One sermon. One mission. One week.
Prepare a reviewable Mission Kit from Sunday's sermon today. Then work with JesusCord through a guided pilot to test one voluntary weekly mission and human-led follow-up.
What JesusCord is
JesusCord is an early-access sermon-to-mission product for churches. It starts with source material the church already trusts: sermon notes, teaching text, or an enabled YouTube sermon link. JesusCord Helper prepares a Mission Kit that a pastor or church operator can review, revise, and share.
The current kit can contain cards, headlines, summaries, longer text, captions, key points, and AI-generated images. A public page presents the full kit, while individual elements can have their own share links.
Why “sermon to mission” matters
Generating more content is useful, but it is not the whole ministry outcome. JesusCord’s working thesis is that one pastor-approved message should help the church choose one faithful next step during the week—and that any requested response should reach a real person rather than disappear into a dashboard.
That complete sermon-to-action-to-follow-up workflow is a guided pilot. We are not claiming that it is finished automation, and we do not promise reach, attendance growth, conversion, or spiritual outcomes.
Who the pilot is for
The strongest early fit is a church that publishes a sermon each week, can name one person to operate the workflow, and can name a real ministry leader for requested follow-up. JesusCord is not a replacement for the pastor, communications team, church-management system, or the relationships where ministry happens.
Responsible AI boundary
AI prepares and revises kit elements. Church leaders decide what faithfully represents the message. People lead prayer, teaching, discernment, conversation, and care.
What is available now
A concrete sermon-to-kit workflow, not a promise of automated ministry.
Mission Kits from source material
Bring sermon notes or other approved source material. Where YouTube intake is enabled, a sermon link can also become the source.
Review and revision
Review cards, summaries, captions, text, and images; request changes before deciding what represents the message faithfully.
Public sharing
Share the full public kit page or a separate link for one element through the channels members already use.
What the guided church pilot tests
The larger mission workflow is being developed with early church partners.
One voluntary weekly mission
Choose one sermon-shaped action: encourage, invite, pray, discuss, serve, or reflect. Participation remains voluntary.
A consent-aware response
Give people a clear choice about whether to respond or enter a private church conversation.
Human-owned follow-up
Name the church leader responsible for requested follow-up. AI never serves as pastor, counselor, or spiritual authority.
JesusCord for Churches FAQ
Is JesusCord an AI sermon repurposing tool?
Mission Kit preparation is the implemented starting point. JesusCord's larger purpose is helping churches test how a pastor-approved sermon becomes one voluntary weekly mission and human-led follow-up. That wider workflow is currently a guided pilot.
Does JesusCord replace our church app or messaging tools?
No. Mission Kit links are made to travel through existing social networks and messengers. JesusCord should begin as a focused addition to the church's current tools.
Are Mission Challenges and impact reports live?
Treat church-wide Mission Challenges, automatic room handoffs, care workflows, and outcome reporting as guided pilot or planned capabilities, not finished automation.
How do we explore a pilot?
Bring one recent sermon, one church operator, and one person who can own requested follow-up. We will shape a small fall pilot before any wider church launch.
Bring one recent sermon
Create a Mission Kit in early access, or ask about a small guided fall pilot for your church.
No public launch is required. Start with a small group and one clear mission.