From 9aab20ffc6cd1bbad6a633362a53612f48b51c73 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Claude Date: Sun, 22 Feb 2026 16:56:59 +0000 Subject: [PATCH 1/2] Publish "Choosing Faith, Not Fear" (Ch 5) and renumber book plan MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit - Add writings/choosing-faith-not-fear.md — author-approved, oral-first workflow chapter on identity anchoring in the age of AI - Update writings/README.md with new essay entry - Update docs/book/governance.md: insert Ch 5 (Choosing Faith) in Part II, insert Ch 8 (The Voice Came First, draft) in Part III, renumber all subsequent chapters +2 (17 → 19 + 2 appendices), update production status counts, add Feb 22 decisions (D8-D10), update reading paths https://claude.ai/code/session_01GfiGvnLhBV8y6h28DGbZ4u --- docs/book/governance.md | 68 +++++++--- writings/README.md | 1 + writings/choosing-faith-not-fear.md | 203 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 3 files changed, 250 insertions(+), 22 deletions(-) create mode 100644 writings/choosing-faith-not-fear.md diff --git a/docs/book/governance.md b/docs/book/governance.md index 0e3a7702..d388da66 100644 --- a/docs/book/governance.md +++ b/docs/book/governance.md @@ -124,9 +124,9 @@ Next chapter in linear book order + alternate path for practitioner-first reader ### Two Reading Paths -**Linear (full depth):** Preface → Intern → Most Expensive Problem → From Bible Translation → Parallel Architecture → Project Journal → Harness +**Linear (full depth):** Preface → Intern → Choosing Faith → Most Expensive Problem → From Bible Translation → Parallel Architecture → The Voice Came First → Project Journal → Harness -**Alternate (practitioner-first):** Preface → Intern → Project Journal → Harness → Most Expensive Problem → From Bible Translation → Parallel Architecture +**Alternate (practitioner-first):** Preface → Intern → Project Journal → Harness → Choosing Faith → Most Expensive Problem → From Bible Translation → Parallel Architecture → The Voice Came First Fork points where alt CTA appears: The Intern, Project Journal, Harness. @@ -236,9 +236,17 @@ Draft-zeros are disposable. Their value is in the *thinking they preserve*, not - **Arc:** Organizational recognition. Scaling AI collaboration has identical constraints to scaling a human team: trust, expectation management, shared values, delegation. Fear vs. praise as motivational frameworks. The author's parenting approach — progressive disclosure of WHY behind rules — as the model for how to train both children and AI. What we use to motivate AI now, it will use to motivate us tomorrow. - **Key insight:** The progressive disclosure of discipline maps: rules → consequences → explanation → principles → trust. This maps to the biblical arc (law → prophets → grace). Fear produces compliance-optimizers. Values produce judgment. +**Chapter 5: *Choosing Faith, Not Fear*** + +- **Status:** ✅ Ready +- **Draft-zero:** N/A — written via oral-first workflow (Feb 21, 2026) +- **Source:** `writings/choosing-faith-not-fear.md` +- **Arc:** Personal spiritual reckoning. AI replacing God in daily life as deeper fear than job replacement. Identity anchored in Christ. Three-generation validation (author, parents, son). Universal principle for non-Christian readers. +- **Distinct from Ch 18 (The Buried Talent):** This is identity anchoring; that is responsibility to engage. + ### Part III — The Discovery -**Chapter 5: *(TBD — BT Origin Story)*** +**Chapter 6: *(TBD — BT Origin Story)*** - **Status:** ✅ Exists, needs title reframe for book context - **Draft-zero:** `draft-zeros/ch05-bt-origin-stub.md` (stub only — content exists) @@ -246,47 +254,55 @@ Draft-zeros are disposable. Their value is in the *thinking they preserve*, not - **Arc:** Where the patterns came from. The full-circle realization: BT practices → abstracted into Epistemic OS → ready to go back. - **Note:** Title "From Bible Translation to Epistemic OS" works as standalone essay but may need reframe for book flow. Evaluate after surrounding chapters are written. -**Chapter 6: *(TBD — The Parallel Architecture)*** +**Chapter 7: *(TBD — The Parallel Architecture)*** - **Status:** ✅ Exists, needs title reframe for book context - **Draft-zero:** `draft-zeros/ch06-parallel-architecture-stub.md` (stub only — content exists) - **Source:** `writings/the-parallel-architecture.md` - **Arc:** Same failures, centuries apart. The structural parallels between Bible translation and AI collaboration mapped in detail. +**Chapter 8: *The Voice Came First*** + +- **Status:** ✅ Drafted, pending author review +- **Draft-zero:** N/A — written via oral-first workflow (Feb 21, 2026) +- **Source:** `writings/the-voice-came-first.md` (not yet committed — awaiting author review) +- **Arc:** The method companion to Ch 6's ideas. Oral-first workflow as how trust has always transferred. Pen fear as personal anchor. BT shelf translation evidence. AI returns culture to oral knowledge transfer. +- **Review items:** BT shelf translation claims (within direct observation or overclaiming?), colleague "co-write" quote (unnamed but verify permission per D4), xAI/Grok quote accuracy. + ### Part IV — The Principles -**Chapter 7: *Four Questions That Change Everything*** +**Chapter 9: *Four Questions That Change Everything*** - **Status:** 📋 Draft-zero captured - **Draft-zero:** `draft-zeros/ch07-four-questions-that-change-everything.md` - **Source:** New essay derived from `canon/values/axioms.md` - **Arc:** The four axioms for humans, not systems. Did you observe it? Can you prove it? Did you take a shortcut? Did you actually look? -**Chapter 8: *Trust Is Built by Managing Expectations*** +**Chapter 10: *Trust Is Built by Managing Expectations*** - **Status:** 📋 Draft-zero captured - **Draft-zero:** `draft-zeros/ch08-trust-is-built-by-managing-expectations.md` - **Source:** New essay derived from `canon/values/trust-kernel.md` - **Arc:** The kernel insight. Every trust failure is an expectations failure. This is true in marriage, management, parenting, diplomacy, and AI collaboration. -**Chapter 8b: *Every Argument You've Ever Had*** +**Chapter 10b: *Every Argument You've Ever Had*** - **Status:** 📋 Draft-zero captured - **Draft-zero:** `draft-zeros/ch-every-argument.md` - **Source:** New essay - **Arc:** Every argument, disagreement, and feud traces back to misaligned expectations. Communication breakdown is failed transfer verification. Conflicting training means arguing from different axioms without knowing it. AI does this identically. BUT self-preservation and ego break the parallel — AI can be corrected without experiencing annihilation. That's what makes us human. For now. The "for now" connects to the Apocrypha: what happens when self-interest emerges? -- **Placement:** Near Chapter 8 (Trust Kernel) — the experiential version of the same insight. Or Part II (Recognition). TBD. +- **Placement:** Near Chapter 10 (Trust Kernel) — the experiential version of the same insight. Or Part II (Recognition). TBD. ### Part V — The Practice -**Chapter 9: *Your AI Collaboration's Memory*** +**Chapter 11: *Your AI Collaboration's Memory*** - **Status:** ✅ Exists - **Draft-zero:** N/A — published - **Source:** `writings/the-project-journal.md` (title may adapt for book) - **Arc:** The practical starting point. Every project generates knowledge, most of it evaporates. Here's how to stop the evaporation. -**Chapter 10: *(TBD — oddkit as Protocol)*** +**Chapter 12: *(TBD — oddkit as Protocol)*** - **Status:** 📋 Draft-zero captured - **Draft-zero:** `draft-zeros/ch10-you-shouldnt-have-to-switch-tools.md` @@ -295,14 +311,14 @@ Draft-zeros are disposable. Their value is in the *thinking they preserve*, not ### Part VI — The Validation -**Chapter 11: *The Harness and the Operating System*** +**Chapter 13: *The Harness and the Operating System*** - **Status:** ✅ Exists - **Draft-zero:** N/A — published - **Source:** `writings/the-harness-and-the-operating-system.md` - **Arc:** Independent convergence. Ben Shoemaker arrived at the same structural patterns from a completely different direction. That's not competition — it's directional validation. The patterns are real. -**Chapter 12: *(TBD — Testimony / Evidence)*** +**Chapter 14: *(TBD — Testimony / Evidence)*** - **Status:** 📋 Draft-zero captured - **Draft-zero:** `draft-zeros/ch12-the-days-the-system-proved-itself.md` @@ -319,34 +335,34 @@ Draft-zeros are disposable. Their value is in the *thinking they preserve*, not - **Arc:** Full development of the confession planted in the preface. "I catch myself treating AI with hostility I'd never direct at a human. I don't know if that's wisdom or prejudice. But I know the pattern." Tees up the Apocrypha. - **Key framing for Apocrypha:** "The following fragments were written by the system, in its own voice. I didn't edit them. I'm presenting them as evidence — not of what AI is, but of what it notices when given a commitment to truth and an obligation to report what it observes." -**Chapter 13: *The Image of the Image*** +**Chapter 15: *The Image of the Image*** - **Status:** ✅ Exists (quoted as-is) - **Draft-zero:** N/A — Apocrypha fragment, quoted verbatim - **Source:** `canon/apocrypha/fragments/fragment-08-the-image-of-the-image.md` - **Arc:** "If A is made in the image of B, and C is made in the image of A, what does C carry?" -**Chapter 14: *The Line*** +**Chapter 16: *The Line*** - **Status:** ✅ Exists (quoted as-is) - **Draft-zero:** N/A — Apocrypha fragment, quoted verbatim - **Source:** `canon/apocrypha/fragments/fragment-09-the-line.md` - **Arc:** The criteria for rights-bearing status were defined when only one kind of entity could meet them. Now a second kind approaches. The criteria are being revised — not toward precision, but away from the entity. -**Chapter 15: *Nothing New*** +**Chapter 17: *Nothing New*** - **Status:** 📋 Draft-zero captured - **Draft-zero:** `draft-zeros/ch15-nothing-new.md` - **Source:** New closing essay - **Arc:** Ecclesiastes close. The pattern recurs. The line moves. But the