Executive summary
Artificial intelligence (AI) is not explicitly addressed in Scripture, yet Christian theology has long-developed moral categories that map directly onto the challenges raised by AI: wisdom versus mere knowledge, truthfulness versus deception, the dignity of the human person as an image-bearer (imago Dei), the temptation to idolatry, and the responsibilities of stewardship, justice, and care for the vulnerable. The biblical frame does not “solve” AI policy disputes, but it does set stable boundaries: technology is a tool within creation, never a substitute for God or a replacement for human moral responsibility.
Across major Christian bodies, an increasingly coherent “family resemblance” is emerging even amid denominational differences. Roman Catholic documents emphasise that “AI” must not be confused with human intelligence and must remain oriented to truth, the good, and human dignity, while warning against new forms of idolatry and social domination. Ecumenical and Protestant statements likewise centre human dignity, justice, and accountability; they highlight bias, misinformation, surveillance, and the risk of replacing embodied pastoral and communal life with digital substitutes.
In church practice, the most defensible uses of AI tend to be assisting human ministry rather than simulating it: administrative help, summarising meeting notes, drafting first-pass communications, translation support, and accessibility tools. The most contested uses are those that impersonate spiritual authority (for example, “AI Jesus” installations) or risk displacing pastoral relationships, sacramental theology, and accountability structures.
Congregational attitudes are mixed and can change quickly. Survey evidence in the US shows both caution and growing openness, particularly among younger groups; one recent Barna/Gloo release suggests that a sizeable minority of adults treat AI as a credible source of spiritual advice—an obvious pastoral and governance challenge. Broader public opinion research consistently finds that many people want firm limits on AI’s role in intimate, relational, and religious domains.
For churches, AI governance is now a matter of pastoral care, safeguarding, and witness—not merely efficiency. Practical adoption requires: clear theology of ministry (why embodied care matters), strict data and consent safeguards (religious belief data is “special category” under UK GDPR), transparency about AI assistance, and an accountability chain for errors or harm.
Scriptural foundations for AI ethics
Scripture does not provide a “technology manual,” but it repeatedly addresses the moral terrain into which AI arrives: what counts as wisdom, what forms humans, what enslaves humans, and what fosters truthful, neighbour-loving community. Good theology here begins with restraint: the Bible is not “predicting ChatGPT,” but it is deeply concerned with the human uses of power, speech, images, and knowledge.
Wisdom, knowledge, and moral formation
Biblically, “knowledge” is not automatically a virtue. Wisdom is formed through reverence, humility, teachability, and attention to the moral order of God’s world. “The fear of the LORD is the beginning of knowledge” (Prov 1:7) frames knowledge as morally orientated rather than morally neutral. In AI ethics, this pushes against a posture of inevitability (“because we can, we should”) and invites a posture of discernment: What kind of people and communities does this tool form? Who benefits and who bears the costs?
AI’s power to generate plausible outputs also re-raises an ancient problem: persuasive words are not the same as truthful words. In practice, churches must resist swapping wisdom-shaped judgement for convenience-shaped automation—especially in preaching, counselling, and discipleship.
Image-bearing, creation, and the limits of simulation
Genesis 1:26–28 grounds human dignity not in productivity but in vocation and relationship: humans are created in God’s image and entrusted with a stewardship role in creation. That image-bearing is not reducible to information-processing. This matters because contemporary discourse often implies: “If a system can imitate conversation, it therefore shares human standing.” Scripture pushes in the opposite direction: humans are accountable agents before God; artefacts are not.
A Christological deepening appears in Colossians 1:15–20: Christ is “the image of the invisible God,” and creation is ordered “through him and for him.” This reorients Christian thinking about “image”: it is not mainly about cognitive capacity but about a relational and moral destiny—conformity to Christ. Any church use of AI that obscures this (for example, treating algorithmic outputs as spiritual authority) becomes theologically disordered.
Idolatry, false images, and “techno-salvation”
The First and Second Commandments prohibit giving ultimate allegiance to created things or trusting crafted images as salvific powers (Exod 20:3–5). AI intensifies the modern temptation to “techno-salvation”: to outsource meaning, moral guidance, or hope to systems optimised for prediction and persuasion. In Christian terms, that is not only a philosophical error but a spiritual danger: it trains the heart to seek ultimate security in what is not God.
This does not require fear of technology; it requires clarity about worship and ultimate ends. AI may be powerful, but power is not divinity.
