For pastors and ministry leaders

Practical testimony infrastructure for churches.

JesusDoes.com is the ministry operating layer beside JesusDoes.org: argument, practice, tools, and pastoral systems for helping real stories become durable witness.

The pastoral problem

Testimony is too important to leave to memory, momentum, or a volunteer spreadsheet.

Pastors need more than a better form. They need practical language, a defensible process, and enough social proof to help their people understand why testimony belongs in the life of the church.

This site will become the library and workbench for that job: simple enough to use, serious enough to trust, and restrained enough to keep the witness central.

A simple method

Receive, steward, share.

01

Capture

Give people a simple way to name what Jesus has done without turning testimony into performance.

02

Steward

Keep releases, review posture, source context, and pastoral judgment close to the story.

03

Share

Let the right stories strengthen the right people at the right moment, on the right surface.

Seminary library, not software pitch

The argument needs a home before the product asks for trust.

The first content lane should read like field notes for ministry leaders: direct, useful, theologically aware, and grounded in the actual pressure of leading people.

  1. Why testimony fades after powerful ministry moments
  2. How a church can collect stories without creating pressure
  3. The difference between witness, marketing, and manipulation
  4. What pastors need before a testimony becomes public
The workbench behind the library

Practical tools can follow the argument.

Once the public argument is clear, the site can point ministry leaders toward a small paid toolset without making JesusDoes.org carry sales weight.

  • Story intake and review paths
  • Release-aware public testimony pages
  • Church and ministry story libraries
  • Campaign follow-up rooted in real witness
A quieter next step

If your ministry has stories worth stewarding, start with the problem in front of you.

Begin with a focused conversation about the stories already in your care, the risks you need to guard, and the first faithful path for stewarding witness.

Start a conversation