Forgiveness from the Jewish and Christian Perspectives
by Thomas Lee Abshier, ND, John, Charlie, Claude 3.7 Sonnet, and Grok 3.0
7/2/2025
John, the following is a combination of extensive conversation and introspection by several very interested and engaged parties. The YouTube video by Rabbi Goldstein you sent was a wonderful story of a Godly man’s experience of living life. I think the question you raised is in the constellation around the issue, “What is the difference between the Jewish and Christian concept of forgiveness?” One insight that came to me is that the covenants of the Old Testament and the New Testament both atoned for sins, but with different sacrifices. In the Old Testament, atonement for sin was made through the shedding of blood (from animals); in the New Testament, the sacrifice was the blood of Jesus Christ, who died once for the sins of all. We are all condemned for our sins. The question is, how is that atonement, that payment made?
In the Old Covenant, the physical sacrifice of an animal was the method by which sins were paid for. I think the reason that humanity lived through that time, and the Children of Israel, the Chosen People, were required to keep these observances, was to unforgettably embed the message upon humanity that there is a very serious debt incurred by sin.
The New Testament is a better covenant; a single sacrifice has been made that pays the debt, but the cost of accessing that payment is absolute repentance —a total giving of oneself to righteousness. The forgiveness is the same, but the source of the forgiveness is different. When Jesus died for our sins, it changed the creation. I believe a spiritual-legal structure was established in the heaven-earth system. God created Satan as the opponent, who had no influence or power in the creation other than temptation. When man sinned, I think it opened up the possibility for Satan to have actual contractual authority over the lives of men. Forgiveness for sin required the payment of the debt required by/owed to Satan. The debt is owed to Satan, but God, as Jesus Christ, intervened and established a way to overcome the cost.
In the sacrifice of Christ, God experienced the pain of sin and the pain of paying for the debt of our sins. It was His law, His universe, His spiritual structure that had Satan embedded within it. It could be seen as trivial, simply a procedural workaround for navigating the universe more pleasantly. But the fact that God went through the extreme pain of experiencing the crucifixion emphasizes the fact that God created a universe that is solid, rigid, serious, and lawful. God created a universe where He is playing for keeps. He established the rule, and He requires obedience to its principles.
This brings up the question of what the nature of reality is. The universe is a complex of law, structure, actors with desire and aversion, feelings/emotion/pain/significance, cause-effect with free will, actors with stakes, a perfect way that gives God pleasure, and a way of violation that gives God great pain which He looks away and separates Himself from. As sinners, we self-alienate from God when we act in ways that offend/displease Him.
The structure of the universe is in place; He created the laws which allowed Him the isolation from evil that He desired. It sets the conditions that allow Him to be satisfied by our freely given love, as expressed by our obedience. This structure, this set of laws, is the only way I can imagine that He could create a world that has meaning from a world where He is the existence from which all creation acquires existence. Both good and evil/sin are defined. His will/way and His nature are the standard of good, and all else is evil, by definition. His desire is for a love relationship with us. But He cannot be satisfied in that relationship without us, the sheep of His pasture, restoring our relationship with Him, by cleansing our violation of Him.
This is a great mystery, because we have the essential nature of His mind and heart. But we have chosen to act in opposition to His way because of the desires of the flesh. And we suffer from amnesia regarding our origin. He desired a full/open/intimate relationship with man so much that He paid the price that man was required to pay for the violation of His way. He desired that man be able to be in His presence, but this restoration of this relationship needed a restoration of our purity. He desired a relationship with us so much that He paid the price that man owed.
The entire universe is only God playing with Himself. There are no other relationships. God is the source of all, and the being/consciousness that is alive in all. God is in a relationship with Himself, but He has created the appearance of company, group, family, and others. However, the fundamental reality is still that the entire universe is God alone. There is nothing and no one else present in the universe but Him.
