84 working previews of Atlanta-area church AI assistants are already built and live, each trained on that church's own website and sermons. Yours may be one.
If you lead a church in the Atlanta area and you're looking into an AI assistant, check before you build anything — yours may already exist. AskMyChurch has 84 working previews of Atlanta-area church assistants built and live right now, each one trained on that church's own website and sermons, waiting for someone at the church to claim it.
These are previews, not customers. Nobody at those churches signed anything or paid anything. We built them so a pastor or church admin can watch their own assistant answer real questions about their own church — service times, kids check-in, what a recent sermon said about grief — before making any decision.
Each assistant answers only from the church's own published content: the website and the sermons. Nothing from the open internet. Ask when Sunday services start and it answers from your site. Ask what the pastor taught on forgiveness and the Canon layer links to the exact minute in the sermon recording — click the link and the message plays from the moment those words were said.
When the answer isn't in the church's content, the assistant says so and hands the conversation to a real person. It never fills a gap with a guess. That's the design standard: the front door of your church, always open, with a real person on the other side of it.
Every incoming message is checked for signs of crisis before any AI response is generated — in English and in Spanish. A message that reads like someone in danger routes straight to the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline and the Crisis Text Line. This is hard-coded. No church setting turns it off, and the AI never attempts a pastoral answer first. For a tool sitting on a church website at 2 a.m., we think this is the feature that matters most.
Atlanta churches serve Spanish-speaking members and visitors every week. The assistant detects the language of the question and answers in it — same content, same sermon citations, same crisis check in both languages. Bilingual support is standard on every plan, not an upgrade.
Looking at your preview costs nothing. If you claim it, pricing is by weekend attendance, and every plan is the same full assistant:
Every plan starts with a 30-day free trial, carries a money-back guarantee, and you can cancel anytime. The full tier breakdown is at /answers/how-much-does-a-church-ai-chatbot-cost.
A demo trained on somebody else's church proves nothing to you. You already know your own content — your service times, your pastor's voice, the sermon series from last spring. When the assistant gets those right, you can judge it in five minutes. When it doesn't know something, you can watch it admit that and hand off instead of inventing an answer. Building the preview first means the evaluation happens on your real questions, at no cost and with no commitment from the church.
The 84 Atlanta-area previews were built from public content: each church's own website and its published sermon recordings. If your church is in the metro and has both, there's a good chance a preview is already running.
Go to askchurch.ai and look up your church to see whether it's one of the 84. Read /docs for how claiming works and what happens after — including how the assistant goes onto your existing website. If you're still comparing tools first, /answers/best-ai-assistant-for-churches covers how the options stack up.
Possibly — 84 working previews of Atlanta-area church assistants are already built and live, each trained on that church's own website and published sermon recordings. Go to askchurch.ai and look up your church to see whether it's one of the 84; looking costs nothing and requires no commitment from the church.
Only from your church's own published content — the website and the sermons, nothing from the open internet. When the answer isn't in the church's content, the assistant says so and hands the conversation to a real person instead of filling the gap with a guess.
Every incoming message is checked for signs of crisis before any AI response is generated, in English and in Spanish. A message that reads like someone in danger routes straight to the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline and the Crisis Text Line — this is hard-coded, no church setting turns it off, and the AI never attempts a pastoral answer first.
Pricing is by weekend attendance: Base is $99 per month for under 500 weekend attendance, Growth is $249 per month for 500 to 2,000, and Premium is $500 per month for over 2,000 or multi-campus. Every plan is the same full assistant, starts with a 30-day free trial, carries a money-back guarantee, and you can cancel anytime.
Updated 2026-06-26 · AskMyChurch by Vision Genesis · Knoxville, TN
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