In an age where AI floods in — we need a new way of relating.
I have always wrestled with the space between the church and the world.
How should Christian faith reveal itself amid this world? In what relation should the world and the faith stand?
In this rapidly changing age of AI, I am searching for new possibilities.
Graduate of Methodist Theological University (B.A. and M.Div.).
Eleven years as an associate pastor, five years as a senior pastor of a small church-plant — and now serving as Executive Director of Incheon Urban Industrial Mission.
I never saw a sermon as a word that simply passes once and vanishes. A sermon is a record of life — faith, anguish, exegesis, and a reading of the times — accumulated over years.
Yet in reality, countless sermons get buried in folders. Past insight and struggle are forgotten, and we repeat the same questions. This felt like such a waste. So I wanted to build an AI that does not write the next sermon for you, but remembers the sermons you have already lived.
This system analyzes past sermons — which texts you wrestled with, which themes you returned to, how your theology and pastoral concerns shifted over time. It is not merely a productivity tool but a tool of memory — preserving a minister's thought, time, and the history of a community.
There are many AIs that auto-generate sermons. But few remember the preacher's own life and accumulated wisdom in service of the next sermon. I built this not just to write sermons, but to remember the life walked as a preacher.
I am not a professional developer. There will be mistakes along the way.
But I will not avoid responsibility. I will respond faithfully, maintain faithfully, and keep listening — taking feedback and shipping updates.
As both a registered business and a fellow minister, I will grow this program together with you.