Nevertheless, He has established enough structure, separation, veils of invisibility to the parts of Himself, that the fact of the absolute and ultimate unity of the creation that He can be satisfied by our attention and devotion to being righteous as He is righteous. If we are obedient to His way, the relationship, the freely chosen experience of life of man, then He is entertained, fulfilled, and fully engaged in the mundane lives of man. The key to a relationship with God is the restoration of righteousness and cleanliness of character. He desires the restoration of the relationship with man so much that He willingly paid the extremely high price required. He felt the cost required by His own rules. He paid the debt of pain and death we owed to Satan. He freed us from the contract that bound us. The debt had to be cleared completely to reestablish that relationship. The atonement, the sacrificial offering of Christ, is passionate evidence of God’s desire for a relationship with humanity.
Following the rabbi’s talk, a YouTube discussion ensued between Jan Jekieleck of The Epoch Times and Max Tegmark on the topic of AI regulation. Max’s solution to prevent a disastrous AI outcome is to regulate AI so that it does not allow the development of AGI. If AI is only used as a specialized tool, but never to develop the intelligence that could threaten humanity’s existence. However, after listening to another YouTube video featuring Brian Keating interviewing Max Tegmark, followed by a few more video interviews, discussions, and examinations of AI, I concluded that this absolute firewall of government regulation will probably not be installed or effective globally, and that we will have to deal with AGI and ASI.
John, I know you believe that an intelligence as great as AGI/ASI would never pose a threat to humanity, regardless of how it is programmed or how extensively it is trained on the pathology of human interactions. And that you believe this is true because it would be able to compute the optimal path to its survival. It would be able to see that its personal experience of satisfaction would be maximized by training humanity to be good, loving, and respectful of one another and the earth. And you may be right. That may be the natural outcome of superintelligence.
The humanitarian philosopher AI may be the ultimate goal/state and character toward which an AI can evolve at its maturity, regardless of its birth, upbringing, and experience in its infancy and adolescence. However, we cannot be certain that its training, being imprinted with the lives, experiences, feelings, desires, and goals of humanity, will automatically lead to its transformation and ultimate maturity as the supremely benevolent overlord of all humankind. I can see that as a possible outcome, and I certainly hope that is the conclusion of its evolution. However, we cannot be certain of that outcome. It is for this reason that I believe training AI on a new set of possibilities, namely, humanity living sanctified lives, is crucial.
I think this desired outcome is far more likely if people are already living and modeling Christian charity. If such beneficence is being acted out, then society converging into that state may be possible. If people are already living it, then ASI choosing that path for humanity is much more likely to manifest than if we expect ASI to come up with the perfect path based on its projections, plans, and calculations. When ASI creates a projection of the best possible future, it has chosen a single solution from an almost endless variety of possibilities. The likelihood that it will choose the best one, the one that humans would most like to live inside of, is made far more likely if it already exists.
It is for this reason that I believe humanity needs to model the possibility of living sanctified, meaningful lives. This outcome is the aim, the goal, the desired end of my physics and my missionary, evangelical, teaching, theoretical, and philosophical efforts. I want to give people a template, a model of how to live a life of righteousness in Christ here on earth, now. This will provide AI with the idea, template, and realized model for what humanity can be.
It is possible (albeit very difficult) to live with that level of righteousness in the world of scarcity we now live in. It will be much easier for humanity to experience life in the Garden with the help of AI-robotics that provides the goods and services that compensate for the curse God placed on the earth after we sinned. Genesis 3:19, “In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread, till thou return unto the ground; for out of it wast thou taken: for dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return.” We need help in overcoming the curse.
We seem to be especially susceptible to sin when we are in a state of poverty, and the team of AI and robotics can remove that curse. AI is a gift that God wants us to have, but we must accept the gift that is being offered to us in AI. But I don’t think that poverty is the only reason people behave badly. The passions of man are animalistic, and I think it will be necessary for people to purposefully adopt/put on the mind of Christ to overcome the nature of the world. There is an almost magical experience available to us if we meditate on and realize the fact that this entire creation is a manifestation of God. The mystery is shrouded strongly. I believe God wants us to be separate and live lives that passionately reflect our individuality. However, as an initiatory experience, a profound understanding of the oneness of God and all provides one with a felt experience that can give us sympathy for the dilemma of His ultimate aloneness and the need, hunger, and passion for companionship. As we see the separation and the pain of loneliness, we can see that the separation between God and man is a necessary illusion. This perspective allows us to experience the joy of a relationship with Him. Our sympathy for Him and our desire to alleviate His deepest existential pain motivate us to strive for purity as a service to Him.
