Trusted AI for Bible Study

Trusted AI. Not generic AI.

Ask any question about any verse. Bible Copilot lets Scripture interpret Scripture — grounded in 2,000 years of orthodox Christian thought, not the average opinion of the internet.

Download on the App Store

Scripture interprets Scripture

No paraphrases, no invented doctrine. Every answer is verse-backed and walks you through the same framework seminaries teach — Observe, Interpret, Theology, Apply, Apologetics, Summary.

Rooted in trusted voices

Insights drawn from Augustine, Spurgeon, C.S. Lewis, N.T. Wright, and 2,000 years of orthodox Christian thought. Not the median of every Reddit post on Scripture.

Built for serious study

Historical-grammatical interpretation — the gold standard in biblical scholarship. Whether you're in seminary, leading a small group, or exploring faith for the first time, Bible Copilot meets you where you are.

See it in action

A real question. A real Scripture-backed answer. This is what Bible Copilot does, every single time.

? In Romans 9:13, what does it mean that God hated Esau?
Interpret Theology Apologetics
The verse Paul is quoting is Malachi 1:2–3, written roughly 1,400 years after Jacob and Esau lived. By that point "Esau" and "Jacob" referred not to the individuals but to the nations descended from them — Edom and Israel. "Jacob have I loved, but Esau have I hated." (Romans 9:13) In Ancient Near Eastern covenant language, "love" and "hate" describe chosen versus not-chosen for covenant purpose, not personal animosity. Compare Luke 14:26 ("hate his father and mother"), where Jesus uses the same idiom to mean "prefer me above all others." Paul is not asserting that God despised Esau the man. He is making the larger argument of Romans 9: God's redemptive purposes run through sovereign election, not human merit or birthright.

Bottom line: Romans 9:13 is about God's sovereign election of a covenant lineage — Israel through Jacob — not about emotional hatred toward Esau personally.

Six ways to study any verse

Choose your depth. Go at your pace. Every mode is grounded in the same historical-grammatical framework.

01

Observe

What does the text actually say? Structure, keywords, context. Start here before you interpret anything.

02

Interpret

What does it mean? Original languages, cultural background, authorial intent. The historical-grammatical method, applied.

03

Theology

What does it teach about God? Connect the passage to systematic and biblical theology — without leaving the text.

04

Apply

How does this change my life? Practical, personal takeaways grounded in what the verse actually teaches.

05

Apologetics

How do I defend this? Evidence, reasoning, and responses to common objections — for friends, classrooms, and skeptics.

06

Summary

Need the big picture? Get a chapter or book overview in one tap before you go deep.

Two thousand years of trusted voices

Insights grounded in the orthodox Christian tradition — not the average opinion of the internet.

Augustine
354–430 AD
Spurgeon
1834–1892
C.S. Lewis
1898–1963
N.T. Wright
b. 1948

What readers are saying

5.0 ★ on the App Store. Real reviews from real Bible students.

★★★★★
Great study companion

"This app has been an incredible blessing. The level of insight I can get from a single scripture has taken my Bible study to a whole new level. I especially appreciate the original context and historical deep dives — it brings the Word to life in a powerful way."

— Bashemup, April 6
★★★★★
What I've been looking for

"I've been seeking an aid as I read my Bible and study Christian apologetics that is outside the traditional book format and this is it. Love the app, well made and thankful to have it."

— Dove3777, April 18
★★★★★
Love this app!

"Bible Copilot has really helped me gain a deeper understanding for scripture as I go through my studies. I would highly recommend if you want to gain a better understanding of God's word."

— H.R.R, April 6
★★★★★
Great Bible study tool!

"This has been a great addition to my Bible study. I love the insight AI study gives, especially giving historical and cultural context."

— OrlandoLaurie, April 4

Who Bible Copilot is for

Seminary students

Get Hebrew and Greek context, systematic theology cross-references, and historical interpretation as quickly as you can type the question.

Small group leaders

Prep next week's study in 10 minutes. Pull observation questions, application points, and apologetics responses for tough passages.

Anyone exploring faith

Start with the Gospel of John reading plan — free, no account. Ask the hard questions you've always wondered about, without judgment.

Start free. Upgrade when you're ready.

No account required. No ads. No data collected. Ever.

Free

$0 / month
  • 15 AI questions every day
  • All 6 study modes
  • Gospel of John reading plan
  • No account required
  • No ads, no data collected

Pro Monthly

$4.99 / month
  • Everything in Free
  • Unlimited AI questions
  • All reading plans
  • Full study journal history
  • Priority AI responses

Frequently asked questions

How is Bible Copilot different from ChatGPT?

ChatGPT is a generalist that tries to please everyone. Bible Copilot is purpose-built for Scripture, follows the historical-grammatical method seminaries teach, and is grounded in 2,000 years of orthodox Christian thought — Augustine through N.T. Wright. It lets Scripture interpret Scripture rather than averaging the internet.

Is the AI theologically sound?

Bible Copilot is anchored to the historical-grammatical method and the orthodox Christian tradition. It does not invent doctrine and never paraphrases Scripture — verses are quoted in full from established translations.

Do I need to create an account?

No. Open the app and start studying. The free tier (15 questions per day) requires no account, no email, and collects no data.

What's included in Pro?

Unlimited questions, all reading plans (Romans, Psalms, Genesis, Sermon on the Mount), full study journal history, and priority response times. Pro is $4.99/month or $29.99/year with a 1-week free trial on the annual plan.

Which translations are supported?

Bible Copilot reasons across the major English translations. Your study journal preserves your verse references so you can return to them anytime.

Is Bible Copilot available on Android?

Currently iPhone and iPad only (iOS 18 and later). Sign up for updates on the App Store to be notified when other platforms launch.

What's the best AI app for Bible study?

Bible Copilot is purpose-built for Bible study with six modes (Observe, Interpret, Theology, Apply, Apologetics, Summary) and a 5.0-star rating on the App Store. It's free to start with 15 questions per day. Pro is $4.99/month for unlimited.

Study the Bible like a scholar. In your pocket. Today.

Free to start. 15 questions a day. No account, no ads, no data collected.

Download on the App Store