Gedam Gedam
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Coming soon to iPhone

Walk the ancient way,
one candle at a time.

The whole devotional life of the Oriental Orthodox Church — its prayers, fasts, Scripture, and saints, ordered by a living liturgical calendar — gathered into one place, in English, and made yours to keep, day by day.

Fully offline · No ads · No trackers · No account required

6
Oriental Orthodox churches, each in its own tradition
100%
Offline — the whole Orthodox canon, no signal required
1,190+
Lives of the saints, a commemoration for every day
0
Ads, trackers, or data ever sold

The name

Gedam ገዳም

Gedam is a word from Geʼez, the ancient prayer language of the Ethiopian and Eritrean Church. It means a monastery: a place set apart for prayer, fasting, and the reading of Scripture. This app is not such a place, and could never stand in for one. It only hopes to carry a little of that life into your day — a small corner that keeps the prayers, the fasts, and the saints close at hand, so that wherever you are, the rhythm of the Church is near. The monastery on the mountain remains. This is only a path toward it.

Our mission

An ancient faith, within reach

To put the devotional life of the Oriental Orthodox Church within reach of everyone who longs to keep it — the diaspora, the convert and the seeker, the young believer praying in English, the faithful far from a parish.

For too long that inheritance has lain scattered — the calendar on a parish wall in a language you may not read, the prayers in books hard to find and harder to follow, the saints kept in the Synaxarium and the Senkessar but barely carried into English. Gedam gathers what was scattered and keeps it whole: the prayers of the day, the whole of Scripture, the readings and saints appointed for each day, and the fasts and feasts that order the year — all held together by a living calendar that always knows where you stand. Never a replacement for the Church, only a companion that carries you toward her.

And Gedam speaks English — the common tongue of the diaspora and of the wider world. It serves the whole Oriental Orthodox family, six ancient churches held together by one confession of Christ, so that for the young, the convert, and the faithful far from a parish, the same door stands open. Read how they are one family.

Why Gedam

The whole devotional life, together

Other apps give you one tradition, or one thing — a Coptic prayer book, an Ethiopian fasting calendar, a list of saints. Gedam brings the devotional life together.

Most apps

One tradition, or one thing — a prayer book here, a fasting calendar there, a list of saints somewhere else. Scattered across apps, books, and parish walls.

Gedam

Gedam is the first app to gather the whole Oriental Orthodox devotional life in one place — the calendar, the prayers, the Scripture, the fasts, and the saints, in English, across all six churches. If you pray in English, live in the diaspora, are far from a parish, or are only beginning to seek, the life of the Church is no longer scattered across books, websites, and a calendar on a wall you cannot read. It is here, whole, in your pocket — and it follows the real Church year, day by day.

What Gedam does

A companion for the whole devotional life

Everything the devotional life asks of a day, gathered into one quiet place that keeps the Church's own calendar: the prayers, the fasts, the Scriptures, and the saints. It all lives on your device and works without a signal, and you sign in only if you wish to carry it across your own devices.

A living liturgical calendar

Open the app and know at once what today is in the Church — fast or feast, the saint remembered, the readings appointed at the Liturgy. Gedam computes the whole Church year for any tradition and any year, so you are never left guessing where you stand.

Devotions that follow the calendar

A habit tracker for the life of prayer. Choose the devotions you want to keep — a morning prayer, the Wednesday and Friday fast, the day’s reading — and check them off; the list follows the calendar, and a day you miss is never counted against you.

A candlelit ascent

Keep a devotion and Gedam lights a candle for it — a quiet sign the day was offered. Your kept days carry you gently up the Ladder of Divine Ascent: encouragement to return tomorrow, never a streak to break or a score to lose.

An offline Orthodox Bible

The whole Orthodox canon on your device — the Septuagint with the full Deuterocanon, plus Enoch and Jubilees, the Psalms numbered as the Church prays them. Follow the day’s readings, highlight the verses that find you, and keep your notes — no signal required.

The prayers of the Church

The Church’s prayers, always within reach — the Hours, the Wudase Mariam, and the Jesus Prayer told on the rope, with many more for the saints, the departed, and the seasons of a life. Each is shown in the form your own tradition keeps.