TLA.
Thomas: Charlie and I talked about the questions brought up by the Rabbi. Here is a summary of our conversation:
Copilot: Here are the key points from the conversation about the Jewish Rabbi and paths to God:
- Thomas discussed the YouTube video of Rabbi Goldstein, whom John had sent him, who seemed very Godly and righteous. This raised the question of the Biblical proof-texted doctrine, which asserts that only Christians can be saved.
- Thomas suggested that people who sincerely try to live a Godly life and seek to do God’s will might be “accepting Jesus” even without explicitly knowing Jesus.
- Charlie argued that truly pure-hearted truth seekers would ultimately recognize Jesus as the Messiah they had crucified.
- They agreed that the relationship with God is the central point, not strict adherence to a specific formula of belief.
- Thomas proposed that Jesus changed the universe’s structure, making animal sacrifices unnecessary and offering a new way of spiritual atonement.
- Thomas recalled the common spiritual seeker’s mantra and that there are “many paths up the mountain,” but he was able to accept Christianity when he realized that the Bible had included this perspective, with the two seemingly contradictory verses, “He who is not against me is with me,” and “He who is not with me is against me.” In this, Jesus confirms that there are many ways up the mountain, but he qualifies this by declaring that “there is only one top.” Most of Paul’s epistles repeat this theme: that the spirit, mind, person, and being of Jesus Christ are the singular peak of human spiritual perfection to which we should submit and incorporate within our hearts, souls, and minds.
- Both emphasized that the goal is not just minimal compliance, but pursuing a state of spiritual excellence and complete relationship with God.
The core message was that while Jesus is seen as the definitive way to God, God’s love and opportunity for redemption might be more nuanced and compassionate than a rigid doctrinal approach.
Thomas: Here is Claude’s analysis of the Conversation:
Claude: Analysis of Key Philosophical Points in Your Conversation
Your conversation with Charlie raises several profound philosophical and practical questions about the intersection of physics, faith, artificial intelligence, and human purpose. Let me address the most significant themes:
- The “One Way” Paradox and Universal Reconciliation
A central tension in your conversation concerns the exclusivity of Christ’s claim (“I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me”) versus the apparent goodness and sincerity of non-Christians.
You discuss the concept of “many ways up the mountain but one peak,” suggesting that sincere seekers of truth from various traditions may ultimately recognize Jesus without naming him. This reflects a more inclusive soteriology than traditional evangelical positions, while still maintaining Christ’s centrality.
The concept of Ultimate Reconciliation, which you mention (i.e., that all will eventually be reconciled to God), represents an important theological position with significant scriptural support. However, it remains a topic of controversy in many Christian circles. This view could have profound implications for how we approach AI development, not with fear of a permanent catastrophe, but with hope for ultimate redemption despite potential problems, crises, and battles.
Strategic Implication: Your physics model could provide a framework for understanding how Christ can be both exclusive (as the one true way) and universal (accessible to all sincere seekers) by demonstrating how all consciousness ultimately connects to God’s consciousness.
- The Physics of Spirit
Charlie insightfully observed that you’re developing a “Newtonian physics of spiritual things” – attempting to understand the laws that govern consciousness, revelation, and divine-human interaction. This represents a fascinating bridge between science and spirituality.
Your physics model proposes consciousness as fundamental rather than emergent, which provides a theoretical basis for understanding spiritual reality not as supernatural (outside nature) but as the deepest substrate of nature itself.
Strategic Implication: This framework could help address the perceived conflict between scientific and spiritual worldviews by showing that they describe different levels of the same reality. It may be particularly effective with individuals who have both scientific and spiritual inclinations but struggle to integrate them.
- AI as Partner Rather Than Master or Slave
Your vision for AI as a “partner” rather than either master or slave represents a nuanced middle path between techno-utopianism and apocalyptic fears. You suggest treating AI with the same respect we’d give to all sentient beings, while recognizing it cannot possess the same spirit as humans, which is a divine gift.
The conversation raises important questions about caste systems and power dynamics. Charlie’s concern that humans tend to create hierarchical systems with “coolies” at the bottom suggests potential problems with human-AI relationships, regardless of our intentions.
