Algorithms, AI, and the Antichrist Agenda 📲🤖💻
Discerning Who or What Is Discipling You
⸻
“Who told you that you were naked?”
(See Genesis 3:11)
Have you ever heard a message, a soundbite, or a doctrinal stance that sent you into a tailspin?
Me too.
Source matters.
I was raised in a Christian culture that discouraged questions and avoided confrontation. “Work out your salvation with fear and trembling” was interpreted as an internalized crisis rather than a divine invitation to wrestle in relationship. Asking questions was treated like rebellion. And so, I learned to suppress them.
As I got older, I realized that many people didn’t struggle the way I did with free will, discernment, and choosing what to believe. I carried into adulthood this faulty belief: that if a leader, an “authority,” or an expert said something, I had to accept it-no matter how it felt in my spirit.
But here’s the problem: they all disagreed with each other.
Layer on top of that my codependent, people-pleasing nature-driven to make peace and avoid conflict-and you get a recipe for confusion and compromise.
The truth is:
Problems presented without solutions are not God-initiated.
They are condemning by nature, destructive by design.
When Christ is the source, restoration is always the endgame.
Sin, depravity, and decay all have a remedy: His name is Jesus.
God appoints, anoints, and empowers-but not like the world does. It’s not a reward system for behavior or a prize for cracking a spiritual code. His choosing refines, defines, and delivers. It produces humility, contrition, and a piercing tone that cuts through the white noise of idle babble.
The world’s system is built on reciprocity: “Give me what I want, and I’ll give you what you want.”
But the Kingdom says: “Deny yourself. Pick up your cross. Follow me.”
So I ask again: Who told you?
Was it a life-giving word?
Or the knowledge of good and evil that stripped you of your identity?
⸻
The Anxiety Algorithm
We live in a world run by algorithms—and they are anything but holy.
They are dopamine-driven, fear-framed mechanisms designed to feed on your soul and feed you back what you’ve already consumed-like a dog returning to its vomit
(See Proverbs 26:11).
Your news feed is feeding you lies, half-truths, and illusions at such a high volume that your subconscious and central nervous system can’t keep up.
Discernment weakens.
Survival instincts kick in.
Urgency becomes a deity, and we worship at the altar of significance.
The algorithm feeds you what you consume-whether or not it’s good for you. And because it thrives on engagement, it subtly rewires your value system. If you’re not careful, you’ll begin to mirror it.
You are being discipled by your feed.
But Jesus said:
“Come to Me, all you who are weary… and I will give you rest.”
The algorithm can’t give what it doesn’t possess.
Only Christ can restore what culture has stolen.
⸻
The “Christian” Conundrum
We’re called to be in the world but not of it.
But far too often, we are not in it and still of it.
Christian culture has become an echo chamber-its own kind of algorithm.
We contribute little to cultural transformation because we refuse to engage. Meanwhile, the kingdoms of this world continue, largely uninfluenced by our presence.
But the call is to be leaven-to infiltrate the dough and cause it to rise.
Like Daniel and the Hebrew boys, we must refuse the king’s food, while still sitting at the table offering wisdom from heaven.
Without this integration, we settle for rhetoric without revelation, community without consecration, and information without transformation.
Too many believers now exist in a subculture fed by consumer-driven content independent from the Spirit of the Living God.
We’ve replaced:
• Teachers with influencers,
• Prophets with political pundits,
• Evangelists with charismatic salesmen,
• The Father with pop psychology,
• The Son with self,
• And the Holy Spirit with AI crafted in our image.
We’ve outsourced intimacy with God to idols of community, industry, and morality-a form of godliness that lacks both power and presence.
⸻
Spiritual Pornography, Prostitution & the Sterilization of the Saints
Intimacy is not a spectacle.
Private passion was always meant to produce public fruit.
But in our performative age, people document intimacy with God not as testimony, but as entertainment-because they are being discipled by the wrong kingdom.
Fruit doesn’t lie. But people do.
Voices without fruit are nothing more than clanging cymbals-spiritually barren influencers talking about things they’ve never truly lived.
But pastors with healthy families, leaders with legacy, and ministers who move in both power and the fear of the Lord-these are irreplaceable.
What we’ve traded for this is spiritual pornography:
• Visually documented spiritual acts,
• Tailored to preference,
• With no intention of covenant or fruit.
This isn’t intimacy; it’s performance.
And performance without intimacy will always sterilize the saints.
Desire is deceptive. Appetite is subjective.
But appetite adjusts to diet-and desire follows focus.
So if we want a pure heart, we must consecrate our consumption.
Intimacy with God was always intended to produce a legacy, not just an experience.
⸻
The Death of Consumer Christianity
Consumer Christianity is dead.
It just doesn’t know it yet.
These models are failing because they were destined to.
Any branch not abiding in the Vine is cut off and thrown into the fire.
Christianity is and always has been built on Christ, the rejected cornerstone.
And it’s rooted in a life of:
• Prayer,
• Scripture,
• Radical obedience,
• And the Great Commission.
If you’re not healing the sick, casting out demons, cleansing the leper, raising the dead, or proclaiming the Kingdom-you may need to ask yourself which kingdom you’re actually serving.
Jesus is coming back for a pure and spotless bride.
Many will say “Lord, Lord… we did ___ in your name.”
And He will say:
“Depart from Me, I never knew you.”
⸻
A Final Prayer
May the Lord, who is a consuming fire,
Consume every idol erected in our image.
May the glory of God destroy every philosophy
That violates His purpose.
May the Spirit resuscitate every heart dead in sin.
Lord, let mercy triumph over judgment.
Let grace wash us clean.
And may we repent of deception and mixture,
Until only Christ remains.

So. Much. Truth! Felt like I was being hit by a holy freight train.
This so resonates