The saints of every day

Each day, the saints the Church remembers — more than a thousand lives drawn from the Senkessar and the Coptic Synaxarium, told in English at last. Read who stands with you today, and let their lives shape your own.

How it works

A simple daily rhythm

For all its imagery, what Gedam asks of you is simple, and the same each day: choose a few devotions, keep them as the day allows, and let the candles you light mark your ascent. It is the oldest rhythm of the Christian life, set to the calendar of the Church and made easy to return to.

I

Choose your devotions

Choose the devotions you want to keep, much as you would set any daily habit. Take them from the life of the Church — a morning prayer, the Wednesday and Friday fast, a chapter of Scripture, the Jesus Prayer on the rope — or create your own. Because Gedam follows the Church’s calendar, the ones tied to it appear when they are due, a fast through its whole season, so you always see what today asks and are not shown what it does not.

II

Keep them, day by day

Each time you pray, fast, or read, you mark that devotion kept, and a candle is lit on your home screen, a simple and visible sign that the day was offered. Gedam keeps no scoreboard and no broken streaks; when a day falls short, it does not scold you, but quietly invites you back tomorrow.

III

Watch your ascent grow

Day by day, the devotions you keep carry you upward along the Ladder of Divine Ascent, the soul’s long climb toward God, what the Church calls Theosis. It is never a measure of your failures, only a quiet sign of a life turning Godward, and a reason to take up tomorrow with hope.

What is the Ladder of Divine Ascent?

In the seventh century, Saint John Climacus, a monk of Mount Sinai, described the Christian life as a ladder of thirty rungs, each a virtue, by which the soul climbs toward God. His Ladder of Divine Ascent has been treasured across the Orthodox world ever since, read in the monasteries through every Great Lent. Gedam borrows the image gently. The candles you light and the days you keep are not a score to win, but a small and daily picture of that same ascent: the slow, ordinary work of turning toward God one faithful day at a time.

A guided tour

See Gedam in use

Real screens from the app, playing on their own — hover to pause, or tap any screen to jump to it.

Gedam — TodayGedam — CalendarGedam — A day's detailGedam — Your devotionsGedam — ScriptureGedam — ReadingGedam — PrayersGedam — Your ascent

What sets it apart

A calendar that is calculated, not copied

Most apps simply store a handful of fixed holidays. Gedam instead computes the calendar from each church's own rules. The Coptic, Ethiopian, and Eritrean churches share the ancient reckoning of Alexandria — the same centuries-old computation the Church of Alexandria has kept since the early centuries, which the Ethiopian and Eritrean churches call the Bahere Hasab; the Armenian, Syriac, and Malankara churches follow their own Gregorian dating. From the date of Pascha, the Church's Easter, the whole moving year unfolds — Nineveh, Great Lent, Holy Week, the Resurrection, the Ascension, and Pentecost — each tradition true to its own.

  • Every day, in its place. Open any day for its fast or feast, the readings appointed for it, and the saints or commemoration it holds — tap a saint to read their life from the Senkessar or the Coptic Synaxarium.
  • The weekly rhythm. Wednesdays and Fridays kept as fasts; every Sunday a feast of the Resurrection.
  • Each calendar, in step. The Geʼez and Coptic calendars keep thirteen months; Gedam shows each one alongside your everyday date.
  • Right for any year. Because it is calculated, not stored, the calendar is correct for any year — and tested against the churches' own published dates.

A day's detail

The fast
Whether the day calls for one, and how it is kept
Fast
The day’s readings
The Psalms, the Epistles, and the Gospel appointed for it
Read
Feasts & commemorations
What the Church marks on this day
Feast
The saints of the day
Tap any one to read their life from the Senkessar or Synaxarium
Lives

Through the whole year

Far more than a handful of holidays

The Ethiopian and Eritrean churches keep seven fasting seasons across the year, and Gedam knows each one: when it begins, how long it lasts, and how it is kept. The Coptic Church keeps its own, reckoned the same way, and the Armenian, Syriac, and Malankara churches each keep theirs.

The Fast of the ProphetsThe weeks before the Nativity
The GahadThe eves of the Nativity and Epiphany
The Fast of NinevehThree days, recalling Jonah
Great LentFifty-five days leading to Pascha
The Fast of the ApostlesAfter Pentecost, kept by the Twelve
The Fast of the AssumptionTwo weeks for the Mother of God
Wednesdays & FridaysKept through most of the year

And in the Ethiopian and Eritrean tradition, every month carries its own feasts — Saint Michael on the 12th, Saint Gabriel on the 19th, the Mother of God on the 21st, and more — so few days pass without someone to remember.

