Just the mention of the word “hacker” evokes the image of the online netherworld, of spies surreptitiously downloading blueprints of the latest stealth fighter or shutting down power grids.
Now are there Christian hackers?
Apparently so. Since 2014, Code of the Kingdom has held 44 weekend “hackathons” worldwide for programmers to help non-profits. Around 100 technologists compete for $10,000 in prizes while tackling the ills of the world. They’ve launched an app to fight human exploitation and streamlined access to social services for the homeless.
“We write code and create technology to help release the oppressed, teach God’s Word, heal the sick, feed the hungry, clothe the naked and support the church and the body of Christ,” their website declares.
Hackathons are nothing new; they gather topnotch coders to brainstorm solutions in marathon sessions that harness the collective nerd power of diverse professionals. What is different about Code for the Kingdom is the participants’ undergirding faith. Some 4,000 techies worldwide have participated so far.
“I wanted to be in a place where there’s a stronger connection between my work and my faith,” Kristen Stark told GeekWire. She’s an engineer at Midfin Systems in Redmond, California. “We love Jesus and other people and want to help them. Helping the users and offering them alternatives by showing that others care for their underlying needs is a very Christian approach to intervention.”
Their weekday jobs are for Amazon, Google, Microsoft and a slew of startups. Then on select weekends throughout the year, they gather in Seattle; Nashville; Cali, Columbia; Bangalore, India; Chicago; Dallas; Denver; London; Jakarta, Indonesia; Manila, Philippines; La Paz, Bolivia — in all 32 cities in 12 countries.
Finish reading the article on Jesus Geeks.
Ha! I love this. Thanks for sharing it. 🙂
Reblogged this on Talmidimblogging.
Very cool! Go millenials for Christ!
Praise the Lord for this! It’s about 30 years late for me, because I dove into computers about 33 years ago, and my coding is so archaic as to not be worthy of the name. At this point I want computers just to work for me, rather than having to work to make them be reliable.
Ok, Mike, I’ll move over 🙂
Hey friend, good to hear from you! How are things going?
Doing ok, all things considered. How are you?
For years I’ve been meaning to ask you this: why don’t you have a link to your blog on your Gravatar?
probably because I don’t know how to do it
ok, did i manage to do it?
Great job! Now, when I see you liked a post, I’ll click your gravatar and come read your latest post.
the funny thing is that you never look at your own gravatar. anyhow, I thought I put my blog link on their once years ago. how do I put a warning on my FB page that there are political posts there?
Nice play on words lol!
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Love this! Thanks for sharing! God bless!
For years I’ve been meaning to ask you this: why don’t you have a link to your blog on your Gravatar? —
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I think WordPress foils it. It sends you to a page that says “blog terminated.” It WAS an SEO trick to multiply your URL across the internet.