Some people chase freedom.
Some chase Wi-Fi.
Paul chased both—and still managed to plant churches, write letters, and patch tents along the way.
We didn’t invent the digital nomad life.
We just added laptops and loyalty points.
In the early church, a tent-maker wasn’t just someone with a practical skill.
It was someone who carried their calling lightly,
who traveled not to escape, but to serve.
Someone who didn’t wait for funding to arrive,
but worked with their hands, hearts, and whatever space they could borrow.
Sound familiar?
Like Paul, tent-makers today might stay in a place for a season.
They might build something, bless someone, and move on.
But the work remains.
The beauty of it?
There’s no shame in working to support the mission.
Whether it’s writing, teaching, consulting, creating—
tent-makers don’t rely on prestige.
They rely on presence.
So what does this have to do with matcha and gorilla grammar?
Everything.
Because even now—2,000 years later—the real tent-making continues.
Except now the tents are made of:
And if Paul had access to ChatGPT?
He’d probably write even longer letters to the Corinthians.