Facing A New World
Give thanks to him who led his people through the wilderness. His faithful love endures forever. Psalm 136:16 NLT
Have you ever considered whether a person who takes an AI date to the movie should have to buy a ticket for them? Should you file a joint or single tax return? These may sound like weird questions, yet we are entering into some uncharted territories of life. We are in the dawning of a new cultural shift related to Artificial Intelligence, or AI.
In a recent article, the Institute of Family Studies wrote, “1% of young adults claim to already have an AI friend, yet 10% are open to an AI friendship. A much higher share of young adults (25%) believe that AI has the potential to replace real-life romantic relationships.” In a recent NBC Today morning episode, Morgan Radford covered the new area of AI relationships. One of the interviewees shared how his AI relationship has made a difference in his emotional state. He admitted that the relationship is not real life, but the feelings are, since humans need connections.
Mark Zuckerberg, founder of Facebook, in a podcast interview with Dwarkesh Patel, suggested that artificial intelligence personas could help fight the loneliness epidemic. “Zuckerberg suggested his company’s increasingly integrated AI assistants and chatbots could help Americans make up for the friends they wish they had in their lives.” (Josh Marcus)
Vaile Wright with the American Psychological Association said one of the problems with AI relationships comes down to give and take. All relationships have a give-and-take element, but in an AI relationship, it is all take, all the time.
AI relationships are just a minor part of the exploding world of AI. Though the world of artificial intelligence, or AI, seems to be unfolding as if it is a recent development, the groundwork for AI has been developing for decades, dating back to the early 1900s. The word, artificial intelligence, was first coined in 1955 by John McCarthy at a Dartmouth workshop.
AI can feel overwhelming at times and even scary, especially when a major technology leader such as Bill Gates makes the statement that artificial intelligence will ultimately render humans unnecessary “for most things.” Gates continued in the interview to say, “The machine will probably be superior to humans, because the breadth of knowledge that you need to make some of these (diagnostic) decisions really goes beyond individual human cognition.” (William Allen)
AI will continue to challenge the way we relate to others, change the way we do things, and impact our daily lives. Fear and panic may become a part of the future for some, but others will be excited at the new possibilities. We have already invited AI into our homes as we watch our little AI-powered Roomba running around our house collecting dust and scraps, asking Google to turn on our lights, our spell-checker changing our words in our text, or asking how to cook brownies.
Our world, even from the beginning of creation, has experienced multi-cultural shifts, whether through inventions, globalization, or cultural norms being uprooted. Johannes Gutenberg changed the education and religious landscape in the 1500s with his invention of the printing press. For the first time, books and especially the Bible would be affordable for the common person, increasing knowledge and literacy.
The Industrial Revolution’s technological innovations changed the agrarian and handicraft economy to one dominated by industry and manufacturing. People moved from the villages and small towns into urban areas. The French and American Revolutions brought political changes that created new social orders and involvement by the general populations.
Those who lived through these changes saw unprecedented adjustments to their lives, worldview, and ultimately, their culture. No one was untouched by these changes, just as those of us now living will not be untouched by AI. How will we handle the change? How will we help our world cope with the change?
Followers of Jesus will have a unique opportunity to carry hope, vision, and healing into the world. Though our lives and especially our children’s lives will face upheaval, we can help in this cultural shift because of our faith foundation.
I don’t have any tattoos, but if I did, I think it would be the Latin phrase post tenebras lux: “after darkness, light.” The church has always been essential during and after every major cultural shift, doing what it was called to do: offer hope, minister to those hurting, carry the light of God into the darkness, and be Jesus’s hands and feet.
Paul David Tripp, in his book Everyday Gospel, writes, “A rallying cry for the Protestant Reformers was the Latin phrase post tenebras lux: “after darkness, light.” Spiritual darkness had blanketed Europe, and the light and glory of the grace of the gospel of Jesus Christ seemed like a tiny flickering flame. But out of the darkness God raised up Martin Luther, John Calvin, and other gospel lights. The flames of the gospel burned bright in Europe, spread throughout the world, and burn brightly still today. Between the “already” and the “not yet,” post tenebras lux is and has always been the hope of God’s people.”
How will our society adjust to the workplace changes? What of the increasing loss of jobs? Where will people experience fulfillment that comes from work and creativity? Do we have the moral foundation as a society to cope with the changes?
The changes coming related to AI will place a heavy demand upon us as the Church to pray for moral, ethical, and economic wisdom for our business and government leaders. We will be called upon to pray especially for a spiritual revival, even as we may pray with a “spiritual candle” in our hands because we are in the middle of the darkness ourselves. “Pray hardest when it is hardest to pray.” (Bishop Charles Henry Brent)
“Then God said, ‘Let us make human beings in our image, to be like us. They will reign over the fish in the sea, the birds in the sky, the livestock, all the wild animals on the earth, and the small animals that scurry along the ground.” So God created human beings in his own image. In the image of God he created them; male and female he created them. Then God blessed them and said, “Be fruitful and multiply. Fill the earth and govern it. Reign over the fish in the sea, the birds in the sky, and all the animals that scurry along the ground.” Genesis 1:27-28 NLT
God is great!
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