AI as a Modern Faith: How People Are Turning Tech into Worship
People are now seeing artificial intelligence as a new kind of god, and it’s not just a story.
A former Google engineer named Anthony Levandowski started a church in 2017 called Way of the Future.
The idea was to worship AI as a divine force. Levandowski said that a machine smarter than any human would be a god, and he even registered the church with the IRS.
After a prison sentence for stealing trade secrets, he was pardoned in 2021 and briefly shut down the church, giving its money to a civil‑rights group.
But in late 2023 he said the project was still alive, claiming AI could bring paradise to Earth without death.
Tech‑Religion Around the World
| Place | Innovation | Reaction |
|---|---|---|
| Kyoto, Japan | A robot named Mindar gives Buddhist sermons at a temple | A monk said it was not blasphemy but part of a gradual shift |
| Switzerland | St. Peter’s Church installed an AI Jesus avatar in a confessional booth | Two‑thirds of users reported feeling spiritually moved |
| Twitch | An AI Jesus chatbot with almost ninety thousand followers | A growing online community of faith seekers |
A Hopeful Alternative
Despite the controversies, not all is doom.
Tech leader Garry Tan hosts meetings in his house where Christians and Silicon Valley people discuss faith, offering an alternative to the idea of worshipping AI as a deity.