Seek answers from the sacred scriptures of your faith.
Every tradition. Every question. One divine conversation.
"Ask, and it shall be given to you; seek, and you shall find."
— Matthew 7:7 · The Bible
"And when My servants ask you concerning Me — indeed I am near."
— Quran 2:186
"Turn it over and over again, for everything is in it."
— Pirkei Avot 5:22 · The Torah
AskYourGod.ai draws from the authentic texts of each tradition — no interpretation bias, no blending. Your faith, your scriptures.
The Holy Bible — Old & New Testament. Ask about the Gospels, Epistles, Psalms, Proverbs, and the life of Jesus Christ.
The Holy Quran and Hadith. Seek guidance on the Five Pillars, the teachings of the Prophet ﷺ, and the path of Islam.
The Torah, Talmud, and Tanakh. Explore the wisdom of the Rabbis, the mitzvot, and the covenant between God and Israel.
The Bhagavad Gita, Upanishads, and Vedas. Discover dharma, karma, moksha, and the teachings of Krishna and the Rishis.
The Pali Canon, Dhammapada, and Sutras. Walk the Eightfold Path and explore the Buddha's teachings on suffering and liberation.
Explore Dianetics and the foundational writings of L. Ron Hubbard. Ask questions of Scientology's core texts and teachings.
Three steps to sacred wisdom
Select your religious tradition. Your conversation will be grounded entirely in that tradition's authentic scriptures — nothing blended, nothing borrowed.
Ask anything — from deep theological questions to everyday guidance. "What does the Quran say about forgiveness?" "How should I handle grief according to the Psalms?"
Receive answers drawn directly from scripture, with citations so you can read the source yourself. No opinion — only what the texts say.
Begin with a free question. Continue the journey with a subscription.
"I've studied the Bible my whole life. AskYourGod.ai helps me find connections between passages I never would have found on my own."
— Margaret T., Christian, Ohio"As a new Muslim, I had so many questions about the Quran. This gave me a gentle, patient way to learn at my own pace."
— Yusuf A., Muslim, Toronto"The citations are what make it trustworthy. I can see exactly where every answer comes from and verify it myself."
— Rabbi D. Levi, Jewish, New York