Early beta. Exposite is in active development. You may encounter rough edges, incomplete features, or the occasional bug. Your feedback during this phase helps us understand what needs attention.
Exposite brings your reference tools, your notes, and your thinking into one workspace. Look up passages across multiple translations. Explore cross-references from the Treasury of Scripture Knowledge. Study Greek and Hebrew words with concordance data. Take notes directly on your sermon text. Export your work as a study guide.
The workbench also includes AI observation layers that surface linguistic, historical, and theological considerations for your review. These are observations for you to evaluate, not conclusions. You can use the reference tools without ever running an analysis.
Create an account to save your work. Or explore the demo first.
The workbench includes a set of reference tools that work without any AI involvement. These are the foundation of the workspace.
Your thinking belongs to you. The workbench provides tools to capture and organise your own observations alongside the reference material.
When you submit a sermon, you can run an AI analysis paragraph by paragraph. The analysis surfaces observations across three layers:
You choose which paragraphs to examine and which layers to run. Observations include source citations and cross-checks against lexicon data where applicable.
The analysis is powered by a large language model. It can be wrong. Every observation should be verified against your own study, not accepted at face value. If an observation is unhelpful, you can flag it. Flags help us refine the prompts. Your sermon text is never included in feedback data.
You can set a theological frame for the analysis: Reformed, Catholic, Pentecostal, or Academic (neutral). The lens adjusts how observations are framed and what sources are weighted.
This is not the tool advocating for a position. It is the tool evaluating coherence within the framework you select. You can switch lenses between analyses to see how different traditions would approach the same passage.
It is not a replacement for theological education, pastoral mentoring, or careful study of the original languages. It cannot tell you what a passage means. It cannot resolve genuine scholarly disagreements.
It is a workbench. It gathers reference materials, organises observations, and keeps your notes in one place. It is most useful for someone already engaged in exegetical work who wants their tools consolidated and their thinking documented.
Working pastors preparing weekly sermons. Seminary students refining their exegetical skills. Bible study leaders who want to surface passages that need deeper exploration.
If you already have a process for exegetical review (a study partner, a mentor, a peer group), Exposite is a complement to that, not a replacement. If you do not have that process, it can serve as a starting point.
During the beta, Exposite is free. We would be grateful if you tried it, tested its limits, and told us where it falls short. There are no paywalls, no features held back, no credit card required.
After the beta, there will be a free tier with limited analyses per month and paid tiers for higher volume. We are also working on seminary and ministry pricing.
Your sermon content is never used to train language models. Analyses are stored only for your own access and can be deleted at any time.
You do the thinking. Exposite helps with gathering.