Good morning. Today we’re launching Believing, a newsletter about modern religion and spirituality. To kick it off, we’re exploring how chatbots are mimicking chaplains — and even gods.
Chatting with God?
Delphine Collins, a 43-year-old preschool teacher, used to go to McDonald’s for breakfast before work. She’d always order the Big Breakfast — eggs, sausage and pancakes — as the sun turned Detroit’s skyline pink. She stopped going, though, when a woman in her neighborhood was stabbed to death while working there. Collins, who fled Liberia’s civil war years ago, turned to a spiritual chatbot for comfort. It offered a psalm and said that “the Scriptures remind us of God’s power to heal and restore.” She said it helped. She isn’t alone. Tens of millions of people are turning to A.I.-powered religious apps that mimic conversations with clergy — or even God. These apps are rocketing to the top of Apple’s App Store. Bible Chat, a Christian app, has more than 30 million downloads. Hallow, a Catholic app, was Apple’s most-downloaded app at one point last year, ahead of Netflix, Instagram and TikTok. The apps are attracting tens of millions of dollars in investments, and people are paying up to $70 a year for subscriptions. Now, other apps — like Pray.com, a platform that encourages people to pray and has about 25 million downloads — are rolling out chatbots, too. I’ve been reporting on these apps for a story we published today. It was part of my work on Believing, a new Times newsletter on modern religion and spirituality that we’re launching today. (Sign up to get Believing each week.) Below, I explain why these chatbots are so popular, as well as what concerns they raise. Personalized guidance
In religious texts, the protagonists are often ghosted: Moses wandered in the desert. Job’s suffering seemingly had no end. Muhammad petitioned heaven and, for a period, found silence. Their predicament is universal. People often seek cosmic help in their toughest moments and then wait for a response. To some, this was a business opportunity. Tech founders realized chatbots could offer people the instant, personalized support that clergy can’t always provide. Krista Rogers, who is 61 and lives in Xenia, Ohio, goes to church regularly and uses religious apps. She also turns to a chatbot when she has spiritual questions that she doesn’t necessarily want to ask her pastor, including about remarriage after divorce. “It is more low-stakes,” she said of talking to a chatbot. Plus, she added, “you don’t want to disturb your pastor at 3 in the morning.” Several religious leaders told me they were supportive of the chatbots as long as they complement — but don’t replace — traditional religious communities. “There is a whole generation of people who have never been to a church or synagogue,” said Rabbi Jonathan Romain, a leader in Britain’s Reform Judaism movement. “Spiritual apps are their way into faith.” Others are more wary. “The curmudgeon in me says there is something good about really, really wrestling through an idea, or wrestling through a problem, by telling it to someone,” said Fr. Mike Schmitz, a Catholic priest and podcaster. “I don’t know if that can be replaced.” He is also worried about data privacy. “I wonder if there isn’t a larger danger in pouring your heart out to a chatbot,” he said. “Is it at some point going to become accessible to other people?” Seeking omniscienceIn the past few years, chatbots have become so many things — tutors, therapists, research assistants and engineers — that their foray into chaplaincy may seem unremarkable. This area of life, though, is different. Religions are in the business of omniscience. They promise answers to the unknowable, encounters with the mysterious, and communion with the divine. While chatbots can seem all-knowing, they’re only a facsimile. They borrow the aggregated wisdom of the internet, but they are incapable of cultivating their own. (At least, for now!) Many people have devoted their entire human lives to spiritual contemplation; chatbots offer replies in about three seconds. Still, they are shaping how people think about huge, eternal concerns — salvation, deliverance, confession. Karen Fugelo, who works at a middle school in Pennsylvania, has turned to religious apps for advice on perhaps the most urgent of spiritual matters — death. “My mother is going to be 95 and reaching the end of her life’s journey,” she said. On Hallow, Fugelo asked the chatbot “how to prepare myself as well as my mother for going to be with God.” That’s also what Laurentiu Balasa had in mind when he created Bible Chat, after the death of his own father eventually brought him back to church. “People come to us with all different types of challenges: mental health issues, well-being, emotional problems, work problems, money problems,” Balasa told me. “I believe this is a new way of approaching faith.” Read the full story here, and sign up to get my Believing newsletter in your inbox every Sunday.
Charlie Kirk
International
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