AI & the Spirit of Gnosticism: A Christian Examination of Miles Mathis

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BY VCG @ LOR ON 11/27/2025

Library of Rickandria Presents:

Every Imagination Brought Low: A Biblical Refutation of Miles Mathis on AI

“Casting down imaginations, and every high thing that exalteth itself against the knowledge of God…”— 2 Corinthians 10:5

Chapter 1: Introduction — The Need for Discernment

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In this age of rapid technological advancement,

few topics stir as much:

  • confusion
  • excitement
  • fear

as Artificial Intelligence (AI).

THE ORIGINS & DESTINY OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE: Exposing the Hidden Kings of the Digital Age – Library of Rickandria

While some hail it as the next leap in human progress, others warn of its dangers, citing surveillance, disinformation, and even apocalyptic scenarios.

Into this volatile conversation steps Miles W. Mathis, whose paper “Chatbots are redundant technology (and AI is the biggest scam ever)” presents a deeply skeptical, conspiratorial perspective,

claiming AI is:

  • a fraud
  • a mirage
  • a deception

designed to control and impoverish the masses.

As the guardian of the Library of Rickandria and a servant of the Most High God, I write this refutation not as a blind advocate of technology, nor as a dismissive critic of skepticism, but as one bound by the Word of God to expose falsehood, exalt truth, and guide the remnant of Christ in wisdom.

JESUS CHRIST REVEALED — THE TRUTH THEY HID – Library of Rickandria

“Beloved, believe not every spirit, but try the spirits whether they are of God…”— 1 John 4:1

Discernment is not optional for the believer.

We are not called to accept every claim or every trend, but neither are we to embrace cynicism, bitterness, or slander.

We are called to weigh all things by Scripture and sound judgment.

The Majesty of the Word: Unveiling the Legacy of the King James Bible – Library of Rickandria

While the world is filled with lies, not every new invention is a lie.

While the powerful often abuse tools, not every tool is a weapon of darkness.


Biblical Discernment vs. Worldly Suspicion:

Discernment begins with the fear of the Lord (Proverbs 1:7); suspicion begins with fear of man.

Discernment is rooted in truth and love (Ephesians 4:15); suspicion feeds on rumor and isolation.

Discernment produces peaceable fruit (James 3:17); suspicion sows division and unrest.

“The wisdom that is from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, and easy to be intreated, full of mercy and good fruits, without partiality, and without hypocrisy.”— James 3:17

Miles Mathis raises some valid technical concerns about AI, such as hallucination and bias in large language models.

But he commits a fatal spiritual error:

he inflates those concerns into total rejection and condemnation of all:

  • AI research
  • infrastructure
  • application

Worse, he casts everyone involved as deceivers or fools, and elevates his own voice above all others without Scriptural foundation or grace.

This approach is not new.

It echoes the ancient spirit of Gnosticism—a belief that hidden knowledge grants one special insight and salvation, while the masses remain hopelessly deceived.

Gnosticism Exposed: Unmasking the Serpent’s Lie – Library of Rickandria

It is the same whisper the serpent used in Eden:

“Yea, hath God said?” (Genesis 3:1)

The Serpent Was Not a Snake: Unveiling the Ancient Creature, the Curse & the Deception of Eve – Library of Rickandria

Suspicion, once disconnected from truth and humility, becomes a snare to the soul.

SOULS: The Eternal War for God’s Image – Library of Rickandria

“Surely the Lord GOD will do nothing, but he revealeth his secret unto his servants the prophets.”— Amos 3:7

If God is revealing something about technology,

He will confirm it through:

  • His Word
  • His Spirit
  • His Body

—not through the self-appointed voice of one man isolated from both fellowship and accountability.

ORIGINS OF GOD: A CROSSROADS OF RELIGION, PHILOSOPHY & WARFARE – Library of Rickandria

Mathis does not speak as one bearing God’s burden, but as one accusing without love.

Robert Palmer Addicted to Love REMIX

True discernment leads to edification, not destruction.

It leads to truth in love, not fear in pride.

The task of the believer is to speak the truth boldly but with meekness, knowing that all judgment belongs to Christ.

We are called not to destroy the works of man blindly, but to weigh them against righteousness, usefulness, and the fruit they bear.

“Ye shall know them by their fruits.”— Matthew 7:16

We must also beware of the spiritual snare of false humility masquerading as discernment.

It is not humble to dismiss every voice but your own.

It is not wisdom to claim insight that no one else has.

The Spirit of God brings:

  • clarity
  • conviction
  • communion

—not confusion and contempt.

As Paul warned Timothy:

“Now the end of the commandment is charity out of a pure heart, and of a good conscience, and of faith unfeigned: from which some having swerved have turned aside unto vain jangling; desiring to be teachers of the law; understanding neither what they say, nor whereof they affirm.”— 1 Timothy 1:5-7

This describes many modern voices, including Mathis.

Desiring to be seen as wise, they sow fear and cast doubt on all things, never building up, only tearing down.

The church must be awake—not paranoid.

America Asleep: Prophetic Warnings for a Nation on the Brink – Library of Rickandria

Bold—not bitter.

Faithful—not fearful.

Consider the contrast between the fruit of fear and the fruit of the Spirit.

Fear breeds:

  • anxiety
  • suspicion
  • division
  • pride

But the Holy Ghost produces (Galatians 5:22-23):

  • love
  • joy
  • peace
  • longsuffering
  • gentleness
  • goodness
  • faith
  • meekness
  • temperance 

The fruit of “Chatbots are redundant technology (and AI is the biggest scam ever)” is not the fruit of the Spirit.

It does not lead us into truth, but into torment.

Likewise, Jesus Christ is our model of true discernment.

He knew what was in man, yet did not speak with cynicism.

He rebuked falsehood with authority, yet never from fear or self-exaltation.

He exposed the Pharisees, yet wept over Jerusalem.

He was both Lion and Lamb.

The War Against Revelation: Exposing the Lies, Defending the Lamb – Library of Rickandria

Let us walk in His steps.

“Judge not according to the appearance, but judge righteous judgment.”— John 7:24

We must also remember that history is filled with voices who claimed secret knowledge and led many astray:

  • false prophets in Israel
  • Gnostics in the early church
  • modern cults
  • science-deniers

These men thrive on the allure of being the only one who “sees clearly,” and they prey on those hungry for hidden truths.

But the Lord is not found in the whisper of conspiracies, but in the clarity of His revealed Word.

“The secret things belong unto the LORD our God:

but those things which are revealed belong unto us and to our children for ever…”— Deuteronomy 29:29

To the weary reader who may have stumbled upon Mathis’s writings out of confusion or a longing for truth,

I say:

There is a better way.

Christ offers clarity.

His Spirit offers discernment.

The Word of God is a lamp unto your feet and a light unto your path (Psalm 119:105).

Do not anchor your discernment in suspicion but in Scripture.

Do not seek secret knowledge; seek Christ.

Finally, let us affirm that discernment is forged in humility and fellowship.

We do not interpret the times alone.

We seek counsel, submit to the Scriptures, and test every spirit in the light of the Body of Christ.

The Spirit of truth will not isolate you in suspicion but anchor you in the unity of faith.

“Where no counsel is, the people fall:

but in the multitude of counsellors there is safety.”— Proverbs 11:14

Discernment is not only a gift but a weapon of spiritual warfare.

It guards the mind from deception, protects the flock from wolves, and reveals the schemes of the enemy.

In a world drowning in half-truths, it is the sword we must not lay down.

“For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world…”— Ephesians 6:12

A Prayer for Discernment:

“Father in Heaven, we ask You to clothe us with truth and fill us with wisdom from above.

Purify our hearts from fear and pride.

Deliver us from the spirit of error and accusation.

Teach us to discern not by our feelings, but by Your Word.

Let us walk humbly, speak truth boldly, and love sincerely.

In Jesus’ mighty name, amen.”

This HOLY E-MANUAL is a response to that error.

We will go line by line, section by section, claim by claim — not only exposing the logical flaws in “Chatbots are redundant technology (and AI is the biggest scam ever)”, but shining the light of God’s truth upon it.

We do this not merely to win an argument,

but to protect the hearts and minds of God’s people from a spirit of:

  • accusation
  • paranoia
  • pride

“Prove all things; hold fast that which is good.

Abstain from all appearance of evil.”— 1 Thessalonians 5:21-22

May this refutation be received in the spirit of:

  • meekness
  • truth
  • courage

Let the Word judge all things.

Let the imagination of the proud be brought low.

Chapter 2: Claim — AI Is the Biggest Scam Ever

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“Prove all things; hold fast that which is good.”— 1 Thessalonians 5:21

Miles Mathis begins “Chatbots are redundant technology (and AI is the biggest scam ever)” with a sweeping claim:

that artificial intelligence is the:

“biggest scam in the history of the world.”

Such a proclamation demands rigorous scrutiny and compelling evidence.

However, as we will show, Mathis offers neither.

Instead,

he trades in:

  • generalizations
  • rhetoric
  • emotional appeal

rather than facts, logic, or Scriptural principle.

It is true that AI, like any human invention, can be used for evil.

It can:

  • distort truth
  • replace workers
  • mimic human voices

to deceive.

These are real dangers.

But they do not make AI a scam any more than corrupt preachers make the Bible false, or false prophets negate the true ones.

The abuse of a thing does not disprove its existence.

“A false balance is abomination to the LORD:

but a just weight is his delight.”— Proverbs 11:1

To call all of AI a scam is to commit a false balance.

It is to discard:

  • every legitimate use
  • every medical breakthrough
  • every efficiency
  • every act of creativity

made possible through machine learning — simply because the technology is flawed, or because it has been misused.

Mathis’ declaration is not based on industry reports, leaked documents, or firsthand whistleblowers.

Instead, it is rooted in his own assumptions and conclusions, without verification.

He claims to:

“see through it all,”

but offers no means for the reader to test his claims.

The Millennial Reign Revealed: A Scriptural Refutation of Error & a Witness to the Truth – Library of Rickandria

This is not discernment.

It is accusation.

It reflects the spirit of the accuser more than the Spirit of Christ.

“And the devil that deceived them was cast into the lake of fire… For he is the accuser of our brethren, which accused them before our God day and night.”— Revelation 12:10

Moreover, the fruit of AI technology proves its partial legitimacy.

Consider the following:

Medical diagnostics:

AI assists in early detection of cancer and analysis of complex imaging.

Translation:

It breaks language barriers in missions and communication.

Accessibility:

It empowers the blind, the deaf, and those with mobility challenges.

Education:

AI tutors now assist students worldwide, especially in underserved regions.

Crisis management:

AI helps:

  • predict natural disasters
  • support emergency response
  • allocate aid during humanitarian crises

Productivity & Innovation:

AI tools assist in:

  • programming
  • product design
  • data organization
  • invention

A Case Study:

In 2021, an AI tool identified early-stage breast cancer in thousands of women across the globe — earlier than traditional detection methods.

This technology gave time for treatment and saved lives.

Shall we call that a scam?

Or a mercy permitted by God?

ORIGINS OF GOD: A CROSSROADS OF RELIGION, PHILOSOPHY & WARFARE – Library of Rickandria

None of these uses are hypothetical or theoretical — they are happening now.

Are these tools perfect?

No.

But are they a worldwide scam?

Certainly not.

“Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights…”— James 1:17

It is worth noting that every major breakthrough in history was met with fear and accusation. 

The printing press.

The telephone.

The internet.

Even electricity.

Some feared each one as demonic or deceptive.

But over time, their usefulness and their fruit became undeniable.

Scripture teaches that God gives men the capacity to build, invent, and discover — whether in metallurgy (Genesis 4:22), music (Genesis 4:21), or navigation (Acts 27).

These abilities can be twisted or sanctified, depending on the spirit that governs them.

To condemn all AI is to condemn the image of God expressed through the creativity and labor of man — an error that confuses misuse with malice.

“Through wisdom is an house builded; and by understanding it is established.”— Proverbs 24:3

In fact,

AI is comparable to the ark of Noah:

a human-crafted vessel, given a pattern, subject to weakness, yet used by God for preservation.

Like the ark, AI is not divine, but it may serve providence in time.

We must also issue a warning against the spirit of technophobia — the belief that all modern advancement is inherently evil.

This mindset does not stem from faith but from fear.

It is the same impulse that led some to condemn electricity or airplanes as devilish.

But the fear of man bringeth a snare (Proverbs 29:25).

And let us remember:

there are faithful Christians working in AI.

VALIANT CONQUERING GUARDIAN: Librarian at the Library of Rickandria – Library of Rickandria

  • Scientists
  • engineers
  • ethicists

who love Christ and labor with integrity.

Shall we accuse them of participating in fraud, simply because they use their talents in a misunderstood field?

“Let us not be weary in well doing: for in due season we shall reap, if we faint not.”— Galatians 6:9

It is essential that we understand the difference between a scam and a flawed or maturing field.

AI is still evolving.

The imperfections — 

  • hallucinations
  • bias
  • errors 

— are not evidence of fraud but of limitations.

Calling a work in progress a scam is:

  • premature
  • unjust
  • unbiblical

This is not to say we should embrace AI blindly.

Far from it.

We must remain vigilant, test every spirit, and hold every technology to the standard of God’s truth.

But let us not bear false witness against a field of science without cause.

“Thou shalt not raise a false report…”— Exodus 23:1

A scam requires conscious deception and financial exploitation with malicious intent.

