Two parties: the person asking and your church's team — and the church sees questions without names. No accounts, no ad networks, no training on conversations.
Two parties can see what people ask your church's AskMyChurch assistant: the person asking, and your church's own team — and your team sees the questions without names attached. Nobody else sees them: there are no accounts, no ad networks, no data brokers, and no model being trained on your congregation's conversations.
That's the whole answer. The rest of this page walks through each party, because a church deciding whether to put an assistant on its website deserves the list, not a policy PDF.
The person asking. Their conversation is on their screen, and that's it. Nobody has to sign in, make an account, or type an email address to ask a question. Someone can land on the church's site at 1 a.m., ask what they've been carrying for a year, and leave without ever telling anyone who they are.
Your church's team. The church gets a view of what people asked — the content of the questions, never the identity of the asker. A pastor can see that eleven people asked about divorce care this month. She cannot see which eleven, because that information was never collected in the first place. This is the useful half of the arrangement: churches finally learn what their community is actually wondering, without turning the front door into a surveillance camera.
Us. AskMyChurch builds and runs the assistant, but we can't attach a question to a person because there's no account to attach it to. We don't build profiles of your congregation.
Advertisers and data brokers. Nothing is sold, shared, or fed into an ad pixel. A question asked on your church's site does not follow anyone around the internet afterward.
Other members of your congregation. Conversations are private to the person having them. Nobody browsing the site can see what anyone else asked.
An AI training pipeline. Your congregation's conversations are not used to train a model. The assistant's knowledge comes from one place — your church's own website and sermons — and answers cite their source, down to the minute of the sermon where the pastor said it.
People ask a church website things they would never ask from the front row. Am I welcome if I'm divorced? Do I have to dress up? What does this church actually teach about doubt? Put a sign-in wall in front of those questions and they simply don't get asked. Anonymity isn't a privacy checkbox here — it's the reason the questions show up at all.
Exactly one way: the person volunteers it. If someone wants to plan a visit, ask for prayer follow-up, or talk to a human, they can share their name and contact info — and that goes to your church's team, not to us. The assistant is built to hand off to a real person: the front door of your church, always open.
One special case runs even faster than that. If someone writes something that signals a crisis, hard-coded routing shares 988 and the Crisis Text Line — in English and Spanish — before any AI response is generated. The person still isn't identified or tracked. They're pointed to trained humans, immediately, every time, because that path is fixed code rather than AI judgment.
We've built working previews for churches across six metros — 84 in Atlanta, 79 in Nashville, 63 in Charlotte, 60 in Columbia, 53 in Charleston, and 38 in Knoxville — each waiting for its church to claim it. A preview runs under the same privacy rules as a claimed assistant: anonymous questions, no accounts, no tracking.
Plans are $99, $249, or $500 per month by weekend attendance (Base under 500, Growth 500–2,000, Premium 2,000+ or multi-campus), with a 30-day free trial, a money-back guarantee, and cancel anytime. None of those tiers changes the privacy answer above — the list of who can see the questions stays the same at every size of church.
No. Questions are anonymous by default — no account, no sign-in, no email required. Someone can ask and leave without ever saying who they are.
No. The church's team sees what was asked, never who asked it, because identity is never collected with a question. A person is identified only if they choose to share their info to plan a visit, request prayer follow-up, or reach a human.
No. Nothing is sold or shared with advertisers or data brokers, and congregation conversations are not used to train a model. The assistant answers only from the church's own website and sermons, with cited sources.
Hard-coded routing shares 988 and the Crisis Text Line, in English and Spanish, before any AI response is generated. The person is still not identified or tracked — they're pointed to trained humans immediately.
Updated 2026-06-26 · AskMyChurch by Vision Genesis · Knoxville, TN
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