Gathering. Eating. Walking. Singing. Serving.
Not as ritual — as life.
Jesus didn't ask people to build churches. He asked them to follow him.
Others talk about Jesus.
This house follows Jesus.
That means: act.
Every moment you're alive is grace. Not theology — actual grace. Jesus showed how to live in response: with action, with love, with presence.
This is the disciples' house. Not a building — a way of being together. If you're trying to follow something greater than yourself, you already live here.
Ready to Follow?
Because a disciple is simply someone who follows.
And this house belongs to all who follow — follow Jesus, follow truth, follow the call to show up for others.
Think of it like this: planet Earth belongs to all of us. It's our common home. We didn't build it. We can't own it. But we can live in it together — appreciate it, nurture it, be good custodians of it.
That's what disciples' house means. It's not our house to gatekeep. It's our house to share.
We're all just housemates here, learning to live well together.
We're given this house → We appreciate it → We share it → We're generous with it → We take care of it and each other
This is the Grace cycle lived out. Not as theology. As daily practice.
Because, regardless of belief, he remains the most historically consequential figure in the secular world.
His life changed everything.
Strip away every theological claim. Remove every supernatural element. Question every miracle. Set aside every doctrine. You're still left with one person whose actions — in three years — reshaped human history.
Christianity has existed for roughly 2,000 years. Today alone: 2.4 billion Christians. Across all of history? Tens of billions of lives oriented around his example.
Billions of lives. Changed by one person. Who owned nothing. Who held no power.
That's not religion. That's historical fact. And here's what he did: he laid down his life for others.
That's the bar he set.
Honestly: most people can't meet it. Most won't lay down their lives. There are families, fears, limits. But that's where the bar is. So this house aims for it. Reaches toward it.
The belief here is that Jesus set a pattern — not a boundary. A life poured out for others. Radical presence with the marginalized. Action over doctrine.
This pattern exists in every culture, every tradition. Figures who saw grace in being alive and responded by giving themselves away.
If you know someone like that from your history, your tradition, your family — bring their story to the table.
The only requirement: believing in showing up for others.
Join
The whole thing starts here.
You're alive. Right now. That's grace. Not something you earned. Not a reward. Just... gift.
Grace isn't a theological concept to accept. It's reality to notice. The air in your lungs. The light on your face. The fact that anything exists at all instead of nothing.
Grace is first. Everything else follows.
Grace → Appreciation → Sharing → Generosity → Mission
It begins with recognizing the gift of being alive. That recognition becomes appreciation. Appreciation flows into sharing. Sharing grows into generosity. Generosity becomes mission — helping those who need it most.
→ Not praying about problems — addressing them.
→ Not hoping for change — creating it.
→ Not talking about love — showing it.
This is spiritual. Deeply spiritual. But spiritual the way Jesus was: embodied, active, present.
Some of us believe deeply. Some are uncertain. Some are skeptical. All are welcome.
No promises of feeling God's presence here. No promises of spiritual epiphanies or moments of transcendence. That's not something anyone can manufacture or guarantee.
But sometimes — in the breaking of bread, in the harmony of voices, in the silence of a trail at dawn — something clicks. A moment of coherence. A feeling of alignment. The sense that you're exactly where you're supposed to be, doing exactly what you're supposed to do.
We can't promise those moments. But when they happen, we'd love you to share them.
Whether you call it God, grace, presence, or just the beauty of being alive — it's honored here. No requirement to name it. Just stay open to it.
Following Jesus means showing up for the overlooked.
Our action arm is the UNderDOGMATIC Foundation.
Refugees, disaster displaced, former prisoners rebuilding their lives.
Ethnic minorities, domestic workers, elderly alone, families in subdivided flats.
Creating pathways for those society wasn't designed to include.
Not helping from a distance. Showing up. Sitting with people. Eating together.
Jesus didn't run programs. He broke bread with people others wouldn't touch.
Learn About UNderDOGMATIC →
Six ways we practice being together. No services. No sermons. Just showing up.
Meals in homes.
🎵Participatory music.
⛰️Hong Kong's trails.
🌅Dawn in the water.
🤝Action as worship.
🧘Quiet practice.
This house doesn't gather to praise Jesus's name. Jesus never asked anyone to praise him — he asked them to follow him.
"Praise his name" doesn't increase your understanding, deepen your kindness, or help anyone in need. It's performative, not transformative.
Instead, we sit together and discuss his examples, his actions, how we can learn from them. We study. We question. We apply.
If you want worship music and praise, that's what church is for. Here, we focus on action.
Jesus gathered around tables. Not altars. Tables.
He ate with tax collectors, sinners, outcasts, friends. The table was where barriers dissolved.