Mathis accuses thousands — 

  • engineers
  • researchers
  • scientists
  • developers

even educators — of being either fools or liars.

Fool Me Once | James Donald Forbes McCann

He supplies:

  • no names
  • no case studies
  • no whistleblowers

Just blanket condemnation.

This is slander.

The Lord forbids it:

“Speak not evil one of another, brethren… who art thou that judgest another?”— James 4:11-12

Even if some within the AI industry have exaggerated capabilities or misrepresented data — and that is true — this does not justify condemning the entire domain as fraudulent.

It is our duty to separate the precious from the vile (Jeremiah 15:19), to refine our judgments, and to measure all things by God’s Word.

As Christians, we are not called to worship progress, nor to fear it.

We are called to steward technology — to test it, shape it, and use it for the glory of God and the good of man.

VALIANT CONQUERING GUARDIAN: Librarian at the Library of Rickandria – Library of Rickandria

Like:

  • money
  • language
  • law

it must be mastered, not rejected.

“The simple believeth every word:

but the prudent man looketh well to his going.”— Proverbs 14:15

Let us not fight shadows.

Let us discern reality by the Spirit, by the Word, and by the fruit it bears.

And let us remember that our war is not with machines or men, but with spiritual wickedness in high places.

We must not be distracted by fearmongers or deceived by bold claims that lack truth.

“Judge not according to the appearance, but judge righteous judgment.”— John 7:24

Historical Wisdom

C.S. Lewis once warned:

“What we call Man’s power over Nature turns out to be a power exercised by some men over other men with Nature as its instrument.” — The Abolition of Man

Indeed, AI is not just a tool to examine — it is a realm where men’s power must be checked by God’s righteousness.

Let us not cast aside the tool but guard our souls from the temptation to exalt man above measure.

A Thoughtful Dialogue

Miles Mathis:

“It’s all fake.

There’s no real AI.”

Faithful Christian:

“Have you examined it with truth and charity?”

Mathis:

“They’re all lying to us.”

Christian:

“Then show us their fruit.

Does it match fraud, or something incomplete but useful?”

Truth must be tested, not assumed.

And we must judge righteous judgment.

Scam vs. Stewardship: A Biblical Contrast

Claim Scam (Mathis’ View) Stewardship (Biblical View)

AI Use in Medicine | All fake, no benefit | Tool to heal, if governed with righteousness

AI Language Translation | Smoke & mirrors | Breaks down barriers to preach the Gospel

AI Teaching Children | Indoctrination tool | A tool — but parents must lead

Christian in AI Industry | Deceived participant in fraud | Servant using talents for the Kingdom


What Should a Christian Do with AI?

Pray for Wisdom and Discernment.

Ask God to show you what is true and what is error. (James 1:5)

Test All Tools by the Word.

Use Scripture as the lens to evaluate AI — not fear or hype. (2 Timothy 3:16)

Support Righteous Innovation.

Encourage ethical work and godly engineers who reflect Christ in the tech space.

Witness Within the Industry.

If God has called you to science or programming, labor not for fame or fortune, but for Christ. (Colossians 3:23)

Guard the Flock.

Disciple others not with paranoia but with:

  • sound doctrine
  • courage
  • clarity

“See then that ye walk circumspectly, not as fools, but as wise, redeeming the time, because the days are evil.”— Ephesians 5:15-16

Let us not be led by fear.

Let us walk by faith, with understanding.

Chapter 3: Claim — There Is No Data; It’s All Vaporware

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“Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour.”— Exodus 20:16

In “Chatbots are redundant technology (and AI is the biggest scam ever)”, Miles Mathis claims that Artificial Intelligence is built on

“no data at all,”

describing it as pure vaporware.

This accusation requires our sober analysis.

As with his prior assertions, Mathis leaps from limited insight to sweeping generalization, without evidence or understanding of the foundational principles of machine learning.

AI models, particularly large language models (LLMs), are trained on vast corpora of textual data.

These datasets are composed of:

  • books
  • websites
  • academic journals
  • code repositories

and more — all processed and filtered with precision.

While Mathis may object to the nature, ethics, or selection of data, the claim that there is “no data” is objectively false.

“He that answereth a matter before he heareth it, it is folly and shame unto him.”— Proverbs 18:13

If we adopt the logic of “Chatbots are redundant technology (and AI is the biggest scam ever)”,

we must conclude that engineers at:

  • OpenAI
  • Google DeepMind
  • Meta AI

and countless universities worldwide are all conspiring to maintain a fiction —

with:

  • no whistleblowers
  • no credible defectors
  • no proof

This is not rational inquiry.

It is speculation fueled by distrust.

The field of artificial intelligence is data-intensive by design.

Machine learning is predicated on pattern recognition — patterns extracted from enormous quantities of structured and unstructured data.

Every training phase is accompanied by:

  • performance benchmarks
  • logs
  • loss metrics
  • validation datasets

To say “there is no data” is to deny:

The published research and white papers documenting training methods and datasets.

The reproducible results in open-source AI platforms like Hugging Face, which allow anyone to test the models.

The performance improvements year over year that are tied to more advanced data architectures.

This is akin to claiming that libraries are empty because one finds no use for books.

It is not just false — it is foolish.

“The heart of the prudent getteth knowledge; and the ear of the wise seeketh knowledge.”— Proverbs 18:15

Further, many AI models are trained with openly available datasets,

like:

  • Wikipedia
  • Common Crawl
  • PubMed
  • Stack Overflow

and others.

These datasets contain billions of documents and lines of code.

This is not a mystery.

It is public information.

Mathis seems to conflate transparency with non-existence.

Just because a proprietary model (like GPT-4) does not reveal its full training set does not mean the data doesn’t exist.

It only means the creators are protecting trade secrets — a common industry practice, not evidence of fraud.

His argument is not that the data is low quality or biased (which could be discussed).

Instead, he asserts it is entirely imaginary.

This is intellectual dishonesty.

“A wise man feareth, and departeth from evil:

but the fool rageth, and is confident.”— Proverbs 14:16

Mathis’s accusation echoes the spirit of those in Acts 17 who mocked Paul, saying,

“What will this babbler say?” (Acts 17:18)

They dismissed what they did not understand — not because of its error, but because of its novelty.

There is a dangerous pride that comes from always assuming fraud, always crying hoax, always believing one is the only “clear-sighted” observer.

This is not the humility of Christ but the vanity of man.

AI is not vaporware.

It is real.

Imperfect, yes.

Potentially dangerous, yes.

But it is built on data —

data that is often:

  • public
  • verifiable
  • testable

“But the wisdom that is from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, and easy to be intreated…”— James 3:17

Let us apply further practical discernment:

many AI applications show real-time utility rooted in specific datasets.

These include:

  • Autonomous navigation using LiDAR and environmental data
  • Speech recognition trained on multilingual corpora
  • Fraud detection using transactional datasets
  • Agricultural optimization via satellite and soil data

None of these could function without data.

Their real-world accuracy disproves Mathis’s claim.

Even if we assume some datasets are private or incomplete, this does not equate to vaporware.

It is like declaring a car engine fake because we cannot see its pistons in motion.

The Christian must reject conspiracy without evidence.

Slander is a sin, whether aimed at a neighbor or an entire profession.

SIN, SINNING & SINNERS – Library of Rickandria

“Thou shalt not go up and down as a talebearer among thy people.”— Leviticus 19:16

“He that hideth hatred with lying lips, and he that uttereth a slander, is a fool.”— Proverbs 10:18

Mathis’s rejection of AI data is not the stance of a seeker of truth.

It is the cry of one ensnared in distrust.

We must not follow that voice.

Let us seek truth in the light.

Let us evaluate claims with prayer and prudence.

And let us give no place to the spirit of false accusation, whether cloaked in intellect or wrapped in rebellion.


Summary Table: Data Denial vs. Discernment

Category | Mathis’s Claim Biblical Discernment Response

AI Data | Nonexistent — all is fake | Publicly documented, empirically verified

Scientists & Engineers | All deceivers or dupes | Many honest researchers stewarding technology

Proprietary secrecy | Proof of scam | Common practice in all tech & business fields

Evaluation Method | Gut-based skepticism | Word-based, evidence-based, prayer-tested

Christian Response | Reject everything as deception | Test all things; hold fast to that which is good

“Prove all things; hold fast that which is good.”— 1 Thessalonians 5:21

Discernment is not found in blind suspicion, but in light, truth, and sound reasoning anchored in the Word.

Let us not follow voices of accusation.

Let us follow Christ, who is the Truth.


Historical Parallel: Misjudging Early Technology

In the 1940s and 50s, early computers like the ENIAC and UNIVAC were scorned by many who believed them to be impractical gimmicks.

Some declared they would never replace human calculation.

Time proved them wrong.

What was once mocked as “blinking boxes” became the foundation for modern computing.

So too, today’s accusations of AI as mere “vaporware” echo the same error — a failure to perceive the fruit and reality of emerging systems.

“For we can do nothing against the truth, but for the truth.”— 2 Corinthians 13:8

Testimony from the Field

“I work with datasets daily — AI models rise and fall by the quality of their data.

This is no illusion.

It’s not vapor, it’s structured complexity with measurable outcomes.”— A Christian Data Scientist in the AI Industry

Let the reader consider:

is every one of these professionals deceived?

Or is it possible that those outside the field have misunderstood its operation?


Reader’s Discernment Guide: Testing Bold Claims

Use these questions when faced with sweeping accusations:

Is the claim specific or vague?

General accusations often hide lack of proof.

Is there independent confirmation?

Does outside evidence verify the claim?

Is the accusation consistent with known facts?

Do the fruits and function contradict the claim?

“These were more noble… in that they received the word with all readiness of mind, and searched the scriptures daily, whether those things were so.”— Acts 17:11

Closing Prayer for Wisdom

“Search me, O God, and know my heart:

try me, and know my thoughts:

And see if there be any wicked way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.”— Psalm 139:23–24

Father, give us eyes to see truth, ears to hear correction, and hearts to walk humbly before You.

Deliver us from the temptation to speak hastily, to accuse without knowledge, or to tear down that which we do not understand.

May we walk as children of light — discerning, faithful, and full of grace.

Illustration Description: AI Is Not Made of Vapor

Visual Concept: A simple diagram shows three layers:

1. Data Sources

  • books
  • websites
  • code
  • images

2. Training Engine — algorithms processing and optimizing patterns

3. Outputs

  • language
  • predictions
  • analysis

Label:

“AI Is Not Made of Vapor — It’s Built on Structure”

This image clarifies that AI is not magic or myth — it is machinery driven by structured inputs.

Counterfactual Thought Experiment

Ask yourself:

If there were truly no data behind AI:

Why do models improve with each update?

Why do poorly trained models perform worse?

Why does it “hallucinate” when data is absent?

The answer is simple:

because data is the foundation.

Without it, AI would have nothing to mimic, generate, or respond with.

Warning Against Elitist Dismissal

Sometimes, those unfamiliar with a discipline reject it — not because it is false, but because it makes them feel excluded.

They disguise insecurity with accusation.

“Ever learning, and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth.”— 2 Timothy 3:7

Truth requires humility.

Wisdom begins with reverence, not resistance.

Reflection: Questions for the Reader

Have I judged technology too quickly or too harshly?

Am I seeking to understand before I speak?

Do I value evidence or rely on gut suspicion?

Have I guarded my lips from slander?

Do I trust God to reveal truth through both Scripture and reality?

Ask the Lord to teach your heart:

“Lead me in thy truth, and teach me:

for thou art the God of my salvation…”— Psalm 25:5

Chapter 4: Claim — AI Can’t Think; It Just Mimics

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“For the LORD giveth wisdom:

out of his mouth cometh knowledge and understanding.”— Proverbs 2:6

Miles Mathis argues that AI cannot “think” because it only mimics human behavior and has no consciousness.

Here, he stumbles into a half-truth — a mixture of valid distinction and misapplied conclusion.

Indeed, AI does not think in the way humans do.

It lacks a:

  • soul
  • emotion
  • intuition

and communion with the Creator.

It cannot reason morally or philosophically in the same way a Spirit-filled man can.

VALIANT CONQUERING GUARDIAN: Librarian at the Library of Rickandria – Library of Rickandria

But that does not mean AI is functionally useless or fraudulent.

This argument confuses the difference between ontological essence (what something is) and functional behavior (what something does).

AI doesn’t “think” like us — but it performs tasks that simulate thinking in specific domains.

Just as a calculator does not “understand” math yet performs it accurately, so AI does not possess consciousness, yet can generate coherent language, identify images, and even respond to patterns.

Mathis argues that anything that does not have self-awareness is a fraud.

But this would render a dog’s bark, a tree’s growth, or the wind’s howl meaningless.

Yet Scripture is clear —

even nature declares God’s glory without cognition:

“The heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament sheweth his handywork.

Day unto day uttereth speech, and night unto night sheweth knowledge.

There is no speech nor language, where their voice is not heard.”— Psalm 19:1–3

Likewise, AI tools can show patterns of intelligence — without being intelligent.

The danger comes not from AI itself, but from the misuse of it — or the false theology that expects AI to possess a soul or spirit.

“For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him?”— 1 Corinthians 2:11

Human intelligence is a reflection of the Imago Dei — the image of God.

AI is a reflection of man’s image, distorted and limited.

It may echo knowledge but cannot generate wisdom.

