Short answer
Collie provides church agents for common ministry jobs: planning the week, drafting communications, preparing board packs, finding records, and coordinating volunteers. The agents draft, search, and queue. They do not send, publish, assign, or create external changes on their own.
What Collie helps with
- Turn vague ministry requests into structured drafts and pending actions.
- Keep approvals visible in one queue instead of hiding work in a chatbot.
- Connect church context without removing the pastor from final decisions.
Boundaries
- Approval-gated by design for email, calendar, social, and volunteer asks.
- Built around church tenancy, audit logs, and role-aware access.
- Designed for PRD guardrails rather than generic agent autonomy.
Questions pastors ask
What can a church agent do in Collie?
A Collie church agent can draft communications, prepare plans, search church records, and create pending review items. It cannot auto-send, auto-post, or bypass approval.
Are Collie church agents autonomous?
They are intentionally bounded. Collie can draft and prepare work, but every external action remains pending until a human approves it.