Sample Build · A Real Pastor's Archive
Live Showcase Sample Build
Sample Build
What a Build Looks Like

This is a real pastor's sermon archive — 79 sermons, fully decomposed. Every section below was generated from the same pipeline we'd use on yours.

Use the navigation on the left to explore each section. Here's what you'll find inside:

Your Analysis
Voice Analysis
Your theological center of gravity, rhetorical register, tone distribution — the fingerprint that makes your preaching yours.
Your Analysis
Exemplar Match
The Guild Hall preacher whose craft most resembles yours — not to imitate, but to apprentice alongside.
Your Analysis
Growth Areas
Data-grounded coaching: not “improve your illustrations” but specific gaps measured against your exemplar.
Your Analysis
Latent Book
The manuscript hiding inside your sermon archive — themes, sustained arguments, the book you’ve half-written.
Your Archive
Illustrations & Quotes
Every illustration you’ve ever used, every quote you’ve cited — extracted, typed, and searchable.
Your Tools
PreFlight Check
Paste a sermon manuscript before Sunday. Get it scored against your own coaching benchmarks in real time.
Start exploring ←
Select any section from the navigation panel on the left to see real data from a real pastor’s archive. On mobile, tap the menu in the top corner.
Everything you see here was built from one pastor’s sermons. Your build will look different — because your voice is different.
Voice Analysis
What the data reveals about how this pastor preaches.
Exemplar Similarities
Your preaching has a lineage.

The Guild Hall doesn't just profile the masters — it finds the one who sounds most like a more mature version of you. Not to imitate. To apprentice. The match is built from data: rhetorical register, theological center of gravity, illustration instinct, application posture, and more. When the overlap is high, the comparison becomes a roadmap.

An 85% match with DeYoung means this pastor shares his Logos dominance, his Soteriology spine, and his instinct for cultural reference. The 15% gap is where the coaching lives — and it's specific enough to act on.

Illustration Arsenal
Illustrations, extracted and indexed by type.
Intellectual Lineage
Citations. Indexed.
Scripture Index
Scriptures, cross-referenced.
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Recent Sermons
Sermons, fully indexed.
TitleSeriesTextDateType
Growth Areas
Where the data points toward development.
Latent Book
The book already written in your sermons.
Herald · Money Quotes
Your best lines, ready to share.
Herald
Quote graphic generator · Social-ready formats
Herald surfaces your highest-impact lines — key claims from your own voice and memorable quotes you've cited — and renders them as shareable graphics. Navy, parchment, or dark. Download and post, or hand them to your social media team.
Money Quotes
Format:
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Add-ons · VoxPrompt
Your voice, on demand.
VoxPrompt
AI system prompt · Trained on your corpus · Voice-matched output
Coming Soon
VoxPrompt is a system prompt for any AI — Claude, ChatGPT, or others — built from your decomposition data. Paste it in, and the AI writes closer to how you think: your theological emphases, your illustration instincts, your sentence rhythms. Use it for drafting email copy, study materials, or a starting point for sermon outlines.
Add-ons · Hall Query
Search the masters. Find what they said.
Hall Query
Semantic search · Public domain preachers only · Guild Hall corpus
Coming Soon
Search across the full decomposed corpus of public domain Guild Hall preachers — Spurgeon, Watson, Ryle, and others. Find how they handled a specific text, what they said about a doctrine, or which illustrations they used on suffering, grace, or the cross. Every result is sourced to a specific sermon.
ENTER
All preachers Spurgeon Ryle Watson
J.C. Ryle · Expository Thoughts on Matthew
“The Sermon on the Mount is not meant to tell us how to be saved. It is meant to tell us what saved people look like. Reverse that order and you will end up with a religion of merit — which is no religion at all.”
Unit 004 · Sermon: “The Beatitudes and the Kingdom” · Rhetorical function: Doctrine
C.H. Spurgeon · Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit
“Every beatitude is a paradox. The poor are rich; the mourners are comforted; the meek inherit. Christ has a habit of turning the world upside down — which is to say, right side up.”
Unit 012 · Sermon: “Blessed Are the Poor in Spirit” · Rhetorical function: Exposition
Pre-Flight Check
Test your sermon against your benchmarks.
Paste Your Sermon Manuscript
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Everything you just saw was built from one pastor's sermons — the same pipeline, the same methodology, the same level of detail. Your build starts with your archive: audio files, transcripts, or manuscripts. We handle the rest.

Your theological fingerprint and rhetorical DNA Your exemplar match from the Guild Hall Data-grounded coaching specific to your voice The latent book hiding in your sermon library Your full archive — searchable, indexed, and working for you

Corpus builds starting at $500

Questions? chris@sovgracekc.org — a pastor, not a sales team.