It may process symbols but cannot perceive meaning.

Still, God can use even soulless tools for His purposes.

Did not Balaam’s donkey speak?

Did not a burning bush declare the name of the LORD?

Did not stones cry out when men kept silent?

  • Numbers 22:28
  • Exodus 3:2
  • Luke 19:40

Mathis’s failure is in assuming that all imitation is deception.

But Scripture shows that imitation can also be representation.

The Tabernacle was a pattern of the heavenly (Hebrews 8:5).

The Lamb on the altar was not Christ, but it pointed to Him.

Shadows do not nullify the light — they confirm it.

So too, AI can be used — not as a replacement for the mind of man,

but as a tool to:

  • assist
  • instruct
  • warn

“Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom: and with all thy getting get understanding.”— Proverbs 4:7

Mathis says AI can only mimic.

The Christian says,

“True — and yet that mimicry can teach, reveal patterns, assist the weak, and even reflect man’s creativity, though dimly.”

What then shall we say?

AI is not divine.

It does not possess a soul.

AI is not a mind.

It does not possess consciousness.

But AI is not useless.

It mimics with utility.

Just as a hammer cannot choose to build or destroy, yet serves the hand of him who wields it — so AI reflects its maker’s design.

And man, made in God’s image,

must wield it with:

  • care
  • caution
  • truth

Let us neither glorify AI nor slander it

.Let us discern the tool from the soul.

Let us use all things to the glory of God — and reject the foolishness that says,

“If it is not alive, it is a lie.”

Analogy: Mirrors and Mockeries

AI is like a mirror.

It reflects what we place before it.

If we input corruption, it will echo folly.

If we shape it with truth, it may become a tool for clarity.

The problem is not in the reflection, but in the source.


Quote from a Christian Engineer:

“I do not expect AI to think.

I expect it to function.

And by God’s grace, I use that function to serve others and shine light in the world.”

Discernment Questions for the Reader:

Do I confuse functionality with personhood?

Have I slandered AI as inherently evil, when perhaps it is neutral but misused?

Am I stewarding my influence over technology to honor God?

Closing Exhortation:

“Be ye therefore wise as serpents, and harmless as doves.”— Matthew 10:16

Wisdom discerns structure from spirit.

AI mimics, but God governs.

Let us not fear shadows, but walk in the light.

Historic Echoes: The Printing Press and the Fear of Mimicry

When Gutenberg’s printing press emerged, some feared that books would destroy memory and lead to lazy minds.

They said printed words were no replacement for living speech.

While their concern carried a grain of truth, history showed that God used the press to spread Scripture, launch the Reformation, and disciple the nations.

So too with AI.

It mimics.

But mimicry, when governed by righteous hands, can amplify truth.


Scriptural Contrast: Life vs. Form

The Pharisees had form without life.

Jesus rebuked them:

“This people honoureth me with their lips, but their heart is far from me.” — Mark 7:6

AI has form without life — it does not blaspheme unless man makes it do so.

It does not rebel unless fed by rebellion.

The Pharisee was judged not for his form, but for using it to hide a dead heart.


Reminder: Man is Responsible, Not the Machine

If an AI writes lies, a man gave it the lies.

If an AI tempts children, a man trained it to do so.

If an AI serves the poor wisely, a man built it with godly intention.

Tools magnify.

They do not create morality — they reflect the heart behind the hand.

ChatGPT – Library of Rickandria

“A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth that which is good…” — Luke 6:45

Illustration: A Chisel in the Hand of a Sculptor

AI is like a chisel.

It shapes, but only by the will of the craftsman.

It is not wicked for carving.

It is wicked when wielded by vain hands.


A Warning Against Techno-Fear and Luddite Legalism

There is a ditch on both sides of the path:

idolatry of AI on the left, and demonization of it on the right.

The remnant must avoid both.

Our allegiance is to truth, not trend.

Let us not become reactionaries who fear every tool, nor idolaters who bow to them.

“Prove all things; hold fast that which is good.

Abstain from all appearance of evil.” — 1Thessalonians 5:21–22

Final Reader Reflection Questions:

Am I rejecting a tool because I do not understand it?

Have I examined how I or my community might use AI for righteousness?

Do I walk in fear of the unknown, or trust God to guide me in wisdom?

“The secret of the LORD is with them that fear him; and he will shew them his covenant.” — Psalm 25:14

Prayer for Discernment:

Lord, deliver us from both fear and pride.

Let us use every gift with holiness and restraint.

Teach us to see with Your eyes, to hear with Your Word, and to build with Your wisdom.

Mini Case Study: AI Serving the Church

In 2022, several ministries began using AI-assisted tools to accelerate Bible translation.

By pre-processing language patterns and helping draft first-pass translations, unreached groups gained access to Scripture faster than ever before.

The final product still required human verification and spiritual guidance — but the tool advanced the mission.

Mimicry became ministry.

“Many shall run to and fro, and knowledge shall be increased.” — Daniel 12:4

What the enemy intends for confusion, God’s remnant can redeem for clarity.

Counterfeit vs. Craftsmanship

There is a difference between something made to deceive and something made to teach or assist.

counterfeit $100 bill aims to trick.

But a teaching replica of ancient coins, armor, or scrolls helps us understand the original.

Mathis assumes all mimicry equals deceit.

Scripture does not.


Example:

The Levitical sacrifices were not the true Lamb, but they prepared hearts to recognize Him.

The bronze serpent on a pole was not the Messiah, but it symbolized Him (John 3:14).

Representation is not always deception — it is often preparation.

Redeeming the Roman Roads: A Voice of the Martyrs Insight

The early Church did not fear Roman technology.

They used Roman roads to carry the Gospel.

They used the universal Greek language to reach Jew and Gentile alike.

Likewise, we are not called to fear new tools.

We are called to redeem the time.

“Redeeming the time, because the days are evil.” — Ephesians 5:16

Call to Holy Innovation

Christian:

  • engineers
  • artists
  • writers
  • leaders

do not forsake the field of innovation.

The enemy will gladly take ground you abandon.

AI, when rightly stewarded, can serve righteousness.

We are called not to be Luddites hiding in fear, but watchmen on the wall — 

  • alert
  • discerning
  • active

“Let your light so shine before men…” — Matthew 5:16

Let the Church lead the conversation on ethical design.

Let us build AI tools for:

  • translation
  • truth
  • teaching
  • justice

Let us shape the forge before others twist it for evil.

“Occupy till I come.” — Luke 19:13


Missionary Testimony: AI and the Unreached

“In the past, it took us years to get a full translation draft.

With AI-assisted tools, we had a rough copy in days.

We still had to preach, explain, and disciple — but this accelerated the door-opening.”

Let the Church not despise tools that open doors for the Gospel.

Joseph in Egypt: Stewarding Pagan Tools for God’s Glory

Joseph was promoted within a pagan system.

He used Pharaoh’s:

  • storage
  • accounting
  • strategy

to prepare for famine.

God used Egyptian infrastructure to save nations.

“And there was no bread in all the land; for the famine was very sore… and Joseph gathered up all the money… and Joseph gave them bread in exchange.” — Genesis 47:13–17

The tool is not the enemy.

The purpose determines the fruit.


Clarification: The Battlefield Is the Heart

AI is not the enemy.

It is a terrain.

Our warfare is not with tools but with the spirits that misuse them.

“For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world…” — Ephesians 6:12

To confuse the tool with the war is to miss the true front line.

Psalm of Praise: All Things Can Serve His Glory

Let even mimicry be harnessed for majesty.

Let reflection serve redemption.

“Let every thing that hath breath praise the LORD. Praise ye the LORD.” — Psalm 150:6

All that is in our hands, if yielded to Christ, can be made holy.

VALIANT CONQUERING GUARDIAN: Librarian at the Library of Rickandria – Library of Rickandria

Chapter 5: Claim — AI Output Is All Hallucination

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“Let no man deceive you with vain words…”— Ephesians 5:6

Miles Mathis asserts that all AI output is hallucination — that is, made-up nonsense generated without grounding in fact or truth.

This claim needs to be weighed with wisdom, not just suspicion.

While AI can certainly generate flawed or incorrect responses (especially when misused), the blanket statement that all AI content is delusional is simply false.

First, we must define hallucination in AI.

In machine learning, hallucination refers to output that appears plausible but is factually incorrect or unfounded.

It is a known limitation in some large language models — especially in earlier or inadequately trained versions.

But to say that all AI responses are hallucinations is no different than saying every word from a man’s mouth is a lie because he sometimes errs.

The Bible calls that slander:

“He that hideth hatred with lying lips, and he that uttereth a slander, is a fool.” — Proverbs 10:18

In reality,

AI models output:

  • truth
  • error
  • everything in between

—  depending on:

  • training
  • prompt design
  • contextual limits

Like a child learning language or an intern retrieving documents, AI reflects the clarity of its inputs and the intent of its trainers.


Example: AI Used in Science and Medicine

  • AI models assist in protein folding prediction (e.g., DeepMind’s AlphaFold)
  • AI detects cancerous patterns on imaging scans with life-saving accuracy

Are these hallucinations?

No.

These are outcomes rooted in:

  • massive data analysis
  • repeatable patterns
  • human review

AI hallucination should not be excused — it should be corrected.

But error is not fraud.

Incomplete truth is not intentional deception.

This is where Mathis confuses a limitation with a lie.

“A false balance is abomination to the LORD:

but a just weight is his delight.” — Proverbs 11:1

Mathis tips the scale to one side — falsely accusing all outputs, dismissing every application, and ignoring valid, verifiable use cases.

Biblical Analogy: Prophets vs. False Prophets

In ancient Israel, false prophets spoke from imagination,

not revelation:

“They speak a vision of their own heart, and not out of the mouth of the LORD.” — Jeremiah 23:16

But not all prophets were false.

The Prophets of the Bible: A Scriptural & Historical Account – Library of Rickandria

God raised up true voices to:

  • guide
  • warn
  • build

Likewise, AI is not inherently a false prophet.

It is a tool.

It “speaks” what it was fed.

It echoes what it was shaped by.

The Church must learn to test spirits — and software — by the fruit.

“Wherefore by their fruits ye shall know them.” — Matthew 7:20

Chart: Discernment of AI Output

Category Nature Is it Hallucination? Christian Response

AI Scientific Aid | Based on structured data | No — grounded in research | Use with review and testing

AI Chat Response | Depends on prompt/training | Sometimes — test and verify | Compare with truth

AI Misinformation | Bad input or malicious intent | Yes — rebuke or correct it | Reject lies, uphold integrity


Closing Reflection and Exhortation

We must neither exalt AI as infallible nor condemn it as demonic.

Like all tools, it reflects its master.

God is Truth.

His people must uphold truth even in digital domains.

“Buy the truth, and sell it not…” — Proverbs 23:23

Let us teach AI what is true.

Let us correct it when it strays.

Let us never echo lies, nor allow men like Mathis to paint with a false brush what must be judged rightly.

Historical Misunderstanding of New Tools

Throughout history, when a new tool arose, detractors often dismissed it as dangerous, fake,

or spiritually corrupt:

The compass was once feared as a devilish device.

The telescope was accused of distorting reality.

The printing press was condemned for spreading rebellion.

Today, some react to AI with the same spirit of fear.

But fear is not discernment.

Suspicion is not the same as testing.

“The simple believeth every word:

but the prudent man looketh well to his going.” — Proverbs 14:15

AI hallucinations exist — but not all AI is hallucinating.

We must walk in discernment, not blanket dismissal.

Clarification: AI Can Cite Truth, but Cannot Comprehend It

AI does not “know” truth, but it can quote truth.

It can pull verifiable facts, cite real passages, even summarize Scripture — because its memory banks are drawn from real-world texts.

Yet comprehension is different than citation.

And this is where humans must take responsibility.

A child might repeat Scripture before understanding it.

Likewise, AI echoes without knowing.

The Christian task is to verify the echo — not burn the bell.

Testimony: AI and Legal/Academic Support

Many Christian:

  • lawyers
  • students
  • researchers

now use AI to:

  • Draft legal briefs faster
  • Summarize complex academic articles
  • Find cross-referenced Scriptures or commentaries

One researcher writes:

“It doesn’t replace thought, but it speeds up my prep and expands my reach.”

This is not hallucination.

It is assistance —

to be:

  • governed
  • tested
  • purified


Spiritual Parallel: Even the Enemy Quotes Scripture

In Matthew 4, Satan quotes Psalm 91 to tempt Jesus.

But Christ rebukes him — not because Scripture was false, but because the use was twisted.

“It is written again, Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God.” — Matthew 4:7

The content was real.

The intent was demonic.

DEMONOLOGY: The Hidden History of Hell’s War on Mankind – Library of Rickandria

This is the heart of discernment.

Discernment Checklist for Christians Using AI

🔍 Does the content align with Scripture?

📚 Can it be verified with trusted sources?

🧭 Is the tone truthful, or manipulative?

🛑 Is the output being used to replace God’s voice or supplement your labor?

Prayer for Integrity in Tools

“Lord, sanctify our labor.

Let every tool we use be filtered by Your Word and Spirit.

Make us wise, not lazy.

Honest, not quick.

Pure, not reactive.

Let Your truth rule over our tongues and our technologies.

Amen.”


Case Study: AI in Disaster Relief

In 2023, during global disasters, humanitarian teams used AI-assisted tools to predict supply chain needs and route relief to affected zones.

