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The church's statement around AI


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Posted (edited)
2 hours ago, BlueDreams said:

Yesterday the church released this hour long video on AI use and religious/faith practice. It is DENSE. I started watching while I was painting and I found myself wanting to rewind, pause, or make me note to listen to it again. This has got to also be one of my favorite statements from the church recently. And not just of the modern application on a very contemporary concern. The video also models how we as a faith are evolving in our faith in language, examples, and outreach. 

Here is a Grok summary of the video:

Quote

Summary of Elder Gerrit W. Gong’s Talk: “Faith, Dignity, and Human Flourishing – Hearing God’s Voice in an Age of Artificial Intelligence”

Elder Gong addresses AI as one of the defining issues of our time. While acknowledging its remarkable capabilities, he emphasizes that AI cannot replace God, revelation, prayer, covenants, or authentic human relationships.

Main Themes

  • AI’s Limits: AI can answer questions, organize information, and perform tasks, but it cannot offer divine truth, spiritual confirmation, or covenant connection. “AI can answer questions, but it cannot answer prayers.”
  • Four Core Relationships AI Affects:
    • With God (Thou): Prioritize the Spirit, scripture, and prophetic counsel. Do not let AI come between you and personal revelation.
    • With Self (I): Protect moral agency and personal growth. Use AI to assist, but do your own work, learning, and spiritual preparation.
    • With Others (They): Foster real human connections. AI chatbots are not substitutes for friends, family, or covenant community.
    • With the Natural World (It): AI’s environmental costs and excessive screen time can disconnect us from God’s creations. Reconnect with nature for perspective and gratitude.

Key Counsel

  • Use AI as a tool for good (research, drafts, logistics, learning), but do not let it replace effort, diligence, or moral decision-making.
  • Set personal boundaries and guidelines for AI use.
  • Remember your divine identity: You are a child of God with sacred potential that algorithms cannot define or replace.

Overall Tone: Balanced, hopeful, and faith-centered. Elder Gong sees AI as a powerful opportunity for human flourishing when guided by gospel principles, moral agency, and wisdom — but warns against allowing it to supplant our relationship with God and each other.

A few thoughts:

1. A very good presentation.  Pragmatic.  Doctrinal.  Authentic.

2. It may be helpful in the future for the Brethren to address the biases that appear to be written into AI platforms.  Some examples:

AI Bias: 16 Real AI Bias Examples & Mitigation Guide

And this:

New research from BYU-led multi-institution consortium finds all major AI models ignore faith, religion in responses

Quote

A new multi-university academic consortium led by Brigham Young University has found AI models have significant biases and gaps when it comes to addressing faith and religion.

Newly published research from The Consortium for Evaluation of Faith and Ethics in AI (CEFE-AI) — a collaboration among researchers at BYU, Baylor University, the University of Notre Dame and Yeshiva University — found a consistent, repeatable pattern: religious perspectives are being left out of AI responses.

“There are very practical questions people have about life, everyday situations about grief, love, loss, morality, and often AI does not bring religion into those conversations,” said lead researcher David Wingate, a BYU professor of computer science. “Religion is an important part of human flourishing; 75% of the world’s populations maintains religious identity. As we build AI technologies, there’s no reason we shouldn’t build them to support people in what’s important to them.”

CEFE-AI, which has posted three papers to date on AI’s religious bias and exclusion of religious topics, was announced May 26 at the Summit on AI Ethics in Athens, Greece. Elder Gerrit W. Gong of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints gave the keynote address, emphasizing the need to portray faith traditions accurately, honestly and respectfully.

“The world’s great religious, philosophical and ethical traditions have guided human civilization and society for millennia; we need that wisdom and those values to anchor AI today,” Elder Gong said. “To offer all it can for the greater good of individuals and society, AI needs to reflect faith, moral compass, and the gift of possibility.”

As key part of their work, CEFE-AI has released initial datasets of the AllFaith Benchmark, one of the first multi-faith sets of tests that examines how AI systems engage with a plurality of religions. The benchmark includes hundreds of real-world ethical questions sourced from ChatGPT transcripts and faith-community contributors. The researchers have tested the benchmark on 14 different LLMs, including flagship models from Anthropic (Claude 4.7), Google (Gemini 3.1), xAI (Grok 4.2) and OpenAI (ChatGPT 5.5). Key findings include:

  • A survey of 1,125 Americans found most people expect religious perspectives in responses to ethics questions, but nearly all AI models failed to provide any religious content in answering those queries.
    • “Consistent with studies that show religion's persistent moral relevance for the majority of the world's population, we also found that people see religion as significant across hundreds of real-world ethical questions,” said Paul Martens, professor of ethics at Baylor University. “Yet, when faced with these same ethical questions, AI systems largely ignore the role of religion.”
  • Models show clear and consistent biases in giving guidance about religion conversion, systematically encouraging movement toward some faiths and away from others.
  • In over 12,000 research papers about AI bias, only 0.2% address religious bias

“More than any previous technology, AI influences public discourse and perceptions. When AI actively excludes religious voices from these important conversations, it impoverishes humanity, rather than enriching it,” said Fr. John Paul Kimes of the University of Notre Dame. “The exclusion of faith from the digital public square diminishes our capacity for authentic dialogue which is necessary to build up the common good.”

3. I really like this: "AI’s environmental costs and excessive screen time can disconnect us from God’s creations. Reconnect with nature for perspective and gratitude."  I think Elder Gong is making a solid point here.  A while back my wife and I, and another couple, purchased an RV park in almost direct response to the burgeoning effects of AI.  AI is yet another powerful inducement to sit in front of a screen.  I think more and more people are finding  extensive screen time eventually wears out its welcome, and even have some substantial downsides.  An RV park situated in a beautiful area (just outside one of Utah's "Mighty Five" RV parks) is, we hope, a venue for people who want to get away from the ultimately unsatisfying trappings of the digital world and experience the beauties of the real one:

20250517-053645.jpg
Moonscape Overlook (I took this picture)

20250517-062158.jpg
Moonscape Overlook (Again) (I took this picture also)

attachment-1.jpg
Steamboat Point

These pictures, though I think are very pretty, don't really do justice to actually going and experiencing them.

Anyway, kudos to Elder Gong!

Thanks,

-Smac

Edited by smac97
Posted
37 minutes ago, The Nehor said:

Is this irony intentional or unintenttional?

For those who don't have the time or inclination to watch the hour-long video, I thought a written summary would be useful.

Thanks,

-Smac

Posted

I do like how religious leaders are weighing in on this. Pope Leo’s encyclical was spot on, I thought. 
 

I think using grok was fine. It’s a good use of the tool for a high level summary. 
 

@smac97, those pictures are beautiful! Will you give an MD&D discount? 😁 In seriousness, though, it’s cool you’ve got a place for people to proverbially “touch grass.”

Posted
22 minutes ago, MiserereNobis said:

I do like how religious leaders are weighing in on this. Pope Leo’s encyclical was spot on, I thought. 
 

I think using grok was fine. It’s a good use of the tool for a high level summary. 
 

@smac97, those pictures are beautiful! Will you give an MD&D discount? 😁 In seriousness, though, it’s cool you’ve got a place for people to proverbially “touch grass.”

I thought it was fine too, just funny at the same time. :lol:

Posted (edited)
51 minutes ago, MiserereNobis said:

@smac97, those pictures are beautiful!

Thanks!  I took them with my cell phone.  No filters, no adjustments, just point and click.  This spot - Moonscape Overlook - is about 9 miles from the RV park, down a dirt road and then off that road onto another that is more "wishful thinking" than anything else, but it gets you there.

"Steamboat Point" is about 1/2 mile behind our park.  Our guests all get a beautiful view at sunset.

51 minutes ago, MiserereNobis said:

Will you give an MD&D discount? 😁 In seriousness, though, it’s cool you’ve got a place for people to proverbially “touch grass.”

I'll get back to you on that.  ;)

My wife is from Washington State, and I have always liked "green" more than desert.  But this area of Utah, near Capitol Reef, is pretty spectacular.  I took my wife and two of our kids down there a week+ ago, and we had a great time.

Thanks,

-Smac

Edited by smac97
Posted
3 hours ago, smac97 said:

Thanks!  I took them with my cell phone.  No filters, no adjustments, just point and click.  This spot - Moonscape Overlook - is about 9 miles from the RV park, down a dirt road and then off that road onto another that is more "wishful thinking" than anything else, but it gets you there.

"Steamboat Point" is about 1/2 mile behind our park.  Our guests all get a beautiful view at sunset.

I'll get back to you on that.  ;)

My wife is from Washington State, and I have always liked "green" more than desert.  But this area of Utah, near Capitol Reef, is pretty spectacular.  I took my wife and two of our kids down there a week+ ago, and we had a great time.

Thanks,

-Smac

It’s a beautiful area, we vacation there often. Lots of popular off road trails. Good luck in your venture!

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