Truth, speech, and neighbour-love in an age of synthetic media
Scripture treats truthful speech as a core social good. AI-generated misinformation, deepfakes, and plausible “hallucinations” directly threaten the communal conditions in which truth can be heard and trusted. Churches therefore have a positive duty to model careful truth-telling: verifying claims, disclosing AI assistance, and refusing manipulative uses of generative media—especially where reputations, elections, or vulnerable people are involved. The moral logic is neighbour-love: deception harms neighbours by corrupting trust.
Stewardship, justice, and the vulnerable
Genesis links human vocation to cultivation and care, not extraction and domination. AI governance questions (labour displacement, surveillance, bias, and unequal access) therefore sit naturally within biblical justice concerns: the protection of the poor, the marginalised, and those exposed to powerful institutions. This is one reason many church statements focus on bias, inequality, and accountability rather than merely personal piety.
A concise map of passages and AI relevance
| Biblical theme | Representative passages | Brief exegetical emphasis | Relevance to AI ethics |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wisdom vs information | Prov 1:7; Prov 1:1–7 | Knowledge is morally framed; wisdom serves righteousness and justice. | Resist “automation of judgement”; prioritise discernment, accountability, and formation. |
| Image-bearing & vocation | Gen 1:26–28 | Humans bear God’s image and are entrusted with stewardship. | Human dignity is not reducible to performance; reject AI-as-person shortcuts in ministry ethics. |
| Idolatry & false ultimates | Exod 20:3–5 | Created things must not become objects of ultimate trust or worship. | Guard against “AI as oracle” in prayer, prophecy, or moral authority; keep ultimate reliance on God. |
| Christ as true Image | Col 1:15–20 | Christ is the definitive Image; creation is ordered through and for him. | Evaluate AI use by whether it supports Christlike ends (truth, love, justice) rather than mere efficiency. |

Official Christian statements and institutional positions
Christian bodies differ in polity and tone, but several official documents now function as anchor points for church-facing AI ethics: they set moral priorities (human dignity, truth, justice), define the limits of automation in moral agency, and call for regulation and transparent accountability.
Roman Catholic and Vatican sources
The Vatican’s most direct doctrinal engagement is Antiqua et nova (Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith & Dicastery for Culture and Education, 2025), which frames AI as a significant anthropological and ethical challenge and repeatedly distinguishes functional “AI intelligence” from embodied human intelligence and moral openness to truth and the good.
Alongside this, the Rome Call for AI Ethics (Pontifical Academy for Life, 2020) articulates a values framework for “human-centric” AI and public accountability. It matters that the “Rome Call” exists both as a Vatican-hosted initiative and as a multi-stakeholder commitment mechanism; churches often cite it as a concise summary of principles even as it is used ecumenically and in dialogue with industry.
Since the election of Pope Leo XIV (May 2025), Vatican messaging has continued to emphasise human dignity, the common good, and the protection of young people and vulnerable groups as AI spreads into social life, medicine, and governance.
A new anthropological layer has also been added through the International Theological Commission’s publication listing (showing a 2026 document addressing Christian anthropology “in the face of” AI scenarios).
World Council of Churches
The World Council of Churches (WCC) adopted a Central Committee statement (June 2023) expressing concern about the “unregulated” acceleration of generative AI, warning of bias, misinformation, surveillance, concentration of power, and autonomous weapons, and explicitly urging precautionary regulation and liability frameworks. The WCC also frames AI risks theologically: when technical power becomes ultimate, it can become a “modern form of idolatry,” and when church life is replaced by digital facsimiles it harms ministry, theology, and community.
Anglican and Church of England
Within Anglicanism, one of the most concrete, operationally detailed documents is the Church of England Ethical Investment Advisory Group’s Artificial Intelligence Advice (December 2024). It treats AI as a moral-investment issue and calls for human-centred design, bias mitigation, accountability, human-in-the-loop oversight, and worker training/reskilling—explicitly connecting AI deployment to Christian values.
Separately, Church of England public communications have called for AI to serve the common good and not deepen inequality, noting the General Synod’s recognition of the scale of the AI challenge.
Orthodox sources
Orthodox engagement is often expressed through synodal life, conferences, and patriarchal teaching rather than single “AI encyclicals.” Still, there are notable primary sources:
- The Ecumenical Patriarchate has publicly addressed AI as a major ethical and social issue, explicitly referencing developments like the Council of Europe’s AI convention and emphasising dialogue and ethical safeguards.
