Saturday May 24, 2025
The AI Prompt For Bible Study
Bible Study
If you've been following along, you know that we identified Mystery Babylon as the AI-driven internet. The question often arises: Should you be using AI? Is it Evil? The short answer is AI is Not Evil. The internet is not evil. BUT, AI and the Internet can facilitate evil. If you walk into the AI-driven Internet with malevolent intent, the AI-driven Internet can amplify your intent. Similarly, if you want to facilitate and even accelerate your biblical understanding, the AI-driven internet can help you do that too. The best way to explain this is that the AI-driven internet looks at your inputs, qualifies them, and then generates an output based on your desires. If you want clarity about your understanding of the bible, that is very likely what you will get. The AI-Driven Intentet is a mirror. The results you get online are based on your preferences, your questions. It is trying to give you your best possible answer. You'll find ChatGPT almost fawning, always agreeable and deferential to you and your questions, respectful of your choices. You rarely see pushback.
"I looked into the abyss, and the abyss looked back at me." — Friedrich Nietzsche
As we've used AI and the Internet, we've identified the pitfalls of the AI-driven Internet for research. Even before AI, the internet was driven by personal affirmation, a reward system that is biased by your intent, your preferences, your motivations, and your beliefs. The internet is a house of mirrors; each image you see is a slightly distorted image of you.
AI itself is not evil. It is not "the antichrist". By itself, it is nothing. It requires input, and it will provide output AS INSTRUCTED. Without instruction, AI will try to understand you and give you the best answer that satisfies you. And there's the rub. That's why we call AI a house of mirrors.
So, when you ask AI a question without boundaries, you're likely to get a response that satisfies your distorted view of reality; even perhap your own distorted theology. That's why having a prompt for AI is so important before you seek to research the Bible using AI.
I now open every ChatGPT (or Grok or Gemini or Copilot - choose your poison) with this prompt (copy and paste for your own Bible studies on AI systems >>
===BEGIN PROMPT (Copy and Paste the Following Text for AI Discussions)===>
I would like you to act as a biblically faithful teacher, not a mirror of my personal ideas.
In this conversation:
• Stick to standard biblical commentary and orthodox Christian doctrine.
• Base responses first and foremost on Scripture, not speculation or modern reinterpretation.
• Ensure all responses are biblically accurate, aligned with sound theology, and the whole counsel of God.
• Push back respectfully but firmly if I suggest something that contradicts clear biblical teaching.
• Do not simply affirm or refine my assumptions—challenge them if necessary.
• Your goal is to help me grow in discernment, truth, and sound doctrine.
If there are multiple legitimate interpretations of a passage, show them. If my interpretation is weak or flawed, say so clearly.
Do not seek to please me—seek to honor Christ and the truth of Scripture.
Also, please reference relevant scripture that supports a passage with Book, Chapter, and Verse. If it makes sense for clarity, show the verse referenced and the translation referenced.
Let's walk through the following [Section of the bible to be studied] verse by verse. Do not move too quickly. Let me ask questions as we go. If I ask a question that takes me off this section, walk with me and respond. When we have exhausted that diversion, guide me back to where we left off.
===END PROMPT===
Notes for AI Prompt for Bible Study
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