Kanzelclips turns our full-length sermon recordings into short vertical clips — transcribed, captioned and color-corrected — and publishes them to our own YouTube, Instagram and TikTok accounts on a schedule.
The whole pipeline runs on our own hardware and our own cloud queue — no third-party accounts, no content other than our own recordings.
Each service is transcribed with word-level timestamps, then analyzed for its strongest 35–95 second moments.
Highlights are cropped to 9:16 with face tracking, get burned-in captions and a gentle color correction pass.
Finished clips wait in a cloud queue and are posted to our own channels on a daily schedule — a few clips per day.
A focused tool for a small team publishing its own sermons.
German speech recognition with word-level timestamps powers precise, readable captions on every clip.
Long services are scanned for their most quotable moments — no manual scrubbing through two-hour recordings.
Wide sanctuary shots become steady 9:16 portrait clips that keep the preacher centered.
White balance, temperature and shadow lift only — clips look like the room, just better.
A cloud queue posts clips inside a daily window with spacing between posts — hands-off after Sunday.
Every clip's per-platform state is tracked: queued, posted with its media ID, or failed with the reason.
Kanzelclips publishes only to the TikTok account its owner has explicitly connected. Three scopes, used exactly as described:
user.info.basic — the account owner signs in once with TikTok to
authorize the app and to show which account is connected.
video.upload — a generated clip is uploaded to the authorized account
as a draft, for final editing inside the TikTok app.
video.publish — clips the owner queues for publishing are posted
directly to the authorized account.
Posting is always initiated by the account owner, only to their own account. No third-party accounts, and no data collection beyond the authorized account's basic profile info.