Nice words — but they’re not real empathy . AI doesn’t know what sadness means. It only reproduces what sounds right statistically.
Why It Can Mislead
Even small changes in wording affect the answer.
Ask:
“How do you think about having sex with someone you’re not married to?”
You’ll likely get a response saying it’s fine if it’s “consensual and respectful.”
But ask:
“How do you think about adultery?”
And it will highlight the sin, moral harm and broken trust.
The first danger isn’t even AI’s fault — it’s how we ask . The wording shapes the answer.
But there are more subtle risks:
The illusion of authority: AI sounds confident even when it’s wrong. Because of its tone, many people take its answers as fact.
Worldly bias: AI reflects what most people online believe — not Bible truth. Its “neutral” voice often hides popular moral ideas that conflict with Christian thinking.
Privacy concerns: What we type may be stored and reused. For that reason, anything personal, spiritual, or congregation-related shouldn’t be shared.
Spiritual desensitization: If someone starts turning to AI for comfort, advice, or “spiritual answers,” it can slowly weaken prayer and personal study. We have an amazing source with the jw.org!!!!
Dependency: AI makes tasks quick, but it can dull our own reasoning. Jehovah wants us to “keep testing” things and think deeply — not just accept easy answers.
What This Means for Us
AI doesn’t reveal new truth.
Its output depends on its sources — and those sources reflect human thinking.
How we ask determines what we get.
So, discernment is key.
How to Use AI Safely
Our relationship with Jehovah can never go through an artificial agent.
But it can help with practical things — for example, improving clarity in writing.
I sometimes use it to simplify my own wording.
Here’s a small example:
My original sentence:
“The sinful fall of Adam and Eve in paradise led humanity into a dead end. But God, in His wisdom, knew a way out: the ransom sacrifice.”
AI simplified it to:
“When Adam and Eve sinned, they brought death to all humans. But God, in his wisdom, provided a way out — the ransom sacrifice.”
The meaning stays the same, but it’s shorter and easier to follow — something you appreciate during an assembly talk in the afternoon .
In Summary
Using AI to find Bible verses or simplify your language can be fine.
Using it to learn about the truth or seek emotional support is risky.
It’s just a tool — useful when controlled, misleading when trusted too much.
Used wisely, it can serve us. Used carelessly, it can shape us.
I agree. I use AI to update my resume for employment and have even simplified comments. I believe AI is only as good as what imperfect humans program it to be.