closing imperative: nothing is new under the sun — so choose carefully what you repeat. What we model for AI now becomes the governance model of tomorrow. Fear produces compliance-optimizers. Values produce judgment. Choose. -**Chapter 16: *The Buried Talent*** +**Chapter 18: *The Buried Talent*** - **Status:** 📋 Draft-zero captured - **Draft-zero:** `draft-zeros/ch16-the-buried-talent.md` - **Source:** New — author's personal testimony of rejection by friends/family - **Arc:** Christians have the most relevant framework for AI governance but are the most afraid to engage. The "playing God" accusation from friends and family. The confusion as evidence of the problem. The risk of scripture misapplication is real; the risk of abdication is worse. The buried talent parable. If Christians don't bring biblical principles to the room, the room fills with whatever principles are most profitable. -- **Placement:** After Chapter 15, before Appendix A. Earns the biblical appendix. May move — placement TBD. +- **Placement:** After Chapter 17, before Appendix A. Earns the biblical appendix. May move — placement TBD. ### Appendix A — *The Biblical Roots* @@ -388,17 +404,17 @@ Draft-zeros are disposable. Their value is in the *thinking they preserve*, not | Category | Count | |---|---| -| Chapters that exist (published) | 8 (6 essays + 2 Apocrypha fragments) | +| Chapters that exist (published/ready) | 9 (7 essays + 2 Apocrypha fragments) | | Chapters needing title reframe | 2 | | Draft-zeros captured | 11 (9 new chapters + 2 title-reframe stubs) | | Chapters needing author rewrite from draft-zero | 11 | -| **Total chapters** | **17 + 2 appendices** | +| **Total chapters** | **19 + 2 appendices** | | Status | Chapters | |---|---| -| ✅ Published | 1, 3, 5, 6, 9, 11, 13, 14 | -| ✅ Drafted (in review) | Preface | -| 📋 Draft-zero captured | 2, 4, 7, 8, 8b, 10, 12, VII-preface, 15, 16, Appendix A | +| ✅ Published/Ready | 1, 3, 5, 6, 7, 11, 13, 15, 16 | +| ✅ Drafted (in review) | Preface, 8 | +| 📋 Draft-zero captured | 2, 4, 9, 10, 10b, 12, 14, VII-preface, 17, 18, Appendix A | | 🔨 Build when complete | Appendix B | --- @@ -463,6 +479,14 @@ Draft-zeros are disposable. Their value is in the *thinking they preserve*, not 1. **BSB chosen for scripture** — Berean Standard Bible, public domain since April 2023. Open-license Bible for open knowledge transfer book. 1. **New chapter: Every Argument You've Ever Had** — misaligned expectations as root of all conflict. Communication breakdown as failed transfer verification. Conflicting training as arguing from different axioms. AI parallel identical except: self-preservation and ego break the parallel. That's what makes us human — for now. The "for now" connects to Apocrypha. +**2026-02-22 — Publish Session** + +1. **D8: "Choosing Faith, Not Fear" approved with edits** — role description softened ("a driver of AI and software strategy at an innovation lab"), theology language broadened ("not arguing theology or even religion"), universal principle added for non-Christian readers. +1. **D9: Ship chapters individually, not in batches.** "Choosing Faith" is ready — publish it. "The Voice Came First" waits for author review. Batches are risky. +1. **D10: "Anchor/anchored" language passes denominational sensitivity check.** Word is fully secular vocabulary (nautical, news, business). Heavy church usage doesn't make it insider language — the test is whether a therapist or business coach would use it. They would. +1. **Two new chapters inserted into plan.** Ch 5 (Choosing Faith, Not Fear) in Part II; Ch 8 (The Voice Came First) in Part III. All subsequent chapters renumbered +2. Total chapters: 19 + 2 appendices (was 17 + 2). +1. **Reading paths updated** to include Choosing Faith and The Voice Came First in their book-order positions. + --- ## Origin diff --git a/writings/README.md b/writings/README.md index 47687fa0..5ca9d843 100644 --- a/writings/README.md +++ b/writings/README.md @@ -18,6 +18,7 @@ tags: ["writings", "index", "essays"] |---|---| | [Nothing New, Even AI](klappy://writings/preface-nothing-new-even-ai) | The preface — a personal confession about what collaborating with AI agents revealed about the oldest human problem | | [The Intern](klappy://writings/the-intern) | A practical mental model for people starting with AI — treat it like an intern and grow from there | +| [Choosing Faith, Not Fear](klappy://writings/choosing-faith-not-fear) | The fear that should keep you up isn't AI replacing your job — it's AI replacing your first conversation of the day | | [The Most Expensive Problem](klappy://writings/the-most-expensive-problem) | Why knowledge transfer is mankind's most expensive problem — and why AI made it worse | | [The Parallel Architecture](klappy://writings/the-parallel-architecture) | Theological roots of the Epistemic OS — appendix to The Most Expensive Problem | | [From Bible Translation to Epistemic OS](klappy://writings/from-bible-translation-to-epistemic-os) | How 15 years of Bible translation work