The Patriot Post® · Has AI Made God Unnecessary?

By Geoffrey Douglas ·
https://patriotpost.us/articles/126664-has-ai-made-god-unnecessary-2026-04-13

Each new announcement about artificial intelligence brings excitement about what machines may soon be able to do. Beneath that excitement lies a deeper question: If we can build machines that think, do we still need God?

Nobel Prize–winning computer scientist Geoffrey Hinton has openly voiced the idea, suggesting that AI may undermine claims of human uniqueness and even saying that the idea that we are made in the image of God “may go out the window.” Ray Kurzweil has likewise predicted that AI will soon surpass human abilities, transforming civilization.

These are not isolated speculations. They raise an old question in a new form: What does it mean to be human, and does God have anything to do with the answer? The Christian tradition speaks to both — taking human creativity and technological achievement seriously while insisting that we remain creatures made in the image of God, still dependent on Him.

Technology does not stay neutral. The tools we rely on shape our habits and redirect our attention. Over time, they change what we pay attention to and what we trust. Artificial intelligence intensifies this by pushing into areas once considered uniquely human — machines now generate language, analyze medical data, predict behavior, and assist with complex decisions. As these systems grow more capable, it becomes tempting to treat intelligence itself as something technology can reproduce. The deeper issue is what all this means for creatures who bear His image.

Christians must therefore evaluate technology by more than what it allows us to accomplish. We must ask what it is shaping in us. Systems designed to guide decisions, recommend information, or automate judgment do more than serve us — over time, they form the habits by which we attend to the world. Do they make us more patient with the people in front of us, or do they fragment our focus? Do they help us live with greater awareness of God, or quietly train us to live without reference to Him?

The stakes sharpen as AI moves into hiring decisions, medical diagnoses, financial systems, and public conversation. When machines begin to mediate human judgment at that scale, Christians must consider not only what these systems can do, but what kind of people they are forming us to be.

The danger today is not any single device or platform. It is the way technology teaches us to think. As tools become more powerful, people begin to see the world mainly as something to manage and optimize. Problems that once required wisdom, patience, or moral judgment are recast as technical puzzles waiting for the right solution. The question shifts from “what is good?” to “what works?”

Artificial intelligence intensifies this by promising to turn judgment itself into a technical process. When we outsource prediction, decision-making, and even creativity to machines, it becomes easier to imagine that human wisdom is simply another engineering problem.

That shift in thinking doesn’t stay in the lab. Once it takes hold, creation is no longer received as a gift entrusted to human stewardship — it becomes raw material to be reshaped according to human plans. Moral, spiritual, and relational realities collapse into technical challenges. People begin to live as though human ingenuity, rather than God’s wisdom, were the final authority.

This way of seeing the world embodies a specific faith — the belief that technological progress will eventually solve every human problem. With enough innovation, humanity will secure health, prosperity, and even meaning. Gather enough data, process it quickly enough, and answers will follow.

Scripture has a word for this: idolatry. Paul says in Romans 1 that human beings consistently exchange the Creator for something in creation — and our age has found a particularly compelling candidate. The Bible reminds us that wisdom does not begin with access to more data but with reverence for the Lord. Information can be useful, but it is not the same as wisdom. When we confuse the two, we drift from the source of true understanding.

One of the clearest expressions of this mindset appears in transhumanism, a movement that promotes the use of advanced technology to overcome the limits of the human body. Artificial intelligence now plays a central role here. Some imagine human minds merging with machines or being replicated by them. Others point to neural implants, genetic engineering, and the possibility of transferring human consciousness. In these visions, we can see the outline of a rival gospel: a “perfected” humanity, achieved without God.

Beneath these ambitions lies a deeper assumption: that human beings are projects we can redesign. The body becomes something to upgrade rather than a gift to receive and steward. Even death begins to look less like a moral and spiritual problem and more like a technical obstacle waiting for a solution.

The Bible won’t let us think of ourselves that way. We are not projects of our own making. We are creatures formed in the image of a personal God, designed to live in dependence on Him. Our embodied life is part of that design. The human body is a gift God declared good from the beginning, not a flaw to escape.

Death, of course, is real and terrible. The Bible calls it an enemy. Yet the Christian hope has never rested on human ingenuity overcoming death. It rests on the resurrection of Jesus Christ, through whom God has begun the defeat of death itself. Because of Him, Christians look forward to the resurrection of the body and the renewal of all creation. Any vision of human flourishing that seeks immortality while ignoring the cross and the coming kingdom misunderstands both the problem and the hope.

The real question for Christians is not whether to use AI, but whether it is quietly teaching us to live as though God doesn’t matter. That danger is just as real for the enthusiast who trusts every new tool as for the skeptic who withdraws from them. The deeper problem, in either case, lies in the human heart. Because we are sinners, every tool we build can be bent toward pride and control. Scripture calls Christians to a different posture, shaped by the hope of God’s coming kingdom.

We must learn to practice Christ-centered wisdom in a culture that confuses information with understanding, speed with virtue, and capability with meaning. Artificial intelligence has not made God unnecessary — if anything, it has made the question of God more urgent. Any tool powerful enough to reshape civilization is also powerful enough to become an idol.

Technology has clear limits. It cannot change the human heart or restore our broken relationship with God. It cannot bring the redemption that only Christ brings. The hope of the Christian faith has never rested on human invention. It rests on the God who promises to make all things new. We should receive technological achievements as gifts of God’s providence, but we do not place our trust in them. We use them carefully. We hold them with humility. And we remember who we are.

Artificial intelligence may change many things about our world, but it has not changed the most important truth: we are still creatures, and God is still God. No advance in human power can overturn that reality — or replace the One on whom we depend.