my governor 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
This is absolutely the right move. Getting embarrassed in a bowl game against BYU would be really hard on the program. Much smarter to avoid playing tough teams so you can keep your brand intact.
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3 Dec 2025
#11 BYU is the lowest ranked 11-1 power conference team at the end of the regular season in CFP history. Every other 11-1 power conference team since 2014 was ranked in the Top 10.
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Brock Blake retweeted
3 Dec 2025
If you're going to penalize a 1-loss Power Conference team for a weak strength of schedule... BYU's SOS is better than Ole Miss and Notre Dame. If you're going to penalize a team for not having the strongest power ratings (which incorporate prior year's history and recruiting rankings)... BYU's FPI is higher than Oklahoma's. If you're going to penalize a team for a non-competitive / bad loss... Alabama lost by 14 to a team with a losing record and Miami lost to two unranked teams. If you're going to use strength-of-record like you indicated you would, BYU's SOR is the second highest of teams 6-12. BYU also (1) made its conference championship game and (2) if you sum up the wins of the teams it has beaten, it is THIRD in the country. It is hard to win games and BYU has beaten a lot of teams with a lot of wins. This. Makes. No. Sense. The @CFBPlayoff should be ashamed of itself. It has literally contorted itself into a pretzel to avoid putting BYU where it should be ranked (somewhere between 6th - 9th). RT to get the info out there. They need to feel pressure.
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Brock Blake retweeted
65 independent computer systems collectively say that BYU is the SEVENTH best team in the nation… Meanwhile some argue that the Big12 is a 1-bid league & tout 7 diff SEC teams being CFP worthy If the CFP committee keeps BYU underrated at #11 the system is broken/rigged
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Brock Blake retweeted
the numbers speak for themselves.
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Brock Blake retweeted
How tough was Texas A&M's SEC schedule? The Aggies' SEC gauntlet: 7 wins vs. teams w/losing SEC records, a combined 11-41 4 wins vs. teams that fired coaches in season 1 loss to a team w/winning SEC record
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Brock Blake retweeted
29 Nov 2025
New résumé comparison 📊 BYU: • 2-1 vs. current Top 25 • 6 wins over bowl eligible teams • Best win: #12 Utah • Lost to #5 Texas Tech on the road Texas A&M: • 1-1 vs. current Top 25 • 5 wins over bowl eligible teams • Best win: #9 ND • Lost to #16 Texas on the road
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Brock Blake retweeted
It’s all about the facts when it comes to this CFP resume.
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Brock Blake retweeted
A couple who survived being shot at their Grand Blanc @Ch_JesusChrist meetinghouse in September tried to enjoy a @BYUfootball game this weekend, just a few hours from home, when their sense of security slipped away again as parts of the crowd chanted, “F- the Mormons.” On Facebook, Brandi Hicken wrote that she and her husband, Jared, “got to sneak away this weekend for a much-needed date night” at the BYU–Cincinnati game. She said they hoped for a night where “the attack is not at the forefront of our minds for once.” Instead, the trip became an emotional reminder of the hate that took the lives of four members of their congregation two months ago. Last month, the FBI said the attack on the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints meetinghouse in Grand Blanc was motivated by “anti-religious beliefs” toward the faith. The gunman, Thomas Jacob Sanford, 40, rammed his truck into the building during Sunday services, opened fire and set parts of the church on fire. He was killed by responding law enforcement. Jared and Brandi Hicken were among the survivors. Jared, a native of Roosevelt, Utah, and a fourth-year chief emergency medicine resident and BYU grad, helped other victims after being shot in the leg. Their 5-year-old daughter, Piper, was also hit, and Brandi suffered shrapnel wounds as she carried their two youngest children to safety. “Jared took a bullet to the leg. My 5-year-old took one right in the middle of her back,” she wrote shortly after the shooting. Doctors later determined Piper’s wound was more superficial than they first feared, likely caused when a bullet ricocheted before hitting her. Brandi said she didn’t realize she had been hurt until the adrenaline wore off and she saw blood on her dress. Now physically recovered, the couple drove to the BYU–Cincinnati game hoping for a break from the anxiety that has followed them for two months. Brandi said the chants from portions of the Cincinnati crowd left her shaken. On Monday, Cincinnati athletic director John Cunningham issued a public apology to BYU and to members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. “The use of offensive or religiously derogatory language by a group of fans during Saturday’s game was unacceptable and does not reflect our values,” Cunningham posted to X. “We remain committed to creating an environment at Nippert Stadium where every visiting team and its supporters are treated with dignity and respect.” Brandi shared the letter she sent to Cunningham describing how the chant affected her as a survivor of a religiously motivated attack. The full letter: “Dear Mr. Cunningham, I am writing to you from my heart as a disheartened college football fan. More specifically, as a BYU football fan and member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints commonly know as “the Mormons.” As a BYU alumni and huge fans of college football, my husband and I took the opportunity to travel 4.5 hours from our little city in Grand Blanc, Michigan to come spectate and enjoy our favorite pass time at the BYU vs. Cincinnati football game at Nippert Stadium last night. I want to provide a little bit of background for you in order to portray the strength and courage it took for us to travel to this