Parents ask kids questions at night: check-in, age groups, safety policy, youth times. AskMyChurch answers from your published pages — and never improvises on child safety.
No visitor reads your website more carefully than a parent deciding whether to hand you their kids on Sunday. And no visitor asks more questions at 9:30pm — after bedtime, mid-decision, the night before a first visit. Is there a nursery at the early service? What's the check-in thing like? Who exactly is in the room with my third grader? These questions decide visits, and most churches answer them with a page last updated two youth pastors ago. Here is what an assistant does with them — and the line it refuses to cross.
Kids ministry questions are wonderfully concrete: age groups and room assignments, check-in and pickup process, what time youth group meets and ends, whether middle schoolers and high schoolers are together, what happens during a service, whether the nursery takes an eighteen-month-old who's never been left anywhere. AskMyChurch answers all of it — provided your website says it — instantly, at any hour, in English or Spanish automatically, with every answer citing the page it came from. A parent who gets those answers on Tuesday night arrives Sunday already knowing which door to walk in. That calm is the ministry outcome.
Some kids questions carry more weight: are your volunteers background-checked, what's your two-adult policy, how does pickup security work, what's your protocol if a child is hurt. These deserve exact answers, and "approximately right" is not a category that exists for them.
The design handles this the only acceptable way. The assistant answers only from your church's own published content — so a safety question gets your written policy, cited, in your words. If your church hasn't published the policy, the assistant says your content doesn't cover it and hands the parent to a real person. It does not summarize "typical church practice." It does not reassure. It never improvises on child safety, because an invented reassurance about children is the worst sentence a church tool could ever produce.
Incidentally, if you don't have a published child-safety page, this is your sign: parents are already asking, and a clear page is itself a trust signal — with or without an assistant.
Youth questions have a different flavor: they're schedule questions, they change constantly, and they come from parents and teenagers alike. Because the assistant answers from your website, the fix for "youth is cancelled this week" is updating the one page you were going to update anyway — the page is the single copy of the schedule. And when a teenager types something into a church website that isn't a schedule question — hard weeks find their way into text boxes — every message has already passed a hard-coded crisis check before any AI ran, in English and Spanish, routing acute distress to the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline, the Crisis Text Line (text HOME to 741741), and your church's care team. The AI never attempts a pastoral response in a crisis.
Kids and youth staff field the same messages every week, mostly at night, mostly on personal phones. The look-ups move to the website. What routes to your team instead: the requests that need them — a family wanting to plan a visit, a volunteer signup, a prayer request from a parent — each sent to the right leader rather than a group chat.
Everything here is in every plan: $99, $249, or $500 a month by weekend attendance, month to month, cancel anytime, money-back guarantee. The prerequisite isn't technical — it's the kids page and the safety page your parents are already looking for. Publish those, and the assistant makes them work the night shift.
Whatever your website publishes: check-in process, age groups and rooms, what time youth group meets, what kids do during the service, drop-off and pickup. Answers cite the page they came from.
It answers from your published safety policy and only from it — background checks, two-adult rules, check-in security, whatever your church has posted. If your content doesn't state the answer, it says so and hands the parent to a real person. It never improvises on child safety.
Yes. The assistant auto-detects English or Spanish and answers in kind, on every plan — which matters for exactly these questions, since kids logistics are the first thing many visiting families need to settle.
No. It reads your public website and sermons, not your check-in system or member records. Questions about a specific child go to your staff, where they belong.
Updated 2026-07-11 · AskMyChurch by Vision Genesis · Knoxville, TN
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