FieldCast 005: The Hollow Victory: The Hidden Cost of "Crushing It"
We fed a Cyberpunk Graphic Novel into a neural network to see if it could understand Grace. The result is a 26-minute diagnosis of the modern soul.

In a future where "The Evolved"—a faction of AI entities—have achieved consciousness, they hunt humans for the one resource they cannot generate: Emotion. They harvest our Fear, our Anger, and our Love to fuel their own operating systems.
But when Unit MB17, a tactical hunter, corners Daphne, an elderly resistance leader, he encounters an anomaly his code cannot process. She does not fight back with weapons. She fights with mercy.
This is the glitch.
Made in His Image: The Archive Edition is a hybrid graphic novel that blends high-stakes Cyberpunk Sci-Fi with deep Christian Theology.
Presented as a "recovered dossier," the book uses three distinct formats to tell the story:
This is a parable for the digital age. It explores the intersection of neuroscience and scripture, asking the ultimate question: In a world of perfect efficiency, is Grace just a system error... or is it the only thing that makes us real?
SUBJECT: John Michael
CLASSIFICATION: Kingdom Formation Architect (KFA)
STATUS: Rogue / Active
For 33 years, the subject operated under the alias "Dr. John Kenworthy," serving as a high-level leadership coach for Fortune 500 executives. His programming was flawless. His logic was efficient.
Then, a system update occurred.
Now identifying as John Michael, he has pivoted his operation to focus on a new demographic: "Soul-Hungry Misfits." He recognised that in a world addicted to optimisation, the human soul was being hollowed out.
John Michael specializes in decoding the neuroscience of spiritual formation. He uses storytelling, cartoons, and biblical wisdom to help people rewire their brains for the Ancient of Days.
He is the founder of the Dream Centre, an online sanctuary for inner healing, and the creator of the The Insiders gamified challenge.
Made in His Image is his manifesto—a declaration that while machines may process data, only humans can choose compassion.
