About Pastor Simon Demosthene

As a Haitian-born pastor, Simon Demosthene brings a humble and deeply rooted commitment to pastoral care, Christian education, support for immigrant communities, Haitian diaspora spirituality, visual arts, curriculum design, writing, publishing, community outreach, and cultural preservation. His work grows out of a desire to serve God and people with faithfulness, compassion, and cultural understanding.
Through ministry, education, art, and practical service, he seeks to help churches, families, and communities grow in spiritual clarity, cultural dignity, creativity, resilience, and hope.
Forged in the Shadows, Shaped at the Margins — Trained in the Halls, Sent to the Field
My ministry didn’t begin in places of privilege or power. It started in the unseen corners — struggle, silence, and survival. I was forged in the shadows of adversity and shaped by the realities of life on the margins in Haiti. Every vision begins with a burden. For me, that burden was formed in the context of a humble childhood, where daily life was marked by scarcity, but never without signs of grace. Despite the lack, there were hope-planters: my parents, faithful Sunday school teachers, a fourth-grade teacher who saw beyond my limitations, and neighbors whose quiet acts of kindness created a foundation of encouragement and dignity. Though I was shaped in the shadows, grace opened doors I never imagined—doors that led to academic halls and sacred spaces of spiritual formation. These experiences didn’t erase the past; they gave it purpose. They trained me to think, serve, lead compassionately, and remain grounded in my origins. Now, I walk in the calling I once only sensed in the dark — sent to serve, build, and lift others as I was lifted.


Beyond the Pulpit
Beyond the pulpit, Simon is committed to community empowerment. Through GREMC and related outreach initiatives, he has helped develop programs that serve families, immigrants, youth, and English-isolated residents. These efforts include language learning, health awareness, energy-saving education, youth development, spiritual formation, and creative arts opportunities.

Writing on Faith, Culture, and Spiritual Atmosphere
As an author, Simon writes at the intersection of Christian faith, Afro-Caribbean spirituality, cultural memory, and pastoral discernment. His book The Gods Inside My Brain: How Atmosphere, Spirit, History, and Nature Shape the Mind examines how spiritual atmosphere, family history, nature, trauma, and unseen influences can shape the human mind and life.
In The Age of Ecclesiastical Accusation, he turns his attention to the spiritual dangers that emerge when accusation, false teaching, pride, fear, and manipulation enter the life of the church. Across his writing, Simon combines testimony, theological reflection, cultural analysis, and pastoral concern to help readers discern the forces that shape belief, community, and spiritual identity.