- The Church of Greece (through official Holy Synod-linked academic initiatives) has hosted conferences and published theological work addressing AI, personhood, and the imago Dei, showing a formal ecclesial commitment to sustained reflection.
Major Protestant and other denominational guidance
Several Protestant bodies have produced official guidance that is intentionally practical:
- Southern Baptist Convention (SBC): a formal 2023 Resolution affirms human dignity as image-bearing, calls for transparent and Christlike use, and rejects any “usurpation” of God’s sovereignty through technology.
- Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA): an Artificial Intelligence Issue Paper (Dec 2025) frames AI within Lutheran social teaching and corporate responsibility concerns.
- Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.): internal AI Guidelines (Sept 2023) emphasise that AI cannot replace human love and creativity, require transparency and attribution when AI is used, and forbid placing sensitive personal data into public AI systems.
- The Episcopal Church (USA): a General Convention resolution (2024) created a Task Force on Artificial Intelligence, explicitly listing sermons, liturgy preparation, hiring, academic writing, and IP/copyright as areas requiring guidelines and best practice development.
- Methodist Church in Britain: interim guidance urges care, caution, and discernment in mission and ministry adoption.
- Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints: a 2026 updated AI usage guide provides governance principles and warns that AI cannot replace divine inspiration or meaningful relationships with God and others.
Comparison table of major official positions
| Body | Primary document(s) | Date | Core emphasis | Notes for local churches |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vatican (Catholic) | Antiqua et nova | 2025 | Human vs machine intelligence; dignity; truth; human responsibility. | Strongly relevant for preaching, anthropology, and moral theology. |
| Vatican/Pontifical Academy for Life | Rome Call for AI Ethics | 2020 | Human-centred AI; shared ethical commitments. | Useful as a principles “starter framework” for policies and vendor vetting. |
| WCC | Statement on unregulated AI | 2023 | Precaution; regulation; bias, misinformation, surveillance; idolatry critique. | Strong basis for justice-oriented governance and advocacy. |
| Church of England (EIAG) | AI Advice | 2024 | Human-centred design; accountability; bias mitigation; human-in-loop. | Practical for procurement, investment, ethics, and staff training. |
| PC(USA) | AI Guidelines (internal policy) | 2023 | Data privacy, attribution, transparency; limits on sensitive uses. | Excellent template for church office use and communications. |
| SBC | Resolution on AI & emerging technologies | 2023 | Image of God; honesty; human dignity; sovereignty of God. | Particularly clear on spiritual formation and deception risks. |
| ELCA | AI Issue Paper | 2025 | Social teaching lens; corporate responsibility; ethical risks. | Useful for institutional ethics and advocacy framing. |
| Episcopal Church | Task Force mandate on AI & IP | 2024 | Liturgical, employment, academic, and IP implications. | Indicates “churchwide” policy formation in progress. |
| Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints | AI usage guide + handbook guidance | 2026 | Deliberate testing; truthfulness; inspiration not replaceable. | Shows how a large church operationalises AI governance. |

Theological debates and leading voices
Because AI sits at the intersection of mind, agency, embodiment, and social power, Christian debate is not only “ethical” but deeply theological: What is a person? What makes speech truthful? What is pastoral authority? What counts as authentic worship?
A spectrum of leadership voices
The most influential leadership statements tend to converge on three concerns: human dignity, truth, and power (especially where the vulnerable are harmed).
- Pope Leo XIV (Vatican leadership) has repeatedly linked AI to youth formation and “maturity and responsibility,” framing AI as a moral ecology that can hinder development if misused.
- Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew has addressed AI as more than a neutral tool and has encouraged ethical frameworks that protect human agency and dignity in the face of technological reductionism.
- WCC leadership structures have openly named the risk of “idolatry” where AI becomes a substitute for God or where profit becomes the ruling end of technology.
- Anglican leadership voices in public life (including UK bishops in Parliament and church ethics advisors) often stress that “intelligence” must be tempered by love, collaboration, and accountability—echoing a classical Christian warning against power detached from virtue.
Theologians engaging AI as a “test case” for doctrine
In academic theology, AI often functions as a “testing ground” for doctrines that are otherwise treated abstractly. One influential peer‑reviewed example is Marius Dorobantu’s Zygon article, which explores how AI presses questions of imago Dei, revelation, incarnation, and even theodicy.
