Not ours.
I help Christian publishers and ministries turn their back catalogs into trusted AI research tools — answers grounded in your titles, your theology, your tradition.
Your catalog represents decades of serious theological work — commentaries, biblical studies, systematic theology, curricula. But for most publishers and ministries, that archive is functionally inaccessible.
Staff search manually and miss things. Readers can't explore across titles. When a researcher needs an answer buried in your collection, they can't find it. So they turn elsewhere.
Then AI arrived — and made it worse. Generic tools will answer theological questions from your readers, but they don't know your catalog. They hallucinate citations. They import theological assumptions you've spent decades avoiding.
A chatbot misattributing a quote to Calvin. A fabricated verse. Your name attached to theological embarrassment. That's not a risk worth taking.
You're caught between two uncomfortable positions: ignore AI and watch your content become inaccessible, or adopt generic AI and risk your name being attached to hallucinated scripture and biased answers.
I connect a citation-grounded AI research interface to your document archive. Your readers, editors, and staff can ask questions in plain language and receive answers drawn from your published titles — with direct citations to the specific book and passage.
If the answer isn't in your catalog, the system says so. It will never invent a source. It will never import a theological framework you didn't publish.
The engagement in plain terms:
Ignaria is a live example. It does for the Church's historical tradition exactly what I propose to build for your catalog. It ingests the Church Fathers, the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, the Reformation writers — and returns cited, source-grounded answers to theological research questions.
Try Ignaria→Sample research questions:
I'm Harvey Ramer. I've spent 20+ years building complex information systems, and the last several years applying that to theological and historical corpora. I built Ignaria because I believe the Church's own intellectual tradition should be accessible to anyone who wants to engage it seriously.
I work with Christian publishers and ministries who want to do the same thing with their own content — make what they've published genuinely accessible, not just stored in a database.
This is not a generic AI implementation. It requires someone who understands the domain — the theological tradition, the corpus structure, the interpretive stakes — as well as the technology. That's what I bring.
If your catalog contains more insight than your readers can currently access — let's talk about what that could look like.
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