Frequently Asked Questions

No.

Actulint does not require belief. It offers frameworks for discovering yourself.

You are encouraged to test ideas, reject what doesn’t hold up, and think independently.

No.

Actulint explicitly rejects:

  • Charismatic authority

  • Exclusive truth claims

  • Isolation from outside ideas

  • Guilt-based control

  • Identity dependency

Participation is voluntary, transparent, and non-coercive.

Because churches historically provided:

  • Meaning

  • Structure

  • Community

  • Moral frameworks

Modern society removed these without replacing them responsibly. Actulint restores structure without superstition.

No.

We do not exist to attack religion or believers.

We exist for people who no longer find traditional religion intellectually or psychologically adequate, but still want meaning, depth, and structure.

Legally and practically, many modern churches already function as commercial enterprises.

They generate revenue, employ staff, own media platforms, sell products, and influence public discourse—often while remaining exempt from obligations imposed on other business entities.

Actulint rejects that contradiction.

We are not like other churches that encourage political activity, disparage certain groups, or exert cultural influence, while simultaneously avoiding transparency, accountability, or taxation.

If an organization operates like a business, it should be treated like one.

Actulint tends to resonate with:

  • Independent thinkers

  • Former believers

  • High-agency individuals

  • Gen-Z and millennials seeking structure

  • People who reject nihilism without returning to faith

Start with:

  1. Reading the Actulint Manifesto

  2. Watching a foundational sermon video

  3. Assessing your own thoughts and ideas about what you heard.

Then decide, clearly and independently, whether this framework serves you.