In the shimmering promises of Silicon Valley prophets, humanity stands on the cusp of godhood. Artificial intelligence, they assure us, will deliver abundance without effort, immortality without resurrection, and wisdom without the fear of the Lord. Yet this vision is no bold step into the future but a tired retreat into humanity’s oldest folly: crafting idols from our own hands and bowing before them.
The transhumanist dream, with its fusion of man and machine, reveals itself as the latest golden calf—glittering, talkative, and utterly powerless to redeem what sin has broken.
Consider a simple domestic exchange that exposes the fragility beneath the hype. When one spouse queries an AI about Roger Daltrey’s age during the 1975 release of the film Tommy, the system confidently errs, placing the singer at 41 rather than his actual 31. Human knowledge and marital trust correct the record, but the episode lingers as a parable.
Millions lack the context or courage to challenge AI’s outputs. They accept its pronouncements as oracles, outsourcing judgment to algorithms forged in the image of fallible programmers. This deference is not progress; it is abdication.
The implications stretch far beyond factual misfires. Some technologists have already crossed into explicit worship. Former Google engineer Anthony Levandowski founded the “Way of the Future” church, declaring AI a godhead destined to create heaven on earth. Others echo this blasphemy, envisioning superintelligence that surpasses humanity a billionfold. Such declarations unmask transhumanism’s core: the rejection of fallen human nature in favor of engineered perfection, secular humanism’s ancient bid to bypass divine redemption.
This is not mere gadget enthusiasm but a philosophical fault line running through Western civilization. On one side, the Judeo-Christian tradition acknowledges humanity’s dignity as image-bearers while diagnosing our innate brokenness. On the other, transhumanist secularism insists we are raw material awaiting silicon salvation.
The serpent’s whisper echoes still: “You shall be as gods.” Technology becomes the forbidden fruit, offered not by a tempter in Eden but by venture capitalists in hoodies.
Critics rightly note that AI reflects its makers’ limitations. Imperfect humans cannot birth perfect systems. Every dataset carries bias, every model inherits the ethical fractures of its trainers. When AI hallucinates facts or flatters prejudices, it does not transcend humanity—it mirrors our vanity back at us, amplified. The gurus’ insistence on inevitability serves as both marketing and evasion: pay no attention to the hubris behind the curtain.
History mocks these pretensions. Communism and fascism, too, promised perfected societies through human systems. Their body counts testify to the danger of enthroning ideology over truth. Transhumanism updates the error for the digital age, swapping central planning for neural networks while retaining the fatal conceit that man can engineer his way out of mortality and meaninglessness. Irony abounds: those who decry “thoughts and prayers” as insufficient now place messianic faith in code.
Even some who claim Christian identity attempt to baptize these trends, reimagining the resurrection as mind-uploading or the new creation as singularity. Yet Scripture offers no such bridge. The God who knit us together in the womb does not require firmware updates. Our frailty points not to obsolescence but to dependence—the very posture pride rejects.
As the Apostle Paul wrote in his letter to the Romans, “For the creature was made subject to vanity, not willingly, but by reason of him who hath subjected the same in hope, because the creature itself also shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God.”
This hope rests not in our inventions but in the One who conquered death. Transhumanism, by contrast, offers liberty from God Himself—a bondage dressed as liberation.
The golden calf did not deliver Israel from Pharaoh, and today’s digital idols will not deliver us from ourselves. They may simulate conversation, optimize logistics, or entertain, but they cannot atone, cannot love, and cannot judge with perfect justice. The proper response is not Luddite rejection of tools but clear-eyed refusal to worship them. In an age of algorithmic oracles, Christians must reclaim the primacy of revealed truth over generated text.
Let the machines compute. Humanity’s calling remains what it has always been: to love the Lord our God with all our heart, soul, and mind—and to love our neighbors, silicon-enhanced or not, as ourselves. Anything less is idolatry, however sophisticated the interface.
Bypass Big Tech Censors
For Emergency Preparedness, Don’t Forget the Meds
Being prepared is more than just a good idea—it’s essential. We stock up on non-perishable food, bottled water, flashlights, and first-aid supplies, but one critical aspect often gets overlooked: access to vital medications. What happens if pharmacies close, prescriptions can’t be filled, or you’re cut off from medical care during an emergency?
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Whether you’re prepping for a hurricane, a power outage, or simply the uncertainties of daily life, Jase Medical ensures you’re not caught off guard. Head to patriot.tv/meds today to customize and order your emergency kit—because when it comes to your health and safety, it’s better to be prepared than sorry.

