Yes — if it answers only from your own website and sermons. With no denomination to fall back on, grounding in your statement of faith is the whole ballgame.
Yes — an AI assistant fits a non-denominational church, but only one kind: an assistant that answers from your church's own website and sermons and nothing else. A generic chatbot is a worse fit for you than for almost any other church, because there is no denominational statement of doctrine standing behind you to catch its mistakes.
A denominational church has a published body of doctrine somewhere upstream — a confession, a book of discipline, a catechism. A non-denominational church doesn't. Your statement of faith and your pulpit are your doctrine. There is no second source.
So when a visitor asks your website "What does this church believe about baptism?", there is exactly one right answer: what your church has actually said. An AI that reaches into its training data will hand back an average of everybody's theology — confident, plausible, and not yours. At a denominational church that's an error. At a non-denominational church it misrepresents the only doctrinal authority you have.
That's the fit question: not whether the technology is impressive, but whether every answer comes from you.
AskMyChurch answers only from two sources: your church's website and your sermons. If your statement of faith teaches believer's baptism, that's what a visitor hears. If your pastor preached on suffering last spring, the assistant cites that sermon with a link to the exact minute it was said — the Canon layer — so anyone can check the answer against your pastor's own voice.
When the answer isn't in your material, it doesn't fill the silence. It says so and hands the visitor to a real person on your staff. For a church whose doctrine lives entirely in its own teaching, that refusal to invent is the whole point. AskMyChurch is built to be the front door of your church, always open — and a front door leads inside to real people; it doesn't make things up on the porch.
Independence draws people who check your beliefs before they visit: "Are you affiliated with a denomination?" "Are you charismatic?" "What do you teach about women in leadership?" "Which Bible translation do you use?" These questions land at 9pm on a Tuesday, from people who will not call the office. Each one gets answered from your own published words and sermons, or handed to a human — in English or Spanish, since the assistant is bilingual.
One thing is hard-coded, not left to any AI: crisis routing. If a visitor writes about harming themselves, they see 988 and the Crisis Text Line — in English and in Spanish — before any AI response runs. No model makes that call. It is fixed.
Pricing runs by weekend attendance: $99 a month under 500, $249 a month for 500–2,000, and $500 a month for 2,000+ or multi-campus. Every plan starts with a 30-day free trial, carries a money-back guarantee, and you can cancel anytime.
Working previews are already built and waiting for churches to claim them: 84 in Atlanta, 79 in Nashville, 63 in Charlotte, 60 in Columbia, 53 in Charleston, and 38 in Knoxville. These are not customers — they are previews built from each church's public website and sermons, awaiting that church's claim. If your church is in one of those metros, the fit question may already have an answer you can read for yourself: your own preview, answering from your own teaching. Find it at askmy.church.
Only from the church's own website and sermons — never from general training data or other churches' doctrine. When the answer isn't in the church's material, it says so and hands the visitor to a real person on staff.
It answers from your statement of faith and cites sermons with a link to the exact minute, so a visitor can hear your pastor's actual words. If your church hasn't addressed a topic, it says so instead of inventing an answer.
$99 a month for churches under 500 in weekend attendance, $249 for 500–2,000, and $500 for 2,000+ or multi-campus. Every plan includes a 30-day free trial, a money-back guarantee, and you can cancel anytime.
Crisis routing is hard-coded: 988 and the Crisis Text Line appear in English and Spanish before any AI response runs. No model makes that decision.
Updated 2026-06-26 · AskMyChurch by Vision Genesis · Knoxville, TN
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