AskMyChurch doesn't integrate with Planning Center or any ChMS — and doesn't need to. It answers from your website and links people to the signup and giving pages your ChMS already provides.
Short version: AskMyChurch does not integrate with Planning Center, Breeze, or any church management system — no sync, no connector, no checkbox in settings. And for the job it does, it doesn't need to. If "works with" means "can my church run both without friction," the answer is yes, immediately, with nothing to configure. Here is the honest architecture of that.
A ChMS like Planning Center faces inward. It is where your staff schedules volunteers, checks kids in, manages the member database, processes registrations and giving. As of this writing, planningcenter.com lists ten products — People, Groups, Calendar, Registrations, Check-ins, Services, Music Stand, Church Center, Publishing, Giving — priced per product, most with a free tier, and it is genuinely good at running a church's operations.
AskMyChurch faces outward. It sits on your public website and answers the questions of people who are not in your database yet — and members who just don't want to log into anything to check a service time. It answers only from your church's own published website and sermons, cites its source in every answer, screens every message through a hard-coded crisis check (in English and Spanish) before any AI runs, and hands off to a real person when content runs out.
Inward tools and outward tools don't need to integrate to coexist. They need to not collide — and these don't touch.
Here is the practical overlap, and it's simpler than an integration. Your website already links into your ChMS's public surfaces: the camp registration built in Registrations, the giving page, the Church Center signup for a small group. Those links are part of your website's content — which means the assistant can use them. Someone asks "how do I sign my kid up for camp?" and the useful answer is a sentence from your site plus the registration link your team already built. The assistant supplies exactly that, cited.
That's the whole "integration," and it has a nice property: it can't break. There is no API version to fall behind, no sync to silently fail. If the link on your site works, the assistant's answer works.
A question churches should ask any AI vendor: what data does it see? AskMyChurch reads your public website and posted sermons. It does not see ChMS records, check-in history, donations, or member profiles — there is no connection through which it could. If someone asks the assistant a question whose answer lives in private data ("how much have I given this year?"), the honest answer is a handoff: it points them to your giving page or your office, because your content doesn't — and shouldn't — publish that.
Because the front-door problem doesn't require one, and every integration a church adds is a thing that can misfire in your name. The questions visitors and members actually ask a website — times, kids, parking, beliefs, next steps, how to sign up, how to give — are answered by published content plus the links you already maintain. Keeping the assistant read-only against your public site is what makes it safe enough to face strangers.
Keep Planning Center. Change nothing in it. Put AskMyChurch on the website in about thirty minutes with a link or a QR code — plans are $99, $249, or $500 a month by weekend attendance, all with the same complete assistant, cancel anytime with a money-back guarantee. Your ChMS keeps running the church. Your website starts answering it.
No. There is no data sync, no API connection, no shared login. AskMyChurch answers from your church's website — and when your site links to your Planning Center signup or giving pages, the assistant points people to those links like any other published content.
Nothing. The assistant installs on your website with a link or a QR code in about thirty minutes. Your ChMS never knows it's there.
No, and that's by design. It reads your public website and sermons — not your ChMS records, not check-in data, not giving history. The private data in your ChMS stays exactly where it is.
As of this writing, the pricing page at planningcenter.com lists its products — People, Groups, Calendar, Registrations, Check-ins, Services, Music Stand, Church Center, Publishing, and Giving — without mentioning a congregant-facing AI assistant.
Updated 2026-07-11 · AskMyChurch by Vision Genesis · Knoxville, TN
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