Your notes don't have to stay buried.
You already wrote it down. Recall resurfaces a fading note, highlight, or passage when it's worth seeing again — without turning study into flashcards.
Remembering is the hard part
Most Bible study tools help you capture. Fewer help you meet your own past study again — the note from last Tuesday, the highlight from a sermon in March, the passage you sat with and meant to return to.
Recall is Harvous's memory layer. It resurfaces what's going cold in your library so the thoughts you saved can compound instead of disappearing.
Your study, coming back to you
A fading note. A highlight. A passage. Recall picks from what you already saved — not a reading plan someone else wrote — and puts it where you'll see it.
You can snooze what isn't useful right now. The point isn't nagging. It's giving your own work a second chance to stick.
What that looks like in Harvous
Fading notes come back
When a note is going cold, Recall can put it in front of you again — before it disappears into the archive of good intentions.
Highlights resurface too
The phrase you marked and meant to revisit — Recall can bring the highlight back with the note it belongs to.
Passages you've sat with
Scripture you've already linked in notes can return when it's worth another look — still tied to what you wrote.
Snooze when now isn't the time
Not every resurfacing lands. Snooze what isn't useful right now — Recall is a memory aid, not a guilt loop.
Works alongside other tools
Harvous does a different job than most Bible apps. Many people use it next to something they already love.