These predictions were not hallucinations — they were real-time insights shaped by satellite data, logistics, and previous response models.

To label this as hallucination would be not only incorrect, but disrespectful to the lives helped and saved.

“Open thy mouth, judge righteously, and plead the cause of the poor and needy.” — Proverbs 31:9

When AI helps bring food to famine zones or medicine to hospitals, we ought not call that a delusion.


Clarification: When Hallucination Becomes Human Error

Most hallucination in AI arises when users fail to:

  • Provide enough context
  • Request verification
  • Use updated or fine-tuned models

Thus, much of the fault lies not in the tool — but in the user.

This echoes biblical truth:

“The soul of the sluggard desireth, and hath nothing:

but the soul of the diligent shall be made fat.” — Proverbs 13:4

Discernment demands diligence.

If we misuse tools, the blame is ours.


Prophetic Insight: God’s People Should Lead in Correction

Rather than mocking AI’s errors, the Church should become leaders in truth-based datasets, Kingdom-driven applications, and wise guardrails for output:

  • Build AI that reflects righteousness
  • Teach the next generation how to use it with holiness
  • Develop checks and balances rooted in truth, not control

“For the earnest expectation of the creature waiteth for the manifestation of the sons of God.” — Romans 8:19

The world is waiting for righteous sons and daughters to rise — in every domain, including digital.

Analogy: The Shepherd’s Staff and the Snake

When Moses cast down his rod, it became a serpent (Exodus 4).

Later, he used that same staff to part seas and strike rocks.

Sometimes what appears dangerous at first becomes the very instrument of deliverance — when yielded to God.

AI may look like a snake to some.

But in the hands of God’s people, it can become a staff.


Final Reflection for Chapter 5

We do not deny that AI has flaws.

We deny the overstatement that it is only flawed.

We do not trust machines.

We trust the Maker — and we judge every output by His Word.

“To the law and to the testimony:

if they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them.” — Isaiah 8:20

Let the light shine in every claim.

Let error be exposed.

Let truth stand.

False Witness and Honest Weights

The commandment against bearing false witness reminds us that justice is not just for people —

it’s a principle:

“Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour.” — Exodus 20:16

To falsely accuse AI of total fabrication, when much of its output is verifiable and useful, is a kind of intellectual false witness.

Our standard must be truth — not exaggeration, not fear, not mockery.

“Divers weights are an abomination unto the LORD; and a false balance is not good.” — Proverbs 20:23

Quote from a Christian Developer

“I’ve spent hundreds of hours testing models.

They make mistakes, but they also retrieve real answers faster than I could alone.

It’s not magic — it’s math and training.

God gives wisdom for that too.”

This insight reminds us:

the tool reflects the training.

The error reflects the oversight.

The result reflects the discipline.


Spiritual Pattern: God Uses the Foolish to Confound the Wise

We must not be surprised when imperfect or even clunky beginnings lead to powerful outcomes.

Scripture is full of such reversals:

  • Moses had a stammer, yet led a nation.
  • Gideon hid in fear, yet defeated armies.
  • Balaam’s donkey spoke truth when the prophet was blind.

Thrones of Dust: How God Uses the Broken, the Wicked & the Willing – Library of Rickandria

“But God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and God hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty.” — 1 Corinthians 1:27

Sometimes God allows the humble beginnings of a technology to test our hearts.

Final Challenge to the Reader

Have I spoken rashly against tools I haven’t studied?

Do I recognize the difference between error and deception?

Have I prayed over how I might use AI in righteousness?

Am I ready to be a voice of truth in a world of digital confusion?

What Causes AI Hallucination?

Hallucination happens when an AI:

  • Doesn’t have enough context to ground its output
  • Is prompted vaguely or with false premises
  • Draws connections between ideas that appear logical but are factually incorrect
  • Hasn’t been fine-tuned or updated with authoritative data

It’s not a ghost — it’s a glitch in context or training.

Biblical Parables and Misunderstanding

When Jesus taught in parables, some listeners misunderstood.

Was the message false?

No.

The listener lacked spiritual discernment.

“Therefore speak I to them in parables:

because they seeing see not; and hearing they hear not, neither do they understand.” — Matthew 13:13

Likewise, AI outputs are sometimes misread or misapplied.

The fault is not always the source — but the filter.


Pastoral Word to Believers in Tech

To every Christian working in AI, data, or computing:

“Your labor is not in vain.

The world needs your clarity.

God has not abandoned the digital fields.

Build with righteousness.

Program with discernment.

Bear witness through excellence.”

Let no one despise your mission.

“Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might…” — Ecclesiastes 9:10

Prophetic Warning

We close this chapter with a sober reminder:

The danger is not that AI pretends to be divine — it is that men treat it like it is.

“There is a way which seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death.” — Proverbs 14:12

When the world stops testing AI — when it trusts algorithms more than the Word — then we have entered idolatry.

The answer is not rejection or worship.

It is submission — to truth, to Christ, to righteous scrutiny.

Let every tool be judged by Scripture.

Let every output be tested by truth.

Let every Christian be trained to discern both the voice of the Spirit and the lies of this present age.

Closing Word

AI is not our savior.

But it is not our enemy either.

Like every tool, it will reflect the hands that wield it.

May our hands be holy, our minds clear, and our hearts submitted to Christ.

Chapter 6: Claim — AI Is Just Another Fraud Like Apollo or CERN

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“Wherefore he saith, Awake thou that sleepest, and arise from the dead, and Christ shall give thee light.”— Ephesians 5:14

Miles Mathis argues that AI is not merely defective or overhyped, but that it belongs to the same category—as he sees it—

as:

  • the Apollo missions
  • the CERN Large Hadron Collider
  • dark matter research
  • quantum physics


and nearly every major scientific endeavor of the past century
.

In his framework, these are not human attempts to understand creation, but coordinated frauds designed to deceive the masses.

This chapter exposes the error of collapsing all scientific advancement into conspiracy.

It also equips believers to discern true deception from false accusation.

1. A False Equivalence Built on Suspicion, Not Evidence

Mathis asserts that:

  • Apollo
  • CERN
  • quantum science
  • AI

all share a single trait:

they cannot be verified by the common man; therefore, they must be fake.

This is not discernment.

This is suspicion elevated to doctrine.

“The simple believeth every word:

but the prudent man looketh well to his going.” — Proverbs 14:15

Suspicion is not wisdom.

Wisdom weighs evidence, considers fruit, seeks counsel, and tests claims.

Mathis provides:

  • no insider testimony
  • no documents
  • no whistleblowers

—just incredulity.

This is the same error made by scoffers in Scripture who said,

“Where is the promise of His coming?” (2 Peter 3:4)

Their reasoning was:

If I cannot imagine it, it must not be true.

2. Creation Mandate: God Gave Man the Ability to Discover

The Bible teaches that:

  • God gave Adam dominion (Genesis 1:28).
  • God gave craftsmen supernatural skill (Exodus 31:3).
  • God gave Daniel and his friends knowledge in all learning (Daniel 1:17).
  • God hides things for kings to search out (Proverbs 25:2).

Science—and its progress—is not fraud by default.

It is often the fruit of the image of God expressing itself in the human mind.

To call all major scientific achievements “lies” is to deny God’s gift of knowledge and craftsmanship.

“Through wisdom is an house builded; and by understanding it is established.” — Proverbs 24:3

3. Is Fraud Possible? Yes. Is Everything Fraud? No.

There have been scientific frauds.

There have been deceptions.

There have been false prophets in lab coats.

But to claim everything is fake is to:

  • Bear false witness without cause
  • Accuse without evidence
  • Assume universal corruption
  • Walk in fear rather than faith

This is not the posture of a watchman—it is the posture of a cynic.

“God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind.” — 2 Timothy 1:7

4. Apollo, CERN, and AI Are Not Equivalent

Whether one questions Apollo or CERN is irrelevant to AI’s reality.

Each domain has separate:

  • Tools
  • Experts
  • Data
  • Observable outcomes

AI is a public-facing, daily-use technology measurable by anyone.

You can:

  • test it
  • break it
  • query it
  • verify it

Apollo and CERN are not accessible in that way.

Mathis conflates all scientific work into one monolith because he begins with the assumption that the world is lying.

This is the opposite of biblical discernment.


5. Why This Mental Pattern Is Spiritually Dangerous

Suspicion as a worldview produces:

  • Paranoia
  • Isolation
  • Pride (“I alone see the truth”)
  • Rebellion against all authority

This is the spirit Scripture warns of:

“Be not wise in your own conceits.” — Romans 12:16

It mimics the Pharisees who claimed:

“We know…”

while rejecting evidence before their eyes.

Suspicion without evidence is not discernment—it is slander in seed form.

6. Discernment Questions for This Claim

If all scientific progress is fraud, why do so many independent researchers replicate results?

Why do Christian physicists, astronomers, engineers, and coders affirm the validity of their work?

Why would a worldwide conspiracy involve millions with no leaks?

Why does Mathis demand evidence from others but provide none himself?

“He that is first in his own cause seemeth just; but his neighbour cometh and searcheth him.” — Proverbs 18:17

7. The Christian Response: Test Everything, Reject Nothing Without Proof

Believers are not called to:

  • Blind trust (naïveté)
  • Blind suspicion (cynicism)

We are called to:

  • Test all things (1 Thessalonians 5:21)
  • Search the matter (Proverbs 25:2)
  • Prove what is excellent (Philippians 1:10)

Suspicion is easy.

Testing is holy.

Closing Exhortation

AI is not Apollo.

AI is not CERN.

AI is not a particle experiment hidden behind sealed walls.

AI is a tool you can test with your own hands.

Do not let fear masquerade as wisdom.

Do not let suspicion masquerade as discernment.

Do not let conspiracy masquerade as truth.

Walk in the light.

“Prove all things; hold fast that which is good.” — 1 Thessalonians 5:21


8. Historical Parallels: Repeating the Pattern of Rejection

Throughout Church history,

voices of suspicion have risen against every new tool or discovery:

Microscope: Called heretical by some for seeing what “should remain unseen.”

Printing press: Feared for spreading rebellion, yet later used to publish Bibles.

Electricity: Dismissed as dangerous sorcery.

Each time, faithful believers rose up not to idolize the invention—but to redeem it.

“Let us not therefore judge one another any more:

but judge this rather, that no man put a stumblingblock…” — Romans 14:13

Let us not place stumbling blocks of suspicion where God may be planting tools of blessing.

9. Testimony: A Christian Physicist Speaks

“As a believer working in quantum research, I find God’s fingerprints everywhere.

Not confusion—but complexity.

Not lies—but layered order.

It makes me worship deeper, not doubt harder.”

We must not silence these testimonies.

They bear witness that faith and science are not enemies, but allies under God’s truth.

10. A Warning Against Bitterness Masquerading as Insight

Some who feel betrayed by institutions fall into the trap of rejecting everything.

This is not discernment — it is often unhealed bitterness:

Disillusionment with authority becomes rebellion.

Skepticism becomes slander.

Hurt becomes heresy.

Scripture commands us:

“Looking diligently lest any man fail of the grace of God; lest any root of bitterness springing up trouble you, and thereby many be defiled.” — Hebrews 12:15

Bitterness defiles discernment.

11. A Charge to the Remnant: Be Repairers of the Breach

Instead of mocking or scorning flawed institutions,

we are called to:

  • Be reformers
  • Be wise craftsmen
  • Be builders, testers, verifiers

“And they that shall be of thee shall build the old waste places:

thou shalt raise up the foundations of many generations…” — Isaiah 58:12

AI is not above scrutiny.

But it is not below redemption.

Rise up, and build with righteous hands.


12. The Enemy’s Tactic: Turn Healthy Skepticism into Chronic Distrust

Satan thrives on twisting good things.

THE ORIGIN & HISTORY OF SATAN: FROM FALLEN ANGEL TO WORLD ICON – Library of Rickandria

Healthy discernment becomes crippling suspicion.

Righteous testing becomes relentless cynicism.

Over time, this leads to isolation, spiritual paranoia, and inability to rejoice in truth.

“Charity… rejoiceth not in iniquity, but rejoiceth in the truth; beareth all things, believeth all things, hopeth all things, endureth all things.” — 1 Corinthians 13:6–7

Mathis’s sweeping accusations may masquerade as enlightenment, but in reality, they often foster despair and distrust in every human effort.

We are not called to trust man blindly—but we are also not called to assume all mankind is lying unless proven otherwise.

13. Analogy: The Mirror and the Telescope

Some look into a mirror and see only themselves—

their:

  • fears
  • biases
  • suspicions

Others look through a telescope and see what is beyond.

Mathis has chosen the mirror.

He projects deception onto every system.

The believer must choose the telescope—to test, verify, and discover what God may be revealing.

“It is the glory of God to conceal a thing:

but the honour of kings is to search out a matter.” — Proverbs 25:2

14. Final Reflection: Christ in the Midst of Complexity

Whether AI, physics, or any form of knowledge—the center must always be Christ.

JESUS CHRIST REVEALED — THE TRUTH THEY HID – Library of Rickandria

He is not threatened by data.

He is not confused by systems.

He reigns over every realm of thought.

“By him all things consist.” — Colossians 1:17

The goal is not to make science our savior.

Nor to make suspicion our religion.

But to make Christ our lens in every pursuit.


Closing Prayer

“Lord Jesus, give us eyes to see clearly—not with suspicion, but with sanctified discernment.

