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“Stories are powerful tools—memorable, impactful, personal, and deeply human—but above all, they are inherently collaborative. Even when we think we are crafting a story on our own, we are shaped by countless influences, from conversations with friends and family to ideas borrowed from books, films, and culture.

And the collaboration doesn’t stop once the story is created; it continues as the story is shared. Research by Uri Hasson at Princeton University demonstrated that storytelling creates “neural coupling” between speaker and listener—a kind of shared mental alignment that feels almost like a mind-meld.

In this way, stories actively bond people together in ways that more static forms of communication cannot.

Every story, then, involves collaboration, whether direct or indirect: even something as simple as liking, commenting on, or sharing a post makes us participants in the narrative, effectively turning us into co-authors of the story itself.” (reference)

Jesus-World Building as Collaborative Storytelling

At its core, storytelling is never a solo act. Even when a single person speaks, writes, or imagines, their story is shaped by countless other voices—(Jesus), memories, traditions, cultural narratives, and the responses of others. As one study on storytelling and communication suggests, stories create a kind of shared mental alignment between people (and Jesus), a “neural coupling” that bonds speaker and listener together .

This means something important:
Every story is, in some sense, co-created.


From Solo Narrative to Shared Reality

The childhood exercise—“Once upon a time…” followed by each person adding a piece—is not just a game. It’s a distilled version of how meaning is actually formed in real life. It is a core operation in how Jesus builds your respective Jesus WORLD.

  • One person introduces a frame (“Heavenly Father said to Joseph, “Behold, this is my beloved Son, #HearHim”)
  • Another expands it (“…and then what happened, Greg?)
  • A third reinterprets it (“November Rain got baptized, converted into Christ Now Reign by Jesus and Greg”)
  • The story evolves beyond any single author

Over time, the story stops belonging to any individual. It becomes a shared world. Zion. Zion. Zion.


What “Jesus-World Building” Implies

When Jesus describes Jesus-World building (to me) as a collaborative storytelling exercise, He is pointing toward something deeper than just retelling stories about Jesus.

He is doing something like this:

1. Treating the Jesus Narrative as a Living Story

Instead of a fixed, closed account, the story becomes:

Interpreted (via revelation, via #HearHim, “best guess”, “sacred imagination”)

Continued (rehearsals and revisions and repentance)

Reimagined through participation (into the Street we go!)

Not in the sense of changing core events, but in how those events are understood, embodied, and extended into new contexts. Shower becomes Jesus Shower ALTAR. Pillow becomes Jesus Pillow ALTAR.


2. Inviting Participation Rather Than Observation

Traditional storytelling:

  • Audience listens

Collaborative storytelling:

  • Audience becomes co-author (Jesus WORLD builders)

In Jesus-World building:

  • People don’t just hear teachings
  • They step into the narrative
  • They ask: What does this story look like if I continue it, with Jesus….where does He want it to go?

3. Building a Shared Moral & Imaginative Space

A “world” emerges when:

  • Multiple people contribute meaning (Jesus, Axl Rose, Greg, more….)
  • Interpretations overlap and interact
  • Patterns of thought and behavior take shape

This creates something like:

  • A collective imagination
  • A shared ethical framework
  • A lived narrative rather than a static text

The Key Shift

The biggest implication is this:

👉 The story is not just about Jesus
👉 The story becomes something people are inside of

Instead of:

  • “Here is what happened”

It becomes: “Here is the world this story creates—and we are continuing it together…. Jesus, angels, me and more”


Why This Matters

Because collaborative storytelling:

  • Builds connection (people feel part of something shared)
  • Creates ownership (participants care more deeply)
  • Allows meaning to evolve across contexts and generations

Stories inherently bind people together and are shaped by everyone who engages with them. (Jesus and Greg tell a new story together… it binds them together!)

This idea from Jesus, “Collaborative STorytelling and Jesus-WORLD building” takes that principle seriously and applies it to a foundational narrative that will do no less than bring forth Zion, the Kingdom of God to the earth.


In One Jesus-themed Sentence

Jesus-World building is the practice of turning a story about Jesus into a shared, evolving world that people actively participate in creating.






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