Editorial policy
How BibleInTongues creates original content, how references are selected, and how the site handles review and corrections.
Purpose of the original content
BibleInTongues exists first as a reading site. Original content on the site should help the reader begin, continue, and deepen direct reading of the biblical text.
That means the editorial layer should stay practical. It should point back to the text rather than compete with it.
How references are chosen
Topics, plans, and question pages should use references drawn from the site database and controlled seed files. The goal is to avoid invented or untraceable verse claims.
When an editorial page recommends passages, those recommendations should be easy to verify and easy to read in context.
Use of templates and AI assistance
Structured templates are preferred over vague free-form generation. They keep pages consistent, auditable, and easier to improve over time.
AI can assist with rewriting, localization adaptation, or turning a structured brief into readable prose, but it should not be treated as a theological authority or a substitute for factual checks.
Corrections and updates
When readers report a broken link, a bad localization, or a weak thematic match, the ideal fix is specific and visible: adjust the page, the seed data, or the generation logic instead of hiding the issue behind vague wording.
The site is meant to improve by tightening relevance and usability, not by generating more pages than it can defend.
Publisher and policies
See who runs the site, how editorial pages are produced, how translations are handled, and where to send corrections.