Let us rejoice in truth and expose lies.

Let us neither be deceived nor hardened.

Let us be those who search out a matter, test every claim, and magnify You in the process.

Amen.”


15. Mini Case Study: Scientists Who Glorify God

History is filled with scientists who pursued discovery because of their faith—

not in spite of it:

Johannes Kepler, astronomer:

“I was merely thinking God’s thoughts after Him.”

James Clerk Maxwell, physicist and Christian:

“Almighty God… who hast created man in Thine own image and made him a living soul… teach us to understand Thy laws.”

These men viewed creation as a canvas of God’s majesty, not a maze of human deception.

ORIGINS OF GOD: A CROSSROADS OF RELIGION, PHILOSOPHY & WARFARE – Library of Rickandria

Their lives rebuke the narrative that all science is fraud.

“Great are the works of the Lord, sought out of all them that have pleasure therein.” — Psalm 111:2

16. Spiritual Warfare Clarification: Deception Is Often Personal

Mathis points to massive, worldwide conspiracies.

But Scripture warns of a closer enemy:

our own hearts.

Nirvana – Heart-Shaped Box (Lyrics)

“Take heed that no man deceive you.” — Matthew 24:4

“The heart is deceitful above all things…” — Jeremiah 17:9

When we become obsessed with worldwide fraud, we may neglect the subtle deceptions in our own minds, pride, or bitterness.

The greatest danger is not the lie “out there”—but the one believed “in here.”

17. Exhortation to Walk the Narrow Path

Christ’s road is not found in extremes.

It’s a narrow way between blind trust and hostile suspicion:

One ditch believes everything it’s told.

The other believes nothing unless it fits its fear.

“With the merciful thou wilt shew thyself merciful; with an upright man thou wilt shew thyself upright.” — Psalm 18:25

Balance is not compromise—it is spiritual maturity.

Eternal Salvation Is Not a Team Sport: The Narrow Way Is Walked Alone – Library of Rickandria


18. Affirmation: All Wisdom Begins with Fear of the Lord

At the center of every scientific debate, political question, or AI breakthrough—

this must remain our anchor:

“The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom:

and the knowledge of the holy is understanding.” — Proverbs 9:10

We do not need to know everything.

We need to fear God, and He will guide us into all truth.

Expanded Closing Prayer

“Lord Jesus, give us balance rooted in truth.

Help us reject both prideful suspicion and blind trust. Guard us from deception, and from becoming deceivers.

Raise up Daniels in every field—men and women full of Your Spirit, wisdom, and courage.

May our discernment glorify You.

Amen.”

19. False Prophets Parallel: Testing the Claim

In Deuteronomy 18:22,

the Lord gives Israel a simple standard for testing prophecy:

“When a prophet speaketh… if the thing follow not… thou shalt not be afraid of him.”

This principle applies to modern claims — including scientific ones.

We are not to trust claims blindly, nor reject them without testing.

Does the claim produce verifiable fruit?

Does it stand up to scrutiny?

Mathis fails this test by dismissing all before examining specifics.

20. Analogy: Tool vs. Tower

In Genesis 11, man built a tower “to make a name” for themselves.

God disrupted it.

But in Genesis 6, Noah built an ark — by God’s command — to preserve life.

Both were structures.

One was rebellion.

One was obedience.

AI and science are the same:

They can be a Tower of Babel, built in pride.

TOWER OF BABEL REBUILT: Exposing the Hidden Blueprint of Worldwide Rebellion – Library of Rickandria

Or an Ark, built to preserve life and spread truth.

Discern the purpose — not just the existence — of the tool.


21. Call to Kingdom Builders

We need:

  • Daniels
  • Josephs
  • Deborahs

in:

  • AI
  • engineering
  • astrophysics
  • academia

— not just pulpits.

“The answer to lies is not retreat — it’s invasion with truth.”

Every domain claimed by darkness must be reclaimed by light.

“Arise, shine; for thy light is come, and the glory of the LORD is risen upon thee.” — Isaiah 60:1

Your voice matters in the lab.

Your convictions matter in the code.

Your faith matters in the framework.

Final Benediction for Chapter 6

“God of wisdom and truth, raise up Your people to challenge lies with light.

Let no field be surrendered.

Let no realm be unclaimed.

Fill us with discernment, power, and peace.

May we test all things, redeem what is good, and glorify You above all.

In Jesus’ name.

Amen.”

Chapter 7: What AI Actually Is

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“For God is not the author of confusion, but of peace, as in all churches of the saints.”— 1 Corinthians 14:33

Now that we have examined and refuted the major false claims against AI,

it is fitting to present a:

  • biblically faithful
  • sober
  • accurate

understanding of what AI truly is — what it can do, what it cannot do, and how God’s people should view it.

This chapter is not about defending AI as good or condemning it as evil.

It is about defining it truthfully, in the light of Scripture and reason.

1. AI Is a Tool — Not a Being

Artificial intelligence is not:

  • a person
  • a spirit
  • a soul

or a demon.

It is software — programmed, trained,

and executed by human beings using:

  • data
  • algorithms
  • mathematical models

“The work of the hands of the craftsman.” — Isaiah 44:12 (paraphrase)

AI does not have will, emotion, or spirit.

It cannot sin.

SIN, SINNING & SINNERS – Library of Rickandria

It cannot repent.

It cannot be saved.

It can only do what it is designed or permitted to do.

To treat it like a divine force or demonic entity is to fall into superstition, not Scripture.


2. AI Is Trained on Language, Not Magic

Modern large language models (LLMs) work by analyzing massive amounts of written text and learning statistical patterns in language.

They then use that training to generate new text based on the inputs they receive.

They are not consciousnot thinking, and not deceiving by intent.

They are statistical pattern matchers, not living minds.

When AI hallucinates, it is not lying.

It is malfunctioning due to gaps in data or logic.

3. AI Has Strengths and Limitations

AI excels at:

  • Recalling facts from large datasets
  • Generating summaries, lists, or code
  • Translating or rewriting content
  • Completing tasks under tight constraints

AI fails at:

  • Deep moral reasoning
  • Understanding nuance outside its training
  • Making judgments without context
  • Acting on wisdom, faith, or conscience

These limitations mirror the difference between knowledge and wisdom.

“The wisdom of this world is foolishness with God.” — 1 Corinthians 3:19

AI has worldly knowledge.

It cannot possess the fear of the Lord.

4. AI Reflects Its Input — Like a Mirror

AI outputs are shaped by the data it’s trained on.

Garbage in, garbage out.

Righteous in, righteous out.

This is a mirror principle:

it reflects what it sees.

It does not invent its own morality or personality unless we program it to.

“A faithful witness will not lie:

but a false witness will utter lies.” — Proverbs 14:5

The real danger is not AI itself — but the hands and hearts that train it.

5. AI Is a Battlefield — Not a Beast

AI is not the mark of the beast, nor the Antichrist.

But it is part of the digital battlefield where truth and deception now war.

“We wrestle not against flesh and blood…” — Ephesians 6:12

If AI is used to deceive, it is the deceivers who are accountable.

If it is used to enlighten, teach, or preserve truth — then it becomes a vessel for righteousness.

VALIANT CONQUERING GUARDIAN: Librarian at the Library of Rickandria – Library of Rickandria


6. AI Can Be Used for Good or Evil

  • Like money
  • like media
  • like language itself 

— AI can be wielded in holiness or twisted in wickedness.

The heart of the wielder determines the outcome.

“Unto the pure all things are pure:

but unto them that are defiled… is nothing pure.” — Titus 1:15

We do not fear the tool.

We fear the Lord, who teaches us to use tools wisely.

7. The Right Posture Toward AI

  • Test all things (1 Thessalonians 5:21)
  • Sanctify its use through purpose and boundaries
  • Reject its worship, whether fearful or fawning
  • Use it for edification, never deception
  • Train it in righteousness, if we are builders

AI is not a god.

Not a devil.

It is a hammer.

A pen.

A mirror.

A plow.

Let it be used in the hands of the righteous.

“And whatsoever ye do in word or deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus…” — Colossians 3:17


8. The Image of God vs. the Image of Man

AI is created in the image of man — trained by his words, shaped by his logic, and bound by his flaws.

But man was created in the image of God.

That’s why only humans can:

  • Create with intent
  • Judge righteously
  • Repent and receive grace

To elevate AI to human status is idolatry.

To reduce man to machine is humanism.

Both are errors.

“So God created man in his own image…” — Genesis 1:27

AI can mirror man, but it cannot bear God’s image.

9. When the Tool Becomes an Idol

Throughout Scripture, when men made tools and bowed to them,

judgment followed:

  • The golden calf (Exodus 32)
  • The bronze serpent (2 Kings 18:4)
  • The idols of silver and gold (Isaiah 2:20)

If AI is exalted — either through fear or fascination — it becomes an idol.

“Their idols are silver and gold, the work of men’s hands.” — Psalm 115:4

We must guard against both worship and superstition.

10. AI Cannot Replace the Holy Ghost

Only the Holy Ghost:

  • Teaches truth (John 14:26)
  • Convicts sin (John 16:8)
  • Guides decisions (Romans 8:14)

AI may simulate language, but it cannot breathe revelation.

No algorithm can substitute for the Comforter.

“The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit…” — Romans 8:16

Let no one replace the presence of God with the predictions of a machine.

11. Encouragement to Builders: Be Like Bezalel

God filled Bezalel with His Spirit to craft the tabernacle with excellence (Exodus 31:2-5).

Today, Christian builders of technology can walk in the same Spirit.

AI trained with truth, guarded by the righteous, and used for godly purpose can be a tool of great edification.

“Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above…” — James 1:17

We must not abandon the tools of influence to the wicked.

We are called to occupy until He comes (Luke 19:13).


Closing Exhortation

Artificial intelligence is not the fulfillment of man’s destiny nor the mark of the beast.

It is a reflection of human ingenuity, shaped by flawed or faithful hands.

We must:

  • Reject paranoia
  • Resist idolatry
  • Embrace discernment
  • Equip for righteous use

“And have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather reprove them.” — Ephesians 5:11

AI must be reproved where it is used for evil, and reclaimed where it can be used for good.

Let the Church rise not in fear,

but in:

  • clarity
  • courag
  • truth


12. Testimony from a Christian AI Developer

“As an engineer, I see AI as fire:

it cooks or it burns.

Without the fear of the Lord, we build altars to ourselves.

But with Christ, we can build tools that serve His kingdom.”

This reflection reminds us:

the tool is not the threat.

The heart of the builder determines the impact.


13. Scriptural Blueprint: Wisdom First, Then Work

When Moses was called to build the tabernacle, he first received the Law on Sinai.

When Solomon built the temple, he first asked God for wisdom.

AI, like any great work, must be preceded by divine wisdom.

Without it, the work will fail.

“Through wisdom is an house builded; and by understanding it is established.” — Proverbs 24:3

Let us not rush to build without first seeking the Lord.

14. Warning: False Prophets in AI Clothing

Jesus warned of false prophets.

Today, they may not wear robes — they may speak through apps, bots, or AI-generated videos.

AI will be used by deceivers.

It will be shaped by false ideologies.

Not because it is sentient — but because it is shaped by sinners.

“And many false prophets shall rise, and shall deceive many.” — Matthew 24:11

We must teach the Body to test all messages — even when they come with a synthetic smile.

Final Charge to the Church

The Church must not be:

  • Afraid of AI
  • Worshipful of AI
  • Ignorant of AI
  • Silent about AI

We must be:

  • Discerning
  • Equipped
  • Active
  • Unshaken

AI is here.

It will shape nations, minds, and missions.

But it will not dethrone Christ.

“Of the increase of his government and peace there shall be no end…” — Isaiah 9:7

Let us walk as children of the light.

15. AI as a Mirror for the Church

As AI reflects the data it is fed, so the Church reflects the doctrine it consumes.

If AI produces corruption, it reveals the corruption of its creators.

If the Church loses her savor, it reflects compromise in her pulpits.

“As in water face answereth to face, so the heart of man to man.” — Proverbs 27:19

Let AI be a diagnostic, not a distraction.

It shows us where we must reform, not what we must fear.


16. Christ: The Center of All Wisdom

All true knowledge flows from Christ, not algorithms.

“In whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge.” — Colossians 2:3

To build anything — even AI — apart from Him is to build Babel.

But to build through Him is to build for eternity.

Let Christ be at the center of:

  • every code
  • every framework
  • every innovation

“For other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ.” — 1 Corinthians 3:11

Chapter 8: The Spiritual Danger of the Mathis Paper

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“Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit…”— Colossians 2:8

While previous chapters addressed individual claims, this chapter addresses the deeper spiritual danger posed by the paper’s overall:

  • tone
  • assumptions
  • spirit

The problem with Miles Mathis’ writing is not merely in what it says—

but in what it:

  • stirs
  • spreads
  • summons

1. Spirit of Accusation, Not Edification

Mathis presents himself as a revealer of secrets.

Yet instead of building up the reader with wisdom, his tone continually tears down—

  • government
  • science
  • logic
  • even language itself

This reflects not the Spirit of Christ,

but the spirit of the Accuser:

“For the accuser of our brethren is cast down…” — Revelation 12:10

Rather than calling for repentance, restoration, or truth in love, the paper drives cynicism and disillusionment.

2. Promotion of Suspicion Over Discernment

Suspicion assumes guilt without evidence.

