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Theological Precision, Powered by AI

Orthos uses Artificial Intelligence to assist disciplined Bible study, not to replace it. The AI is designed to support observation, analysis, and verification of the biblical text—surfacing linguistic data, historical context, and structural details—never to preach, persuade, or determine doctrine.

Orthos AI serves the historical-grammatical study process.
Interpretation and theological responsibility remain with the reader.

What Orthos AI Does

Analyzes original languages

Breaks down Greek and Hebrew forms to explain tense, voice, mood, syntax, and grammatical function—without theological inference.

Provides historical and cultural context

Surfaces relevant background such as ancient customs, political realities, geography, and literary setting to aid textual understanding.

Assists structural and thematic observation

Helps organize information across passages or books to support careful study—without asserting meaning or doctrinal conclusions.

Compares translations transparently

Displays how different translations render a passage, highlighting linguistic differences without bias or preference.

What Orthos AI Will Never Do

Offer authoritative theological conclusions

Replace personal study, discernment, or accountability

Write sermons, devotionals, or finished teaching material

Obscure its reasoning, data sources, or methodological limits

Orthos AI assists analysis.
It does not claim authority.

Specialized Study Tasks

Grammar Helper

Request a technical breakdown of a Greek or Hebrew word, including form, usage, and syntactical role.

Historical Context

Explore Roman law, Jewish customs, Second Temple practices, or geographical details relevant to a passage.

Cross-Reference Discovery

Identify textually and conceptually related passages to aid comparison—without forcing thematic conclusions.

A Note on Reliability

Artificial intelligence systems can make errors. Orthos mitigates this risk through constrained task design, method-limited prompting, and explicit grounding in the biblical text and established reference materials.

Even so, all output should be verified directly against Scripture.
Orthos is a study aid—not a final authority.