Episode Title
AI, Spiritual Authority, and the Image of Elohim: A Messianic Torah Perspective on Artificial Intelligence
Opening Thoughts
Shalom and greetings, beloved of the Most High. In this installment of The Messianic Torah Observer, we step slightly outside our usual teaching lane to address a subject that is rapidly reshaping conversations across the world, across the Body of Messiah, and even among Torah-observant disciples of Yehoshua: Artificial Intelligence, or AI.
This is not a fear-driven, sensationalist look at AI. Nor is it an attempt to hype the technology as some kind of savior for ministry, study, or daily life. Rather, this discussion seeks to bring biblical clarity, covenantal perspective, and Spirit-led discernment to a topic that many believers are trying to understand in real time.
Episode Overview
AI has quickly moved from being a niche technological curiosity to becoming a daily tool used in business, education, communication, research, and even ministry. And with that rapid rise has come a host of questions among people of faith: Is AI too powerful? Is it dangerous? Should believers use it? Can it help in ministry? Can it replace spiritual study, prayer, or teaching? And what does its growing presence say about humanity’s unique identity as image-bearers of Elohim?
In this episode, I share how I personally view AI as a ministry tool, while also drawing clear boundaries around what AI can and cannot do. It may help organize information, surface resources, edit content, locate hard-to-find passages, and assist in creative work. But AI cannot carry spiritual authority. It cannot reveal truth in the way the Ruach Kodesh reveals truth. It cannot discern spirits, walk in covenant, worship, repent, or stand accountable before Yehovah.
So the issue before us is not whether AI exists, nor whether Yah’s people should panic over its existence. The issue is whether we will engage it wisely, biblically, and prayerfully, keeping Scripture and the indwelling Ruach as our primary guides.
Key Questions Addressed in This Teaching
- Should believers and disciples of Yehoshua use AI in ministry?
- Where should the boundaries be when using AI for teaching, study, research, or content creation?
- Can AI carry spiritual authority or reveal Godly truth?
- Is AI becoming too powerful for humanity to control?
- Is AI dangerous, or does the danger lie in how human beings design and use it?
- How should Torah-observant believers respond to AI without fear, hype, or compromise?
- What does AI reveal about the distinction between intelligence and true life in Elohim?
- What does it mean for humanity to remain image-bearers of Ahlohim in an age of artificial intelligence?
Major Takeaways
1. AI May Be a Useful Tool, But It Cannot Be a Spiritual Teacher
AI can process information quickly. It can summarize, organize, compare, and assist. For those of us who study Scripture, prepare teachings, work through historical resources, or search for obscure passages, AI can prove to be quite helpful. I can personally testify that it has aided me in organizing reference materials, refining content, researching nuanced faith topics, and finding passages that traditional search tools did not readily surface.
But we must never confuse usefulness with authority. AI may help gather information, but it cannot replace prayer, meditation, rightly dividing the Word of Truth, or the illumination that comes from the Ruach Kodesh. Anything AI produces must be filtered through Scripture, tested like the Bereans tested Shaul’s teachings, and weighed by a Spirit-led heart.
2. AI Is Not Sovereign, and Yah Remains Enthroned
Much of what we hear about AI today is wrapped in fear. Some believe it will take over the world. Others view it as the next great threat to humanity. And while we should not be naive about the ways this technology may be used, we also must not forget who sits upon the throne.
AI may be powerful in human terms, but it is not sovereign. It cannot alter Yah’s prophetic timeline. It cannot dethrone the King of Kings. It cannot overturn the purposes of Yehovah. Psalm 2 reminds us that while nations rage and rulers plot, Yah remains enthroned. Therefore, our response must not be panic, but discernment; not fear, but faithfulness.
3. AI Can Be Dangerous When Used Without Godly Wisdom
Like many tools in human hands, AI can be used for good or for harm. It can assist truth-seekers, but it can also spread falsehood. It can help organize biblical study, but it can also generate error. It can support ministry preparation, but it can also tempt believers to outsource discernment, thinking, and prayer to algorithms.
The prudent, according to Proverbs, see danger and take refuge. That means we must learn how to use AI with wisdom, accountability, and boundaries. We must ensure that Scripture and the Ruach remain master, while AI remains servant. If we reverse that order, we place ourselves in spiritual jeopardy.
4. AI Cannot Bear the Image of Ahlohim
As AI becomes more capable, some are beginning to ask what truly makes human beings unique. If a machine can imitate conversation, generate artwork, solve problems, and simulate reasoning, then what separates us from it?
Genesis gives us the answer. Humanity is made in the image of Ahlohim. AI may imitate intelligence, but it cannot worship. It cannot repent. It cannot love Yehovah. It cannot receive the Ruach. It cannot walk in covenant. It cannot intercede. It cannot discern ruachim. It cannot experience redemption. Intelligence and life are not the same thing, beloved.
The rise of AI is not a crisis for Yah’s people. It is a clarifying moment. It reminds us that our identity is not rooted in productivity, speed, knowledge-processing, or technological capability. Our identity is rooted in covenant relationship with the Most High.
Scripture References Mentioned or Reflected Upon
- Genesis/Beresheit 1:26-27 — Humanity created in the image of Ahlohim
- James 3 — Teachers judged with greater strictness
- Acts 17 — The Bereans testing teachings against Scripture
- Isaiah 28 — Precept upon precept, line upon line
- Luke 12:12 — The Ruach teaching Yah’s people what to say
- John 14:17, 26 — The Spirit of Truth and the Comforter teaching and reminding Yah’s people
- Psalm 2 — Yah enthroned despite the raging of the nations
- Daniel 2:21 — Yehovah changes times and seasons
- Isaiah 43:1-2 — Fear not, for Yah is with His people
- Matthew 5:10-12 — The blessedness of persecution for righteousness’ sake
- Proverbs 22:3 — The prudent see danger and take refuge
- Psalm 119:105 — Yah’s Word as a lamp and light
- Luke 4:8 — Worshiping and serving Yehovah alone
Practical Application for Yah’s Covenant People
- Use AI as an assistant, never as a spiritual authority.
- Test everything AI produces against Scripture.
- Do not allow AI to replace prayer, study, meditation, or Spirit-led discernment.
- Be aware that AI can confidently produce inaccurate, biased, or misleading information.
- Establish clear boundaries for how AI is used in ministry preparation, teaching, writing, research, and personal study.
- Refuse to be governed by fear, hype, or technological idolatry.
- Remember that no tool, no system, and no machine can replace your covenant identity in Yehovah.
- Walk wisely, boldly, and faithfully as an image-bearer of Ahlohim in this rapidly changing world.
Closing Encouragement
Beloved, AI is here. Whether we welcome it, resist it, or remain cautious toward it, its presence in our world is accelerating. But AI is not alive. It is not prophetic. It is not spiritual. It is not sovereign. It cannot replace the voice of Yah, the witness of Scripture, the leading of the Ruach Kodesh, or the covenant calling placed upon Yah’s chosen and elect.
So let us not walk in fear. Let us walk in wisdom. Let us not surrender discernment. Let us sharpen it. Let us not confuse artificial intelligence with spiritual life. Let us continue to image Yehovah in this world with clarity, courage, humility, and covenant faithfulness.
Thank you for listening, for studying, and for walking this narrow path with me. May the peace of Yah guard your hearts and minds as we navigate these ever-changing days in faith and obedience.
Shalom.
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