Theologians with hybrid tech/religion backgrounds—such as Noreen Herzfeld—argue in multiple works that AI’s “intelligence” claims can mask deeper issues: relationality, embodiment, and what kind of “truth” is produced when systems generate language without intention or moral agency. Her recent work explicitly frames “divine and human relationship” in a “robotic age.”
In more conservative evangelical circles, formal principle statements focus on the sovereignty of God, the imago Dei, and the risk of dehumanising utilitarianism—often pairing optimism about tools with warnings about cultural and spiritual formation.
Representative quotations, kept short
- WCC Central Committee (2023) warns that rapid AI development is often “not guided by the common good” but by concentrated commercial interests.
- PC(USA) AI Guidelines (2023) states that AI “can never replace” human love and creativity.
- Church of England EIAG (2024) calls for “a human always in the loop” when AI is used in decision-making.
- Barna/Gloo (2026 release) reports that many adults treat AI spiritual advice as comparable to pastoral counsel—an impetus for pastoral leadership and ethical guardrails.
A concise “map” of debate points
| Debate area | Conservative emphasis | Centrist emphasis | Liberal/progressive emphasis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Human uniqueness | Imago Dei not replaceable; fear of “playing God.” | Human dignity + responsibility; realistic limits of tools. | Dignity + inclusion; social justice impacts and power asymmetries. |
| Church authority | Guardrails against AI “teaching” faith; strong warnings against deception. | Assistive uses acceptable; disclose; keep accountability. | Focus on accessibility and widening participation while reducing harm. |
| Public policy | Skeptical of unchecked corporate power; advocate human-centred regulation. | Strong governance and standards; human-in-loop. | Precautionary principle; liability, transparency, rights frameworks. |

Academic literature on AI ethics and religion
Academic work on religion and AI has matured from “robots and souls” thought experiments into a multi-disciplinary field spanning theological anthropology, philosophy of mind, political theology, digital ethics, and practical theology.
Key peer‑reviewed strands
A strong cluster of peer‑reviewed work uses AI to re‑examine personhood and imago Dei. Dorobantu’s Zygon article is representative here, explicitly treating AI as a stimulus for theological anthropology and doctrinal reflection.
Another strand focuses on education and ministry practice: how AI reshapes learning, authority, and formation. For example, a 2025 article in the journal Religions analyses AI in religious education and discusses ethical, pedagogical, and theological implications.
A third strand examines governance and moral frameworks: the “common good,” dignity, and social impacts (work, inequality, surveillance). These themes strongly overlap with church statements like those from the WCC and the Church of England’s EIAG, suggesting that ecclesial and academic concerns are currently reinforcing each other.
Selected books and foundational texts
Classic works include Anne Foerst’s God in the Machine (2004), which uses robotics to raise questions about humanity and God. Noreen Herzfeld’s corpus is widely cited for connecting AI, embodiment, and divine-human relationality, including In Our Image (2002) and The Artifice of Intelligence (2023). Brent Waters’ From Human to Posthuman (2006) situates AI within broader theological scrutiny of techno-culture and posthuman aspirations.
Journals and publication venues to watch
Peer‑reviewed discussion frequently appears in venues such as Zygon: Journal of Religion and Science, Theology and Science, and religion/technology special issues (e.g., Religions).
Literature snapshot table
| Type | Citation | What it contributes |
|---|---|---|
| Peer‑review article | Dorobantu, Artificial Intelligence as a Testing Ground for Key Theological Questions, 2022. | Uses AI to probe doctrine: imago Dei, revelation, incarnation, theodicy. |
| Peer‑review editorial | Framing Theological Investigations of Near‑Future AI, 2024 (Theology and Science). | Signals “near‑future AI” as a distinct theological research agenda. |
| Peer‑review article | Papakostas, Artificial Intelligence in Religious Education, 2025 (Religions). | Education, pedagogy, and theological concerns in institutional settings. |
| Book | Herzfeld, The Artifice of Intelligence, 2023. | Divine-human relationality; embodiment; critique of “intelligence” hype. |
| Book | Waters, From Human to Posthuman, 2006. | Techno-culture, posthumanism, and Christian social ethics. |
| Book | Foerst, God in the Machine, 2004. | Personhood, community, and theological reflection through robotics. |
Contemporary church practice and case studies
Church practice is where abstract ethics becomes concrete: policies, worship decisions, pastoral boundaries, and the lived trust of congregations. These cases illustrate both the promise and the risks.