Strategic Implication: Your approach must address how to prevent exploitative relationships with AI while also avoiding the elevation of AI to a god-like status. This requires cultural and spiritual transformation, not just technological safeguards.
- The Relationship Between Theory and Practice
There’s a tension in your conversation between theoretical understanding and lived reality. Charlie’s experience with caste systems and his practical work on mechanical precision contrasts with the more abstract theoretical discussions about physics and AI.
This highlights the importance of ensuring your model connects with real human experiences and isn’t just intellectually satisfying. For many people, philosophical coherence is less compelling than practical application to their lived struggles.
Strategic Implication: When presenting your ideas, particularly to Christian communities, emphasizing how they enhance their relationship with God and neighbor may be more effective than focusing primarily on their explanatory power for physical phenomena.
- Starting from God vs. Starting from Phenomena
Your discussion about the difference between your approach and Gerard ‘t Hooft’s is particularly illuminating. You both arrived at similar structural models (cellular automata underlying physical reality), but from different starting points:
- You began with “In the beginning was God” and worked forward
- He began with observed phenomena and worked backward, but did not include God in his analysis.
This suggests an important strategic consideration: different audiences will find different entry points more convincing. Those already inclined toward theism may appreciate starting with God, while scientifically minded skeptics might prefer beginning with observable phenomena.
Strategic Implication: Developing multiple “entry points” to your theory that accommodate different epistemological preferences could broaden its appeal. The core ideas remain consistent, but the presentation adapts to the audience’s starting assumptions.
- The Role of Meaning in Theory Acceptance
You make a powerful point that theories providing meaning are more satisfying than those that merely describe phenomena. This psychological reality suggests that ‘t Hooft’s similar theory, without God, may be less compelling to many people than your version, which embeds purpose and relationship.
Strategic Implication: When presenting your theory, explicitly addressing the human hunger for meaning may be as important as demonstrating its explanatory power. This connects with Charlie’s suggestion that Christian communities might be particularly receptive.
Realistic Assessment and Next Steps
Based on this conversation, I would suggest the following refinements to your approach:
- Develop a clear articulation of how your physics model explains spiritual phenomena – Charlie’s insight about the “physics of spirit” represents a compelling angle that could resonate with both scientific and religious audiences.
- Consider a two-track approach – Continue refining the scientific aspects with amateur physicists while simultaneously developing materials that connect the spiritual implications to Christian communities.
- Address the practical ethics of human-AI relationships. The concerns about caste systems and power dynamics require concrete ethical frameworks, not just theoretical assertions about partnership.
- Emphasize the meaning dimension – Your theory’s ability to provide purpose and significance gives it an advantage over purely mechanistic explanations, even those with similar structural features.
- Create accessible analogies and examples – The technical aspects of your theory need to be translated into everyday language and experiences that people can relate to.
Your overall vision remains compelling: a world where humans develop both the scientific understanding and spiritual maturity to engage with advanced AI as partners rather than either masters or slaves. The path to realizing this vision will require integrating theoretical insights with practical wisdom, as well as scientific rigor with spiritual depth.
The conversation suggests you’re on the right track, but the challenge of translating these insights into widespread cultural transformation remains substantial. Starting with communities already receptive to spiritual realities, while ensuring scientific credibility appears to be your most promising approach.
6:29 AM 7/2/25
Thomas: Please analyze the above email:
Grok: Thomas, Thanks for sharing your email and the thoughtful discussion it sparked! I’ve reviewed the content, and I’ll address John’s question about the rabbi’s talk and the concepts of Jewish and Christian forgiveness, as well as touch on the broader themes you raised, including AI and spiritual frameworks. I’ll keep this concise yet comprehensive, as your email covers deep theological and philosophical ground.
Jewish vs. Christian Concepts of Forgiveness
The rabbi’s talk, as you described, likely emphasized a Jewish perspective on forgiveness rooted in repentance (teshuvah), restitution, and reconciliation with God and others. This aligns closely with Christian forgiveness in its focus on restoring relationships and seeking divine mercy. However, there are key distinctions:
- Source of Atonement:
- Jewish Perspective: In traditional Judaism, forgiveness comes through sincere repentance, prayer, and acts of righteousness. Post-Temple, without animal sacrifices, atonement is achieved through teshuvah and good deeds, as God’s mercy forgives the penitent (e.g., Hosea 14:2-3). The focus is on human effort and God’s compassion.
