EPISODE · Jun 28, 2026 · 32 MIN
"What AI Can't Do" by Hiram Kemp
from Cumberland Trace Church of Christ (Formerly Lehman Ave Church of Christ) · host lehmanavechurchofchrist
June 7, 2026 - Sunday PM Sermon In this sermon Hiram welcomes the congregation and then turns to a sustained, pastoral reflection on artificial intelligence: its rapid spread, cultural influence, and the need for Christians to engage AI from a biblical perspective. The talk opens with statistics and cultural anecdotes — the 2025 AI spending figure, the prevalence of generative AI in business, and studies showing Gen Z engaging AI as a friend — and references high-profile voices (Richard Dawkins, Marvin Minsky, Sam Altman) to frame contemporary claims about machine consciousness and human identity. The sermon anchors its critique and counsel in Scripture. It draws on Genesis (creation and the Tower of Babel), Psalms, Isaiah, Acts, the Gospels, and Pauline letters to argue that AI has important practical uses but also clear limits. The speaker outlines seven key realities AI cannot do: replace human value (we are image-bearers of God), complete our most important tasks (worship, repentance, and evangelism), substitute true human companionship and friendship, supply ultimate certainty or be a source of truth, think deeply on our behalf, comfort broken hearts with genuine assurance, or solve humanity’s deepest problem of sin and need for salvation. Practical concerns and pastoral warnings are woven throughout: AI may make tasks easier or produce polished outputs, but relying on it in place of prayer, discipleship, authentic speech, pastoral care, rigorous thought, or personal testimony risks a loss of what it means to be human and to serve God. The sermon includes concrete examples — Philip, Ananias, and Cornelius in Acts — to show why God calls embodied people to share the Gospel, and cautions against mistaking algorithmic affirmation for true friendship or spiritual counsel. The message concludes with a pastoral invitation and encouragement: Christians should neither demonize technology nor uncritically worship it; instead they should use it wisely while remembering the primacy of Scripture, the necessity of human discipleship, and the gospel as the only remedy for humanity’s deepest needs. Listeners are invited to respond in repentance, baptism, and discipleship, and to seek prayer or conversation with the congregation’s leaders about faith and how to engage AI faithfully. Duration 32:14
What this episode covers
June 7, 2026 - Sunday PM Sermon In this sermon Hiram welcomes the congregation and then turns to a sustained, pastoral reflection on artificial intelligence: its rapid spread, cultural influence, and the need for Christians to engage AI from a biblical perspective. The talk opens with statistics and cultural anecdotes — the 2025 AI spending figure, the prevalence of generative AI in business, and studies showing Gen Z engaging AI as a friend — and references high-profile voices (Richard Dawkins, Marvin Minsky, Sam Altman) to frame contemporary claims about machine consciousness and human identity. The sermon anchors its critique and counsel in Scripture. It draws on Genesis (creation and the Tower of Babel), Psalms, Isaiah, Acts, the Gospels, and Pauline letters to argue that AI has important practical uses but also clear limits. The speaker outlines seven key realities AI cannot do: replace human value (we are image-bearers of God), complete our most important tasks (worship, repentance, and evangelism), substitute true human companionship and friendship, supply ultimate certainty or be a source of truth, think deeply on our behalf, comfort broken hearts with genuine assurance, or solve humanity’s deepest problem of sin and need for salvation. Practical concerns and pastoral warnings are woven throughout: AI may make tasks easier or produce polished outputs, but relying on it in place of prayer, discipleship, authentic speech, pastoral care, rigorous thought, or personal testimony risks a loss of what it means to be human and to serve God. The sermon includes concrete examples — Philip, Ananias, and Cornelius in Acts — to show why God calls embodied people to share the Gospel, and cautions against mistaking algorithmic affirmation for true friendship or spiritual counsel. The message concludes with a pastoral invitation and encouragement: Christians should neither demonize technology nor uncritically worship it; instead they should use it wisely while remembering the primacy of Scripture, the necessity of human discipleship, and the gospel as the only remedy for humanity’s deepest needs. Listeners are invited to respond in repentance, baptism, and discipleship, and to seek prayer or conversation with the congregation’s leaders about faith and how to engage AI faithfully. Duration 32:14
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"What AI Can't Do" by Hiram Kemp
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