Which projects would best serve the Kingdom?

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I am not going to give an in-depth discussion of this question myself. I will, however, give you a bunch of notes. Mostly, the reason I am posting is to get your feedback on the question in the title.

And God hath set some in the church, first apostles, secondarily prophets, thirdly teachers, after that miracles, then gifts of healings, helps, governments, diversities of tongues. Are all apostles? are all prophets? are all teachers? are all workers of miracles? Have all the gifts of healing? do all speak with tongues? do all interpret? But covet earnestly the best gifts…

1 Cor 12:28–31

I would particularly like to hear from people who know me (even if I don’t know them—I know there are some of you out there, because occasionally such people introduce themselves to me) or just people who have read my conversion story, “The Denominational Distinctives” (Part 1, Part 2, or Part 3), or “Why the ACNA.” (Or if I have sent you other writings of mine, and you read them.) If you haven’t read such things, I’m interested in your opinion anyway, but please let me know this in advance.

I have discussed with both my rector and my bishop about how I ought to spend my time to advance the Kingdom. Both left it more or less in my hands.

So, let me just give you some lists and then step back.

Things I am reasonably good at:

  • Writing and editing (in certain modes)
  • Probing the really hard questions that other people don’t like to talk about
  • Architecting and starting internet projects
  • Organizing people in groups online
  • Designing software systems
  • I am very OK at coding

Things I am fairly bad at:

  • Leading people face-to-face
  • Simplifying things for total beginners (that’s what my old OSU student reviews told me, so I believe them)
  • Fundraising (LOL)
  • Anything that basically involves lying to people; e.g., sales
  • Tact

Projects I have finished, that I liked:

  • The above-linked essays
  • Various websites, including the one you’re now reading
  • ZWIBook flash drives (~70,000 books from Project Gutenberg put on a 128GB flash drive with reader software)
  • A 330K-word (~600 page) Q&A style commentary on Genesis, never published, focused on answering all the hard questions I could think of, plus 64 more pages about Matthew. (This project is finished but I did it in 2021-23, so it would need much editing.)
  • A very long book building a systematic philosophical and theological case for the existence of God, aimed at an educated, intelligent, critical, nonspecialist audience. (Not finished, but I have worked steadily on it for five years, I am 100% committed to finishing it, it’s in a third draft, and it’s 630+ pages long.)

Things I might like to do, which might actually be useful to the Kingdom (eventually)

  • Make a Substack-type subscription version of the blog and start blogging more. Variants and/or post types:
    • Share drafts of writing projects and invite feedback.
    • Post intros to various readings about classics of philosophy of religion and theology (from a philosophical point of view) and lead discussions of them (in comments).
  • Make a version of ZWIBook that includes a massive offline compendium of Christian texts, basically collecting all the public domain texts that I can find online in one place. Make them available offline a la ZWIBook. Include a search function for the entire thing. This is basically one variant on the project described here.
  • A podcast of some sort (but realistically I don’t think I’d get many followers…and it’s kind of hard work TBH)
  • Various other book projects
  • Some sort of Christianity, Bible, or theology wiki (probably not, I list the idea only because it comes up)
  • A collaborative, ever-expanding commentary on Bible and other key texts; I would gladly organize this for the ACNA, but it would be a full-time job
  • An ever-growing outline of theological texts, divided them into chunks, like a very fine-grained version of the old Propaedia. I am 80% sure this would be incredibly useful but would require several years to get the software into shape and a few texts in place enough for others to help much with it.

So, dear readers, I put it to you: How should I use the rest of my time on earth for the Kingdom of God?


Update, September 10

First, I want to thank the dozen of you who offered words of advice and encouragement below, and also privately.

I actually think I may more profitably reduce my decision to the broad type of work I should try to do for the Kingdom:

  1. Academic writing, i.e., writing specific for academics in an academic mode. I could, but ultimately, I think I’d rather not.
  2. Theological writing. This is different from the foregoing. It involves writing for a wider audience in books and blogs specifically about issues in theology and related issues in philosophy. It would be informed by academic study but not written for “educated non-specialists.”
  3. Apologetics, advocacy, and political podcasting and writing. There is a certain thing that goes on under such descriptions that is, I think, of only limited value. But there might be approaches to it that would be potentially very useful.
  4. Specific innovative reference projects. There are various projects here that others are unlikely to do, or to do as well as I could. I won’t list the projects now. Maybe in a separate post, later. The aforementioned “outline of theological texts” is an example, though.

I will say this—the following sounds very plausible. I haven’t decided on this, but this sort of narrative of my future life makes more sense than saying, “you should do x” where x is something described in a simple way.

I do want to continue to do theological writing. I will finish God Exists, even if it takes a few more years. This will lead, no doubt, to other, similar writing projects, as well as interviews and speaking engagements (that’s typically what happens when a major book project is launched).

