Field workers home on furlough, partner delegations, the whole sending church in one room for a weekend. Every seat follows every session — without stocking a receiver bank.
Or start free — 8 broadcast hours a month, no credit card.
A missions conference gathers the church's whole sending world into one room: field workers home on furlough, partner-church delegations, and the congregation that sends and funds them. It is the one weekend where the language mix is guaranteed to be wider than any ordinary Sunday — and where the visiting speaker is as likely to need translation as the audience is.
Spanish is the largest non-English home language in the United States by a wide margin, and Spanish-speaking members are the most common bilingual reality in the American church — often a first-generation congregation worshiping alongside their English-first children. Half the churches that come to VoxLive name Spanish before any other language.
Spanish is written in the Latin alphabet, so the challenge is not the script — it is keeping a natural, sermon-paced flow that a native speaker doesn't have to fight to follow.
The Reina-Valera 1960 is the dominant Spanish Bible in Protestant and evangelical churches across Latin America and the US Hispanic church — for most Spanish-speaking believers, it is simply how the verse is supposed to sound.
Connect a laptop or tablet to your sound board and open the VoxLive studio in a browser. Pick Spanish as a listener language and click Go Live. Everyone who needs it opens one link on their own phone and reads live Spanish captions — or listens to translated audio in their earbuds — as the speaker talks. There is no app to install and no receiver to hand out.
The Reina-Valera 1960 is the dominant Spanish Bible in Protestant and evangelical churches across Latin America and the US Hispanic church — for most Spanish-speaking believers, it is simply how the verse is supposed to sound. When the speaker references a passage, VoxLive detects it and renders that verse on every Spanish listener's screen in Reina-Valera 1960 (RVR1960) — automatically, on every plan including Free.
No. They open a link the church shares (or scan a QR code) and choose Spanish on their own phone or tablet. No app, no account, no receiver, no hardware. Captions render in the Latin alphabet they already read.
Yes — this is one of the things that makes VoxLive different. If your church already has a volunteer or missionary interpreter, VoxLive can carry their live voice to every phone and let AI cover only the languages they can't. Interpreter mode is available now; you are not forced to replace the person you already trust.
You can run a real service on the Free tier (8 broadcast hours a month, no credit card) or unlock the full product for one service with the $5 First Sunday Pass. Ongoing plans are flat and published: Starter $59, Growth $199, Pro $449, and Scale $789 a month — no per-language add-ons and no overage charges.
No. Plans are month-to-month, so a church can run its conference on a single paid month and step back down afterward. If you want to evaluate first, the $5 First Sunday Pass unlocks the full product for one complete service.
The cheapest way to know is not another page — it is your own room. The First Sunday Pass unlocks the whole product for one full service for $5. If it doesn't work in your sanctuary, the $5 comes back.
No app to install. No receivers to buy. Works alongside your existing livestream.