Eight anchors. One body of work.
Everything K.A. Perkins writes, teaches, and builds lives inside one of these eight topics. Each hub is a permanent entry point — an evergreen introduction and a curated set of supporting essays.
Faith and Work
The recovery of vocation as worship.
Faith and work is not a category. It is the entire Christian life colliding with the eight to twelve hours a day where most of us actually live. The Church spent a century treating the workplace as a mission field to invade instead of an altar to serve at, and the result is a generation of Christians who feel two-thirds pagan by Wednesday afternoon.
Marketplace Ministry
The marketplace is not a mission field. It is a parish.
Marketplace ministry is not the Christian who witnesses at the water cooler. It is the Christian who builds the company. It is the founder as pastor, the operator as elder, the P&L as a form of pastoral care.
Leadership Beyond Sunday
The Kingdom is bigger than the sermon.
Sunday is one hour a week. The Kingdom is 168. Leadership beyond Sunday is the discipline of extending the pulpit into every arena the pastor cannot reach — the org chart, the boardroom, the school, the studio, the household.
Kingdom Entrepreneurship
Build companies that outlast you and honor the King who owns them.
Kingdom entrepreneurship is not Christian branding on a startup. It is a way of building — of choosing capital, hiring, product, customers, and exit — that treats the Kingdom as the actual client.
Faith & AI
The most important theological conversation of the next fifty years is technical.
AI is not a productivity tool. It is a covenantal moment. The way the Church engages the next twenty years of machine intelligence will shape catechesis, formation, work, worship, and neighbor-love more than any denominational debate of the last century.
Christian Productivity
Getting things done is a form of stewardship, not self-optimization.
Most productivity systems are Stoicism in a Notion template. They assume the goal is self-optimization and the reward is control. Christian productivity assumes the goal is faithful stewardship of finite time and the reward is a life laid down well.
Life Architecture
Design the life you are actually going to live.
Life Architecture is the discipline of designing a life on purpose — vocation, family, faith, health, finances, legacy — instead of accepting the life that momentum, culture, and other people's ambitions are quietly building for you.
Building Organizations That Build People
The best organizations produce goods, services, and human beings.
The point of an organization is not merely to produce output. The best ones produce people — leaders, saints, spouses, parents, citizens — as a byproduct of doing excellent work together.