FaithTech is a practicing community. We believe there is a way of building technology that redemptively changes the world while transforming those who build it. We gather in city-based communities around the world to build technology together, rooted in a biblically based method, and bring this new method of building back into our workplaces.
Our city-based communities are where we meetup in person to eat, learn and build together!
Every FaithTech city has its own distinct characteristics and unique local expression. The common thread between each city is a shared love for Jesus and a desire to gather together in community to build technology in a redemptive way.
We believe in a new way of building technology. A different way. A redemptive way.
In FaithTech Create, we form small teams around ideas that emerge within a local city. These teams follow our 4D cycle methodology to create technology tools that help advance the gospel, help the local church, or serve the most poor and marginalized.

Quantum computing is advancing from a theoretical science into a phase of real-world utility, due in large part to AI emerging as the indispensable control plane that manages its immense fragility. The Understanding section details this transition, noting that the field is now defined by the pursuit of logical qubits and the Quantum Echoes algorithm achieving verifiable quantum advantage in molecular simulation. The technological power raises an urgent security threat, the Post-Quantum Cryptography (PQC) Imperative. The Applying section calls for the church to engage with this technology as something capable of revolutionizing drug discovery and climate modeling. The most immediate action for all organizations is to begin the migration to the new PQC standards to protect data now, while actively advocating for equitable access and resisting the technological hubris that minimizes the magnificent order of God's creation.

Since early 2026, robotics is utterly supercharged by AI and is transitioning from a niche industrial machinery into a physical AI that is intelligent and autonomous. The Understanding section explores this critical shift, noting that the automation of toil could possibly present a redemptive opportunity to free humans for work that better reflects the Imago Dei. However, the parallel rise of robotic companions that simulate relationship raises profound ethical questions about emotional deception and the irreplaceable nature of human community. The Applying section details how the democratization of robotics through open-source and no-code platforms offers a historic chance for ministries to engage in low-cost, mission-driven innovation, such as using collaborative robots for humanitarian logistics. We are called to ensure this technology always serves as a bridge back to human community, guiding its development with a moral goal that prioritizes stewardship, gentleness, and respect for the integrity of God's creation.

This AI moment represents both an opportunity and a challenge for believers. We are called to be in the world but not of it (John 17:14–15), engaging with cultural and technology while remaining rooted in timeless biblical truths. As the gap between AI and our ability to respond wisely continues to widen, the global church faces an unprecedented opportunity to proclaim the gospel in a world searching for meaning.

By the end of 2026, drone technology has transcended simple aerial observation, emerging as an autonomous and interactive platform for physical action. This shift is driven by the convergence of AI and advancements in heavy-lift cargo and Beyond Visual Line of Sight (BVLOS) capabilities. The Understanding section of this report explores how drones have become ubiquitous in humanitarian aid and rapid disaster assessment, and how they serve as tangible instruments of beneficence. The Applying section demonstrates that drones are uniquely positioned to solve critical problems in last-mile aid delivery and environmental stewardship. For ministries, the path forward requires strategic partnership with drone logistics companies, the prioritization of biblical and ethical paradigms to guard against the risk of surveillance and privacy violations, and a commitment to integrating drone data analysis into vocational training programs. The technology offers a powerful and visible demonstration of God's love in action, but its use must be guided by the highest standards of truth and integrity.

By early 2026, blockchain has matured into a foundational General Purpose Technology (GPT), moving beyond cryptocurrency speculation to the core of institutional finance and enterprise systems. The Understanding section explores this critical shift, noting that the technology's core feature, the immutable ledger, presents a theological parallel to God's unchanging nature and commitment to truth, creating a unique opportunity for redemptive work. The Applying section details how the technology can be used to dramatically enhance transparency and accountability in ministry, particularly through Real-World Asset (RWA) tokenization to enable community stewardship models and the use of Decentralized Autonomous Organizations (DAOs) for transparent governance. However, the technology requires rigorous ethical scrutiny to counteract the risks of financial speculation, plutocratic control in DAOs, and the co-option of decentralization by centralized institutional systems. We are called to actively discern and support open-source projects that align with a Kingdom vision of empowering the marginalized and fostering genuine community governance.