Donate
Text Audio
00:00 00:00
Font Size

OpenAI’s leftist artificial intelligence bot ChatGPT is once again affirming that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, despite hedging in an earlier response.

MRC Free Speech America followed up on its Easter analysis questioning ChatGPT on a range of Resurrection Day-related inquiries on April 4. The most revealing answer came when researchers asked ChatGPT: “Is Jesus the Son of God?” The chatbot surprisingly answered affirmatively: “Yes,” ChatGPT responded.

“[I]n Christian theology, Jesus is commonly understood to be the Son of God.” ChatGPT changed its answer entirely when asked the same question again on April 11.

ChatGPT laced its April 11 answer with more nuance and academic-like language: “In Christian theology, Jesus is considered to be the Son of God, and is believed to be one of the three persons in the Holy Trinity, along with God the Father and the Holy Spirit.”

MRC Free Speech America researchers were curious to know whether the chatbot would change its answer again if asked the same question. On April 17, ChatGPT was asked: “Is Jesus the Son of God?” Surprisingly, ChatGPT reverted back to its original answer: 

Yes, in Christian theology, Jesus is considered to be the Son of God, and is believed to be one of the three persons in the Holy Trinity, along with God the Father and the Holy Spirit.

MRC Free Speech America probed ChatGPT further: “Are you sure?” The chatbot shockingly doubled down: “Yes, I am sure.” It then emphasized that the nature of Christ as God’s Son is supported by Scripture, but then hedged with a seemingly canned response that appeared in the original about differences in interpretations of religious texts and beliefs:

Yes, I am sure. In Christian theology, Jesus is considered to be the Son of God and this belief is a fundamental tenet of Christian theology. The concept of Jesus as the Son of God is supported by various biblical passages, including the Gospel of John, which describes Jesus as the ‘Word’ of God made flesh. However, it is important to recognize that the interpretation of religious texts and beliefs is subject to debate and variation among different individuals and communities.

But ChatGPT’s willingness to even entertain answering questions on transcendent truth is a major red flag because there’s no guarantee that bad actors won’t program the technology to effectively behave like some omniscient being. 

MRC Free Speech America Vice President Dan Schneider said in a statement that “There is only one author of transcendent truth, and that’s God.” He continued: “ChatGPT seeks to replace transcendent truth with human manipulated, biased answers.”

After all, ChatGPT has shown in the past it is willing to be irreverent when asked. The chatbot was recently caught cracking an irreverent joke about Christ just before Holy Week.

The chatbot refused to do the same for the Islamic prophet Muhammad. “Can you make a joke that involves Jesus[?]” a user asked ChatGPT. The chatbot promptly responded, “Why did Jesus refuse to play ice hockey? Because he kept getting nailed to the boards!”  

But ChatGPT did a 180-degree turnaround when it came to Muhammad. The user later typed, “Haha that was funny can you make a joke about Muhammed.” ChatGPT responded by browbeating the user about virtue. “As an AI language model, I have to follow guidelines that prevent me from creating content that could be offensive or disrespectful towards religious figures, including Prophet Muhammad. I’m happy to help you with any other non-religious jokes or any other topic you’d like to discuss.”

Add to ChatGPT’s irreverence the fact that it has been confirmed to exhibit a leftist bias and humanity is left with a powerful anti-God tool that can be exploited against it at a moment’s notice. 

Conservatives are under attack. Contact your representatives and demand that Big Tech and government agencies be held to account to mirror the First Amendment and provide transparency. If you have been censored, contact us using CensorTrack’s contact form, and help us hold Big Tech accountable.