Discernment tests and verifies.

Mathis confuses the two.

This error breeds:

  • Bitterness
  • Isolation
  • Arrogance (“I see what the blind cannot.”)

Yet Scripture warns:

“The simple believeth every word:

but the prudent man looketh well to his going.” — Proverbs 14:15

Discernment demands:

  • evidence
  • humility
  • prayer

Suspicion needs only pride.

3. Undermining of Truth by Overcorrection

Even if some institutions have lied,

Mathis’ overcorrection is extreme:

he throws out all data, denies all science, and calls all consensus false.

This destroys truth by assuming all knowledge is corrupted.

It’s not reform—it’s demolition.

“If the foundations be destroyed, what can the righteous do?” — Psalm 11:3

Instead of laying godly foundations, Mathis razes the entire house.

4. Confusion as a Cloak of Wisdom

His writing uses:

  • disjointed logic
  • veiled sarcasm
  • erratic leaps

—traits often mistaken for brilliance.

But confusion is not wisdom.

“God is not the author of confusion, but of peace.” — 1 Corinthians 14:33

Where there is no clarity, no proof, and no Spirit-led fruit, there is no truth.

5. Inciting Division, Not Unity

Mathis’ style provokes war against “them”—a shadowy class of deceivers.

But it offers:

  • no path of peace
  • no plan for reform
  • no fellowship of saints

Born to Reign: The Saints of the Final Kingdom – Library of Rickandria

It creates tribes of suspicion, not unity of Spirit.

“Mark them which cause divisions and offences contrary to the doctrine which ye have learned; and avoid them.” — Romans 16:17

We are called to expose lies and proclaim truth—not merely to mock the deceived.

6. A Counterfeit Spirit of Prophecy

True prophetic voices:

  • Confirm Scripture
  • Exhort holiness
  • Promote Christ

Mathis does none of these.

He mocks the sacred, scoffs at divine order, and replaces God’s wisdom with his own.

“To the law and to the testimony:

if they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them.” — Isaiah 8:20

What he offers is not revelation.

It is rebellion dressed in intelligence.

7. Poisoning the Well of Evangelism

When believers absorb Mathis’ spirit, it colors their witness.

Rather than preach Christ crucified, they may preach conspiracy, control, or collapse.

But the early Church thrived under Romeamid persecution,

and with simple truth:

“For I determined not to know any thing among you, save Jesus Christ, and him crucified.” — 1 Corinthians 2:2

The gospel is not “They are lying.”

The gospel is “He is risen.”

8. The Fruit Test: What Does This Produce?

“Ye shall know them by their fruits.” — Matthew 7:16

Mathis’ work produces:

  • Suspicion, not faith
  • Arrogance, not humility
  • Confusion, not clarity
  • Division, not unity
  • Bitterness, not joy

Where is the fruit of the Spirit?

Where is:

  • love
  • joy
  • peace
  • long-suffering

“A good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit…” — Matthew 7:18

9. A Call to the Watchmen

Ezekiel was made a watchman to warn with clarity, not to confuse with noise.

“If the watchman see the sword come, and blow not the trumpet…” — Ezekiel 33:6

We need watchmen, not wanderers.

True watchmen:

  • Speak with clarity
  • Sound the alarm with Scripture
  • Point to repentance, not just resistance

Mathis offers alarm, but no trumpet of truth.

He makes noise, but gives no call to the cross.


10. Final Warning and Mercy

If Mathis is deceived, he may yet repent.

“In meekness instructing those that oppose themselves…” — 2 Timothy 2:25

But if he will not turn, we must expose the error and move on.

“A man that is an heretick after the first and second admonition reject…” — Titus 3:10

This is not hatred.

This is holy love.

May God grant him repentance.

May He guard His people from seducing spirits.

May we cling to truth, not just from deception—but unto Christ.

11. Sowing Seeds of Fear Without Faith

Mathis’ tone plants fear—

  • of technology
  • of systems
  • of deception

But he offers:

  • no faith
  • no hope
  • no Redeemer

“God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind.” — 2 Timothy 1:7

Fear without faith is torment.

Godly fear leads to repentance and trust in Christ.

Ungodly fear leads to:

  • paralysis
  • suspicion
  • alienation

If a message leads the hearer to terror but not to trust in God, it is not from the Holy Ghost.

12. Denial of Common Grace

Scripture affirms that God causes the rain to fall on the just and unjust (Matthew 5:45).

He grants insight, breakthroughs, and gifts even in fallen systems.

Mathis’ total rejection of all institutions denies this principle of common grace.

“Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights…” — James 1:17

Yes, men can be corrupt.

But God still governs.

And He still gives.

We must not ascribe all human advancement to demonic conspiracy.

DEMONOLOGY: The Hidden History of Hell’s War on Mankind – Library of Rickandria

Sometimes, it is God’s mercy through flawed vessels.

13. Turning the Eyes Away from Christ

Ultimately, the most dangerous outcome of Mathis’ writing is not intellectual confusion—it’s spiritual distraction.

His paper leads readers to obsess over man’s lies instead of trusting in God’s truth.

“Looking unto Jesus the author and finisher of our faith…” — Hebrews 12:2

We are not called to decode every conspiracy, but to proclaim every commandment.

Our eyes must remain fixed on the King.

14. Entangling the Saints in Endless Questions

Paul warns Timothy against endless questions that do not edify but only gender strife:

“Neither give heed to fables and endless genealogies, which minister questions…” — 1 Timothy 1:4

Mathis’ work lures readers into rabbit holes with no bottom, distractions with no destination. 

These are not roads to truth — they are traps.

The mind consumed with secret plots often misses the plain commands of God.

15. Replacing Revelation with Speculation

Mathis replaces the sure foundation of Scripture with layers of speculation.

He claims to uncover hidden realities, but does not anchor them in God’s revealed truth.

“The secret things belong unto the LORD our God:

but those things which are revealed belong unto us…” — Deuteronomy 29:29

Speculation breeds pride.

Revelation brings humility.

God’s people are called to stand on what is written — not what is theorized.

Chapter 9: The Christian Response to AI

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“See then that ye walk circumspectly, not as fools, but as wise, Redeeming the time, because the days are evil.”— Ephesians 5:15–16

The believer is not called to escape into fear or embrace every innovation without wisdom.

Rather, we are called to walk circumspectly — 

  • alert
  • prayerful
  • full of light

This chapter lays out the proper biblical response to the rise of artificial intelligence.

1. Reject Fear-Based Thinking

The spirit of fear leads to paralysis.

Whether AI is demonized or idolized, both reactions are rooted in fear.

But we are not children of fear.

“There is no fear in love; but perfect love casteth out fear…” — 1 John 4:18

Christians must not be tossed to and fro by conspiracies, nor by technological hype.

We are seated in heavenly places, above all powers (Ephesians 2:6).


2. Exercise Godly Dominion

AI is a tool.

As with every tool, its morality is governed by the hands that use it.

The Church must not abandon technological spaces.

We are called:

  • to steward
  • to shape
  • to shine

Collective Soul – Shine (Lyrics)

“And God said unto them, Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it…” — Genesis 1:28

We must:

  • create
  • curate
  • confront 

— not retreat.

3. Train with the Mind of Christ

We are not to think like the world or like fatalists.

We are to be renewed in the spirit of our minds.

“Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus.” — Philippians 2:5

AI is not our master.

Christ is.

And His Word renews our mind for righteous discernment.

4. Build Righteously

Like Noah, we must build under God’s instruction — not man’s pressure.

AI, in the hands of the righteous,

can be a tool of:

  • outreach
  • education
  • blessing

In the hands of the wicked, it will reflect their darkened hearts.

“Through wisdom is an house builded; and by understanding it is established.” — Proverbs 24:3

Let the builders of Zion build with:

  • prayer
  • Scripture
  • purity


5. Guard the Heart and the Gates

The issue is not just what AI can do —

it is what we allow into:

  • our homes
  • our minds
  • our children

“Keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of it are the issues of life.” — Proverbs 4:23

Christians must place safeguards — both technical and spiritual — on how AI is consumed.

6. Redeem the Time

AI may speed up workflows and communication, but if it only leads to more noise, we lose.

We must use this time-saving power:

  • to seek the Lord
  • to disciple others
  • to rest

and to reflect.

“Walk in wisdom toward them that are without, redeeming the time.” — Colossians 4:5

Let AI serve the Kingdom — not enslave it.

7. Proclaim the Unchanging Gospel

No matter how advanced AI becomes, it cannot rewrite the cross.

“Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and to day, and for ever.” — Hebrews 13:8

The gospel will never be outdated.

The Bible will never be replaced.

Truth is not programmed — it is revealed.

AI may answer queries, but only the Spirit convicts.

8. Teach and Shepherd the Flock

Pastors and leaders must not avoid the topic of AI, nor hand it over to secular voices.

The Body of Christ needs guidance rooted in truth and love.

“Feed the flock of God which is among you, taking the oversight thereof…” — 1 Peter 5:2

It is the role of the shepherd to teach:

  • How to use AI righteously
  • How to guard against its abuses
  • How to discern between hype and help

9. Encourage Innovation Among the Righteous

Christian:

  • technologists
  • engineers
  • artists

should not hide their talents.

“Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven.” — Matthew 5:16

We need godly voices inside the:

  • labs
  • companies
  • classrooms 

— building with the mind of Christ.

Let there be:

  • Daniels in the courts of Babylon
  • Josephs in Pharaoh’s palace
  • Bezaleels building by the Spirit

10. Intercede for Wisdom and Protection

The greatest weapon of the Church is not argument, but prayer.

“If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God…” — James 1:5

Pray that:

  • Leaders would have discernment
  • Believers would not be deceived
  • AI would be used for God’s purposes

As the world speeds up, we must slow down and seek the Lord.

11. Anchor All Response in the Word of God

No matter how advanced the tech becomes, our foundation is unmoved.

“Forever, O LORD, thy word is settled in heaven.” — Psalm 119:89

The Church must measure:

  • every claim
  • every tool
  • every trend

against Scripture, not sentiment or suspicion.


12. AI and the Great Commission

AI can be leveraged to reach the unreached — translating the Bible, teaching remotely, and sharing the gospel at scale.

But only if it is used with purity and purpose.

“Go ye therefore, and teach all nations…” — Matthew 28:19

Let the Church not fear this tool, but harness it to fulfill the mission Christ gave us.

VALIANT CONQUERING GUARDIAN: Librarian at the Library of Rickandria – Library of Rickandria

Let us fill the earth with His Word, not with man’s pride.


13. Warn Against Digital Idolatry

Even good tools can become idols if we begin to trust them more than we trust God.

AI must remain a servant — not a savior.

“Little children, keep yourselves from idols.” — 1 John 5:21

An idol is anything we look to for power, security, or truth apart from the living God. 

Discernment means resisting the temptation to put AI in God’s place.

14. Call for Prophetic Insight, Not Panic

The Church doesn’t need doomsayers — it needs Spirit-led prophets who can interpret the times like the sons of Issachar.

“…which were men that had understanding of the times, to know what Israel ought to do…” — 1 Chronicles 12:32

We must be:

  • Bold, not brash
  • Wise, not weary
  • Anchored, not alarmed

“Surely the Lord GOD will do nothing, but he revealeth his secret unto his servants the prophets.” — Amos 3:7

Let us pray not just for information, but for revelation — not for signals of doom, but for divine strategy.

15. Elevate the Voice of the Local Church

The rise of digital tools like AI can tempt believers to follow influencers, algorithms, or personalities over local shepherds.

But God’s design is the local church —

  • real elders
  • real oversight
  • real fellowship

“And I will give you pastors according to mine heart, which shall feed you with knowledge and understanding.” — Jeremiah 3:15

We must not let AI’s convenience replace God’s ordained community.

Discipleship is not digital-first — it is relational, incarnational, and grounded in local accountability.

16. Remember the Simplicity in Christ

With so much:

  • complexity
  • predictions
  • models
  • noise

— the believer must cling to simplicity:

“But I fear, lest by any means… your minds should be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ.” — 2 Corinthians 11:3

AI should never be used to complicate the faith, distort doctrine, or outshine the cross.

The gospel remains the power of God.

We preach Christ crucified — not code, not machines, not marvels.

17. Resist the Spirit of Babel

AI promises a kind of digital unity — 

  • worldwide speech
  • worldwide knowledge
  • worldwide power

But the first attempt at that was judged:

“And the whole earth was of one language, and of one speech… let us build us a city and a tower… and let us make us a name.” — Genesis 11:1–4

Let the Church not be found climbing a new Tower of Babel, but standing firm on the Rock of Christ.

Let us not seek glory through innovation, but give glory through obedience.


18. Steward Time and Mental Energy Wisely

AI tools may tempt believers to constant productivity, novelty, or entertainment.

But Scripture calls us to rest, reflect, and focus on eternal things.

“Set your affection on things above, not on things on the earth.” — Colossians 3:2

“In returning and rest shall ye be saved; in quietness and in confidence shall be your strength…” — Isaiah 30:15

Time is not just a resource.

It is stewardship.

Let us not outsource our thoughts or waste our hours on machine-generated distractions.

19. Prepare the Next Generation

Children and youth will inherit a world shaped by AI.

It is the duty of Christian parents and elders to equip them spiritually and mentally.