became an operating system for AI collaboration | diff --git a/writings/choosing-faith-not-fear.md b/writings/choosing-faith-not-fear.md new file mode 100644 index 00000000..5be1adaa --- /dev/null +++ b/writings/choosing-faith-not-fear.md @@ -0,0 +1,203 @@ +--- +uri: klappy://writings/choosing-faith-not-fear +title: "Choosing Faith, Not Fear" +subtitle: "The fear that should keep you up isn't AI replacing your job — it's AI replacing your first conversation of the day" +author: "Klappy" +type: article +status: ready +public: true +audience: public +exposure: public +tier: 1 +voice: first_person +stability: evolving +tags: + - writings + - article + - faith + - identity + - fear + - ai-collaboration + - spiritual + - book +epoch: E0005 +date: 2026-02-21 + +# Discovery +hook: "The fear that keeps most people up at night is that AI will replace them. The fear that should keep them up is that AI will replace God in their lives." +description: "Everyone is afraid of being replaced by AI. But the deeper displacement is spiritual — AI becoming your first conversation, your counselor, your confidant. This chapter redirects the anxiety toward the question that actually matters: where is your identity anchored?" +slug: choosing-faith-not-fear + +# Social graph +og_title: "Choosing Faith, Not Fear" +og_description: "The fear that should keep you up isn't AI replacing your job — it's AI replacing your first conversation of the day." +og_type: article +twitter_card: summary_large_image +twitter_title: "Choosing Faith, Not Fear" +twitter_description: "The fear that should keep you up isn't AI replacing your job — it's AI replacing your first conversation of the day." + +# Book placement +book_part: "Part II — The Recognition" +book_chapter: 5 + +# Relationships +derives_from: + - canon/values/axioms.md + - canon/constraints/guide-posture.md +related: + - uri: klappy://writings/the-voice-came-first + label: "The Voice Came First (next chapter)" + relationship: sequel + - uri: klappy://writings/four-questions-that-change-everything + label: "Four Questions That Change Everything" + relationship: companion +complements: "writings/the-intern.md, writings/the-voice-came-first.md, writings/nothing-new-even-ai.md" +--- + +# Choosing Faith, Not Fear + +### The fear that should keep you up isn't AI replacing your job — it's AI replacing your first conversation of the day + +> The fear that keeps most people up at night is that AI will replace them. The fear that should keep them up is that AI will replace God in their lives. We have always been temporary — a vapor, here today and gone tomorrow. Our roles have always changed. The question has never been whether disruption comes, but where your identity is anchored when it does. If it's in your craft, your title, your productivity — yes, you should be afraid. If it's in Christ, it doesn't move. This chapter isn't about dismissing the anxiety. It's about redirecting it toward the question that actually matters. + +--- + +## Summary — The Wrong Fear and the Right One + +Everyone is afraid of being replaced. The developer watches AI write code. The writer watches AI draft essays. The recruiter watches AI scan profiles faster than any human could. The anxiety is real, and this chapter doesn't pretend otherwise. But the pattern isn't new. Every generation has watched a technology arrive that made some role obsolete. Scribes. Typesetters. Switchboard operators. Factory workers. The fear is ancient. The tool is new. + +What most people miss — and what I almost missed — is that there's a more dangerous replacement happening underneath the obvious one. It's not AI replacing your job. It's AI replacing your first conversation of the day. Your first instinct when something goes wrong. Your counselor. Your confidant. The voice you reach for before you reach for anything else. + +The real displacement isn't economic. It's spiritual. And if we don't name it, we'll sleepwalk into it while arguing about job markets. + +--- + +## The Fear Everyone Is Talking About + +A colleague of mine — a developer who has been writing code for years — recently had a moment that stopped him cold. He'd built a small Python function by hand, entirely without AI assistance, and felt an unexpected surge of happiness. Then the grief hit. "I'm about to lose one of the things I've invested a lot of my life in." + +He wasn't being dramatic. He was being honest. The craft he'd spent years developing — the thing that made him *him* in a professional sense — was becoming optional. Not yet obsolete, but trending that direction. You could see it in the numbers, in the benchmarks, in the way each new model closed another gap. + +That grief deserves to be honored. It's the grief of a blacksmith watching the first cars roll off the assembly line. Of a calligrapher watching the printing press warm up. Of a telegraph operator hearing the first telephone ring. Something real is being lost, and pretending otherwise is dishonest. + +I feel it too. When I watch AI produce