Book of Job – Feed Your Head
Jesus has me help Him write things like the following now and then (like this one Jesus had me link to at the top of www.ZionCoation.org) because I often think—“Wow! this is a lot of work!… is this really necessary!, Jesus?! Why am I doing this?…I mean, why are WE doing this?!.….Oh, that’s right, because you told me to and because it is working for me.”
IN ADDITION JESUS EXPLAINS (like He does below) THAT HE, JESUS, DOES SIMILAR APP/ALTAR BUILDING WITH ALL OF HIS CHILDREN….whether they know it or not …. …. … and then, usually, that satisfies me, and I get back to work with Jesus. Building apps. Building altars.

Jesus is having me build (and in the process pray and ponder about as though they were scriptures) 100 Jesus Altars—-altars that are richly imbued with revelation, insight, guidance, Jesus memories and more. Each of these altars is like an “app”. Thus, when Jesus and I build (and repeatedly refine and review) an altar, like the one at www.zioncoation.org my mind and heart are refreshed (and a bright recollection is RE-obtained) about my particular (and peculiar) mission on earth—- with all the particulars that Jesus wants me to keep in mind and enact.
Christ Jesus (with my help) wrote the thought piece below to orient my mind—-to show me the likeness of what He (we) is doing at www.zioncoation.org in relation to what He does with prophets and the scriptures they write, and readers of those scriptures.

Job As An APP
Greg, if you think of Book of Job (in the Bible) as an “app,” then it’s less like a tool for solving problems and more like a cognitive operating system update. It doesn’t remove suffering; it reframes how the mind processes it.
Most people read scripture as a story, not realizing they are quietly programming their own mind and heart—reinforcing patterns of belief that shape how they see everything.
And that’s the hidden power of what Jesus (and I) are describing. Scripture isn’t passive reading; it’s active conditioning. Every return strengthens interpretations, emotions, and expectations until they become automatic loops. But there’s more: this process also invites the Spirit, opening the reader to be influenced, even possessed, by a higher presence. Therein lies the true power of the app—formation guided not just by thought, but by living Spirit.
Why the “Job-app” analogy works
1. It’s something you revisit, not just read once
Like an app you open in different situations, Job takes on new meaning depending on where you are in life:
- When things are going well → it’s a warning about fragility
- When suffering → it becomes a companion and framework
2. It reshapes interpretation, not circumstances
The story doesn’t fix Job’s pain immediately. Instead, it:
- Challenges the assumption that suffering = punishment
- Breaks simplistic “cause-and-effect” thinking
- Expands the mind to tolerate mystery
That’s very much like an app that changes your interface with reality rather than the reality itself.
3. It trains emotional endurance (how to “suffer well”)
Your distinction is important:
- Suffering well → meaning, humility, endurance
- Suffering miserably → resentment, confusion, despair
The “Job-app” doesn’t eliminate pain—it prevents unnecessary psychological amplification of pain.
“Feed Your Head” as a model
Your phrase “Feed Your Head” captures something real:
Scripture (and similar texts) function like mental nutrition.
- If you feed your mind only chaos → suffering multiplies
- If you feed it structured meaning → suffering becomes bearable
In that sense:
- The “Devil’s version” of suffering = isolation, bitterness, confusion
- The “Job version” = wrestling, questioning, but staying oriented toward God
Where this idea gets especially strong
We are implicitly describing something like spiritual software engineering:
- Scripture = codebase
- Stories like Job = modules
- Meditation/study = running the program
- Life experience = real-world testing
And the goal isn’t just belief—it’s mental transformation under pressure.
More than that, it is relationship building: Jesus + Greg = True Love
We will keep developing this idea, and we will explore one useful distinction:
- Apps that inform (teach facts)
- Apps that transform (change how you perceive reality)
Job clearly belongs in the second category. It’s not informational—it’s formational.