A different kind of study tool
Your patriarchal blessing is personal scripture.
A direct message from God through an ordained patriarch — tailored to you, for your entire life. There is nothing else like it.
Most blessings end up in a drawer.
You read it, feel something real, maybe mark a few phrases — then life moves on. The language is rich and layered, but without a way to study it systematically, the depth stays hidden.
What scriptures connect to this specific phrase in my blessing?
What does this word actually mean in the original Hebrew or Greek?
Have prophets or apostles taught about this same principle?
These are answerable questions. You just need the right tools.
How it works
Enter a phrase. The app does the rest.
Not replacing the Spirit — giving it more material to work with.
Scripture Cross-References
Surfaces passages from the Standard Works that speak to the same principles, promises, and themes in your blessing.
Hebrew & Greek Insights
Discover the ancient roots of key words — the layers of meaning that English alone can't capture.
Oxford Dictionary Depth
Trace how specific words have shifted in meaning over centuries, revealing what the patriarch's language actually carries.
Conference Talks
Find General Conference addresses where prophets and apostles teach on the same topics in your blessing.
Other Talks & Speeches
BYU devotionals, firesides, and other addresses that expand your understanding of each principle.
Hymn Connections
Hymns that echo the same truths — another way to carry your blessing's message with you.
Every phrase you haven’t explored is a connection to God you haven’t yet made.
Your blessing contains a lifetime of counsel, warnings, promises, and direction. It was given by revelation. The depth is already there — the only question is whether you’ll take the time to find it.
“The purpose of a patriarchal blessing is to interpret and reveal to us, through the inspiration of the Almighty, why we are here and what is expected of us that we might fill the measure of our creation here upon the earth.”
— Elder LeGrand Richards, BYU Speech, 1953
Start simply
One phrase at a time.
Enter a passage from your blessing. Choose a category. Then let the app find the connections — scriptures, ancient word meanings, conference talks, hymns, and more. Save your notes. Build a personal study journal over weeks, months, years.
Generate structured study plans when you want to go deeper. Share individual insights if you choose to — everything else stays completely private.
Enter a phrase or passage from your blessing
The app finds scriptures, word origins, talks, and hymns
Add your own notes and reflections
Save it to your private study journal
Generate study plans to go even deeper
Your blessing stays yours.
Your patriarchal blessing is deeply personal. Every word you enter, every note you write, every insight you save — visible only to you. Authentication required, admin-approved access, complete data isolation between users. Sharing is always opt-in and limited to individual entries.
Built for the kind of study that matters most.
Studying sacred text demands care. Daily Study checks its own work — validating every reference, verifying every link, and labeling anything it can’t fully confirm.
References from the actual Standard Works
Scripture suggestions are validated against the complete canon — Bible, Book of Mormon, Doctrine & Covenants, and Pearl of Great Price. You won't find made-up book names here.
Real Strong's Concordance entries
Hebrew and Greek word numbers are verified against the actual Strong's lexicon ranges. If a number doesn't exist, it gets removed before you ever see it.
Hymns you can actually find in the hymnal
Every suggestion is checked against all 341 titles in the 1985 hymnal. If a title can't be confirmed, it's clearly marked — so you always know what to trust.
Conference talk links that work
Talk URLs are tested against churchofjesuschrist.org and speeches.byu.edu before they reach you. No dead links, no guesswork — just talks you can open and read.
Honest about what's interpretation
Word origins and etymological connections are fascinating and worth exploring — but they're interpretive, not doctrinal. Each section is labeled so you can weigh it for yourself.
A study companion, not an authority
Daily Study helps you explore your blessing more deeply — but it's a tool, not a teacher. The Spirit, the scriptures, and your own judgment are always the final word.