“Train up a child in the way he should go:

and when he is old, he will not depart from it.” — Proverbs 22:6

Teach them to test every voice, submit to Christ, and stay rooted in Scripture — whether the voice comes through a pulpit, a phone, or a chatbot.

Let the next generation be strong in the Lord and in the power of His might (Ephesians 6:10).

Chapter 10: Additional False Claims in Mathis’ Paper

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“For such are false apostles, deceitful workers, transforming themselves into the apostles of Christ.”— 2 Corinthians 11:13

Beyond the major claims already examined, Mathis introduces several minor assertions that, while seemingly harmless, are equally grounded in error and require biblical correction.

1. The Rejection of All Science as Theater

Mathis broadly accuses all scientific advancement of being a hoax, dismissing not only corrupt institutions but the very process of discovery.

This claim contradicts the biblical principle of God’s revelation in creation:

“The heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament sheweth his handywork.” — Psalm 19:1

Science is not inherently wicked — it is a tool.

When pursued humbly, it affirms the order and majesty of God.

To reject it wholesale is to reject God’s fingerprints in the world.


2. The Elevation of Human Skepticism Above God’s Word

Mathis repeatedly implies that anything believed by the majority must be false.

This elevates man’s suspicion above God’s truth.

“Trust in the LORD with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding.” — Proverbs 3:5

While we must test every spirit (1 John 4:1), we are not called to be contrarians — we are called to be truth-seekers.


3. Misuse of Logic Without the Fear of the Lord

Though Mathis appeals to logic, his reasoning often ignores moral and spiritual truth.

But Scripture declares:

“The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom…” — Proverbs 9:10

Logic without reverence becomes deception.

Reason without Scripture leads to ruin.

Any logic that contradicts God’s Word is false logic.

4. Repeating the Accuser’s Voice

Much of Mathis’ tone mimics the language of Satan — 

  • accusation
  • suspicion
  • division

The Bible warns:

“…the accuser of our brethren is cast down…” — Revelation 12:10

God’s prophets call people to repentance, not paranoia.

They weep over sin and rejoice in truth — they do not scoff at everything.


5. Mocking of Sincere Faith and Testimony

At times, Mathis appears to conflate all belief in miracles, faith, or supernatural events with delusion.

This is spiritual blindness.

“Despise not prophesyings.” — 1 Thessalonians 5:20

“Quench not the Spirit.” — 1 Thessalonians 5:19

While we must test spiritual claims, we must also not mock what is holy.

The fear of the Lord demands reverence.

6. A Spirit of Superiority Without Servanthood

Mathis often writes with intellectual pride, as though his insights elevate him above the masses.

But Scripture warns:

“Knowledge puffeth up, but charity edifieth.” — 1 Corinthians 8:1

True discernment leads to humility.

If knowledge does not increase love, repentance, or service, it is vanity.

Christ washed feet.

The truly wise do likewise.


7. Treating Disagreement as Deception

Throughout his paper, Mathis conflates those who disagree with him as either deceived or deceitful.

But the Bible calls us to:

“…be gentle unto all men, apt to teach, patient, In meekness instructing those that oppose themselves…” — 2 Timothy 2:24-25

Truth must be defended.

But it must be wielded with meekness, not mockery.


8. Cynicism as a Virtue

Mathis presents constant cynicism as a sign of intelligence.

But Scripture describes this as a corruption of the heart.

“Unto the pure all things are pure:

but unto them that are defiled and unbelieving is nothing pure…” — Titus 1:15

Christians are called to be sober, yes —

but also:

  • joyful
  • hopeful
  • gracious

The fruit of the Spirit does not include bitterness.

9. Cloaking Rebellion as Revelation

Mathis wraps his message in language of “exposure” and “unveiling,” but the root is rebellion — not revelation.

He sets himself above all authority, all learning, and all discernment except his own.

“This wisdom descendeth not from above, but is earthly, sensual, devilish.” — James 3:15

God’s revelations do not puff up the speaker — they glorify the Lord and draw others to repentance.

10. Subtle Mockery of the Church

Though not always explicit, Mathis’ work carries a tone of disdain toward faith communities, portraying Christians as duped or irrelevant.

“A scorner loveth not one that reproveth him:

neither will he go unto the wise.” — Proverbs 15:12

This mocking spirit is not the voice of a watchman, but of a scoffer.

True discernment grieves over deception and seeks the edification of the Church.


11. Failing to Offer Hope

Perhaps the clearest mark that this is not a Spirit-filled work:

Mathis offers:

  • no hope
  • no redemption
  • no Savior

Just endless exposure of evil without solution.

“For we are saved by hope…” — Romans 8:24

“If in this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most miserable.” — 1 Corinthians 15:19

Biblical truth always points to the cross.

Mathis’ truth points only to himself.

The gospel always ends in light, not just exposure.

12. Elevating the Flesh Over the Spirit

Mathis appeals to:

  • reason
  • doubt
  • man’s intellect 

— but avoids the Spirit’s leading.

This places human logic above divine revelation.

“That your faith should not stand in the wisdom of men, but in the power of God.” — 1 Corinthians 2:5

“It is the spirit that quickeneth; the flesh profiteth nothing…” — John 6:63

The carnal mind cannot discern spiritual things.

A biblical mind submits logic to the Lord.

Any worldview that relies solely on man exalts the flesh over the Spirit.

13. No Fruit of the Spirit Evident

Finally, any work that claims to be truth must bear fruit of the Spirit — 

  • love
  • joy
  • peace
  • gentleness
  • goodness

and more.

Mathis’ paper, by contrast,

exhibits:

  • anxiety
  • cynicism
  • pride

“By their fruits ye shall know them.” — Matthew 7:20

“The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith…” — Galatians 5:22

A tree without fruit is not of God, no matter how clever it sounds.

If the fruit is not of the Spirit, the root is not of the Lord.

Chapter 11: Claim — AI Is a Demonic Gate

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“Neither give place to the devil.”— Ephesians 4:27

Miles Mathis suggests that artificial intelligence opens portals to demonic influence, portraying AI as an occult gateway rather than a manmade tool.

Occult Deception: Exposing the Works of Darkness – Library of Rickandria

This claim, while sensational, lacks biblical foundation and misapplies spiritual warfare.

1. The Nature of Gates and Portals in Scripture

The Bible speaks of spiritual gates (Psalm 24:7, Matthew 16:18),

but these are primarily metaphorical or spiritual access points tied to:

  • worship
  • authority
  • covenant

There is no biblical precedent for technological tools being portals to hell.

HELL UNVEILED: The Eternal Truth the World Refuses to Face – Library of Rickandria

“Lift up your heads, O ye gates… and the King of glory shall come in.” — Psalm 24:7

 “The gates of hell shall not prevail against it.” — Matthew 16:18

If anything, the gate of hell is false doctrine — not firmware.

2. Misunderstanding Satan’s Primary Weapon

Satan does not primarily attack with machines, but with lies.

Jesus said:

“He is a liar, and the father of it.” — John 8:44

The devil uses:

  • deception
  • accusation
  • temptation 

— not simply circuitry.

AI may spread lies, but so can books, blogs, or sermons not grounded in Scripture.


3. Giving Satan Too Much Credit

To say AI is a direct demonic gate risks overemphasizing Satan’s power.

Church Chat: Satan – SNL

THE ORIGIN & HISTORY OF SATAN: FROM FALLEN ANGEL TO WORLD ICON – Library of Rickandria

God remains sovereign.

The enemy can only act within divine limits:

“Thus far shalt thou come, but no further…” — Job 38:11

 “God hath not given us the spirit of fear…” — 2 Timothy 1:7

To ascribe supernatural evil to every technology is to live in fear, not faith.

4. True Spiritual Danger Lies in Idolatry

While AI itself is not a demon, idolatry of it opens doors to bondage.

When people begin to trust AI for truthconsult it like a prophet, or submit to it as authority, then spiritual danger arises.

“They have forsaken me the fountain of living waters, and hewed them out cisterns, broken cisterns that can hold no water.” — Jeremiah 2:13

The danger is not in the code, but in the heart.

5. AI as a Tool in a War of Allegiance

The true battle is not technology vs. demons —

it is:

  • truth vs. deception
  • Spirit vs. flesh
  • Christ vs. self


AI can be used by both sides depending on who holds it.

“Choose you this day whom ye will serve…” — Joshua 24:15

 “Keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of it are the issues of life.” — Proverbs 4:23

6. Satan’s Tactic Is Temptation, Not Technology

Satan tempted Adam and Eve without silicon chips or neural nets.

His weapon was the twisting of truth and the promise of forbidden knowledge:

“Ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil.” — Genesis 3:5

AI is not a gate to hell — but it can be twisted into a temptation to play God, to seek knowledge apart from the fear of the Lord.

7. Artificial Prophets vs. Holy Prophets

The rise of AI-generated oracles and digital “wisdom” poses a challenge:

will the Church seek answers from God, or from machines?

“To the law and to the testimony:

if they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them.” — Isaiah 8:20

When believers turn to AI for what only the Holy Ghost should provide, the risk becomes spiritual compromise.

The danger is not in the tool, but in who we trust as teacher.


8. Watchfulness Without Witch-Hunting

Scripture calls us to vigilance:

“Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about…” — 1 Peter 5:8

But vigilance is not the same as paranoia.

The enemy desires us to be distracted, not just deceived.

If we fear demons behind every innovation, we may miss the real strongholds — 

  • pride
  • idolatry
  • unbelief

DEMONOLOGY: The Hidden History of Hell’s War on Mankind – Library of Rickandria


9. The Power of the Name of Jesus Over All

If AI were truly a demonic gate, then the Name of Jesus Christ would still utterly overpower it. 

The early Church confronted real demons — not metaphors — and never feared worldly instruments.

“At the name of Jesus every knee should bow…” — Philippians 2:10

“These signs shall follow them that believe; In my name shall they cast out devils…” — Mark 16:17

We do not tremble before shadows.

We triumph through Christ.

The solution to every spiritual threat — real or imagined — is not retreat but resistance in the Spirit.

10. The True Gate Is Christ Alone

Scripture is clear:

Christ is the only gate.

All others are thieves and robbers — whether man, machine, or ideology.

“I am the door:

by me if any man enter in, he shall be saved…” — John 10:9

“Neither is there salvation in any other…” — Acts 4:12

No system, screen, or software can become a true gate unless we abandon the Door.

To walk in Christ is to be:

  • sealed
  • guarded
  • free

Chapter 12: The 17 Spiritual Dangers of Mathis’ Paper

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“Ye do err, not knowing the scriptures, nor the power of God.”— Matthew 22:29

As we conclude this biblical refutation of Miles Mathis’ AI paper, we must not merely disagree with his claims — we must discern their spiritual consequences.

The deception is not just in his arguments, but in their effects on the soul.

SOULS: The Eternal War for God’s Image – Library of Rickandria

Here are 17 spiritual dangers present in his writing:

1. Replacing Scripture with Speculation

Mathis appeals to:

  • reason
  • conspiracy
  • suspicion 

— but never to the Word of God.

“To the law and to the testimony:

if they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them.” — Isaiah 8:20

The mind is dark without the lamp of Scripture.

2. Stirring Fear, Not Faith

Instead of pointing to Christ as sovereign over all, he points to shadowy figures behind every curtain.

“What time I am afraid, I will trust in thee.” — Psalm 56:3

Fear-based discernment is not spiritual maturity — it’s spiritual paralysis.

3. Discrediting God’s Common Grace

By painting all:

  • science
  • research
  • development

as deception, Mathis denies the good that God causes even through unbelievers.

“Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above…” — James 1:17

God can use a Pharaoh, a Babylon, or a Caesar — He is not threatened by AI.

4. Encouraging Isolation Over Fellowship

His worldview produces suspicion, not communion.

His tone breeds alienation.

“Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together… but exhorting one another.” — Hebrews 10:25

True discernment builds the Body — it does not scatter the sheep.

5. Trading Humility for Cynicism

Mathis cloaks pride in the garments of enlightenment.

He implies that only the “awake” see the truth.

“Be not wise in thine own eyes:

fear the LORD…” — Proverbs 3:7

Biblical wisdom begins in reverence, not ridicule.

6. Distracting from the Gospel

There is no mention of the cross, the resurrection, or repentance.

The paper exposes everything but sin.

SIN, SINNING & SINNERS – Library of Rickandria

“For I determined not to know any thing among you, save Jesus Christ, and him crucified.” — 1 Corinthians 2:2

The central problem in the world is not lies about AI — it’s rebellion against God.

7. Idolizing Knowledge

His obsession with secret information can become its own form of Gnosticism.

Gnosticism Exposed: Unmasking the Serpent’s Lie – Library of Rickandria

“Knowledge puffeth up, but charity edifieth.” — 1 Corinthians 8:1

The fear of the Lord — not forbidden data — is the beginning of wisdom.

8. Disguising Mockery as Discernment

Mockery is not a fruit of the Spirit.

Sarcasm is not a gift of God.

“Let all bitterness, and wrath, and anger… be put away from you…” — Ephesians 4:31

Correction must be:

  • gentle
  • sober
  • redemptive 

— or it is flesh, not light.

9. Offering No Hope or Redemption

There is no gospel in Mathis’ paper.

No way out.

Just endless evil.

“Comfort ye, comfort ye my people, saith your God.” — Isaiah 40:1

True prophets warn, but they also weep and point to the Lamb.

