Live mobile study workflow

Keep passages, notes, references, and sources in one study workspace.

Exegesis is built for serious recurring Bible study: map connected texts, continue active reading sessions, open commentaries and confessions, and move toward a larger Flutter desktop workspace next.

Current mobile release

Real Flutter screens from the current build, centered around the study surfaces that already ship today.

Map workspaceWord studyOffline library
Notes · Reference screen
Shipping

Hymns

Native synced score player — sheet music, amber cursor, and per-verse audio across vocal, piano, and organ.

Shipping

Letters

Wesley, Whitefield, Athanasius, Chrysostom, and the Apostolic Fathers, each enriched with scripture refs and topic chips.

Shipping

Greek & Hebrew

Tap any word in the reader to see its lexicon entry, top renderings, and every place it occurs in the canon.

Scroll timeline

Walk the product one screen at a time.

This section turns the shipped mobile surfaces into a scroll-driven sequence: each step highlights a real capture and explains what that screen contributes to the study workflow.

Step 01

Tap any word in the reader to open its Greek or Hebrew lexicon.

Tap "Word" on John 1:1 and the reader pulls up λόγος (G3056) with its full definition, top renderings ring chart, and every place it occurs in the canon. The lexicon sheet slides over the verse without losing your reading position.

339 verses where λόγος occurs, jumpable from the panel

  • Word / Verse toggle — switch between lexical entry and whole-verse breakdown.
  • Definition, transliteration, Strong’s number, and a ring chart of top renderings.

Step 02

Open the native hymn-score player on any installed hymnal.

The hymn player renders the actual score with an amber beat-cursor that walks through every measure, with stacked verse lyrics and per-verse audio across vocal, piano, and organ.

3 voices vocal, piano, organ — generated per hymn

  • Beat-aligned cursor on real sheet music, no WebView.
  • Hymnal catalog organized by tradition and meter.

Step 03

Read theologian letters with scripture refs and topic chips above the text.

Letter collections from Wesley, Whitefield, the Apostolic Fathers, Calvin, and Rutherford ship enriched: every letter carries its scripture references and topic tags right above the body text.

49 refs in a single Clement of Rome letter

  • Patristic, Reformed, Anglican, and Methodist authors in one catalog.
  • Refs and topics generated by an LLM-assisted ingestion pipeline.

Step 04

Expand any note into a per-verse reference workspace.

Tap a passage note to open its Reference view: a labeled diagram of connected verses, plus Topic Network, Notes, and Open Passage tabs and a Connected / Statistics breakdown for the link set.

5 links around John 3:14-17 with parallel + allusion + symbol labels

  • Reference, Topic Network, Notes, and Open Passage tabs on one surface.
  • Add a reference inline without leaving the passage view.

Step 05

Flip to Statistics to see which topics the passage actually concentrates on.

The Statistics tab inside any note charts Topics by Reference on a radar — tap Parallel, Allusion, or Symbol/Object to filter the chart. Bar counts beneath the radar show the link distribution at a glance.

3 / 1 / 1 Parallel / Allusion / Symbol-Object links on John 3:14-17

  • Topics radar with axes for Love, Justification, Messiah, Repentance, Atonement, Grace, TULIP, Prayer, Resurrection.
  • Per-link-type filter chips toggle which references feed the chart.

Step 06

Pull every kind of source for the verse into one swipeable Sources panel.

Select a verse — say John 1:1 — and the Sources sheet opens with six tabs: Commentaries, Confessions, Reference, Note, Hymns, and Letters. Matthew Henry’s commentary on John 1 sits a single swipe away from the Westminster confessions, a Reformed hymn on the Word, or a letter that quotes the passage.

6 tabs Commentaries · Confessions · Reference · Note · Hymns · Letters

  • Sources panel groups results by tradition (Puritans, Reformed, Patristic, …).
  • Swipe through installed cards inside the same sheet — never leave the verse.

Live mobile captures

These are real pages from the current Flutter mobile build.

The gallery below was captured from the iPhone simulator against the current app, so the site is now showing actual product screens instead of only describing them.

Primary flows

The site is built around the six product surfaces the app already ships.

The marketing copy mirrors the actual route structure and screen responsibilities in the Flutter client. Bible, Read, Hymns, Letters, the per-note Reference workspace, and Library are the six first-class surfaces you can land on every day.

Bible

Reading built for verse interaction and Greek/Hebrew word study

The Bible reader supports translation switching, book and chapter navigation, verse targeting, and a Strong’s-backed Greek and Hebrew lexicon panel that opens beside the text.

