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What Might Be The Best Way I Can Serve God

Building discipleship infrastructure could be my highest and best use

I've been around enough billionaires to know they're slaves. I've advised the Vatican on AI strategy. I've helped launch tech companies and movements across four continents.

But here's what I'm realizing: most of my work has been building temporary things for temporary people with temporary problems.

Discipleship infrastructure is different. It's building systems that help people choose eternal life over eternal separation from God. That's not temporary work.

I'm uniquely positioned for this in ways that feel almost designed by God himself.

My great-grandfather was a pastor in China during persecution. My parents fled Communist oppression. I was born because of Tiananmen Square political asylum. My family story is literally about faith surviving systems designed to destroy it.

I came to faith through Kanye's music in 2021. Since then, I've built relationships across every major Christian denomination—Catholic, Orthodox, Protestant, LDS. Most people pick a team. I somehow ended up with access to all of them.

That's not normal. And it's not accidental.

When denominations fight each other, Satan wins. When they share infrastructure without compromising theology, the gospel spreads faster than any of them could manage alone.

Think about it: A Baptist church in rural Alabama and a Catholic school in Manila both need legal templates for educational institutions. They both need technology platforms for community building. They both need funding mechanisms for Christian content creation.

Why should they reinvent the same wheels separately when they could use shared infrastructure adapted to their specific theological convictions?

The early church transformed the Roman Empire with scrolls and foot messengers. We have global digital networks and instant communication. Yet Christianity is losing ground because we're not thinking systematically about the infrastructure layer.

I've spent years in Silicon Valley watching how open source software ate the world. Every app exists because brilliant people chose to make their foundational work freely available for others to build upon.

The same principle should guide how we spread discipleship. Not one mega-church or ministry, but open frameworks that make launching Christian schools as easy as launching websites.

My background spans AI engineering, movement building, government relations, and international networks. I understand both technology systems and spiritual warfare. I can see patterns that others miss because I don't have a mind's eye—I connect dots differently.

Most importantly, I've learned to distinguish between building for my ego versus building for God's kingdom. The music festival fantasy was about me being the man. Discipleship infrastructure is about making it easier for millions of people to choose Christ.

This could be my life's work. Not because it sounds impressive, but because it might be the highest leverage thing I could do for eternity.

The question isn't whether I'm qualified. The question is whether I'm called.

And everything in my story—from my family's persecution to my unique denominational access to my technical skills—suggests the answer might be yes.