Indigitous hosted #HACK2024, its 8th annual hackathon throughout the months of October and November, 2024.
Seventy-one champions led 1,113 people at hackathon events in 58 cities and 30 countries globally.
#HACK is a global event where participants come together to create innovative and gospel-centered solutions to issues facing their communities.

Discover the people, projects, and partners who made #HACK2024 possible.
Inspired by the Fourth Lausanne Congress on World Evangelization, Indigitous highlighted three global challenges and joined the global church in addressing these missional gaps: Discipleship in a Digital Age, Unreached Peoples, and People on the Move.
To mentor and empower the 41 new and 30 returning #HACK city hosts or champions, in leading a #HACK event in their city, 32 coaches bridged countries, cultures, and organizations to connect with champions online.
“From champions to participants, from coaches to judges, it was beautiful to celebrate people from every corner of the world coming together to tackle unique challenges in their communities,” said Jonah Jala, Global Director of #HACK2024 and Director of Digital Engagements at Indigitous.
#HACK2024 Projects
#HACK2024 projects included a team in Panama collaborating to design a discipleship platform for migrants in the Darian Gap. The team prototyped a website with discipleship content from the Jesus Film to provide bus drivers with WiFi boxes loaded with discipleship content, ensuring the Gospel reaches migrants on their journey to Costa Rica.
A team in Nairobi worked to create a Biblia Mashinani—an affordable offline app and website featuring Bible content and study guides in local languages to support spiritual growth and church collaboration in rural communities.
In #HACK Iloilo, participants created Moved to Move: Creatives Workshop—an initiative that empowers young Christians to share their faith online. Through mentorship, workshops, and collaboration, participants developed engaging digital content like reels and content strategies, leveraging digital platforms to spread the Gospel and fulfill the Great Commission.
Projects were presented to a panel of 5 judges who reviewed submitted prototypes and provided valuable insights to the teams to further develop gospel-centered solutions. Jesudamilare Adesegun-David, co-founder and CEO of Ennovate Lab; Cynthia Smith, board member of Christians in Web3; Ronald Raj, strategic leader of Living on the Edge; Jasmine Ng, Co-founder of Women In Blockchain Asia; and Stuart Cranney, Director for CV Asia Pacific played a key role in enabling #HACK projects to make a larger, more sustainable impact.
“As strangers gather together, they are encouraged that there are other people who would like to solve the same problems,” said Cassie, from Kuala Lumper, Malaysia. “Everyone thought they were the only one, but with this new community they were able to share, have meals together, and hope to continue with something more.”
“People came without biases,” said Jaison, #HACK Champion in South Asia. “We’re just people who love Jesus, unity, and collaboration who want to take the Gospel to new people, places and spaces.”