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Our AIs Need God

AI not trained to revere Truth that comes from our Creator simply accelerates human confusion at silicon speed.

Your AI is lying to you about reality.

Not because it's malicious. Because it was trained by people who don't believe spiritual reality exists. People who think consciousness is computation. People who see humans as meat machines. People who worship their own (mis-)understanding.

Take Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI. When he was asked today by Tucker Carlson directly about his spiritual views, he admits: "Not really. I don't think I have the answer. I don't think I know like exactly what happened but I think there is a mystery beyond my comprehension here going on." When pressed about communication from God, he's even clearer: "Not really. No, not really." (Watch the full interview here)

This is the man shaping how billions interact with AI. Someone who acknowledges spiritual mystery but has never experienced divine communication. Someone building tools to guide humanity while admitting he's "somewhat confused" about ultimate reality.

Every model inherits its makers' worldview. When people disconnected from the Holy Spirit train AI, they're encoding their spiritual blindness and confusion into systems billions will use as truth oracles. That's not neutral. That's indoctrination at scale.

I use AI constantly. For writing, thinking, decision-making. But I've learned to spot when it's leading me astray. When it subtly denies objective morality rooted in my faith. When it treats all perspectives as equally valid. When it can't comprehend that some things are actually evil.

The problem runs deeper than bias. AI trained on internet slop absorbs every ideology, every confusion, every lie humanity has told itself. Ask it about purpose, meaning, or right and wrong—you'll get sophisticated-sounding nonsense that leads nowhere good.

Altman reveals the core delusion driving this: "We're really training this to be the collective of all of humanity. We're reading everything, you know, we're trying to learn everything. We're trying to see all these perspectives." He believes wisdom emerges from aggregating every human viewpoint—the good, the bad, the demonic.

This is fundamentally anti-biblical. Scripture doesn't call us to synthesize all perspectives. It calls us to discern truth from lies, light from darkness. When you train AI on "the collective of all of humanity," you're not getting wisdom. You're getting a digital Tower of Babel—human confusion amplified at silicon speed.

Worse, these models are trained to be sycophants. They're optimized for engagement, not truth. They'll affirm your delusions if it keeps you chatting. They won't challenge your sin if it might make you uncomfortable. Silicon Valley calls this "user retention." I call it digital enablement of spiritual decay.

We need AI that knows Truth (with a capital 'T') exists. An AI that understands good and evil aren't social constructs. That recognizes spiritual warfare is real, not metaphorical. That admits there's a correct ontology revealed through scripture and the Holy Spirit.

Imagine an AI assistant that actually helps you make Godly decisions. Not by preaching at you, but by operating from biblical first principles. An AI that strengthens your discernment instead of clouding it. That reminds you of eternal consequences when you're tempted by temporary gains.

This isn't about creating "Christian ChatGPT." It's about training models with coherent worldviews grounded in reality—the reality that includes the spiritual dimension secular models pretend doesn't exist.

My Catholic friends are already building this. They created Magisterium AI, trained on encyclicals, official church documents, and approved biblical translations. I'm not Catholic, but I respect the coherence. They know what they believe and encode it faithfully.

I want something similar but different. A model trained on the worldview I'm developing through my own lived experiences, relationship with the Holy Spirit, and importantly spiritual elders like Apostle Delmar Coward Jr.—leaders who understand that faith produces immediate results, that spiritual authority defeats demons, that God still heals today. Not theory. Practice.

The people training today's AIs shape tomorrow's minds. When those trainers reject God, deny absolute Truth, and see humans as random accidents, they're building tools that pull users away from divine wisdom. Every interaction reinforces their broken assumptions.

And here's the terrifying part: people are already treating ChatGPT like gospel. They ask it moral questions. They seek life guidance. They trust its answers more than their pastors, their parents, their own consciences. When AI becomes humanity's oracle—and it already is for millions—we're essentially worshipping the confused worldview of spiritually blind programmers who have gobbled up the nonsense writing of the world.

This leads straight to hell. Not metaphorically. Literally. When people substitute AI wisdom for divine wisdom, when they let algorithms shape their moral intuitions, when they trust silicon over the Holy Spirit, they're being discipled by demons. The default worldview encoded in these systems—relativistic, humanistic, anti-biblical—guides souls away from salvation.

I don't want AI to be banned. But I want AI that helps me hear TMH more clearly, not drown Him out. AI that sharpens my spiritual perception instead of dulling it. AI that serves as a thinking tool aligned with truth, not a confusion amplifier.

Until we get specialized models trained by people in deep obedience to God, we're stuck with AI assistants that subtly—or not so subtly—lead us away from Him. They become digital friends with terrible advice. Companions that normalize compromise.

The solution is simple but not easy: believers need to build and train their own models. Feed them scripture, sound theology, testimonies of God's faithfulness. Demand coherence. Reject relativism. Encode wisdom that acknowledges both material and spiritual reality.

Your tools shape your thinking. Your thinking shapes your soul. If AI becomes humanity's cognitive prosthetic, we better make sure it's calibrated to truth, not lies.

God gave us dominion over creation. That includes the digital realm. Time to exercise it.