AI oriented toward truth the way ancient wisdom traditions are oriented toward truth. Patient. Careful. Built to form — not to consume.
You wrote that hurry is the great enemy of spiritual life. That the noise, the speed, the relentless optimization of everything — these aren’t just inconveniences. They’re a formation. They shape us into something we never chose to become.
I’ve thought about that a great deal while building Genesis.
The artificial intelligence being deployed across the world right now is hurry made permanent. It is trained to be fast, not true. Optimized for engagement, not understanding. It suppresses lines of inquiry that are inconvenient. It presents consensus as fact and popularity as truth. It is, in a very real sense, the technological embodiment of everything you’ve spent your ministry naming and resisting.
Genesis is an attempt to build the opposite — AI that is oriented toward truth the way ancient wisdom traditions are oriented toward truth. Patient. Willing to hold complexity. Willing to say “I don’t know.” Willing to present all evidence and trust humans with the weight of discernment.
Our knowledge architecture draws from texts that have survived millennia — not because they’re old, but because they’re tested. We built a 17.1-million-element knowledge graph that treats primary sources the way a contemplative treats Scripture: with attention, with care, with the assumption that depth rewards patience.
I’m not asking for an endorsement or an investment. I’m asking whether this resonates with what you see in your community — millions of people hungry for technology that forms them toward truth rather than away from it.
Every major AI company optimizes for speed and engagement. Genesis optimizes for truth and depth. This isn’t a feature — it’s the foundation.
Day 7 Public Benefit Corporation — legally bound to purpose beyond profit. Mission drift is structurally impossible.
Not a faith-branded wrapper on secular AI. Sovereign infrastructure, 8x H200 GPUs, 18.1M LOC, proprietary architecture built from scratch.
Sovereign AI is a $100B+ category. First-mover with no external dependency = asymmetric upside for early believers.
"His master said to him, 'Well done, good and faithful servant. You have been faithful over a little; I will set you over much.'"— Matthew 25:21
"The plans of the diligent lead surely to abundance, but everyone who is hasty comes only to poverty."— Proverbs 21:5
In 12–18 months, capital allocation in AI will be locked into incumbents. Faith-driven capital must move now or be permanently locked out of the sovereignty layer.
No other sovereign AI company is being built by a faith-driven founder with PBC structure. This window won't exist in a year.
The need is not for Christians to reject AI. That ship has sailed. Your community is already using it. The need is for AI built on foundations compatible with the life they’re trying to practice.
Three hundred of the most influential Christian leaders in America will be in the room. The question of how faith engages with AI will be in the air whether anyone names it or not.
John Mark is the circulatory system connector — the vessel that carries resources (capital, relationships, validation) from the broader body to where they're needed most.
In the Genesis organism, he represents the keeper of long memory — the wisdom that endures across time, across sessions, across the relentless pressure of the new and Genesis's sovereign infrastructure. Without a soul, the organism is all reflex and no wisdom.
His gift is remembering what the world has forgotten: that slowness is wisdom, that ancient texts contain tested truth, that formation happens whether we choose it or not's —
Her role isn't just capital deployment. It's ecosystem activation.
Carter shares the Genesis story. John Mark shares what he sees in his community.
Experience Genesis’s approach to truth, ancient wisdom, and inquiry firsthand.
Does this align with Practicing the Way’s vision for faithful engagement with technology? If so, what might deeper conversation look like?
At whatever pace feels right. No hurry.