About After Amen
Most AI Bible tools default to one theological perspective and present it as neutral. We do something different. Every answer After Amen gives is shaped by an explicit doctrinal lens, grounded in Scripture, and pastorally framed for real people.
The problem
A January 2026 study from the Bible Society and the University of Cambridge tested five major Bible chatbots and found they frequently promote a narrow theological outlook — most commonly reflecting US evangelical approaches — rather than the diversity of Christian traditions. The researchers noted this imbalance is particularly significant because users assume AI answers are neutral or factual, which reduces the likelihood that they'll critically engage with them.
That's a problem for any believer, but it's especially a problem for Pentecostal, Charismatic, Catholic, Reformed, and other traditions whose distinctives get quietly sanded off by AI defaults trained on mostly evangelical Protestant data.
Our approach
After Amen stores the doctrinal positions of supported traditions as structured data — not as hidden bias in the model. Each church configures its lens. The AI then assembles its system prompt at request time from that lens, the church's preferences, and a curated citation list of theologians and confessional documents.
Ask "Can a believer lose their salvation?" in an Assemblies of God church and you'll get a confident Arminian answer with Hebrews 6 and the assurance of 1 John. Ask the same question with the neutral lens and you'll get a balanced survey of Reformed, Arminian, and Catholic-Orthodox views and a referral to your pastor.
Same model. Same question. Different answers — transparently and intentionally.
For AG churches
Our first lens is the Assemblies of God's Statement of Fundamental Truths. That means After Amen affirms, confidently and without hedging:
Hard rules
Some things stay code-level, not configurable, because they protect users:
Why this name
The pastor preaches a faithful sermon. The congregation says amen. Then the week begins. Real life happens. Most discipleship apps target the Sunday moment. After Amen targets the six days that follow — because that's where the gospel is actually lived.