Pewbeam AI achieved a major milestone with its first live test at CCI Ibadan, successfully projecting Bible verses from a pastor’s spoken words in under two seconds. The demonstration marks a promising intersection of faith and artificial intelligence, blending sermon delivery with real-time technology.
Turning Sermons into Instant Scripture
Developed by Nigerian innovator Dara Sobaloju, Pewbeam AI was designed to solve a simple but recurring challenge in church settings: keeping up with dynamic preaching. Pastors often quote or reference scripture spontaneously, leaving projection teams struggling to display the correct verses quickly.

Pewbeam bridges that gap. The AI listens to a sermon as it happens, recognises key phrases or references, and instantly projects the relevant Bible verse on screen. Unlike traditional slide systems, it responds fluidly to the pastor’s speech, whether they quote a verse directly or reference it indirectly.
At the CCI Ibadan test, the system accurately picked up the pastor’s voice and displayed the matching verse in under two seconds, demonstrating both low latency and contextual accuracy.
Engineering for Real-World Church Environments
To make the technology reliable in live worship conditions, Pewbeam AI was built around three key goals:
Speed: Achieving sub-two-second response times with optimised speech-to-text conversion.
Offline capability: Maintaining performance even during internet outages.
Contextual understanding: Matching keywords and meaning, ensuring the right scripture is displayed even from paraphrased speech.
The system reportedly uses lightweight, locally optimised AI models to ensure smooth operation in Nigeria’s often unpredictable network conditions.
Beyond the Pulpit
Pewbeam’s potential extends beyond sermon support. Its developers envision broader applications in worship management, including automatic sermon indexing, multilingual scripture translation, and interactive audience engagement.
The tool could also reshape how churches prepare and deliver messages, reducing manual slide creation and improving congregation participation. By merging AI responsiveness with the rhythm of live preaching, Pewbeam aims to make sermons more immersive and accessible.
Faith, Technology, and the Future
While its debut was a success, the team acknowledges that refining accuracy, accent recognition, and denominational variations will take time. Misinterpretation or incorrect verse mapping remains a possible challenge in complex sermon contexts.
Still, the test at CCI Ibadan offers a glimpse of what’s possible when technology meets ministry. As AI tools continue to evolve, solutions like Pewbeam could redefine how faith communities experience worship.