“I am the resurrection and the life.” — and because He lives, I can face tomorrow.
John 11:25
Artificial Intelligence has brought new challenges and new opportunities, so step forward and build upon possibilities once unimaginable, and rise to meet the most surprising challenges of our time!
The Bible treats work as a calling to be stewarded with care (Genesis 2:15). Proverbs makes this concrete: “Know well the condition of your flocks, and give attention to your herds” (Proverbs 27:23), for “riches do not last forever” (Proverbs 27:24), and what renews itself must be actively tended. The wise owner does not leave everything to his servants and look away; he keeps his own eyes on the source of his livelihood, because “in all toil there is profit, but mere talk leads only to poverty” (Proverbs 14:23).
Boaz embodied this principle. He came out to his own fields and greeted his workers, “The Lord be with you” (Ruth 2:4), and his presence united diligence and generosity — he deliberately left grain for Ruth, a foreigner (Ruth 2:15–16). Such work calls for energy, discipline, kindness, and shrewdness, and Proverbs is explicit that these are gifts of wisdom, not mere ambition: “The Lord gives wisdom; from his mouth come knowledge and understanding” (Proverbs 2:6). Therefore, to know your flock is to know your work. Tend what renews itself; lead with diligence and generosity — “Commit your work to the Lord, and your plans will be established” (Proverbs 16:3).
To be an entrepreneur in this century is to build at the intersection of human judgment and machine intelligence — to see possibilities where others see disruption, and to turn uncertainty into value. It is less about owning capital than about stewarding ideas, data, and trust; for the wise tend what has been entrusted to them, knowing that riches do not last forever, but what is faithfully cultivated renews itself. Today's entrepreneur must learn continuously, decide under ambiguity, and act with both diligence and integrity — combining the efficiency of algorithms with the understanding that only wisdom can supply. In an age when knowledge is abundant and attention is scarce, to be an entrepreneur is to keep your own eyes on the source of your work, to lead with both shrewdness and generosity, and to commit your plans to something greater than yourself — building things that endure because they serve people, not merely markets.
It is with this purpose that this tool was created, and the foundational elements for an ongoing discussion have been presented in the paper.
Good work! Be an entrepreneur! God bless you!