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Steve Jobs Contribution to Christianity

By October 5, 2011Christians, Culture

Steve Jobs was without question a brilliant man and an incredible marketer. Jobs had a brilliance as an innovator and presenter and could wow an audience or inspire a team. I’ve read that he was difficult (extremely) to work for, but turnover was minimal at Apple because people wanted to follow him.

I do not know anything about Jobs’ spiritual life or his relationship to Christ. I know, however, that Steve Jobs made an incredible contribution to the field of Christianity. God has used his efforts for good.

As I type this post on my MacBook Air, I’m reminded that today I used my iPhone and my iPad to communicate with people around the world. I read the YouVersion by application and kept up with the world through at least a dozen apps I used today.

As a pastor, I am directly benefiting in my ministry from the work of Steve Jobs. May God continue to bring good from the products his company created.

How is your life different because of Steve Jobs and Apple products?

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Ron Edmondson

Author Ron Edmondson

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Comments (33)

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Ron, Jobs was a Buddhist, although I believe he came to it later in life. That said, he was a gifted dreamer and innovator, who has enriched my life in many ways. He will be missed.
4 replies · active 704 weeks ago
Hi Ron

I just read this article on CNN about his spiritual walk. http://www.cnn.com/2011/10/05/tech/innovation/ste...
1 reply · active 705 weeks ago
I wish Steve Jobs was a Christian, (the Washington Post says he was a Buddhist)...

At least I could have meet this great man and business leader face to face when the Lord raptures His church to be with Him forever. I am really worried about his soul...
I feel like we lost our generation's Thomas Edison! He completely changed how we live with the original Macintosh computer. He made computers part of every day life not just something major corporations used. Yes, Christians benefited greatly from his accomplishments.
1 reply · active 705 weeks ago
Bill Beeskow's avatar

Bill Beeskow · 705 weeks ago

The comment thread is very interesting and inspires a question: if Apple makes profits off Christians, then uses those profits to create laws that force Christian pastors to officiate weddings of same-sex couples, or forces Christian churches to have a 'diverse' leadership, is that worth it? And I'm not saying Microsoft is any better; Apple, though, has been very active in matters that appear, at least to me, very anti-Christian.
We in Sumner county are experiencing an attack on our school system by the ACLU. School system employees don't have the right to visibly worship when they are on the clock or risk violation of the establishment clause. So an organization with a lot of money is making use of that money to further their social agenda, and pushing us away from Constitutionally protected rights. I pray that, somehow, God willing, Apple changes its' tune regarding their social agenda.

Bill
1 reply · active 705 weeks ago
I'm just a year older that Steve. I grew up in that same generation of the computer revolution. I've always been interested in Apple and with Steve and the other Steve (Woz). I've watched over the years at the products that Apple developed, but could never afford them or justify them in my personal or work environment. A few years ago a friend gave me an old iMac and I was hooked. Since then I have a Mac Pro at work, two iMacs at home a number of iPods for the kids, an iPhone and an iPad. I've watched with great interest as Apple again and again, with Jobs at the helm, has seen through the clouds of sameness and tradition to lead the way, not just follow; and mostly succeed. I think that he was a visionary man who really followed his heart and was true to himself.

I don't know about his spiritual side, but he is a shining example of doing what you love, being true to yourself, working hard to make things better, never giving up, and always looking at the bigger picture. I prayed for him and his family last night. We never met, a that's something that I would have really liked. He's one of a handful of people that I "grew up with" that I would really have liked to have had a conversation with.
1 reply · active 705 weeks ago
I believe Steve is a Buddhist by faith. I am not sure about his conviction about Christianity.

I always remember his "Stay Hungry Stay Foolish" speech to Stanford students:
"Your time is limited, so don't waste it living someone else's life. Don't be trapped by dogma — which is living with the results of other people's thinking. Don't let the noise of others' opinions drown out your own inner voice. And most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary."
1 reply · active 705 weeks ago
jacqueline kelly's avatar

jacqueline kelly · 704 weeks ago

It grieves me terribly that the God-Most-High who makes man-kind and gives them wisdom, knowledge and understanding, among other gifts, does not get the glory nor will those who miss Him aand his will for them, get to where God intends for him/her.

It is a mighty waste!
Regardless of the path Steve trod with God, I'm finding myself totally inspired by the way he lived his life; the inspirational way he lead his company and the impact he has had on so many lives. There's no doubt that God has used him.
1 reply · active 704 weeks ago
Steve was certainly inspirational in the fact that he pursued his dreams. However, if he is anything like the fool of Luke 12, he died with a very big "barn" but was not rich toward God.
1 reply · active 704 weeks ago
My blog, Consider †his!, much of my Bible study (weak as it may be), speaking out about Christ, my contributions to 2 (hopefully 3) books, plus one of my own, have all been done on Macintosh computers. I do not choose, however, to subject myself to the Christ-limiting (in some cases) selection of iPhone apps, choosing instead a Palm Pre.
1 reply · active 704 weeks ago

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