Heaven's Ark Framework
The Fusion Workflow
"Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit by itself, unless it abides in the vine, neither can you, unless you abide in me." — John 15:4
Three steps. Thirty seconds to learn. A lifetime to deepen. Start here — understanding follows from doing, not the other way round.
The three steps
Select each step to open it. Try the first one before you leave this page.
Before any act — a task, a conversation, a meal, a difficult moment — pause and consciously place it in Christ's hands. You are not creating something new. You are stepping into what He has already done perfectly in the Eternal Now and making it yours.
"Whatever you do, in word or deed, do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus."
Colossians 3:17 — the master verse for the practiceWords you can use — or use your own
The words are not the mechanism. The conscious intention is. Any phrase that genuinely turns your will toward His is sufficient.
Do the act — aware that you are not alone. You are the branch drawing from the vine. Christ is not watching from outside; He is the life flowing through the act itself. The work does not stop being work. It becomes something more than work without ceasing to be itself.
"It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me."
Galatians 2:20 — not replacement, but unionYou will forget. Midway through a difficult task, the awareness fades. This is normal — it is not failure. When you notice you have forgotten, the noticing itself is the return. Simply continue in the awareness you now have.
St Paul's instruction — "pray without ceasing" (1 Thess 5:17) — is not a demand for continuous verbal prayer. It is a description of this: a continuous orientation of the will toward Christ, beneath and within every act.
When the act is complete, briefly return the glory to its source. This is not religious politeness. It is the close of the circuit — grace received, work done, glory returned. Without this movement, the circuit remains open at one end and the soul drifts back into operating as if it did the work alone.
"…giving thanks to God the Father through him."
Colossians 3:17 — the same verse closes the loop it openedThe framework is designed to be error-tolerant not as a concession to human weakness but because error-tolerance is a theological principle: Christ's treasury covers exactly the failures we bring to it. Defeat is never final. The circuit is always available to reopen.
The scriptural foundation
Jesus commanded the practice. Paul showed the workflow. The steps are the instruction manual for obeying both.
The reality beneath the practice
The workflow is simple. The reality it operates within is not small. These three realities explain why three steps — each taking seconds — carry the weight they do.
When Jesus watched a widow place two small coins into the temple treasury, he told his disciples she had given more than all the wealthy donors combined. She had given everything she had to live on.
Every soul is given the same two coins at birth. Not the same quantity of health, wealth, talent, or opportunity — those vary enormously. But the same two coins:
The Fusion Workflow is the act of spending both coins in the right direction — time given to a fused act, free will turned toward Christ — in this present moment. The widow's act was not remarkable because of its size. It was remarkable because of its direction: everything, held nothing back.
Paul's most honest line — "I do not do what I want, but I do the very thing I hate" — is not a confession of unusual weakness. It is a description of the Loop: the soul operating on its own power, generating circular motion that feels like progress but returns always to the same point.
The Circuit is the alternative — directional, generative, connected to a source that exceeds the soul's own capacity. It moves from offering, through action, to thanksgiving, and outward to others. It does not close back on itself. It multiplies.
- Intellect operating alone
- Calculate before acting
- Produce, then claim the result
- Return to the same point
- Time consumed, no Kingdom output
- Will aligned with Divine Will
- Act before full understanding
- Offer → Do → Thank → outward
- Grace distributed to others
- Time redeemed, denominator grows
The servants at Cana did not understand what was happening. They simply filled the jars with what they had, drew it out when asked, and served it. The water became wine in the act of drawing, not before it. This is John 7:17 in a single story: do first, understanding follows.
Every fused act is a circuit completion. Every reset after failure is an exit from the Loop. The two movements — offer and reset — are the only two tools needed to keep the circuit running.
The Fall created a gap that no finite human act can close. Every act we perform — however sincere — is finite. An infinite chasm cannot be bridged from the finite side.
Christ's response was complete and total: he performed every possible human act — eating, working, suffering, resting, speaking, waiting — perfectly, within the Divine Will, at Calvary and across his entire earthly life. Because these acts were performed within the Divine Will itself, they exist in the Eternal Now: not in the past, but perpetually present and perpetually accessible.
When you offer your imperfect act — "Jesus, I unite my will to Yours for this" — you are not generating infinite value out of your own capacity. You are accessing what he already accomplished. The water poured into the wine at the Offertory every Mass demonstrates this precisely: the finite enters the infinite and is taken up into it. The water does not become wine by its own virtue. It becomes wine by what it is united with.
Every circumstance
The Fusion Workflow requires no special conditions, ability, or state of life. Select the situation that is closest to yours.
Everything we do
Paul's letter to the Corinthians is addressed to a community navigating an entirely ordinary life — work, food, marriage, disputes, social pressures, death. His instructions are not mystical; they are practical. And across two letters he returns repeatedly to the same principle that the Fusion Workflow enacts: