Today marks the final post of what I consider Phase 3 of this journey.
If you’ve been following along, you know this blog began as a series of scattered reflections; late-night theological wonderings about technology, AI, and faith. But over time, it’s grown into something more structured. More focused. More like a calling.
What started as curiosity has become calling.
What began as commentary is becoming mission.
A Growing Mission
Over the past several months, I’ve written nearly every day, trying to capture not just what I believe, but why it matters right now. Together, we’ve explored:
AI ethics through the lens of Christian grace
End-times prophecy in light of accelerating technology
The spiritual dangers of digital distraction
The nature of the soul and the limits of simulation
The possibility that Jesus could return in a form we might struggle to recognize
I’ve also opened up a bit about my own story. How I moved from skepticism to faith, from doubt to conviction, and how God used the very technologies I once saw as obstacles to draw me back to Himself.
Looking back, I see a thread. A trajectory. A shape.
And I’m ready to follow it into the next chapter.
Slowing Down to Go Deeper
Starting next week, I’ll shift the rhythm of this space. Instead of posting daily, I’ll move to 2–3 posts per week.
Not because the mission is less urgent,
But because it’s too important to rush.
I want to:
Let each post breathe
Avoid overwhelming the ideas, or the reader
Create margin to build something longer-term
Yes, There’s a Book
I haven’t mentioned it yet, but I’ve been working on a book behind the scenes. It’s a natural outgrowth of everything we’ve been wrestling with here:
What does it mean to follow Christ in a world shaped by machines?
This won’t be a greatest-hits remix of blog posts. It’s a deeper dive. A framework for the conversations the Church needs to have as we approach the Singularity, political realignment, and what some believe may be prophetic convergence.
If that sounds bold, it’s because it is.
But we’re living in bold times.
Phase Four Begins
So what comes next?
Phase 4 isn’t just about asking sharper questions. It’s about becoming the kind of people who can answer them faithfully.
We’ll explore:
How do we disciple the next generation when identity itself is under digital assault?
How do we recognize truth in a world shaped by algorithmic distortion?
How do we live as image-bearers of God when artificial images surround us?
How do we prepare spiritually for what is coming, not with fear, but with clarity?
I don’t pretend to have all the answers.
But I believe the Church needs to wrestle with these questions now, not later.
If something I write helps someone return to the Word, see the world more clearly, or remember who they are in Christ, then this mission is worth it.
What to Expect Going Forward
2–3 posts per week, longer and more reflective
Continued focus on faith, prophecy, technology, and discipleship
More audience engagement: comments, Q&A, maybe even video
Occasional behind-the-scenes updates on the book project
The next post will mark the beginning of this new phase. I’m calling it a shift, but maybe it’s better understood as a sharpening.
Less scatter. More sword.
The time for passive observation is over. What’s ahead will challenge our theology, our discipleship, and our imagination. But we do not walk into the future alone. We walk with the Word, with the Spirit, and with each other.
Let’s sharpen the sword.
Phase Four begins now.