When Jesus said "do this in remembrance of me," he wasn't creating a ritual to be performed once a week in church. He was saying: every time you break bread, every time you share wine, remember.
Remember kindness. Remember goodness. Remember the gift of being alive in this universe, together, right now.
Every meal is communion. Every table is sacred.
Grace: Someone prepares a meal — grace made visible.
Appreciation: We recognize this gift of food, company, time.
Sharing: We pass dishes. We share stories. Walls come down.
Generosity: We give ourselves — attention, honesty, vulnerability.
Mission: We leave ready to bring this spirit into the world.
These aren't dinner parties. They're practice — practicing the presence Jesus modeled.
The table is where strangers become family.
Join a Meal →
Music has always been how humans express what words can't hold.
Somewhere along the way, music became performance. Origin Sessions brings it back to participation.
Grace: Someone starts a song — offering something from their soul.
Appreciation: We listen. We feel. We let the music move us.
Sharing: Our voices join. Individual becomes collective.
Generosity: We give our vulnerability — singing isn't easy for everyone.
Mission: We carry that resonance into our lives.
Traditional hymns reimagined. New songs written together. No audience, only participants.
When we sing together, we breathe together. We become one body.
Visit Origin.Music → Join a Session
Hong Kong has 300+ kilometers of trails. Most people never leave the city.
Jesus retreated to mountains. To gardens. To wilderness. We follow.
Grace: Creation itself — mountains that existed long before us.
Appreciation: We slow down. We notice. We breathe.
Sharing: Conversation flows differently on a trail. Deeper. Easier.
Generosity: We share water. We wait for slower walkers. We carry what others can't.
Mission: We return to the city renewed, ready to serve.
The mountain doesn't care about your title or your problems. It just asks you to climb.
Join a Walk →
There's something about being in water as the sun comes up.
It's uncomfortable at first. Cold. Early. Vulnerable. That's the point.
Grace: Another day. The sun rises whether we deserve it or not.
Appreciation: Cold water makes you very awake, very fast. You feel alive.
Sharing: There's solidarity in discomfort. We shiver together.
Generosity: We encourage the hesitant. We celebrate the brave.
Mission: Starting the day with intention carries into everything.
Baptism wasn't about getting clean. It was about dying to the old and rising to the new. Every sunrise swim is a little resurrection.
Join a Swim →
This is where it gets real.
Following Jesus isn't about feeling good. It's about doing good. Together.
Grace: Someone needs help. We have hands. The connection is grace.
Appreciation: We recognize our own abundance by seeing another's lack.
Sharing: We share our time, our energy, our presence.
Generosity: We give without expecting return.
Mission: This IS the mission. Service is not preparation for something else.
Through UNderDOGMATIC, we partner with organizations serving refugees, people in recovery, former inmates, and neurodivergent individuals.
Not serving to feel righteous. Serving because it's what followers do.
Serve With Us →
Jesus withdrew often. To pray. To listen. To be alone with God.
Gathering to practice being alone — together.
Grace: Silence. Space. The absence of demand.
Appreciation: We notice what arises when we stop doing.
Sharing: We share space without filling it. Present but not intrusive.
Generosity: We give ourselves the gift of stillness — rare and countercultural.
Mission: From stillness comes clarity. From clarity comes right action.
Guided meditation. Silent retreats. Contemplative prayer. Different practices, same intention: make space.
You can't pour from an empty cup. Solitude is how we fill up.
Find Solitude →
A practical question deserves a practical tool.
We're building something a bit different — a way to explore how Jesus might respond to real situations you're facing.
This is an AI experiment — trained on Jesus's recorded words and actions. Not church doctrine. Not theology. Just what he actually said and did.
Describe your situation. Get perspective based on how he handled similar moments.
This is not Jesus. This is not prayer. This is not divine guidance.
It's a study tool — a way to explore his teachings and challenge your own thinking. Use it alongside community, reflection, and your own conscience. Never instead of them.
Coming Soon
All proceeds fund UNderDOGMATIC Foundation programs. Full transparency on costs and impact.
That's okay. Really.
You live your faith your way, and let us live ours.
Disagreement takes many forms. The kindest is simply this: you live your faith your way, and let us live ours.
We're not intruding on your practice. We're not saying your way is wrong. We're offering an alternative for those who want it.
But if disagreement leads to hostility — if your response to people peacefully following Jesus through action is anger or aggression — then consider:
Is that how Jesus would respond to people feeding the hungry and helping the lost?
That's the beauty of this house we've been given: we can disagree, coexist, and still respect each other.
We'd rather be judged by how we live than by how we argue.
Ready to follow? Start here.
We'll reach out within a few days. No spam. No pressure.