Ancient words. Modern voice. The Name restored.
About
Berurah (an AI voice directed and produced by humans) is a music project rooted in the original Hebrew Scriptures -drawing from a tradition older than any single modern genre. Berurah's songs draw directly from the biblical text, using ancient Middle Eastern melody and instrumentation to carry words whose original power was in song and speech, long before silent reading became the norm.
The editing of the Scripture passages for "sing-ability" is done with great care and conscience, by real humans -any words that are changed are still tied to the original Hebrew meaning, and nothing is ever omitted. Works in foreign languages (Aramaic, Hebrew) are meticulously reviewed phonetically to ensure proper pronunciation and faithfulness to bona fide sources.
Occasionally Berurah is joined by other AI voices, including Aziel, who appears on her recording of the Lord's Prayer in Aramaic.
Mission
There is beautiful, sincere work across many musical traditions (contemporary, traditional, Jewish, Messianic, and more). Berurah simply adds something that's been largely absent from streaming platforms: songs that restore the name of Yahweh where it appears in Scripture, sung plainly, in the spirit it was first given.
Music
Featured on The Lord's Prayer in Aramaic: Aziel, vocalist
A Note on AI & Worship
It's a fair question, and one we take seriously. Some concerns Christians may have about AI-generated worship music:
These are real concerns, and we don't dismiss them. To the first: yes -we believe it is. AI has no soul, no personhood, and no relationship with Yahweh -it cannot worship on its own. But AI is not the worshiper. It is an instrument, a tool in the hands of modern worshipers, and whether a song is a genuine offering depends on the heart of the one who wields the instrument, not the instrument itself. Something else to consider is the Spirit's work in the hearer -the one whose heart is moved, convicted, or lifted by the Word being sung (John 4:24). A song carrying faithful Scripture can minister to a listener regardless of how it was produced, just as many instruments have served worship faithfully even when their introduction was initially surrounded with controversy (organs, pianos, printed sheet music, and others).
To the second: AI does not bypass gifts of creativity. The advent of AI does not prohibit any traditional artist from crafting the same breathtaking art they would have continued to make had AI never existed, or from using the gifts Yahweh has given them to lift their hearts and those of others in worship of Him. Some traditional artists are now blending their trademark methods of creativity with AI technology, using new talents given to them by the Master. There is now also a whole generation of human beings being actively gifted new skills and talents by Yahweh in the field of AI-based technology - the responsible, conscientious use of AI requires a great amount of skill, talent, and hard work. Their gifts are not less worthy of being used for worship because they are new and unfamiliar. The idea that these are mutually exclusive is one we do not believe to be consistent with the nature of the technology, or the nature of talent in human beings. All believers, whether they prefer traditional forms of craftsmanship or those more modern, should be able to worship together, with their hearts united in devotion to Yahweh above all other things. Our position is simply that worship is larger than one genre, one method, or one instrument, and that we are each called to use our gifts as Yahweh directs.
To the third: we believe the answers above speak to this as well. The Spirit is not limited by the instruments used to worship Him, and the sincerity of worship is determined by the heart of the worshiper, not the tool.
We'd also invite you to consider what Scripture itself says:
"So shall My word be that goes forth from My mouth; it shall not return to Me void,
but it shall accomplish what I please, and it shall prosper in the thing for which I
sent it," declares Yahweh.
- Isaiah 55:11
"As each one has received a gift, minister it to one another, as good stewards
of the manifold grace of Elohim."
- 1 Peter 4:10
"And whatever you do in word or deed, do all in the name of the Master Yeshua,
giving thanks to Elohim the Father through Him."
- Colossians 3:17
Something worth considering: throughout Scripture, Yahweh's people have worshiped Him with the best tools and talents available to them -from Bezalel's craftsmanship in building the Tabernacle (Exodus 31:1–5) to David's invention of new musical instruments (2 Chronicles 7:6). When we tell those whose gifts lie in directing and shaping technology that they may not use those gifts in worship, we risk adding restrictions where Scripture does not -a pattern Yeshua himself cautioned against (Matthew 15:9, Mark 7:7–8).
Berurah is fully transparent about what it is: an AI voice, directed and produced by humans, singing the words of Scripture faithfully.
We leave the rest to the One whose Word never returns void.