  • Jump directly by translation, book, chapter, and verse.
  • Tap any underlined word to see its lexicon entry, top renderings, and occurrence count.
  • Open commentary and confession context from the scripture surface.
Read

Resume active study sessions without rebuilding context

Read mode brings together continue-reading state, active passages, top topics, quick actions, and passage search in one dashboard.

  • Return to the exact translation and reading location you left.
  • Move into Topics, Library, Export, or Bible from the same surface.
  • Keep active passages and notes close instead of scattering them.
Hymns

A native synced-score player for the historic hymnal

Browse hymnals by tradition, then open any hymn into a native score view that scrolls the amber cursor through the staff while audio plays. Renders offline, no WebView.

  • Hymnal catalog organized by tradition and meter.
  • Beat-aligned cursor over the actual sheet music, with stacked verse lyrics.
  • Per-verse audio across vocal, piano, and organ — generated from the score.
Letters

Theologian letters with refs and topics chips inline

Download letter collections from Wesley, Whitefield, the Apostolic Fathers, Calvin, Rutherford, Athanasius, Chrysostom, and more. Each letter ships with scripture refs and topic tags surfaced above the text.

  • Patristic, Reformed, Anglican, and Methodist authors in one catalog.
  • Scripture references and topic chips above every letter, generated by an LLM-assisted pipeline.
  • Offline reading once installed — no network needed to study a letter.
Notes · Reference view

Every note opens into its own reference workspace

Tap any passage note to expand a per-verse view: connected references shown as a labeled diagram, Topic Network, Notes, and Open Passage tabs, plus a Connected / Statistics breakdown of every link.

  • Reference diagram with Parallel, Allusion, and Symbol/Object labels around the target verse.
  • Switch between Reference, Topic Network, Notes, and Open Passage from the same surface.
  • Add a reference inline — no separate editor screen needed.
Library

Remote catalogs with local installs and offline access

Library mode separates what is installed on the device from what is available remotely across commentary, hymn, letter, and confession collections.

  • Install commentary voices, hymnals, and letter collections for offline reading.
  • Browse confessions, creeds, and theological standards by tradition.
  • Keep bookmarks and recent sections available inside the reader.

Research stack

The surrounding tools turn the reader into a full study environment.

Beyond reading and mapping, Exegesis already includes the library, theological sources, topic management, export surface, and account access needed to support serious recurring use.

Greek & Hebrew lexicon

Tap any underlined word in the reader to see its Strong’s entry, top renderings, KJV usage, and full occurrence list across the canon.

Hebrew and Greek inlineTop renderings with countsEtymology and KJV usage notes

Topics with historical attestation

Every topic pulls a Reformed Presbyterian description, plus a chart of which letters, authors, traditions, and centuries attest to it.

Letters / authors / traditions / centuries / refsAttestation by century, color-coded by traditionRelated letters, hymns, and notes per topic

Commentary catalog

Browse remote authors, filter by category and period, search descriptions, and download selected voices into the local library.

Remote-first catalogSearch and taxonomy filtersOn-device installation progress

Confessions and creeds

Search across documents, filter by tradition, jump to sections, and keep bookmarks plus recent history inside the reader.

Cross-document searchBookmarks and recentsReadable offline after install

Topics, notes, and markup

Create topics, tag passages, add notes, and mark up connected sections so theological themes stay attached to the text they came from.

Custom topic creationPassage-to-topic groupingNotes and visual markup

Multi-device account sync

Supabase-backed sign-in with Apple, Google, or email keeps your library, notes, and topics in sync across mobile and desktop installs.

Apple, Google, and email sign-inLibrary and notes follow you across devicesOffline-first — sync resumes when you reconnect

Rollout

Mobile and Desktop are closer to shipping.

Mobile already carries the serious core of Bible reading, mapping, hymns, letters, library, and analytics.

Shipping soon

A mobile study tool that already covers the serious core

The current Flutter app is not a placeholder. It already ships the reading, mapping, hymn, letter, library, analytics, and export surfaces that matter for everyday study.

  • iPhone and Android delivery today
  • Reference maps, diagrams, and passage graphs
  • Greek and Hebrew lexicon inline in the reader
  • Native synced-score hymn player and theologian letter collections
  • Remote catalogs with local installs for commentaries, hymns, letters, and confessions
Planned next

A desktop workspace for longer sessions and denser study flows

The next step is a Flutter desktop release that keeps the same study model while taking advantage of larger canvases, keyboard input, and side-by-side research.

  • Desktop app planned in Flutter
  • Larger map and diagram canvases
  • More room for simultaneous reading, library, and analytics surfaces
  • A consistent product line across mobile and desktop