Our manifesto

An AI should never stand between a person and God.

Your people are already asking their questions somewhere — at 11pm, into a search bar, into whatever answers fastest. We built Ask Church so that when they ask about your church, the answer comes from your church, in your words — not from a stranger who has never met them.

But there's a line we won't cross.

What it is

Ask Church does the front-door work. It answers what time the service is, where to park, how to get baptized, what your church believes — grounded only in what you've already published, and it shows where each answer came from. It carries your church's own voice and makes it findable. It is the press, not the pulpit.

What it refuses to be

It will not pretend to be your pastor. It will not invent doctrine, take a position you haven't taught, or resolve someone's faith into a tidy reply. The questions that matter most — grief, doubt, "I need prayer," "I want to belong" — it does not try to settle. It hands them to a person. When someone is in crisis, a human reaches them before the AI says a word. That isn't a limitation we apologize for. It's the point.

Why

Because the most important things a church does cannot be downloaded. The truth that forms a soul is found in the struggle, the sacrament, and the people in the room — never in a flawless two-second answer. A tool that tried to replace that wouldn't be serving your church; it would be competing with it. So Ask Church points people in — toward your teaching, your staff, each other, and the door of the actual church. It does the logistics so your people get to the real thing faster.

People for the soul. This for the logistics.

That's the promise, and we'll keep it. — Vision Genesis