Ask the corpus
Pose a question across the whole archive and get a cross-sermon answer, each claim cited back to the source sermon and timestamp.
Research tools
Pose a question across the whole archive and get a cross-sermon answer, each claim cited back to the source sermon and timestamp.
Follow how a single theme is handled across years of preaching, laid out chronologically so you can see the development over time.
Put the times a passage has been preached side by side and study how its treatment shifts from one message to the next.
Every claim links to the exact moment in the sermon it came from, so you can hear the source and quote it with confidence.
Curate sermons, passages, and notes into a syllabus your students can work through as a structured reading.
Reveal a homiletic breakdown of any message — its structure, moves, and craft — for close reading and discussion.
For the classroom
Faculty can curate study sets and keep a homiletic breakdown behind a make-your-own-attempt-first prompt.
Assemble sermons, passages, and notes into an assignable set — a syllabus built from the church's own preaching.
Keep the homiletic breakdown behind a make-your-own-attempt-first prompt, so the student's own work comes first.
See what's actually been preached across the archive — which books, passages, and themes are covered, and where the gaps are.
Trust & ownership
The corpus you study belongs to the church that preached it. Its content stays isolated, and a make-your-own-attempt-first prompt keeps the student's own work first.
Each church's data is isolated at the database row level (row-level security) — your preaching is never pooled with another church's.
Faculty can hold a homiletic breakdown behind a make-your-own-attempt-first prompt, so the student's own work comes first.
On the roadmap
Rewind today gives you deep access to a single church's preaching archive. A consented cross-church library — comparing how different churches preach the same passage — is on our roadmap, not yet available.