But at the same time, I do want to develop the old Textop idea (Text Outline Project) as applied first to the Bible and then to classic works of theology. I suspect that when this is well developed, it might fetch funding or association with a seminary or established ministry. This is especially the case if I develop it in public, i.e., it can be consulted as a free resource even as I develop it. I would develop the software myself. The software would not be simple to develop, but especially with the use of an LLM, it would be quite feasible. It would not take that long to get into a condition where I could actually use it to develop content.

At some point I would be doing more in the way of “outlining the Bible and theological classics”—which sounds insanely fun to me—than I would be doing software development. Still, I would be able to update and improve the software as I go along. Eventually, once the outline were detailed enough to serve as a clear framework for others to help, I might invite others to help. Regardless, in the long run, I think this outline of theology would be of great value to the Kingdom of God. Then, I would hope, we might continue the same method to outline all of the classics of philosophy and other fields in the same way.

Again, I haven’t decided on this, but it is an example of the vision I want to have of my future life going forward. I think what it comes down to, ultimately, is (a) feasibility of my having the time, talent, and funding to finish a given project (bringing it to a condition in which it would be actually useful, (b) actual usefulness when it reaches that condition, and (c) relative feasibility and usefulness compared to other projects I might do.


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Please do dive in (politely). I want your reactions!

30 responses to “Which projects would best serve the Kingdom?”

  1. Mark

    Hmmm. Just to help refine your quest: Reading between the lines, it appears you enjoy and excell at coming up with new ideas in the “knowledge space”, organizing the effort, and gettting it off the ground. OTOH, joining and contributing to an existing effort (and submitting to the existing structure–people and procedures) is likely to be less enjoyable and successful. Fair enough?

  2. Kent Miller

    Larry,
    I hope and pray you continue to research and share your insights. I have read every word of your exploration and discussion of Christianity and they have bern the most inspiring works about the topic I have ever read. I have served as a worship assistant, musician and cathechist in the Lutheran church for many years and your work continues via a book, online or any way you feel called by the living Christ.

    1. Thanks for your encouraging words, which (no offense) I have a hard time believing!

  3. Mark Lopez

    I don’t really know you, but I’ve been very encouraged as I have read your blog. So take any advice of mine with a grain of salt… my initial thought would be to get in touch with people who work at Logos Bible Software to see if they could collaborate on things within your gifting and talent… the intersection between software systems and information architecture is something they are good at, and they might have some ideas for how to work together! I’m loosely connected with a few who work there, and would be happy to make an connection if I’m able to.

    1. Thanks for the advice, but I’m sure they’d look upon me as either (a) another potential employee or (b) someone to help with marketing. They probably wouldn’t be that excited about (a), and I wouldn’t be that excited about (b).

  4. Deemah

    You, as many other ex-academics, would fall under the category of Christians with the gift of teaching. I think you you should leverage your interest in theology and philosophy and your deep knowledge of modern academia to advance the Kingdom among people with graduate and post-graduate degrees. You could collaborate with organizations such as Discovery Institute or CS Lewis Institute (write for their publications, participate in lectures and outreach they are doing). You could just continue doing what you are doing – writing books, commentaries and blog posts.
    The wikipedia/propaedia ideas you have are amazing. I know too little to weigh in, but they sound exciting and there’s probably no one in this world better positioned to do it than you.

  5. Henry

    How about adding to the list and activity such as helping the homeless or disadvantaged such as in a food bank or soup kitchen?

  6. Tori

    https://revelationmovement.com/truthpedia/

    Are you familiar with this initiative? This was the collaborative I meant to post.

  7. Tori

    Are you familiar with this group: https://thirdeducationrevolution.com/
    In my 30+ years of global mission work, it seems the Kingdom of God could benefit more from collaborative efforts.

    1. Yes, I’m in touch with Vishal. We should talk more.

  8. Rick

    Since you have a deep and abiding love for the Lord and his word, are interested in amassing Christian books, and have extensive knowledge of programming, why not create a free Logos Bible software type program whose content could be translated into any number of languages (perhaps via AI) so that even the poorest believer, that has access to a computer and Internet (no matter where in the world) can benefit from a vast library and Bible study tools. Shouldn’t the ability to study deeply God’s very words be available for all people no matter their ability to pay? I love programs like Logos, but I have the ability to pay for it while most of the followers of Christ in the world do not. With this free tool even the poorest believer can learn to exegete the Scriptures and grow in knowledge and grace.

    1. eSword already does something like this, and my guess is that they already have support for other languages. If they don’t, they probably will soon without my help…

      Thanks for the suggestion though, it does illustrate the sort of idea I’m interested in.

  9. Tom Bayer

    Acts 20:20 “from house to house” should be a part of what you do, somehow.

  10. Paul Greasley, PhD

    Here’s what I do. Look for activities that God is obviously blessing and determine how or why. Identify how they align with the macro purposes of God. I don’t need to reinvent or discover something new. Alignment is key. Then I contribute.
    I call this “slip streaming the Spirit of God”. NASCAR. Accelerating into the future. Anticipating God’s favor.

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