Open-source AI that handles the administrative work of church callings — so leaders and members can focus on people, not logistics.
Every week, thousands of ward leaders spend hours on scheduling, tracking, reporting, and coordinating — time that could be spent ministering. The administrative load of church callings is real. We're building AI agents to carry it.
The Agents
Eight specialized agents, each designed for a specific calling's workflow. They handle the logistics so you can focus on the people.
An AI that manages the bishopric's entire scheduling pipeline. It tracks temple recommend expirations, proactively reaches out to members to schedule interviews, finds open times across the bishopric's calendars, sends reminders, follows up on no-shows, and handles rescheduling. The executive secretary focuses on people, not logistics.
Handles attendance tracking, membership record updates, quarterly reports, financial reconciliation, tithing receipt preparation, and audit readiness. It reads reports, flags discrepancies, and drafts corrections. It knows the handbook's record-keeping requirements better than any human clerk.
Manages meal sign-ups for families in need, coordinates service projects, tracks ministering assignments and follow-ups, sends reminders to ministering companions, compiles reports for ward council, and identifies members who haven't been contacted in too long.
Tracks children's progression toward baptism, coordinates substitute teachers, manages the singing time calendar, sends weekly lesson reminders with materials, handles room assignments, and prepares the annual sacrament meeting program.
Plans activities, manages permission slips and medical forms, tracks Personal Development goals, coordinates camp logistics, sends reminders to youth and parents, and handles ride coordination. "4 youth need rides Wednesday — here are the closest parents who've driven before."
Tracks investigators and recent converts, coordinates fellowshipping meals, reminds ward council of commitments, follows up on referrals, and prepares the missionary report with actual data instead of anecdotes.
Manages teacher rosters and substitutes, sends Come Follow Me materials and supplementary resources weekly, collects attendance, flags classes needing support, and helps new teachers prepare their first lessons.
Tracks every companionship assignment, sends quarterly interview reminders, compiles ministering reports from simple text check-ins, identifies gaps in coverage, and suggests reassignments when companionships aren't working.
Open Source
This project is free, open-source, and community-driven. No vendor lock-in, no subscription traps. Wards own their tools.
MIT licensed. Fork it, modify it, self-host it. Built by and for ward members who understand the real workflows.
Member data stays in your ward's control. No cloud dependency required. Designed for the sensitivity that church data demands.
Simple architecture, clear documentation, no magic. Designed so any technically-inclined member can understand, maintain, and improve it.
Get Involved
Whether you code, design, serve in a calling, or just want to follow along — there's a place for you.
Funding covers hosting, API costs, and development time. Every dollar goes directly to building better tools for wards.
DonateDevelopers, designers, and church-service veterans — we need your perspective. Check the issues, open a PR, or start a discussion.
GitHubFollow development progress, new agent releases, and community stories. No spam — just meaningful updates when there's something to share.
SubscribeAbout
Nathaniel Powell is a software engineer, member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and someone who's spent too many hours on the administrative side of church callings.
This project started with a simple observation: the work that burns out ward leaders isn't the spiritual work — it's the scheduling, tracking, and coordinating. AI is finally good enough to handle that. So we're building it.
Questions, ideas, or want to help? Reach out on GitHub.