Built for the work pastors actually do.
SermonStudio is a theology-aware workspace for the whole sermon arc. Not a chat window. Not a coach. A studio.
Why SermonStudio Exists
Generic AI tools fail pastors not because they lack capability, but because they lack theological context. A pastor who has spent years in a Reformed tradition, or a Pentecostal tradition, or a Catholic tradition, finds generic AI suggestions off-key — sometimes harmlessly vague, sometimes actively unhelpful for sermon prep. Feeling unheard by the tools you depend on is a specific kind of frustration, and it compounds every week.
SermonStudio exists to address that specific failure. It covers the full sermon arc — Build, Prep, Review, and Archive — in one workspace configured to your theological tradition. The suggestions it surfaces are grounded in your denomination preset and 48 configurable theological positions, not a generic model guess. Because a pastor who feels unheard by their tools will stop using them, and that is a problem worth solving.
A Note from the Founder
I built SermonStudio because every generic AI tool I tried for sermon prep had the same problem: it didn't know what I believed. It could suggest a passage, but not one calibrated to covenant theology. It could surface an illustration, but not one that would land with a congregation steeped in a particular tradition. The suggestions were intelligent in a general sense and unhelpful in the specific sense that matters for preaching. I kept thinking: what would it look like if the workspace actually knew your theology before you typed a single word?
The name "studio" was deliberate. A studio is a configured space — it is built around how the craftsperson works, not prescriptive about how they should work. A coaching program tells you what good looks like based on someone else's standard. A studio reflects your practice back to you, refined. That is what I wanted SermonStudio to be: a workspace where every passage suggestion reflects how you read Scripture, where illustration retrieval surfaces what your congregation will recognize, and where the review scorecard is calibrated to your tradition's understanding of what a sermon is for. This is early access, and there is real work ahead. But the premise is right, and I'm building in public because I want your feedback to shape what comes next.
—Wayne, founder.
Wayne Harris
Founder, SermonStudio
The Team
Wayne Harris
Founder
Wayne built SermonStudio to give pastors the theology-aware workspace he kept looking for and not finding.
What SermonStudio Is Not
If this resonates with how you approach sermon prep, request access and see it for yourself.
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