AI Bible Study

Bible study with an AI that won’t compromise on the Word of God.

Pick the translation you trust. Pick the tradition you study within. Ask anything from the text — every answer is anchored to Scripture and connected through 343,000 cross-references to the rest of the canon.

3 days. 5 questions. No credit card.

343,000
cross-references woven through every answer
5
trusted translations live, more being added
9
doctrinal traditions to study within
200+
AI models — Claude, Chat-GPT, Gemini, Llama, more
3 days
free trial — no credit card required

If you’ve studied with AI before

You’ve probably noticed it hedges the moment Scripture gets specific.

“Many scholars believe…” Generic answers that flatten the tradition you actually study within. Verses paraphrased to soften their edge. RevelAI is built differently — Scripture is quoted exactly, framed in the tradition you choose, and connected back to the rest of the canon every single time.

A study, two lenses

Can a Christian lose their salvation?

The same question, answered in two different traditions. The text doesn’t change. The framing does — exactly as it would in a well-read pastor from each tradition.

R

Tradition

Reformed

No. The Westminster Confession and the doctrine of perseverance of the saints teach that those whom God has effectually called and justified He will also keep. Scripture grounds this in John 10:28, Romans 8:38–39, and Philippians 1:6. The believer's assurance rests on God's preserving grace, not on the steadiness of their own grip.

Westminster · Heidelberg · Three Forms of Unity
W

Tradition

Wesleyan-Methodist

Yes — it is possible. The Wesleyan tradition reads Hebrews 6:4–6 and Hebrews 10:26–29 as warning genuine believers against deliberate, persistent rejection of grace. God preserves those who continue in faith; the same Scriptures that promise His keeping also call the believer to abide. Assurance is real, but it is not unconditional.

Wesley’s Articles · Quadrilateral · BSB text
Watch the full comparison — video coming soon

Why it’s different

Three things every answer rests on.

01

Scripture, exactly as it reads

Every verse is pulled directly from our indexed Bible database in the translation you chose. Quoted exactly, never paraphrased, never softened to fit a point.

02

Your tradition, in its own voice

Nine doctrinal lenses, drawing from the historic confessions and catechisms that shaped them. Answers sound like a thoughtful believer in your tradition — not a hedging assistant.

03

Built on historic Christianity

Westminster, Heidelberg, the Catechism of the Catholic Church, the ecumenical creeds. The shared foundation is what keeps a tradition honest — and what keeps the AI honest too.

RevelAI vs. ChatGPT

What changes when Scripture isn’t treated as one opinion among many.

Treats Scripture as authoritative
Treats it as one perspective among many
Anchored in the text — never softened to fit a trend
Speaks your tradition's language
Generic “many scholars believe…” hedging
Reformed, Catholic, Lutheran, Orthodox — nine voices, your pick
Connects every answer to all of Scripture
Surface-level, no cross-reference depth
343,000 cross-references woven through every answer
Replaces your other AI subscription
Locked to Chat-GPT only
200+ models including Claude, Gemini, Llama — same price as Plus
Share your study with anyone
No way to share a session
Private share links and clean PDF export

Trusted translations, indexed verse by verse

KJV
King James Version · 1769 Cambridge
BSB
Berean Standard Bible
ASV
American Standard Version · 1901
WEB
World English Bible
YLT
Young's Literal Translation

More translations being added.

How a study session begins

Four steps. About a minute.

Step 01

Pick your translation

Start with the King James Version (KJV), Berean Standard Bible (BSB), American Standard Version (ASV), World English Bible (WEB), or Young's Literal Translation (YLT). Switch any time.

Step 02

Pick your tradition

Reformed, Lutheran, Catholic, Orthodox, Anglican, Wesleyan-Methodist, Baptist, Broad Evangelical — or none. Every answer is framed in your tradition's own voice.

Step 03

Ask anything from the text

Verses are quoted directly from the translation you picked — never paraphrased. Each answer connects back to the rest of Scripture through 343,000 cross-references.

Step 04

Save, share, export

Send a private link to your pastor, your spouse, or your small group — they don't need an account to read it. Or download a clean PDF for offline study.

Nine lenses, one Scripture

Study within the tradition that shaped you.

Pick a lens at the start of every study and the answer is framed in its voice — drawing on its historic confessions, catechisms, and the creeds the whole Church confesses together.

  • Reformed

    Lens

    Westminster, Heidelberg, the Three Forms of Unity. Sovereign-grace theology and covenantal reading.

  • Lutheran

    Lens

    The Book of Concord and the Augsburg Confession. Law and Gospel, sacramental, Christ-centred.

  • Catholic

    Lens

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church. Scripture and apostolic tradition together, the Magisterium guarding both.

  • Orthodox

    Lens

    The seven ecumenical councils and the Church Fathers. The faith once delivered, kept whole.

  • Anglican

    Lens

    The Thirty-Nine Articles and the Book of Common Prayer. Scripture, tradition, and reason held in tension.

  • Wesleyan-Methodist

    Lens

    John Wesley's quadrilateral and the Articles of Religion. Holiness of heart and life, prevenient grace, sanctification.

  • Baptist

    Lens

    The Second London Confession (1689) and the Baptist Faith and Message. Believer's baptism, congregational, Scripture-saturated.

  • Broad Evangelical

    Lens

    The Lausanne Covenant and the historic creeds. Cross-tradition orthodoxy without committing to one confession.

  • None

    Lens

    Stay inside the bounds of historic Christianity — the Apostles' and Nicene Creeds — without leaning on any one confession.

Built for the way Christians actually study

Devotion, sermon prep, small groups, deep study.

Personal devotion

Sit with a passage at the start of the day. Ask the questions you wouldn't bother a pastor with. Get answers anchored in the text and your tradition.

Sermon and teaching prep

Outline a sermon, walk a passage in its historical setting, surface the cross-references that turn a good sermon into a true one. Export the study as a PDF and bring it into the pulpit.

Small group leaders

Draft discussion questions, anticipate the hard pushbacks, share the prep with your co-leader by link — no account needed. Lead with confidence, not improvisation.

Going deeper

Seminary student, lifelong reader, or someone who finally has time to study — follow a thread through the canon without losing the plot. Greek and Hebrew lookups when you want them.

Study together

Share your study with your pastor, your small group, your spouse.

Send a private link — the recipient doesn’t need an account to read it. Or download a clean, printable PDF for offline study and sermon prep. Your study stays yours, and goes wherever you need it.

Private share links

One click, one link. Anyone with the link can read the session; no one else can. No account required on their side.

PDF export

Studies render to a clean printable PDF — the whole conversation with citations preserved. Print, archive, or carry into the pulpit.

Subscription

Same price as ChatGPT Plus.

$20/ month

Bible Study mode plus 200+ AI models, image and video generation included. Cancel any time.

3 days. 5 questions. No credit card.

Common questions

Questions, plainly answered

No. ChatGPT is one of the 200+ models you can use here — but the difference is what surrounds it. Every answer is anchored to verses pulled directly from the translation you picked, framed in your tradition's voice, and connected back to the rest of Scripture through 343,000 cross-references. ChatGPT alone does none of that.

Open the Word with an AI that won’t flinch from it.

$20/month. Bible Study mode, 200+ AI models, image and video generation. Cancel any time.

Read the step-by-step guide