She implemented a "Zero Compromise" policy. Women in her church wore skirts below the knee; men were expected to be providers. These strict standards drew criticism from liberal Christians who called her legalistic. However, members of IGRC often testified that the structure saved their lives.
Lee’s greatest joy was baptism. She would often hold mass baptisms in freezing rivers or portable tanks on the hot Vegas asphalt. For her, the keyword was inseparable from the act of immersion—dying to the old self. The Cancer Battle: Preaching Through Pain In 2019, Jessie Lee received a devastating diagnosis: Stage 4 colon cancer. For most, this would have been a moment to retire, to soften. For Lee, it became the final pulpit. jessie lee
Rather than hiding her illness, she documented her chemotherapy, her weight loss, and her pain on social media. She continued to preach via livestream from her hospital bed. In one of her most viewed videos, a gaunt but fiery Jessie Lee looked into the camera and said, “Cancer is not a curse; it is a chariot. If I die, I win. If I live, I preach. You cannot lose when you are in Christ.” She implemented a "Zero Compromise" policy