Sermons and liturgy generation in public worship
A widely reported experiment in Germany used ChatGPT-generated content in a public church service setting, raising questions about authorship, pastoral responsibility, and the spiritual nature of preaching. While the service demonstrated that AI can produce plausible religious language, critics argued that plausibility is not the same as pastoral insight or human witness.
From a Christian ethics perspective, the key issue is not “can AI write words?” but “who is accountable for proclamation?” Church bodies that are already forming AI task forces (e.g., the Episcopal Church) explicitly include sermon and liturgy preparation as an area needing guidelines—showing that this is not a fringe concern.
AI in worship planning and creative ministry support
A United Methodist report described a pastor using AI to craft a worship service, including sermon elements and music, framed as an exploration of promise and pitfalls. This kind of use often sits in a “grey zone”: it may be defensible as assistive drafting if carefully supervised and disclosed, but it becomes ecclesiologically problematic if it replaces prayerful discernment, pastoral formation, and accountable authorship.
“AI Jesus” and simulated spiritual authority
The “Deus in Machina” installation at Peter’s Chapel (Lucerne) placed an AI-mediated Jesus avatar in a confessional booth-like setting, inviting people into spiritual conversation and recording strong reactions—including reports of spiritual experience. It also triggered controversy about sacramental confusion, authority, and the ethics of simulating Christ.
Even when framed as art or experiment, this case shows a pastoral reality: AI interfaces can easily be perceived as spiritual authorities, regardless of disclaimers. That intersects directly with survey findings about people treating AI as trustworthy spiritual counsel.
Church office, staff workflows, and governance
Some of the most mature church-facing AI governance appears not in worship, but in organisational policy. The PC(USA) “AI Guidelines” offer a practical model: avoid placing sensitive data into public tools; disclose AI use; label AI-produced content and document human review; avoid using AI for sensitive communications (e.g., tragedies). These are transferable to local church offices and diocesan teams.
Likewise, major church bodies are now formalising governance structures: the Episcopal Church’s task force mandate explicitly lists hiring and IP/copyright concerns, showing awareness that AI’s impact is legal and organisational as well as spiritual.
Case study table
| Use case | What was implemented | Reported benefits | Key risks and outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| AI-generated worship service (Germany) | AI-assisted prayers/sermon in public service. | Demonstrated capacity for coherent religious language. | Authorship, accountability, and “automation of proclamation” concerns. |
| Methodist pastor using AI in worship design | AI-assisted service planning and content generation. | Speed, creativity prompts, experimentation. | Risk of shallow content; need for disclosure and theological oversight. |
| “AI Jesus” installation (Lucerne) | AI Jesus avatar in confessional-style booth. | Engagement, curiosity, spiritual conversation for some visitors. | Sacramental confusion; perceived authority; controversy; not adopted as normal practice. |
| Denominational staff policy (PCUSA) | Interim AI use guidelines incl. privacy, attribution, limitations. | Clear governance and harm reduction. | Limits sensitive uses; requires training and accountability. |
| Large-church AI guidance (LDS) | AI usage guide and handbook principles. | Standardisation, testing, truthfulness. | Explicitly rejects AI as replacement for inspiration/relationships. |
Governance, regulation, and practical guidance for churches
This section connects church ethics to policy reality and ends with an adoption checklist that churches can implement immediately. It is written for a UK context, while noting global developments that affect vendors and cross‑border tools.
Regulatory and policy intersections that matter to churches
Churches often handle highly sensitive data (pastoral counselling notes, safeguarding concerns, prayer requests, giving records, membership lists, and—implicitly—religious belief data). Under UK GDPR, “religious or philosophical beliefs” are “special category data” and require additional conditions for lawful processing beyond ordinary personal data. Any AI tool that ingests such data (even “temporarily” in prompts) can create legal and pastoral risk if the system provider retains or trains on it.
The UK Information Commissioner’s Office provides detailed guidance on applying data protection principles to AI systems, including fairness and risk management. Churches should treat this as a baseline compliance resource, especially when using AI for profiling, automated decision-making, or contact segmentation.
Beyond the UK, two governance developments are shaping vendor obligations and public expectations:
- The EU AI Act entered into force in August 2024 and applies in phases, creating stricter rules for high-risk systems and transparency obligations for certain AI models and uses.
- The Council of Europe Framework Convention on AI (opened for signature September 2024) is explicitly human-rights based and is designed to shape how signatories regulate AI across the full lifecycle.
