9:10 is a social platform built around scripture instead of vanity. Post, watch, follow friends — but the gravity of the app pulls toward a community reading the Bible together, sharing reflections, and spreading the word of God.
Most platforms are tuned to keep you scrolling, not to leave you better than they found you. We wanted a place where Christians could build community and create content without having to wade through what the rest of the internet has decided to surface — and where someone curious about Jesus could scroll, watch, and learn from believers instead.
Most Christian apps pick one lane. We're combining them — the combination is the product.
Create and share content that shares the goodness of God. Follow your friends. Like, comment, share — all the primitives you know, pointed somewhere different. Public or private: you decide what to share.
A leader curates a plan — from a template or built passage by passage. The group reads daily. Reflections stay hidden until you post your own. Discussion happens per day, in your circle, not in a public comment section.
Browse any book, any chapter. Multiple translations. Bookmarks for what you want to come back to. Highlighting and notes that sync to your profile, not just your device.
The feed is full of believers making things — sermons, reflections, music, art, testimony. Not whatever's trending. The aesthetic is yours, not the algorithm's.
Every post is public or private — your call, every time. Private posts are visible only to your friends. There's no shadow public surface that scrapes them.
Plans, daily passages, hidden-until-submit reflections, per-day discussion. Up to fifty members. Invite-only. Your table stays your table.
Wisdom starts somewhere specific. It starts in scripture, read in community, at a cadence a group can keep.
We borrowed the name because the problem is the name. So many apps promise transformation. Fewer point back to the foundation the whole tradition is built on.
The shape we landed on: a social media platform designed with Christ at the center. Content, community building, scripture — under one icon, with one center of gravity. The same primitives the rest of the internet uses. A different center.
The app is free. The habit is the point. When we launch, that's what ships — nothing more.