Artificial Intelligence and the Church - A conversation with the Rev. Peter Levenstrong
One month ago, Pope Leo released Magnifica Humanitas: On Safeguarding the Human Person in the Time of Artificial Intelligence … at a time when the top 10 AI-linked stocks account for roughly 45% of the S&P 500's total market cap, the highest single-sector concentration since the 1929 pre-crash peak.
In the Anglican World, Archbishop of Canterbury Sarah Mullally said this earlier this month an an address to the House of Lords.
"God made us creative beings, and AI and wider technologies are a remarkable product of human creativity. They have led to extraordinary discoveries and breakthroughs at speeds that we could never have imagined….
"But this extraordinary product of human creativity, and the power it places in our hands, also raises urgent new questions. What are the implications for our human relationships, for our connections with family and friends? How does it impact on our working lives – the existence of, or the quality of our jobs? What are the implications for warfare, for climate change, for our engagement with information and democracy? Just because we could create something or deploy technology in a certain way, does that mean we should?"
For some, the answer is no.
Recently an Episcopal priest in Massachusetts, has been circulating something called the St. Dunstan Pledge .. it’s a pledge to keep generative AI out of any part of sermon work… brainstorming, planning, drafting or writing.” Around 150 preachers have signed it so far.
Like much of any discourse these days, conversation about Artificial Intelligence in the church tends to cluster around the poles of fawning and fear. Today’s guest, the Rev. Peter Levenstrong, takes a more nuanced approach.
Peter is a priest at St. Gregory of Nyssa Episcopal Church in San Francisco, and he co-produces the AI Toolkit, a podcast exploring the intersection of ministry and artificial intelligence, is the TryTank Institute’s senior research fellow on AI, and authors the substack The Human Part, which advocates for retaining genuine human connection, spiritual labor, and empathy in an increasingly AI-driven world.
Peter joins us for a conversation at the intersection of artificial intelligence and the church … and we talk about AI’s potential for good, the legitimate concerns surrounding it and some of the nature of the reactive fear surrounding the rapid growth of Artificial Intelligence.
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You can read more from Peter on his substack The Human part at thehumanpart.substack.com [http://thehumanpart.substack.com]. You can learn more about living stories at livingstoriessermons.org [http://livingstoriessermons.org], where you can also pre-order his book and you can find all sorts of resources at aichurchtoolkit.com [http://aichurchtoolkit.com] … including the first season of his podcast.
If you like this podcast, please give it a good rating and share it with your friends. As always, if you have ideas of people you’d like to hear from or topics you’d like me to cover, email me at mkinman@gmail.com [mkinman@gmail.com].
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