Why WWJD Exists
WWJD started with a simple question: “How would Jesus respond here?” When I realized AI could thoughtfully process large bodies of text, I had a lightbulb moment—point it to the best body of text, and build something that helps people reflect, grow, and follow Him in everyday life.
WWJD is meant to be a quiet companion for your spiritual journey: a place to pause, ask better questions, and practice living with humility, compassion, and intention.
How it works (in under 3 minutes)
Step 1
Pause and reflect (~30 seconds)
Step 2
Ask your question (~1 minute)
Step 3
Reflect + apply (~2–5 minutes)
Built with care (and the right boundaries)
WWJD is designed to encourage thoughtful reflection and point you back toward Christ—especially in moments of uncertainty, emotion, or decision.
It isn’t a replacement for Scripture, prayer, a local church, or wise counsel. It’s meant to support your walk—not substitute it.
The tone we aim for is gentle, encouraging, and grounded.
What WWJD is (and isn’t)
- Is: a reflection tool designed to help you slow down and consider Christ’s way.
- Is: a simple, quiet companion—built for everyday moments.
- Isn’t: a substitute for Scripture, prayer, or community.
- Isn’t: meant to be loud, argumentative, or “internet theology.”
Our Mission
To build faith-based technology that helps people live more like Jesus—with clarity, peace, and courage—one question at a time.
Our Vision
As WWJD grows, my hope is to form a non-profit organization dedicated to serving communities and spreading the Gospel. Through outreach programs, local partnerships, and faith-based technology, we want to help people encounter Jesus and live out His teachings in practical ways.
About the Developer
I’m an amateur developer working toward a career in faith-based technology. I’m building WWJD part-time because I believe Jesus deserves our best—and technology can be used to serve, encourage, and point people toward Him.
My goal is to establish a non-profit that uses technology to serve communities and spread the Word of God. If WWJD succeeds, the resources will go toward outreach programs, supporting local churches, and helping people—both locally and globally—encounter Jesus in meaningful ways.