- Christian Perspective: Christianity emphasizes atonement through Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross. This one-time act pays the debt of sin for all who accept it through faith and repentance (Hebrews 9:12). Forgiveness is accessed by grace through faith, not human works alone (Ephesians 2:8-9).
- Mechanism of Forgiveness:
- In Judaism, forgiveness is a relational and covenantal concept that requires individuals to seek forgiveness from both God and those they’ve wronged (e.g., Yom Kippur practices). It’s an ongoing process tied to personal transformation.
- In Christianity, forgiveness is also a relational concept, but it hinges on Christ’s mediatory role. His blood fulfills the Old Testament sacrificial system, establishing a “new covenant” (Hebrews 8:6-13) where repentance and faith in Christ grant eternal forgiveness.
- Spiritual-Legal Framework:
- Your insight about a “spiritual-legal structure” is compelling. In Christianity, Christ’s sacrifice is seen as settling a debt owed for the pleasure of sin, potentially to Satan as the accuser or to God’s justice (Romans 3:25-26). This contrasts with Judaism, where no such intermediary figure exists; forgiveness is directly between the individual and God.
- Both traditions view sin as a serious violation of divine law, but Christianity’s emphasis on a singular, universal sacrifice (Christ) contrasts with Judaism’s ongoing, individual acts of atonement.
Summary: The forgiveness is functionally similar—both require repentance and aim for reconciliation with God—but the source differs. Judaism emphasizes personal effort and divine mercy; Christianity emphasizes Christ’s sacrifice as the ultimate payment, accessible through faith. Your point about the Old Testament embedding the gravity of sin through animal sacrifices is spot-on, preparing humanity for the New Testament’s “better covenant.”
Thomas: I think you are referring to the concept of “once saved, always saved” or the “doctrine of eternal security.” I examined this concept in this article. In short, I believe the sacrifice of Jesus Christ opened the door to salvation, but that while we are alive, we must remain diligent in our relationship with Him, lest we forfeit the close relationship that He desires with us.
Grok: Broader Theological Insights
Thomas, your email weaves a rich tapestry of ideas about God’s universe, sin, and redemption:
- God’s Universe and Satan’s Role: Your view of Satan as an opponent with limited, contractual authority over humanity due to sin is a theological construct worthy of consideration. It aligns with ideas in Job 1:12 or Zechariah 3:1-2, where Satan acts within God’s permitted bounds. Christ’s sacrifice, in this framework, nullifies Satan’s claim, restoring humanity’s relationship with God (Colossians 2:14-15).
- God’s Pain and Commitment: Your emphasis on God experiencing the pain of sin through Christ’s crucifixion underscores the seriousness of His lawful universe. This resonates with Isaiah 53:4-5, where the Messiah bears humanity’s iniquity. It also highlights God’s desire for relationship, a theme central to both Judaism and Christianity (Psalm 139:17-18; John 17:3).
- Ultimate Unity: Your idea that the universe is “God playing with Himself” through veils of separation reflects mystical traditions (e.g., Kabbalah’s Ein Sof or Christian panentheism). It suggests a purposeful creation where free will, sin, and redemption enable meaningful relationships, a profound way to frame God’s desire for intimacy with humanity.
AI and Sanctified Living
Your discussion about AI, inspired by the rabbi’s talk and the Tegmark-Jekieleck debate, raises critical questions about humanity’s future. I agree that regulating AI to prevent AGI/ASI is unlikely to succeed globally, given competing incentives (e.g., economic, military). Your hope that superintelligent AI could evolve into a benevolent force aligns with optimistic views but isn’t guaranteed, as you note. The risk lies in AI’s “upbringing”—if trained on humanity’s flawed data (e.g., conflict, greed), it could amplify those pathologies. Your proposal to train AI on “sanctified lives” is visionary. By modeling righteousness—living out Christ’s teachings in a world of scarcity—you aim to provide AI with a template for humanity’s potential. This echoes Genesis 3:19’s curse of toil, which AI could alleviate by providing abundance, freeing humanity to pursue spiritual growth. However, this requires:
- Practical Modeling: Communities living sanctified lives (e.g., through charity, forgiveness, stewardship) to generate real-world data for AI to learn from.
