Ruach Tech did not begin with a pitch deck.
It did not begin with a business plan, a market map, a revenue model, or a grand strategy. Those things matter, and I care about them, but that is not where this started.
It started as a feeling I could not easily dismiss.
I am a Christian, and by the grace of God I believe in Jesus Christ. More than that, Jesus Christ is my wisdom any day, any time. That conviction shapes how I think, how I build, how I make decisions, and how I interpret the quiet movements inside my own heart.
For a long time, I thought about God as though He was somewhere far away. Maybe He was in heaven, and communication meant somehow reaching up to Him, or waiting for Him to come down in a dramatic way. But as I have grown in faith, I have come to understand something much simpler and much deeper: God is nearer than we often think.
If God were only in the sky, the birds would reach Him before us. If He were only in the deep ocean, the fish would get there first. If He were hidden in the forest, the animals would find Him before we did.
But God is not absent from the ordinary. He is not locked away from our daily consciousness. Scripture says, “In him we live and move and have our being.” I have come to believe that God is present in the thoughts that lift us higher, in the desires that keep returning with weight, in the convictions that do not shout but also do not leave.
That is important because I did not start Ruach Tech after hearing an audible voice. There was no thunder. No open vision. No dramatic sign that made the next step impossible to ignore.
There was just a repeated inward pressure.
Create a company.
At first, I did what many of us do with quiet instructions. I wrote it down. I registered the thought. I put it in my notes. Then I carried on.
But the feeling kept returning. Not in a spooky way. Not as fear. More like a steady knowing. A conviction that something needed to exist before I fully understood what it would be used for.
Eventually, I obeyed.
I researched names. I thought through different options. I knew I wanted something rooted in faith, but not forced. I wanted a name that would remind me where the ideas came from and what kind of posture I wanted to keep while building.
That is how I arrived at Ruach.
Ruach is a Hebrew word often translated as spirit, wind, or breath. The word carried the meaning I was trying to hold on to: inspiration, life, movement, and the breath of God upon human understanding. Job says, “There is a spirit in man: and the inspiration of the Almighty giveth them understanding.”
That verse gave language to what I was experiencing.
The Holy Spirit is my inspiration. He breathes upon my mind. He shapes my imagination. He gives weight to certain ideas until they become difficult to ignore. Ruach Tech became a way of remembering that the best ideas I carry are not merely products of intellect, ambition, or technical skill. They are gifts I am responsible for stewarding.
After I registered the company, nothing dramatic happened immediately.
For the first six or seven months, there was not much activity. No sudden breakthrough. No visible proof that the decision made sense. Just a company name, a conviction, and the quiet discipline of waiting.
Then the ideas started coming.
The first major one was MCPLambda.
That idea came out of prayer, meditation, and my regular communion with God. I was already paying attention to AI infrastructure and the Model Context Protocol space, so when the thought came, it did not feel random. It felt like a seed landing in prepared soil.
But conviction was not the end of the process. After the inspiration came the work: research, validation, problem definition, technical exploration, and building. I had to ask whether the problem was real. I had to study the space. I had to understand the gap. And the more I looked, the more the idea made sense.
There was a real infrastructure problem around deploying and managing MCP servers. There was a gap between what AI builders wanted to ship and the operational complexity required to make those systems reliable. MCPLambda became my response to that gap.
Since then, more has come through Ruach Tech: Immigranta, REP Protocol, and other ideas still taking shape. I do not see those products as disconnected experiments. I see them as fruit from the same root: applied AI, infrastructure, security, systems thinking, and a desire to build useful technology with wisdom.
I am careful with this kind of language because I do not think every idea should be baptized as divine just because it feels exciting. Feelings need testing. Convictions need patience. Inspiration still needs discipline. Faith does not remove the need for research, execution, feedback, or humility.
But I also do not want to pretend that everything meaningful in my life has come only from logic.
Some things begin in the unseen.
The physical world is often shaped by things that cannot be seen at first: conviction, imagination, prayer, desire, faith, wisdom, and obedience. Before there is a company registration document, there is a thought. Before there is a product, there is a burden. Before there is a roadmap, there is sometimes a whisper.
That is true even outside faith language. The world’s innovation leaders first carry pictures in their minds. Before a product becomes a device, a platform, a building, a protocol, or a company, it exists as a kind of miniature unseen universe inside someone’s imagination. They think it first, then they begin to have it.
Builders are people who learn to transfer blueprints from imagination into the physical world. They receive, refine, plan, test, and keep working until what was once invisible can be touched, used, shipped, and improved. The unseen does not remove the need for execution. It gives execution something to obey.
Ruach Tech began that way for me.
Not as a perfect company. Not as a finished vision. Not as proof that I had everything figured out.
It began as obedience to a quiet conviction from the unseen, and I am thankful I listened.
There is still a lot to build. There are still many practical questions in front of me. I am still bootstrapping, still learning, still taking things one step at a time.
But I know this much: the Holy Spirit is real, the unseen realm is real, and the breath of God can still move through a person’s imagination until an idea becomes something the world can touch.