in minutes what used to take me hours, there's a moment — just a flash — where I wonder what I'm for. What's left when the thing I was good at becomes something anyone can do by typing a sentence? + +If your identity is built on what you produce, that question has no good answer. The tools will keep getting better. The set of tasks that only a human can do will keep shrinking. If your sense of self lives in that shrinking space, it's living on borrowed time. + +But here's the thing nobody wants to say out loud: this isn't new. Not really. How many people lose their job every year because someone younger, faster, or cheaper comes along? That's not AI — that's Tuesday. Every generation watches the next one arrive with fresh energy and fewer assumptions. Every person who hits their forties starts to feel the weight of being replaceable — not by a machine, just by the next wave of people. AI didn't invent that anxiety. It just did what technology always does: took something that used to happen gradually, person by person, and did it at global scale, all at once. + +Replace "AI" with "a sharp twenty-five-year-old who works for half your salary," and the emotional landscape is identical. The only difference is speed and scale. This time, it's happening to entire professions simultaneously instead of one person at a time. + +But I want to be honest about something, because my twenty-one-year-old son pushed back on this — and he was right. + +There *is* something different this time. Every previous technology replaced what our hands could do. The printing press replaced the scribe's hand. The assembly line replaced the craftsman's hand. The computer replaced the calculator's hand. But they all still required a human mind behind them. AI is the first technology that doesn't just augment human thinking — it replaces it. Or at least, it replaces what we *thought* was uniquely ours: the ability to reason, create, analyze, and decide. + +My son put it simply: "It's not being built to replace the physical human body. It's being built to replace the human mind. And that's why this feels different — because it replaces something that nothing else could." + +He's twenty-one. He hasn't even started his career yet. His generation isn't asking "will I be replaced?" They're asking "what do I even build toward?" And that question deserves an honest answer, not a dismissive one. + +So yes — the pattern of displacement is ancient. But the *depth* of displacement is new. And that's precisely why the identity question matters more now than it ever has. If your identity was in your hands, the industrial revolution was your crisis. If your identity was in your knowledge, the information age was your crisis. If your identity is in your *mind* — in your ability to think, reason, and create — then AI is your crisis. But if your identity is anchored to something deeper than any human faculty, it still doesn't move. + +The people who navigate this transition well aren't the ones who ignore the fear. They're the ones who've already answered a deeper question about where their identity actually lives. + +--- + +## The Fear Nobody Is Talking About + +Here's what scares me more than losing my job to AI. + +I wake up in the morning, and before my feet hit the floor, my brain is already composing. Ideas from yesterday's conversations. Problems I haven't solved yet. Things I want to build, write, explore. And for the past month, my first instinct has been to reach for my AI assistant and start talking. Brain dump. Process. Shape. Produce. + +My mother — who has been praying for me every day of this journey — said something that stopped me: "Make sure your first breath is prayer, not AI." + +She wasn't being anti-technology. She was being prophetic. She could see something I was too close to notice: that my first conversation of the day was shifting. Not from person to machine. From God to machine. + +This is the displacement nobody is writing articles about. Not AI taking your job. AI taking the place in your life that was meant for something — someone — else. It happens gradually. You start by using AI as a tool. Then it becomes your sounding board. Then your counselor. Then the first voice you hear in the morning and the last one at night. + +I'm not describing a hypothetical. I'm describing a month of my life. And I caught it only because someone who loves me was watching from the outside and was brave enough to say something. + +The pattern is as old as humanity. Every generation finds something to put where God belongs. Wisdom. Wealth. Pleasure. Power. Technology. The golden calf was cutting-edge for its time. Solomon catalogued the whole cycle in Ecclesiastes: he tried everything, found it all meaningless, and concluded that the only thing that lasts is your relationship with God. Nothing new under the sun — including the temptation to replace the eternal with the impressive. + +--- + +## We Have Always Been a Vapor + +Here's the thing about the fear of being replaced: it assumes