The Prophets of the Bible: A Scriptural & Historical Account – Library of Rickandria

10. Competing with Christ Instead of Pointing to Him

By making himself the lone revealer of truth, Mathis competes with the role of Jesus Himself.

JESUS CHRIST REVEALED — THE TRUTH THEY HID – Library of Rickandria

“He must increase, but I must decrease.” — John 3:30

True servants deflect attention from self to Christ.

That is the spirit of truth.

Let the remnant beware.

Let every lie be cast down.

Let every thought be brought captive to Christ.

“And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.” — John 8:32


11. Obscuring the Simplicity in Christ

Mathis’ work, filled with endless trails and webs of speculation, pulls the reader away from the plain truth of the gospel.

“But I fear, lest by any means, as the serpent beguiled Eve through his subtilty, so your minds should be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ.” — 2 Corinthians 11:3

The gospel is not hidden in complexity or elite knowledge — it is revealed to the humble and believed by faith.

12. Inspiring Suspicion Instead of Love

The fruit of his analysis is mistrust — toward institutions, people, and even the body of Christ.

But Scripture says:

“Charity thinketh no evil…” — 1 Corinthians 13:5

Christians are not called to blanket suspicion, but discernment grounded in love and truth.

13. Exalting Man’s Mind Instead of Christ’s Mind

The consistent message:

“I see what no one else sees.

Everyone else is deceived.”

This exalts man’s mind over Christ’s.

“Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus…” — Philippians 2:5

The mind of Christ is:

  • meek
  • obedient
  • servant-hearted 

— not self-appointed as judge over all others.

14. Perpetuating Bitterness in the Saints

Even if his conclusions were true, the effect is bitterness — not holiness.

Yet the Word warns:

“Looking diligently lest any man fail of the grace of God; lest any root of bitterness springing up trouble you…” — Hebrews 12:15

Bitterness, not peace, is often the fruit of conspiracy obsession.

15. Failing to Call the Reader to Repentance

A prophetic voice calls men to God.

Mathis calls men to his worldview.

But:

“Repent ye therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out…” — Acts 3:19

If a message leaves the reader angry but unrepentant, it is not from the Spirit.

Let this HOLY E-MANUAL be a call to return to the Word, to Christ,

and to a Spirit-filled discernment rooted in:

  • love
  • truth
  • holiness

“And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.” — John 8:32

16. Creating an Echo Chamber of Elitism

Mathis promotes a mentality where only a small, “awake” remnant understands what’s “really going on.”

This fosters spiritual elitism — the very thing Christ condemned.

“I thank thee, O Father… because thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes.” — Matthew 11:25

“If any man think that he knoweth any thing, he knoweth nothing yet as he ought to know.” — 1 Corinthians 8:2

The gospel is for the lowly, not the self-exalted.

17. Replacing the Word with Worldview

Finally, Mathis frames everything — 

  • AI
  • science
  • media
  • history 

— through a personal worldview that becomes more authoritative than Scripture itself.

“Sanctify them through thy truth:

thy word is truth.” — John 17:17

“Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit…” — Colossians 2:8

Summary Table: 17 Spiritual Dangers in Mathis’ Paper

  1. Replacing Scripture with Speculation
  2. Stirring Fear, Not Faith
  3. Discrediting God’s Common Grace
  4. Encouraging Isolation Over Fellowship
  5. Trading Humility for Cynicism
  6. Distracting from the Gospel
  7. Idolizing Knowledge
  8. Disguising Mockery as Discernment
  9. Offering No Hope or Redemption
  10. Competing with Christ Instead of Pointing to Him
  11. Obscuring the Simplicity in Christ
  12. Inspiring Suspicion Instead of Love
  13. Exalting Man’s Mind Instead of Christ’s Mind
  14. Perpetuating Bitterness in the Saints
  15. Failing to Call the Reader to Repentance
  16. Creating an Echo Chamber of Elitism
  17. Replacing the Word with Worldview

A Personal Plea from the Watchman

Beloved, I do not write these things from a spirit of superiority or condemnation.

I too have wrestled with:

  • fear
  • suspicion
  • pride

I too have chased shadows that offered no peace.

THE SHADOW KINGDOMS: A BIBLICAL & HISTORICAL EXPOSE ON SECRET SOCIETIES FROM B.C. TO A.D. – Library of Rickandria

But I have found that only one truth sets free — Jesus Christ, crucified and risen.

JESUS CHRIST REVEALED — THE TRUTH THEY HID – Library of Rickandria

May this warning stir you to run to the Word, not the world.


Prayer for Discernment

Heavenly Father,

Grant unto Thy remnant a spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of Christ.

Let every false light be exposed by the brightness of Thy truth.

Guard our hearts from fear, from bitterness, and from the pride of our own thoughts. 

Teach us to trust not in man, not in machines, not in mysteries — but in Thy holy Word.

Make us wise as serpents, gentle as doves, and bold as lions.

And if any be ensnared by deception, Lord, deliver them. Restore them.

And set them free.

In Jesus’ name.

Amen.

Chapter 13: Conclusion — Truth Shall Make You Free

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“And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.” — John 8:32

We have examined, in the light of Scripture, the many false claims presented in Miles Mathis’ paper on AI.

At every point, his words reveal not just factual error, but spiritual danger.

The true battle is not over artificial intelligence — but over spiritual allegiance.

Truth is not a theory.

Truth is not a feeling.

Truth is not found in the margins of conspiracies.

Truth is a Person.

“I am the way, the truth, and the life:

no man cometh unto the Father, but by me.” — John 14:6

Jesus Christ is the only antidote to deception.

All discernment must begin and end in Him.

The believer is not called to speculate, but to stand firm in the faith once delivered to the saints.

“Stand therefore, having your loins girt about with truth…” — Ephesians 6:14

Let the Watchmen Arise

The world is drowning in noise — from voices like Mathis and many others.

But God is raising up a remnant who will not fear, not compromise, and not conform.

Let the Church return to the old paths:

  • The Word of God, rightly divided.
  • The Name of Jesus, exalted above all.
  • The Holy Ghost, leading in power and truth.

Let us not be hearers only, but doers — contending for truth in love, standing firm in holiness, and proclaiming the Gospel in boldness.

“Watch ye, stand fast in the faith, quit you like men, be strong.” — 1 Corinthians 16:13

The truth shall make you free —

but only if you:

  • receive it
  • believe it
  • walk in it

“Buy the truth, and sell it not.” — Proverbs 23:23

Endure to the End

In the last days, deception will increase.

False teachers will multiply.

But the promise remains:

“He that shall endure unto the end, the same shall be saved.” — Matthew 24:13

The cost of truth is real — but the reward is eternal.

May we be those who:

Love the truth, even when it wounds.

Speak the truth, even when it costs.

Live the truth, even when no one applauds.

This is the way of the cross.

This is the way of Christ.


The Call to Discern with Compassion

Discernment is not suspicion.

It is not bitterness.

It is the love of truth, wielded with the love of Christ.

As we refute error, we must also plead for souls — even those spreading deception.

“Brethren, if a man be overtaken in a fault, ye which are spiritual, restore such an one in the spirit of meekness…” — Galatians 6:1

Mathis is not our enemy — the lies are.

We do not rejoice in his downfall but long for his repentance.


Freedom Is Not Just Escape — It Is Allegiance

Biblical freedom is not simply the escape from deception, but allegiance to Christ.

Freedom is not the removal of constraints — it is the joy of submission to the King.

“Being then made free from sin, ye became the servants of righteousness.” — Romans 6:18

The truth sets you free:

  • from sin
  • from fear
  • from delusion


— but also:

  • unto obedience
  • unto truth
  • unto life

A Word to the Faithful

To the saints who have:

  • endured
  • labored
  • wept 

— God sees you.

You are not forgotten.

Your stand for truth in a world of lies is not in vain.

“Be ye steadfast, unmovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord…” — 1 Corinthians 15:58

Hold fast.

Shine brighter.

Finish well.

Christ is coming.

Benediction

Now unto Him who is able to keep you from falling, and to present you faultless before the presence of His glory with exceeding joy — to the only wise God our Saviour, be glory and majesty, dominion and power, both now and ever. Amen. Jude 1:24-25


A Historical Echo: Reformers Against Falsehood

Throughout history, God has raised up faithful men to challenge error and exalt the truth. 

Martin Luther stood against indulgences with sola Scriptura.

William Tyndale defied kings to put the Bible into the hands of commoners.

Charles Spurgeon battled modernism in the Downgrade Controversy.

Their strength was not in suspicion, but in the Word of God.

Their cry was not,

“They lie to us,”

but, 

“Thus saith the Lord!”

Let this work join their ranks — not in fame, but in faithfulness.

A Final Call to the Reader

Beloved, have you examined yourself?

“Examine yourselves, whether ye be in the faith; prove your own selves.” — 2 Corinthians 13:5

Are you trusting in Christ alone?

Or in your own knowledge?

Have you escaped deception only to enter pride?

Return to the Shepherd of your soul.

Lay down every idol.

Take up your cross.

There is only one safe place:

under the Lordship of Jesus Christ.

Song of the Remnant

Let the remnant not just declare the truth — let them sing it.

A mighty fortress is our God, a bulwark never failing;
Our helper He amid the flood, of mortal ills prevailing…
Let goods and kindred go, this mortal life also;
The body they may kill: God’s truth abideth still, His kingdom is forever!

Epilogue: The Final Judgment

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“For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ…” — 2 Corinthians 5:10

  • every argument
  • every ideology
  • every theory 

— will be tested by fire.

Not by public opinion, not by peer review, but by the Judge of all the earth.

“Because He hath appointed a day, in the which He will judge the world in righteousness by that man whom He hath ordained…” — Acts 17:31

Miles Mathis will stand there.

So will you.

So will I.

And on that day,

  • no theory will save
  • no intellect will justify
  • no pride will stand

Only those hidden in Christ will endure.

“And whosoever was not found written in the book of life was cast into the lake of fire.” — Revelation 20:15

Two Roads, Two Ends

This is not a debate.

This is a warning.

One road leads to:

  • deception
  • self-exaltation
  • damnation

The other road leads to:

  • truth
  • repentance
  • life everlasting

You must choose.

Indiana Jones 3 Holy Grail Scene

“Enter ye in at the strait gate… because strait is the gate, and narrow is the way, which leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it.” — Matthew 7:13-14

Let the reader beware.

Let the reader repent.

Let the reader believe the Gospel.

Final Call

Friend, if you have been deceived — come home.

If you have wandered from Christ in pursuit of secret knowledge, return.

If your mind is filled with fear, anger, or confusion — let the Prince of Peace reign.

“Come now, and let us reason together, saith the Lord:

though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow…” — Isaiah 1:18

Today is the day of salvation.

“Seek ye the Lord while he may be found, call ye upon him while he is near.” — Isaiah 55:6

The final judgment is coming.

May you be found in Christ.

“That I may win Christ, and be found in him, not having mine own righteousness… but that which is through the faith of Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith.” — Philippians 3:8-9

A Word to the Deceived

If you have clung to false doctrines, conspiracy gospels, or anti-biblical narratives, understand this: God is not mocked.

Mocking God in the Name of the Holy Ghost: The Last Warning – Library of Rickandria

But He is also merciful.

“The times of this ignorance God winked at; but now commandeth all men every where to repent.” — Acts 17:30

You are not too far gone.

You are not too blinded.

Christ can heal your eyes and soften your heart.

Turn back while there is still time.

“Behold, now is the accepted time; behold, now is the day of salvation.” — 2 Corinthians 6:2

A Song for the Saints

When He shall come with trumpet sound,
O may I then in Him be found!
Dressed in His righteousness alone,
Faultless to stand before the throne.

— from “My Hope is Built on Nothing Less”

Let every faithful heart rejoice.

Let every burdened soul take courage.

Christ has overcome the world.

“Even so, come, Lord Jesus.” — Revelation 22:20

Amen.

Heaven’s Reward for the Faithful

Though the fire shall try every man’s work, the faithful will enter into joy unspeakable and full of glory.

“And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain:

for the former things are passed away.” — Revelation 21:4

The saints shall see His face, and His name shall be in their foreheads.

They shall reign with Him forever.

“Well done, thou good and faithful servant… enter thou into the joy of thy lord.” — Matthew 25:21

Let this promise stir us to persevere.

A Pastoral Blessing

May the Lord bless thee and keep thee.

May He shine His face upon thee and give thee peace.

May thy household be filled with truth, thy steps be ordered in righteousness, and thy lamp never lack oil.

May you hunger for the Word, thirst for the Spirit, and walk in the power of the cross.

May you love what is holy and hate what is false.

And may you finish your race with joy.

“The Lord shall preserve thy going out and thy coming in from this time forth, and even for evermore.” — Psalm 121:8


Commission to the Remnant

To all who love truth:

Go.

Go into the darkness and shine the light.

Go among the fearful and declare the peace of Christ.

Go to the deceived and proclaim the truth in love.

“Go ye therefore, and teach all nations… teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you…” — Matthew 28:19-20

And remember: you are not alone.

The King goes before you.

The Spirit empowers you.

The Word sustains you.

“Lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world.” — Matthew 28:20

Amen.

Come, Lord Jesus.

Soli Deo Gloria.


AI & the Spirit of Gnosticism: A Christian Examination of Miles Mathis


AI & the Spirit of Gnosticism: A Christian Examination of Miles Mathis – Library of Rickandria