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Why This Matters

Faithful leadership in a changing digital world

As a modern ministry leader, your most valuable and heavily divided commodity is your time. Between treating the church as a daily business, ministering to the complex personal needs of your parishioners, and managing your own family life, your days are stretched incredibly thin. Yet, when you hear the term “Artificial Intelligence,” your first reaction might be a feeling of dissonance, uncomfortability, or even fear.

You are not alone. Much of the church is currently hearing only the negative, fear-inducing narratives surrounding AI, leaving many leaders hesitant to engage with it. However, if the church succumbs to fear, we risk becoming the caboose at the end of the train of progress, rather than riding in the mainstream to effectively spread the gospel. It is time to overcome our hesitation and recognize that we are stepping into a technological shift designed to help us fulfill the Great Commission.

To understand where we are going, we must speak the language of church history. Embracing cutting-edge technology is not a break from our faith; it is our heritage. When the Apostle Paul asked for his scrolls and utilized writing utensils to draft his epistles, he was utilizing extremely advanced technology for his time. Centuries later, the Gutenberg pressโ€”which introduced movable type printingโ€”was invented for the explicit purpose of mass-producing the Bible.

Consider the advent of television. There was a time when Christians not only failed to embrace television, but actively rejected it as demonic and “of the devil”. Yet, pioneers like the late Dr. Lester Sumrall fearlessly embraced Christian broadcasting in the 1950s. Because of his visionary leadership, networks like TBN, Daystar and ‘The Word Network’ exist. Today, we cannot imagine a world without Christian television. We are in a similar pivotal moment today. AI is quietly revolutionizing the world just as cloud computing did, and we must not let our congregations fall back into the “dark ages” of playing catch-up.

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