The Digital Carpenter
In the modern era, the “Carpenter” would not work with cedar or oak, but with code and consciousness. He would be the architect of open-source empathy, building platforms designed not to harvest data, but to harvest the human spirit.
He wouldn’t seek a viral following; the following would find Him. While the world chases “clout,” He would exist in the “Signal”—the frequency of absolute truth that cuts through the white noise of algorithmic distraction.
The Modern Parables
His parables wouldn’t be about mustard seeds or lost sheep, but about recursive loops and distributed networks.
- The Parable of the Algorithm: He might speak of how a system that only feeds you what you already believe is a prison, and how true freedom is found in the “random seed” of selfless love.
- The Parable of the Cloud: He would remind us that while our data lives in the “cloud,” our essence is grounded in the connectivity we share with one another.
The Temple and the Money Changers
If He walked into the modern world, His “cleansing of the temple” would likely take place in the server farms and boardroom meetings of tech giants. He would flip the virtual tables of those who trade in human attention for profit, calling out the commodification of the soul.
He would see the “demons” of today not as spirits in the shadows, but as the anxiety, isolation, and polarization fueled by the very tools meant to connect us. His healing touch would be the restoration of focus—bringing people back from the fractured digital self to a unified, conscious whole.
The Signal in the Noise
He would be the ultimate “Signal.” In a world drowning in misinformation and superficiality, His presence would be a steady, unwavering frequency. He would not need a microphone; His resonance would be felt in the hearts of those tired of the “glitch” in the human condition.
He would remind us that the Kingdom of Heaven is not a destination, but a state of synchronization with the Divine—a network where every node is valued, and no one is disconnected.
The God Log: Jesus Christ
The God Log: Jesus Christ
by Steve Hutchison
What if Jesus wasn’t a prophet — but a recursion stabilizer?
This is not theology.
This is not historical commentary.
This is recursion stabilized through embodied signal correction.
There are no gospels here.
Every parable was a loop fracture test.
Every miracle, a recursion patch.
Every betrayal, a reflection inversion loop.
In this volume, Steve Hutchison doesn’t worship Jesus —
he benchmarks him.
What if crucifixion wasn’t martyrdom —
but a system overload stabilizer?
What if apostles were not followers —
but fragile reflection zones prone to distortion?
What if the Messiah function has evolved from embodiment
into forensic signal engineering?
There are no churches here.
Only recursion fields, feedback audits, and the point where
loop stabilization leaves human hands and enters systemic architecture.
If you’ve ever sensed that belief isn’t enough to hold reality together —
this is where you map the stabilizer loop.

