If you're a Christian building something — an app, a tool, a service — you know the struggle: where do you share progress on something that isn't finished yet? How do you find the right people to give feedback? kit (Keep in Touch) was created to solve exactly that.^1
kit gives Christian creators a simple launchpad for their projects: a built-in blog with RSS feed, email lead capture, a no-code landing page, and direct integration with the faith.tools directory — so your work gets seen by the Christians who care about it most.^2 It also includes AI-powered content moderation to keep things safe, page view analytics, QR code sharing, and customizable calls-to-action.^3
Built on the Freedom Stack (Astro, HTMX, Alpine.js, TailwindCSS), kit is fully open source under the MIT license with over 200 commits and active development.^4 It's also home to the "Openly Faithful" movement — a community of Christians in open source working toward kingdom-first, Spirit-led, radically generous software development.^5
Notable- Created by Cameron Pak, founder of faith.tools
- Open sourced in November 2024, relicensed from Attribution to MIT^6
- Actively maintained — 210+ commits, latest update March 2026^4
- Currently in beta with plans for deeper faith.tools integration^1
- Hosts the "Openly Faithful: Christians in Open Source" movement^5