David grew up in the church and came to faith young. As he got older and wanted to go beyond surface-level reading, he started using Bible study tools to dig into the original Hebrew and Greek — the languages Scripture was actually written in.
The tools existed. Strong's concordances, interlinear Bibles, lexicons. But they were built for a different era: cluttered interfaces, disconnected workflows, and a learning curve that assumed years of prior training. The gap between wanting to understand the original text and actually being able to was wider than it should be.
As a software engineer, David saw that gap as a solvable problem. The scholarship was already done. The data existed. What was missing was a tool designed from the ground up for the serious student — not the seminary professor, not the casual reader, but the person in between who genuinely wants to know what a word meant when it was written.
That's what Seed Scroll is. Strong's numbers wired directly to every word in the reader. Hebrew and Greek letters broken down to their pictographic roots. A patent-pending Semantic Insight system that surfaces the layered meaning encoded in original root words. AI-assisted verse discovery. And a social feed so study doesn't have to happen alone.