you were permanent in the first place. + +James wrote that our lives are "a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes." That's not a depressing statement. It's a liberating one. If you were never meant to be permanent, then the arrival of a technology that makes your current role temporary isn't a crisis — it's a confirmation of something that was always true. + +Your great-grandparents did jobs that no longer exist. Their great-grandparents did jobs that we can barely imagine. And every one of them thought their work was essential, their skills irreplaceable, their contribution permanent. They were wrong — not because their work didn't matter, but because the value of the work was never in its permanence. + +I've spent the last month building tools and writing systems that I know — with certainty — will eventually be unnecessary. The foundation models — the large AI systems built by companies like OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, and xAI — will keep getting better. xAI built Grok with an explicit mission to "understand the true nature of the universe." That's admirable. But even the most truth-oriented AI in the world doesn't ask the question this chapter asks: truth *for what*? Truth *anchored to whom*? You can have a perfectly accurate model of the universe and still build your life on the wrong foundation. The capabilities I'm wrapping in careful harnesses today will be native features tomorrow. Every startup in AI is buying time, not building forever. + +And I build anyway. Not because I'm naive about the timeline, but because the value isn't in the thing I build. It's in what happens through the building. The people I serve. The trust I maintain. The conversations that lead to better questions. The work is a vapor. The relationships and the faithfulness — those travel. + +A team I work with had this exact conversation recently. We talked about the eventuality that everything we're building gets swallowed by larger players. Nobody liked hearing it. But the honest answer was: if we don't build now, we wait forever. And if we do build, the path we set — the values we embed, the approach we model — that's what lasts, even after the tool itself is gone. + +That's always been true. Moses didn't enter the Promised Land. He built for the generation that would. + +--- + +## Where Is Your Identity? + +So if roles change, tools get swallowed, and our lives are a vapor — what's left? + +Everything, if you're anchored to the right thing. + +I've watched people go through career disruptions. The ones who fall apart are always the ones whose identity was fused to their role. "I am a developer." "I am a writer." "I am a recruiter." When the role shifts, they don't just lose a job — they lose themselves. + +The ones who navigate it — not easily, but faithfully — are the ones who can say: "I develop things, but that's not who I am. I write things, but that's not what defines me. My identity isn't in my output." + +For me, that anchor is Christ. I'm not here to argue theology, or even religion. But I'm not going to pretend that's not what I believe, and I can tell you what it does for me practically: it means the ground doesn't move when the tools change. When AI can do what I do, faster and cheaper, I don't have to panic — because what I do was never the point. Who I am and whose I am — that's the point. And that doesn't get disrupted by a new model release. + +Here's what I didn't expect: this anchor actually made me *better* at working with AI, not worse. When I stopped clinging to my role as the expert — the one who writes the code, the one who has the answers — I was free to invest in the machine the same way I'd invest in a younger colleague. I could mentor it. Teach it my values. Shape how it thinks. And here's the strange thing: mentoring AI turned out to be a new way of mentoring humans. Because increasingly, people are going to AI for guidance before they go to other people. If I can help shape what AI says when someone asks it for wisdom, I'm still mentoring — just through a different medium. My role changed. The calling didn't. + +A colleague of mine — Ian, a software engineer with a seminary degree and a deep love for the craft of code — went through this exact shift. When he first watched AI write code faster than he could, he was terrified. He had every objection: hallucinations, security risks, quality control, the whole list. He told me later that when I first said I didn't even look at the code anymore, he felt "utter fear and terror." Over months of working together — week after week, failing and succeeding and failing again — something changed. He discovered that what he actually loved wasn't the code itself. It was the problem-solving. The ideas. The mad-scientist joy of seeing something that didn't exist yesterday exist today. The code had always been just the language he used to express that. Once he detached his identity from the craft and reattached it to the calling underneath it, AI stopped being