event and really try to enjoy ourselves. You see, just eight short weeks ago, while attending church, we were attacked at our place of worship simply for being “Mormon.” Someone with hatred in their heart rammed their truck into the front of our church building, entered the chapel, and began shooting us and setting our church on fire while many people were still hiding inside. As my family (me, my husband, and our three young children), ran for our lives, my husband and my 5-year-old daughter were both shot. I was also running with my 15 month old baby and my 3 year old in my arms as I was struck in my back with shrapnel. I will spare you any further details about the nightmare we lived through that day and the recovery that has followed, but miraculously, me and my family all made it out alive. The anxiety and fear we have felt since that day has been debilitating. We have put in a lot of work in that short 8 weeks so we can try to feel some sort of safety and normalcy again and enjoy the things we used to, including football games. We had been planning to come see this game for months as we don’t get the opportunity to see many BYU games in person since we moved across the country for my husband’s medical training. We almost didn’t come because it felt scary and overwhelming since the attack on our church. However, we know we cannot live in fear and we need to enjoy the things that used to make us happy. We decided to come and that took a lot for us both mentally and physically. I was nervous putting on my BYU fan gear that day because I knew it would identify me as one of ”the Mormons.” I did it anyway. I was apprehensive when I walked down to my seat and saw that the nearest exit was pretty far from me. I continued to my seat anyway. We came. We smiled. We cheered. We enjoyed ourselves….Until the University of Cincinnati fans began to chant “F** the Mormons.”* This is not a new chant. This is not a chant that is specific to your university. This is a chant I’ve heard before while enjoying a football game whether in-person or on tv. It’s always disheartening to hear. However, now that we Mormons have been quite literally targeted, attacked, chased, shot at, and some of us have been killed simply for being “Mormon,” this chant is no longer just disheartening. It’s crippling. It’s personal. It’s unacceptable. Period. While I did hear the announcer give a warning over the speakers at the game that such chants will not be tolerated, it was simply just that- a warning. It was not just a few fans, it was tens, possibly hundreds of the university’s student fans chanting “F** the Mormons.”* Please, Mr. Cunningham, do not tolerate it. Remove them from the game. Don’t let them come back. Educate them on the seriousness of their actions. Set that standard and expectation moving forward and enforce it. We are hurting. Badly. We just want to enjoy the things that make us happy again without the fear of being targeted and attacked for our religious beliefs. I know you have no control over the Cincy fans on the shuttle after the game ranting about Mormons and how awful we are and how we must have just paid off the refs because we’re corrupt and evil. I don’t get it, but I am used to it. It’s not new to me to hear this stuff and these huge misconceptions about my faith. But now it is personal. Now it is me fearing for my life everywhere I go because someone decided to take it there. Someone tried to kill me, my kids, and my husband. Someone killed 4 of my friends. Now the chanting means something more than it used to. I know you can’t control the actions and words of the fans on the bus. However, I do believe you have the ability to get control of the students’ hurtful and hateful chanting. If you made it this far, thank you for listening. If I am mistaken about any actions that were or were not taken as a result of the chanting, please feel free to correct me. I would welcome the reassurance. Sincerely, Brandi Hicken A fellow college football fan A Mormon A Christian A mass casualty hate crime survivor A human deserving of respect”
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23 Nov 2025
Let’s Go Cougs!! 🙌🏽🏆⚽️💙
Still on Top
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21 Nov 2025
So excited about this! As my role as Bishop of a BYU freshman ward, I’ve already had several 18 year old young women reach out this morning to get their missionary applications started! 🙌🏽😁
🔗: bit.ly/4rbE6KY Young women who want to serve as missionaries for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints can now serve at age 18, the Church announced on Friday, Nov. 21. According to the statement: “The First Presidency is pleased to announce that effective immediately, young women who choose to serve a full-time mission may begin their service at age 18 following graduation from high school or its equivalent. “While the Lord asks every worthy, able young man as part of his priesthood responsibility to prepare for and serve a mission, we reiterate that missionary service remains an optional opportunity for young women. We recognize that for those young women who desire to serve a full-time mission, the choice of age to begin service will not be the same for everyone. “We extend our love to the youth of the Church and commend them for their faithfulness.” Read more in the link above. 📸: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
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The First Presidency is pleased to announce that effective immediately, young women who choose to serve a full-time mission may begin their service at age 18 following graduation from high school or its equivalent. While the Lord asks every worthy, able young man as part of his priesthood responsibility to prepare for and serve a mission, we reiterate that missionary service remains an optional opportunity for young women. We recognize that for those young women who desire to serve a full-time mission, the choice of age to begin service will not be the same for everyone. We extend our love to the youth of the Church and commend them for their faithfulness. newsroom.churchofjesuschrist…
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