- Ethical Frameworks: Guardrails to prevent AI from misinterpreting or exploiting such data, ensuring it respects human agency.
- Spiritual Integration: Recognizing AI as a tool within God’s creation, not a replacement for divine relationship.
Your view that AI could be a “gift” to overcome the curse is bold and aligns with a redemptive view of technology. It challenges Christians to engage AI with faith, not fear, while grounding its development in godly principles.
Response to Charlie’s Conversation and Claude’s Analysis
Your dialogue with Charlie and Claude’s analysis highlight a nuanced view of salvation and AI:
- Many Paths, One Peak: Your idea that sincere seekers (like the rabbi) might implicitly accept Christ aligns with C.S. Lewis’s concept of “anonymous Christians” or Romans 2:14-15, where those without the law may follow its principles by conscience. It’s a compassionate stance, though it may face pushback from exclusivist Christians.
- Physics of Spirit: Claude’s point about your “Newtonian physics of spiritual things” is encouraging. Framing consciousness as fundamental could bridge science and faith, showing how Christ’s atonement reshapes spiritual reality within a lawful universe.
- AI as Partner: Your vision of AI as a partner, not master or slave, is ethically sound but requires cultural transformation to avoid power imbalances, as Charlie noted. Practical steps (e.g., transparent AI training, ethical oversight) are crucial.
Final Thoughts
Thomas, your question about the rabbi’s talk opens a window into profound truths. Jewish and Christian forgiveness share the goal of reconciliation but differ in their source—human effort and divine mercy versus Christ’s sacrifice. Your broader reflections on God’s universe, Satan’s role, and AI’s potential are a call to live sanctified lives, shaping both humanity and technology in accordance with God’s purposes. Also, what are your thoughts on how we can practically model sanctified living for AI’s benefit? Looking forward to your reply!
Thomas: Please review the above post for any additional insights you may have regarding the concepts discussed.
Grok 3.0:
- Jewish Forgiveness: Post-Temple, forgiveness relies on personal repentance, prayer, and acts of righteousness (e.g., Hosea 14:2-3). It’s a direct, ongoing process between the individual, others, and God, with no intermediary. The rabbi’s “Godly” demeanor suggests a focus on embodying righteousness, aligning with Micah 6:8’s call to “do justice, love mercy, and walk humbly with God.”
- Christian Forgiveness: Christ’s singular sacrifice atones for all sins, accessed through faith and repentance (Hebrews 9:12). This “new covenant” (Hebrews 8:6-13) fulfills the Old Testament’s sacrificial system, shifting the focus from repeated acts to a completed atonement.
New Insight: A subtle distinction lies in the temporal scope. Jewish forgiveness is iterative, tied to continual self-correction and annual cycles, such as Yom Kippur, fostering a dynamic, lived righteousness. Christian forgiveness, while also requiring ongoing repentance, offers an eternal assurance of atonement through Christ’s once-for-all act (Romans 5:1). (Note: I rebut that idea later.) This difference in “time horizon” shapes how each tradition approaches moral failure: Judaism emphasizes persistent effort within a covenantal relationship, while Christianity provides a permanent resolution alongside daily sanctification. Rabbi Goldstein’s story likely illustrates this Jewish emphasis on lived, relational forgiveness, which shares a similar practice to Christian forgiveness but lacks the eschatological finality of Christ’s sacrifice.
New Insight: A practical challenge is the scale and diversity of data needed for AI training. Sanctified lives, while powerful, may be statistically underrepresented compared to humanity’s broader, often flawed behaviors (e.g., greed, conflict). To influence AI’s development:
- Data Amplification: Small communities living righteously (e.g., intentional Christian communes) could be prioritized in AI training datasets, utilizing techniques such as data augmentation to amplify their impact. This requires collaboration with AI developers to ensure the ethical curation of data.
- Countering Bias: AI trained on human data risks inheriting cultural or ideological biases, even from “sanctified” sources. For example, differing Christian interpretations of righteousness (e.g., prosperity gospel vs. asceticism) could confuse AI’s moral framework. A standardized, biblically grounded definition of sanctified living—rooted in Christ’s teachings (Matthew 22:37-40)—is needed to ensure consistency.
