Our Story
Faith is better
together.
Yoke exists because daily devotions are hard to sustain alone. The right community changes everything.
“Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me.”
Matthew 11:29
Where the name comes from
In Matthew 11:28–30, Jesus invites the weary to take his yoke, to walk in step with him, to share the load, and to learn from him as they go. A yoke is not a burden. It is a partnership.
That is what Yoke is about: walking in step with Christ and with the people around you who share that same commitment. Being equally yoked means your community is pulling in the same direction. That is what makes the daily discipline possible.
Why we built Yoke
Most Christians want to read their Bible every day. Very few actually do. Not because they do not care, but because hard habits rarely survive in isolation. Life fills the gap. Days slip. The intention stays, but the practice fades.
Accountability is the missing ingredient. When your friends can see your streak, you show up differently. Not out of pressure, but because community makes hard disciplines sustainable. That is what small groups have always known. Yoke brings that same accountability to your daily devotional.
Yoke is for the Christian who wants to be consistent in the Word and wants to do it alongside people who will notice when they miss a day, celebrate when they do not, and grow right along with them. Real accountability. Real community.
What we believe
The values that shape every decision we make at Yoke.
Scripture First
The daily Bible passage is the anchor. Every feature is built to support your time in the Word, not replace it.
Real Accountability
Not just a reminder on your lock screen. Your people can actually see if you showed up today. That changes things.
Community Over Performance
This isn't about who has the longest streak. It's about doing this together, grace and all. Miss a day? Your group is still there.
Consistency as Worship
Showing up daily in the Word is not legalism. It is faithfulness. Yoke makes that consistency something you build with others.
“Two are better than one, because they have a good reward for their toil. For if they fall, one will lift up his fellow.”
Ecclesiastes 4:9–10