A Man, A Mountain, and a Calling
Before there was a vision for a new world… there was a boy searching for meaning.
Ross Harvey’s early years were not marked by fame, power, or extraordinary privilege. They were marked by something far more universal—questions. Questions about life, about purpose, about why the world felt so full of promise and yet so fractured at the same time.
He grew up like many do—learning, observing, striving, and at times struggling to reconcile what he saw around him with what he felt deep within. There was always a sense that something more was possible. Not just for him—but for everyone.
But for a long time, that “something more” remained just out of reach. Like a distant light you can see… but cannot yet touch.
And then came December 2003.
The Seven Days on the Mountain
On December 25th, 2003, Ross stepped away from the noise of the world and into something far quieter… and far more powerful.
For seven days, he entered into what he would later describe simply as “the mountain.”
This was not about geography—it was about encounter.
In those seven days, removed from distraction, stripped of the usual rhythms of life, he experienced something that would redefine everything that followed. A deep, undeniable communion with God. Not abstract. Not distant. But present. Personal. Real.
Time seemed to bend. Priorities dissolved. What remained was clarity.
A clarity that spoke not just to his life—but to the condition of humanity itself.
He saw the gap between what is… and what could be.
He felt, in a way that is difficult to fully articulate, that the suffering, division, and limitation so many accept as “normal” were not the final design. That humanity was capable of more—far more—if aligned with a higher truth.
And perhaps most importantly, he felt called.
Not in a vague or symbolic sense—but with direction.
A call to act.
A call to build.
A call to help bring about conditions where people could truly live—fully, freely, and in alignment with something greater than themselves.
When he came down from that “mountain,” life did not suddenly become easy.
But it became clear.
Walking It Out — Year After Year
What followed was not a single dramatic moment—but a long, steady obedience.
Year after year, Ross chose to follow that call.
Not perfectly. Not without challenge. But consistently.
He moved forward when the path made sense… and when it didn’t.
He spoke when it was welcomed… and when it was ignored.
He reached out to leaders, communities, organizations, and individuals—not because it was easy, but because he believed the message was bigger than himself.
There were seasons of progress… and seasons of silence.
Moments of encouragement… and moments where everything seemed to stall.
But through it all, one thing remained unchanged:
He believed that what he experienced in December 2003 was real.
And he believed it was not given to him to keep—it was given to him to share.
A Vision That Refuses to Shrink
Over time, that calling began to take shape.
What started as a personal encounter became a global vision.
A NuVo World.
Not as an abstract idea—but as a living, growing movement aimed at transforming how people live, connect, and support one another.
At its heart is a simple but radical belief:
That the conditions of what many would call “Heaven on Earth” are not reserved for another time or place… but can be built here—step by step, community by community, person by person.
This vision does not ignore reality—it confronts it.
It acknowledges the broken systems, the isolation, the struggles people face. But instead of accepting them as permanent, it asks:
What if we could do better?
What if we worked together?
What if we aligned our efforts with something higher?
Ross has spent years putting action behind those questions—building platforms, reaching out to leaders, inviting participation from individuals at every level of society.
Not because he claims to have all the answers…
But because he refuses to believe the answers don’t exist.
Faith in Action
At the center of his journey is a conviction he holds firmly:
That nothing meaningful is built alone.
And nothing lasting is built without God.
His work is not driven by ego or recognition—it is driven by alignment. A desire to listen, to follow, and to act when called.
He understands something that many overlook:
That faith is not passive.
It is movement.
It is persistence.
It is showing up again and again—even when the outcome is not yet visible.
An Invitation
This is not just a story about one man.
It is an invitation.
An invitation to consider that the world as it is… may not be the world as it has to be.
That change does not begin “out there”—it begins with individuals who are willing to believe, to act, and to come together.
Ross Harvey’s journey—from a questioning young man, to a transformative experience on a mountain, to years of steady, faithful pursuit—stands as a testament to what can happen when someone chooses to follow a calling fully.
Not halfway.
Not when it’s convenient.
But completely.
The story is still being written.
And its next chapter may not belong to him alone.