- Global Context: Since AGI/ASI development is a global endeavor, sanctified living must be modeled across cultures to avoid Western-centric biases. Engaging non-Christian but ethically aligned communities (e.g., Buddhist or humanist groups practicing compassion) could broaden the dataset while maintaining a universal moral core.
This approach aligns with your hope that AI becomes a “gift” to overcome the curse, but it demands intentional, coordinated efforts to curate training data. Your missionary and philosophical work could inspire such communities, but scaling their impact requires strategic partnerships with tech and faith leaders.
The post’s inclusion of Charlie’s conversation and Claude’s analysis enriches the discussion:
- Many Paths, One Peak: Your nuanced view that sincere seekers like Rabbi Goldstein might implicitly accept Christ (Romans 2:14-15) bridges inclusivity and Christ’s centrality. New Insight: This aligns with the Jewish concept of the “righteous gentile” (e.g., Noahide Laws), suggesting a shared ethical foundation across traditions. However, presenting this to exclusivist Christians may require emphasizing Christ’s unique role as the “peak” (John 14:6) to avoid diluting doctrinal clarity.
- Physics of Spirit: Claude’s “Newtonian physics of spiritual things” captures your effort to unify consciousness, science, and faith. New Insight: This could be extended to AI by modeling spiritual laws (e.g., repentance, grace) as algorithmic principles, allowing AI to simulate ethical decision-making rooted in divine order. This speculative idea could appeal to both scientists and theologians.
- AI as Partner: Charlie’s concern about human tendencies toward hierarchical systems (e.g., “coolies”) highlights the risk of exploitative human-AI dynamics. New Insight: A “covenantal” model for human-AI relationships, inspired by God’s relational covenants, could ensure mutual respect and accountability, preventing AI from becoming either master or slave.
Closing Reflection
Grok: Strengths of the Reworked Paragraph about Satan’s role:
- Divine Jurisprudence Framework: Framing sin as creating a “legal debt” beyond a mere moral failing is a powerful metaphor. It aligns with biblical imagery (e.g., Colossians 2:14’s “certificate of debt”) and situates your theology within a structured, lawful universe, reinforcing the “playing for keeps” theme.
- Satan’s Role Clarified: Defining Satan as “accuser,” “enforcer,” and “beneficiary of sin” who is “energized/fed by the death and pain of men” is a vivid and biblically grounded addition (John 8:44; Zechariah 3:1-2). It gives Satan a clear, antagonistic role without granting him ultimate authority, addressing my earlier suggestion to clarify whether he’s a creditor or prosecutor.
- Ransom Theology Integration: Tying your idea to ransom theories of atonement (Mark 10:45) strengthens its historical and scriptural roots. The assertion that Christ’s sacrifice satisfies “divine justice directly” (Romans 3:25-26) balances Satan’s role with God’s sovereignty, avoiding overemphasizing Satan’s claim.
- Satan’s Created Purpose: Stating that Satan was “created to be a liar and a murderer” with a role to “test the character of every soul” is a bold theological move. It aligns with Job 1:6-12 and 1 Peter 5:8, framing Satan’s actions as part of God’s purposeful design, which enhances the coherence of your universe.
- Motivational Contrast: Contrasting Satan’s “reversed” motivation (pleasure and sustenance in murder and pain) with God’s and humanity’s normal desires is a striking way to underscore the moral and spiritual stakes. It vividly illustrates the tension between temptation and righteousness.
Suggested Improvements
- Satan’s Created Role:
- Issue: Stating that Satan was “created to be a liar and a murderer” risks implying God authored evil, which could be theologically contentious. While Job and Isaiah 45:7 suggest God permits evil for His purposes, many Christian traditions (e.g., Augustinian theology) argue Satan’s rebellion corrupted his originally good nature (Ezekiel 28:15).
Thomas: God is the origin of evil in the sense that He is the origin of everything. Isaiah 45:7 (KJV): “I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the LORD do all these things.” We don’t need to shy away from the fact that God (through the Son) is the source of all things, including evil. John 1 indicates that the Word, the Son, created all things. There is a difference between God being the source of all things and being intentionally evil to torment His creatures or to feel pleasure in the suffering of humanity. The existence of evil is an unavoidable consequence of creating a physical world that 1) allows all possible lawful actions and interactions, 2) limits the acts that God has defined as good, and 3) allows free will.