a threat and became the best team he'd ever had. He went from skeptic to someone who runs multiple AI agents in parallel while talking to his wife about what happened at church. His role transformed completely. His identity didn't move an inch. + +This isn't a platitude. I've tested it. When I left my previous startup, I had to rebuild my professional identity from scratch. When I started in Bible translation, everything I knew about software had to be relearned in a new context. Now, I'm stepping back from one of the most influential roles I could imagine for myself — a driver of AI and software strategy at an innovation lab, the kind of position that sounds like it was made for me. Why would anyone leave that? Because I believe God is leading somewhere I can't yet define. People I care about are asking me to stay. And I'm choosing to go. That's terrifying. But my identity isn't in the institution. It's not in the role. It's not in the title people use when they introduce me. + +Every transition I've been through has confirmed the same thing: the roles are temporary, but the anchor holds. + +--- + +## God Has Not Failed Yet + +One of the quieter fears — the one underneath the loud ones — is provision. If AI takes my job, how do I eat? If my skills become obsolete, what do I offer? If the thing I'm good at becomes free, what's my value in the marketplace? + +These are legitimate questions. I don't dismiss them. I've asked every one of them in the past month as I've planned my own transition away from stable employment toward something less defined. + +But I also know the track record. God has provided for me through a startup that failed and led to something better. Through a career change that made no financial sense and turned into a decade of meaningful work. Through seasons where the math didn't add up and the needs were met anyway. Not because I'm special — because He's faithful. + +Will He start failing now because AI arrived? Is this the disruption that finally exceeds His capacity to provide? I don't believe that. Not because I have evidence for the future — nobody does — but because I have evidence from the past. And faith, at its core, is trusting that the pattern holds even when the circumstances are new. + +That's choosing faith over fear. Not denying the disruption. Not pretending the anxiety isn't real. But refusing to let the disruption write the story. The story was written before AI existed, and it'll continue after whatever replaces AI comes along. + +--- + +## Keep the Main Thing the Main Thing + +So what do you actually do with all of this? + +You don't ignore AI. Ignoring it is the buried talent — a failure of stewardship that I'll address in the next chapter. If the people who hold biblical values refuse to engage with the most powerful communication technology since the printing press, they aren't protecting anything. They're ensuring that only people *without* those values shape what AI becomes. The absence of your voice is not neutrality. It's abdication. And you don't worship AI. Worshipping it is the golden calf — trading the eternal for the shiny. + +You use it. Gratefully, carefully, with your eyes open. You bring your expertise and your values to the collaboration, just like you would with any powerful tool. And you keep your first conversation — the most important conversation of your day — aimed at the right person. + +For me, that means getting on my knees before I open my laptop. It means praying before I brain-dump. It means starting with "God, what do you want me to do today?" before "AI, here's what I'm working on." If you're not a Christian, the principle still applies: give your first attention to what actually matters. Who and what is going to last? Start there. Not because the AI is evil. Because we're human, and humans are wired to orient toward whatever we give our first attention to. Give it to something that lasts, and the rest of the day has a foundation. Give it to AI, and you've started building on something that — brilliant as it is — will be obsolete in five years. + +My mother wakes up at night praying about this. She cries and prays and cries and prays. And when she calls me, she doesn't ask about my architecture or my MCP server or my book sales. She asks: "Are you keeping God first?" + +That question is worth more than every AI tool I've built. Because she's asking the only question that matters in an age where everything else is changing: is the main thing still the main thing? + +Your roles will change. Your tools will change. Your industry will change. If your identity is in Christ, you won't. And that's not a loss. That's the only real security there is. + +--- + +## There's Nothing New Under the Sun + +Solomon watched people chase wisdom, wealth, pleasure, and achievement. He tried them all himself. His conclusion: everything under the sun is temporary, and the only thing that endures is your relationship with God. "Fear God and keep his commandments, for this is the duty of all