Years of sermons become something a member can actually ask. Not a search box, and not a paraphrase — your pastor's actual words, with a link to the exact moment he said them. And when he hasn't taught on something, it says so rather than guess your church's doctrine.
Illustrative — your assistant answers from your church's actual sermons, in your pastor's words.
It surfaces what your pastor really said — in quotes, drawn from the transcript — before it ever summarizes. And if it isn't in his teaching, it says so; it won't invent your doctrine.
Canon turns on with your consent, and a human-approval step keeps you in control of how your teaching is represented.
Every answer links to the precise timestamp in the sermon — not just the video, the moment — so people don't read about it, they hear you say it.
The everyday assistant works from day one with whatever you've published. Canon gets richer the more you teach — so it's something every church grows into, never a big-church-only feature.
Canon is priced by quote, on top of your plan — sized to your library.