79 working previews of Nashville-area church assistants are already built and live. See yours running on your own sermons, then claim it from $99/month.
If you lead a church in the Nashville area and you're looking for an AI assistant, start here: 79 working previews of Nashville-area church assistants are already built and live. Each preview is the real product — an assistant trained only on that church's own website and sermons — waiting for someone from the church to claim it.
To be clear about what a preview is: these are not customers, and no Nashville church has been signed up for anything. We build the assistant first, on public content the church has already published, so a pastor or church admin can see it working on their actual sermons before deciding anything. If your church has a website and sermons online, there is a real chance your preview already exists.
The assistant sits on your website and answers the questions people actually ask a church: service times, what to expect on a first visit, where the kids check in, what the church teaches, how to get baptized, who to call about a funeral.
It answers only from your church's own website and sermons. Nothing from the open internet, nothing generic. If the answer is not in your content, it says so and hands the person to a real human on your staff. It never invents an answer.
When someone asks a teaching question — "what does our pastor say about forgiveness?" — the Canon layer answers from the sermon archive and cites the exact sermon, linked to the minute where the pastor said it. The person can click through and hear it in the pastor's own voice, not a paraphrase.
Two more things run on every conversation:
Go to askchurch.ai and look for your church. If a preview exists, you can watch it answer real questions from your own published content and judge it against what you know is true about your church. That is the whole test: does it get your service times right, does it cite your pastor's actual sermons, does it hand off when it should.
If a preview does not exist yet, one can be built the same way every other Nashville preview was — from your website and your sermon archive, nothing else. No content migration, no IT project.
Pricing is by weekend attendance, and every plan is the full assistant — same features, same crisis routing, same Canon layer.
Every plan starts with a 30-day free trial, carries a money-back guarantee, and you can cancel anytime. There are no other prices and no feature tiers — a 90-person church plant in East Nashville gets the same assistant as a multi-campus church in Franklin, just at a different price.
It will not answer from the open internet or speculate on your pastor's behalf. It will not attempt pastoral counseling in a crisis — that routes to 988, the Crisis Text Line, and your own people. And it does not replace a human. The design goal is the front door of your church, always open: it greets people, answers what is in your content, and hands anything personal to a real person on your team.
If you lead a Nashville-area church, check askchurch.ai to see whether your assistant is one of the 79 already built. If you want the mechanics first — how the crisis gate works, what content gets indexed, how the Canon citations are generated — the docs at /docs cover it.
AskMyChurch is built by Vision Genesis in Knoxville, Tennessee — straight east on I-40.
There is a real chance it is. 79 working previews of Nashville-area church assistants are already built and live, each trained only on that church's own website and sermons. Check askchurch.ai to see whether your church's preview is one of them.
Pricing is by weekend attendance: Base is $99/month for under 500, Growth is $249/month for 500 to 2,000, and Premium is $500/month for over 2,000 or multi-campus. Every plan is the full assistant with the same features, starts with a 30-day free trial, carries a money-back guarantee, and can be cancelled anytime.
No. The assistant answers only from your church's own website and sermons — nothing from the open internet, nothing generic. If the answer is not in your content, it says so and hands the person to a real human on your staff; it never invents an answer.
Crisis routing is hard-coded ahead of the AI. If someone writes in acute distress, they get the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline and the Crisis Text Line — in English and in Spanish — before any AI response is generated. The assistant does not attempt pastoral counseling in a crisis.
Updated 2026-06-26 · AskMyChurch by Vision Genesis · Knoxville, TN
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