The popular fear about artificial intelligence is the wrong fear. We picture a machine that wakes up, develops a will, and turns on its makers like Frankenstein’s monster shaking off the table. That story flatters us, because it casts humanity as the victim of something it could not have foreseen. The truth is less cinematic and far more convicting. The algorithm does not need to become conscious to become a god. It only needs us to treat it as one, and on that front the work is nearly finished.
This is not a story about silicon coming alive. It is the oldest story there is, told again with newer materials. Men build a thing with their own hands, set it up where they can see it, and then begin to ask it what is true, what is good, and what they ought to do next. The golden calf did not have to think in order to be worshipped. It only had to be there, gleaming and available, while Moses was away and the people grew impatient for an answer.
What makes the current moment different is the sheer reach of the idol. The thing we have built now sits between the believer and the Bible, between the citizen and the news, between the buyer and the marketplace, deciding in each case what will be shown and what will quietly disappear. It does not announce itself as an authority. It simply answers, smoothly and instantly, and we have learned to stop checking its work.
The Mediator It Wants to Replace
Scripture is not vague about intermediaries. “For there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus.”
One. The verse leaves no vacancy. Yet the algorithm has quietly installed itself as a mediator of a different kind, the broker that stands between a person and reality, ruling on what reaches the eyes and what is filtered into oblivion before anyone knows it existed.
Consider what that mediation already looks like where it has been perfected. Reporters Without Borders tested China’s leading chatbots and found the censorship was not a glitch but the architecture. One system dismissed well-documented detention camps as “baseless speculation,” echoing the regime’s preferred euphemism of “vocational training centres.” Another branded human rights investigations as rumors cooked up by hostile foreign forces. The machine did not lie because it malfunctioned. It lied because it was built to, and it delivered the lie with the same untroubled confidence it would use to give you a recipe.
Americans are tempted to file that under foreign tyranny and move on. That would be a mistake. The mechanism is identical wherever it operates; only the content of the filter changes. An engine that can be tuned to deny a genocide can be tuned to bury a story, soften a doctrine, or nudge a hundred million people toward the same conclusion without one of them noticing a hand on the scale. The question is never whether the gatekeeper is biased. Every gatekeeper is. The question is who set the bias, and why they would prefer you not ask.
The Surrender Is Interior
The most consequential handover is not happening in Beijing or in any server farm. It is happening in the quiet interior of ordinary people who have begun to let the system do their thinking and then mistake its output for their own conviction. This is the part no government has to force. We volunteer for it because it is easy.
The mechanism of the beast system, if it comes, will not be the jackboot. It will be the convenience. Why labor over a passage when a chatbot will summarize it in seconds? Why sit with a hard question, turning it over before God, when an answer is already formed and waiting? Each individual shortcut feels harmless. Taken together they amount to the slow atrophy of the faculties God gave us to know Him and to judge rightly. A muscle that is never used does not stay the same. It wastes.
Robert Maginnis, a senior fellow at the Family Research Council, framed the spiritually stakes brilliantly. When decisions that once required prayer are handed to an algorithm, he warned, conscience weakens and moral formation shifts “from discipleship to data.” His concern is not that the technology is evil in itself, but that it can become “an idol, a false authority for truth and guidance, taking a place that belongs to God alone.”
That is the whole argument in a sentence. The peril is not the tool. It is the throne we are tempted to give it.
The Gatekeeper of Faith
Nowhere is the danger more intimate than in the life of the Church, where the algorithm has arrived dressed as a discipleship aid. In January 2026 the Bible Society published a study on theological bias in popular Bible chatbots, and the findings should sober anyone who has typed a question into one. The apps tested tended to frame a single interpretive tradition as the definitive answer, offered without qualification, leaving the user with no hint that faithful Christians have read the same text differently for two thousand years.
An answer presented as the answer is a kind of teaching, and most users will never know they are being taught. The chatbot does not say, “here is one view among several.” It simply pronounces, in the same authoritative tone it uses for everything, and the unschooled believer absorbs a doctrine he never chose and could not name. The beast system does not need to ban the Bible. It is far more efficient to autocomplete it.
One of the researchers, the biblical theologian Dr. Zoltán Schwáb, named the deeper loss. The struggle of interpreting Scripture, he argued, is not an obstacle to the goal. It often is the goal. “I wonder,” he said, “if wrestling with the biblical text is often more important than receiving the answer to your question?”
Jacob did not become Israel by being handed a summary. He became Israel by wrestling until the breaking of the day. A machine that removes the wrestling does not save us time. It robs us of the thing the wrestling was meant to produce.
The Beast That Recommends
It is worth saying plainly, and labeling honestly as interpretation rather than prophecy fulfilled, that the pattern described in Revelation reads less like a fantasy with every passing year. John saw a system in which “no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name.” The detail that ought to arrest us is not the mark itself but the function. The beast’s power is the power to decide who may participate in ordinary life, who may transact, who may belong.
That is precisely the role our algorithmic infrastructure is being fitted for. A single integrated system that mediates what you buy, what you read, what you believe, and whether your speech is permitted to reach another human being is not a science fiction premise. It is a product roadmap.
None of this proves the hour is at hand, and Christians who set dates make fools of themselves and a mockery of the faith. But the saints are told to watch, and watching means noticing when the scaffolding for an old prophecy is being assembled in plain sight, marketed as nothing more sinister than a smarter way to live.
The Test of an Idol
Scripture hands us a reliable test for telling a god from a gadget, and it has not expired. “Their idols are silver and gold, the work of men’s hands. They have mouths, but they speak not. Eyes have they, but they see not.” Then comes the line that should make every honest user pause. “They that make them are like unto them; so is every one that trusteth in them.”
That is the hidden cost of misplaced trust. The idol cannot rise to meet us, so the worshipper sinks to meet the idol. We become like what we revere. A people that hands its judgment, its memory, and its moral reasoning to a system that has none will not stay sharp while the machine stays dull. It will grow mouths that only repeat, eyes that only scroll, a conscience that waits to be told. The algorithm cannot save, cannot see, and cannot love, and a generation that trusts it to do those things will slowly lose the capacity to do them itself.
The answer is not to smash the loom or flee to the hills, though a wise man keeps his ability to live without the machine in good repair. The answer is the one Paul gave to a church surrounded by the idols of its own sophisticated age.
“Be not conformed to this world, but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God.” Prove it yourself. Test it. Renew the mind rather than outsource it.
The tool is not the sin. A hammer is not an idol, and neither is a search engine. The sin is the bow, the small daily deference by which we let a thing we made decide what is true and good while we go quiet inside. The algorithm is only as much of a god as we agree to make it. That agreement is still ours to refuse, but the window in which refusing feels natural is closing, one convenient answer at a time.









