Our story

It started with a sermon nobody heard twice

An incredible service, a word that would change lives — and by Monday, forgotten. The video alone on YouTube, no transcript, no study, no search. Doxus was born to solve that.

The Doxus founders sketching the idea on a Sunday afternoon
The spark

Messages that preach once, and disappear

Talking with pastors and with members who missed the service, it became clear: the service ends, the video gets forgotten in the timeline, and the preached Word becomes just another record. Small-group leaders rewrite from scratch what the pastor already said. Members who want to review open the video and give up after five minutes. Google indexes the title and nothing more.

It was an infrastructure failure, not a preaching one. The pastor had already done the hardest work. All that was missing was making that message findable, studyable, and shareable all week long.

Member trying to revisit an old sermon with no transcript
Open Bible beside the keyboard during development
The build

Bible open next to the keyboard

Nothing Doxus does is new magic. Automatic transcription exists, language models exist, search indexing exists. What was missing was bringing it all together with pastoral sensitivity — understanding that a sermon isn't a podcast, that a Bible reference isn't just text, that a pastor doesn't want to see his message distorted by an AI trying to "improve" what he said.

Every technical decision was weighed against a simple question: does this help or hinder the ministry of the Word? If the answer was "hinder," it was out. That's why we don't have a theological chatbot, we don't have AI "answering Bible questions" — we have your pastor's sermon, organized, preserved, available.

Where we're going

The preaching that doesn't end at the service

Every church on Doxus is proof that technology can serve discipleship rather than compete with it. The future is simple — more languages, more reach, more local-church messages arriving to people who have never set foot in one.

01

More languages

Every sermon translated with theological fidelity into English and Spanish — then more. Local ministry with global reach.

02

More churches

Every church that joins strengthens the shared archive: cross-search, shared indexing, discovery across ministries.

03

More pastoral tools

Honest metrics, materials for small groups, integrations with the life of the church throughout the week.

Want to be part of this story?

If you're a pastor, leader, or just a member who believes every sermon deserves to stay alive, start here.