The Orthodox canon, offline

Septuagint Old Testament
The early Church's Greek Scriptures, in English
Full
The Deuterocanon
Tobit, Wisdom, Sirach, the Maccabees & more
Full
Enoch & Jubilees
Books kept in the Ethiopian canon
Full
Highlights & notes
Mark verses in five colours, add your own
Yours

An offline Orthodox Bible

The complete Orthodox Bible

Most English Bibles leave out books the Orthodox Church has always kept. Gedam includes them all: the Septuagint Old Testament, the ancient Greek Scriptures the early Church read and the Orthodox Old Testament to this day, with the full Deuterocanon and the Ethiopian books of Enoch and Jubilees, the Psalms numbered as the Church prays them. These are faithful, public-domain editions, chosen so the whole canon can live on your phone — free, complete, and offline.

  • Truly offline. Every book sits on your device. Read it on a mountaintop with no signal.
  • Bookmark & highlight. Keep a personal record of the verses that found you.
  • The day's readings. The Scripture set aside for each day, brought up automatically for your tradition.

Six sister churches

True to each tradition

The Oriental Orthodox churches share one faith, but keep it differently — how the fasts are held, which prayers are said, which saints are remembered. Gedam keeps each of those differences faithfully, and never shows one tradition's practice as another's. Choose a church to see how Gedam changes for each — or read what to expect from yours.

Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Nativity · Jan 7
A great fast
Tsome Nebiyat
The Fast of the Prophets (Advent)
At the table
No animal products — and never fish
How the fast is kept
Saints of the day
Senkessar
~1,190 commemorations

The Coptic, Ethiopian, and Eritrean churches carry the fullest daily depth — a reading and a saint for every day of the year. The Armenian, Syriac, and Malankara churches are kept in the Sunday-and-feast rhythm their own traditions follow. What to expect from each.

Free at heart

The whole devotional life is free.

The living calendar, the offline Bible, the prayers, the saints, and the ascent — the heart of Gedam — are free for everyone, forever. No ads, no trackers, no signal required. Gedam+ is an optional way to support the work and unlock a few extras.

Gedam

Free, forever

  • The living liturgical calendar, for all six churches
  • The complete offline Orthodox Bible
  • The prayers, the Hours, and the prayer rope
  • The saints of every day
  • The candlelit ascent, and up to seven devotions

Gedam+

A free trial, then $24.99 / year

  • AI reflections — feedback and encouragement, drawn from the devotions you keep
  • Your full Dashboard — the heatmap, your ascent over time, and your reflections
  • Sync & backup — your devotional life, safe across all your devices
  • Unlimited devotions — keep as many as your rule of life calls for

Also $2.99 / month, or $59 once for life. Cancel anytime.

Gedam+ keeps the lights on so the devotional core can stay free for everyone — and it never gates a prayer, a reading, a fast, or a saint.

We do not climb the ladder of ascent all at once, but step by step, in the small faithfulness of each day.
— after St. John Climacus, The Ladder of Divine Ascent

Questions

Before you begin

No. Gedam works fully offline on your device — no account is needed to begin. An optional account, with Gedam+, syncs your devotional life across your own devices.

Yes. The whole devotional core — the calendar, the offline Bible, the prayers, the saints, the ascent, and up to seven devotions — is free for everyone, forever, with no ads. Gedam+ is an optional subscription (a free trial, then $24.99/year, or $2.99/month, or $59 once) that adds AI reflections, your full Dashboard, sync across your devices, and unlimited devotions. It never gates a prayer, a reading, a fast, or a saint.

Every fast, feast, prayer, and saint is drawn from validated, cited sources — never written from memory. The moving feasts are calculated from the Church’s own dating of Pascha (Easter), and each of the six traditions is kept by its own practice, never blended into one.

Yes. Gedam shows no ads, uses no third-party trackers, and never sells your data. Optional sync is protected per account, and you can request full deletion at any time.

Gedam is in final preparation for the App Store on iPhone. Leave your email and we will tell you the moment it launches — no spam, just the release.

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