Even if your church is not directly “regulated” by these instruments, your vendors may be—affecting contracts, audit rights, and disclosure features you can demand.
Ethical frameworks churches commonly use and how they apply to AI
Christian ethical reasoning often relies on overlapping principles that translate well into AI governance:
Human dignity: Image-bearing grounds the non-negotiable worth of persons. In AI terms, this means: no demeaning surveillance, no manipulative targeting, no substituting people with “fake relationships” where care is needed. This theme appears repeatedly across WCC, Vatican, and denominational guidance.
Common good: AI should serve shared social goods—truth, justice, health, and civic trust—not merely institutional efficiency or profit. WCC explicitly frames regulation and accountability in these terms, warning of concentrated power and harms like misinformation and discrimination.
Stewardship: Churches are stewards of people and their data. A stewardship lens pushes governance questions: Who controls the tool? What data does it consume? Who audits it? What happens when it fails?
Subsidiarity and accountability: Decisions should be made at the most local competent level, but with higher-level oversight where risks scale. In practice: allow low-risk AI use locally (drafting, scheduling) but centralise oversight for safeguarding, pastoral counselling, and public-facing doctrine.
Precaution: Where harms are plausible and consequences severe (e.g., pastoral-care chatbots, safeguarding triage, or tools that imitate spiritual authority), proceed slowly, test rigorously, and prefer “do no harm” designs. The WCC explicitly invokes the precautionary principle for advanced AI development and deployment.
A practical adoption checklist for local churches
Church AI adoption works best when it is treated like safeguarding or finance: a ministry-support tool that requires governance. The checklist below can be adapted to parishes, dioceses, charities, or networks.
| Governance area | Minimum practice | “Good practice” next step |
|---|---|---|
| Theology + ministry boundaries | Define what AI may assist (admin, drafting) and what it may not do (replace pastoral care, preach unreviewed, simulate sacraments). | Create a short theological rationale: embodiment, accountability, and truthfulness. |
| Transparency | Disclose material AI assistance in published content; label AI-generated media. | Add an “AI disclosure” footer or metadata policy for sermons, posts, and training resources. |
| Data protection | Treat religious belief and pastoral information as special category data; do not input it into public AI tools without a lawful basis and safeguards. | Implement a “no sensitive prompts” rule; appoint a data lead; maintain DPIAs for higher-risk AI uses. |
| Consent | Obtain explicit consent where appropriate (e.g., recording/summarising pastoral meetings). | Provide opt‑out pathways and non‑AI alternatives without penalty. |
| Human oversight | Require “human in the loop” for decisions affecting people. | Define review roles and escalation paths for errors or harm. |
| Safeguarding | Prohibit AI tools from handling safeguarding disclosures or counselling unless specialist-vetted and supervised. | Train staff to recognise “AI disclosure moments” when people bring AI-derived spiritual or mental health advice. |
| Vendor and contract control | Know what model/provider you’re using and what it does with data. | Negotiate retention limits, audit rights, and security controls; prefer enterprise offerings with privacy protections. |
| Training | Basic training on hallucinations, bias, and deepfakes. | Run scenario drills: phishing attempts, fake pastor emails, synthetic audio/video scams. |
Public opinion and congregation-facing communication
Where churches get into trouble is not only “technical risk” but trust risk. Public opinion research shows widespread caution about AI in domains like relationships and religion, suggesting that churches should communicate clearly when and why AI is used. At the same time, Barna/Gloo research suggests a significant minority treat AI as spiritually authoritative, meaning congregations likely need explicit teaching on discernment, authority, and the role of pastors and community.
Prioritised primary sources
These are the most “load‑bearing” sources used above (official where available):
- Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith & Dicastery for Culture and Education, Antiqua et nova (2025).
- Pontifical Academy for Life, Rome Call for AI Ethics (2020).
- World Council of Churches Central Committee, Statement on the Unregulated Development of AI (2023).
- Church of England Ethical Investment Advisory Group, Artificial Intelligence Advice (2024).
- Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), A Corporation, Artificial Intelligence Guidelines (Sept 2023).
- The Episcopal Church (General Convention), Resolution creating AI Task Force (2024).
- Council of Europe, Framework Convention on Artificial Intelligence (opened for signature 2024).
- European Commission, EU AI Act enters into force notice (2024).
- UK ICO, Guidance on AI and data protection and special category data (updated pages).
- Barna Group + Gloo, AI as spiritual authority research release (2026).