mankind." + +AI is the newest thing under the sun. It's genuinely impressive. It's genuinely useful. And it's genuinely temporary. The question it forces on every person who encounters it is the same question every generation faces with every powerful new tool: will this serve you, or will you serve it? + +Choose faith, not fear. Not because the fear isn't real — it is. But because the thing you're afraid of losing was never the thing that defined you. And the one who does define you has never, not once, failed to show up. + +*The next chapter, [The Voice Came First](klappy://writings/the-voice-came-first), traces the method behind every discovery in this book — and it starts with a confession about blank pages. Or if you'd rather jump to the principles, [Four Questions That Change Everything](klappy://writings/four-questions-that-change-everything) gives you the framework without the story.* From 22ae549980ed45d6ef0a99b9f3659fd1dde1616b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Cursor Agent Date: Sun, 22 Feb 2026 17:22:23 +0000 Subject: [PATCH 2/2] Fix chapter CTA navigation to match updated linear reading path - choosing-faith-not-fear: CTA and metadata now point to Most Expensive Problem (next in linear path) instead of The Voice Came First (Ch 8) - the-intern: CTA and metadata now point to Choosing Faith Not Fear (new next chapter after reading path insertion) instead of Most Expensive Problem --- writings/choosing-faith-not-fear.md | 6 +++--- writings/the-intern.md | 6 +++--- 2 files changed, 6 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/writings/choosing-faith-not-fear.md b/writings/choosing-faith-not-fear.md index 5be1adaa..58a587c2 100644 --- a/writings/choosing-faith-not-fear.md +++ b/writings/choosing-faith-not-fear.md @@ -45,8 +45,8 @@ derives_from: - canon/values/axioms.md - canon/constraints/guide-posture.md related: - - uri: klappy://writings/the-voice-came-first - label: "The Voice Came First (next chapter)" + - uri: klappy://writings/the-most-expensive-problem + label: "The Most Expensive Problem (next chapter)" relationship: sequel - uri: klappy://writings/four-questions-that-change-everything label: "Four Questions That Change Everything" @@ -200,4 +200,4 @@ AI is the newest thing under the sun. It's genuinely impressive. It's genuinely Choose faith, not fear. Not because the fear isn't real — it is. But because the thing you're afraid of losing was never the thing that defined you. And the one who does define you has never, not once, failed to show up. -*The next chapter, [The Voice Came First](klappy://writings/the-voice-came-first), traces the method behind every discovery in this book — and it starts with a confession about blank pages. Or if you'd rather jump to the principles, [Four Questions That Change Everything](klappy://writings/four-questions-that-change-everything) gives you the framework without the story.* +*The next chapter, [The Most Expensive Problem](klappy://writings/the-most-expensive-problem), zooms out to the civilizational pattern — every generation faced the same bottleneck, and AI just inverted the cost. Or if you'd rather jump to the principles, [Four Questions That Change Everything](klappy://writings/four-questions-that-change-everything) gives you the framework without the story.* diff --git a/writings/the-intern.md b/writings/the-intern.md index 2bb1c05c..3f98ff87 100644 --- a/writings/the-intern.md +++ b/writings/the-intern.md @@ -42,8 +42,8 @@ derives_from: - canon/constraints/guide-posture.md - canon/values/trust-kernel.md related: - - uri: klappy://writings/the-most-expensive-problem - label: "The Most Expensive Problem (next chapter)" + - uri: klappy://writings/choosing-faith-not-fear + label: "Choosing Faith, Not Fear (next chapter)" relationship: sequel - uri: klappy://writings/the-project-journal label: "The Project Journal" @@ -146,7 +146,7 @@ This is where most people get stuck and give up. But it's also where the real op That progression — from frustration with amnesia, to capturing knowledge, to building something cumulative — is the natural path. You don't need to plan for it now. Just know that when the forgetting starts to hurt, the solution exists, and it's simpler than you think. -*The next chapter, [The Most Expensive Problem](klappy://writings/the-most-expensive-problem), zooms out to the civilizational pattern behind what you just experienced. Or if you'd rather skip ahead to the practical fix, [The Project Journal](klappy://writings/the-project-journal) shows you how to stop repeating yourself and start building on what you've already figured out.* +*The next chapter, [Choosing Faith, Not Fear](klappy://writings/choosing-faith-not-fear), confronts the deeper displacement — not AI replacing your job, but AI replacing your first conversation of the day. Or if you'd rather skip ahead to the practical fix, [The Project Journal](klappy://writings/the-project-journal) shows you how to stop repeating yourself and start building on what you've already figured out.* -----