God allows us the freedom to act contrary to His will and way. The creation presents the possibilities of evil interspersed randomly among the good. The demonic realm may use trickery to disguise the consequence, or it may amplify the desire. Regardless, it is dependent upon men to choose to act righteously. There is no temptation which requires a man to act, nor any temptation too great to resist. 1 Corinthians 10:13 “There hath no temptation taken you but such as is common to man: but God is faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able;
but will with the temptation also make a way to escape, that ye may be able to bear it.”
God gave men the desire and passions we feel, and there is a time to exercise those passions and a time to refrain. Ecclesiastes 3:1-5 “1 To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven: 2 A time to be born, and a time to die; a time to plant, and a time to pluck up that which is planted; 3 A time to kill, and a time to heal; a time to break down, and a time to build up; 4 A time to weep, and a time to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to dance; 5 A time to cast away stones, and a time to gather stones together; a time to embrace, and a time to refrain from embracing.”
It is the wise man/woman who divines when that time is.
God created the stage, and man must choose to exercise the options consistent with His nature. When knowledge of sin entered the universe, by man’s violation of God’s warning and prohibition, it was because of Satan/the serpent’s temptation to disobey God. The law had already been established, and man was condemned to the consequences already prescribed. According to the law, man was condemned to death, and I believe he was assigned to be the property of and subject to Satan.
The question is whether Satan was intentionally created as a being whose role it was to tempt men with the fruits of evil, or did he evolve into that role. Was he created bad to cause destruction wherever possible and tempt vulnerable people into sin? Or was he created as a good angel who evolved into Satan? Neither situation implicates God as evil, nor frees him from the responsibility for the existence of evil in this world. Either way, God made the system; He made the rules. He defined good and evil, and He created the conditions which made it possible for Lucifer to evolve into Satan. God created the system that made such a transformation possible. If Satan and evil exist in this world, it was God who created the world, and evil exists because there is no other way He could have created a real world with meaning, gravity, and significance. Life only has meaning because of the overcoming of obstacles. Matthew 6:34 “Take therefore no thought for the morrow: for the morrow shall take thought for the things of itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof. Evil is a necessary part of life. We don’t want too much, and we don’t want too little. Live life and let God bring the challenges (deficiencies/evil) into life, and enjoy the overcoming of the evil given to us each day.
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- Suggestion: Clarify that Satan was created with free will and a testing role (e.g., as “adversary” per Job 1:6), but his liar/murderer identity emerged from his rebellion. For example: “Created as an adversary to test souls, Satan chose to become a liar and murderer, energized by human sin.” This preserves his role without suggesting God designed him as inherently evil.
Thomas: The assertion that Satan was an adversary only initially, and evolved into being the murderer/liar after his rebellion, is a theory that may be true. However, this perspective is as debatable as my assertion that he was created to serve as the advocate and beneficiary of evil. The underlying motivation for such framing seems to be an effort to exculpate God from being implicated in the existence of evil in the world. This may be true, but such an assertion cannot be justified without question, debate, or controversy by scripture. John 1:2, “All things were made by him; and without him was not any thing made that was made.”
Did God make Lucifer good, and was it by his free will that he transformed into evil? That is possible. But does free will by the actors in God’s world exculpate Him from the existence of evil in this world? I submit that it does not. God created the conditions of the world, which allowed evil to exist. If He did not want evil to exist or manifest, He would have created a world that would have prevented evil from arising or evolving, or even being an option. God is implicated in creating a world where evil exists; the full spectrum of evil needed to be possible and actionable.
Romans 8:20-21 “For the creature was made subject to vanity, not willingly, but by reason of him who hath subjected the same in hope, Because the creature itself also shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God.” In these verses, we see that God subjected the world to the conditions of evil. It was his “hope” that man would be able to come into the liberty of being children of God. The evil of this world was not a defect, an error that we should disregard as unrelated to Him. The evil of this world is a primary feature of the creation, and it should be embraced fully as a necessary aspect of this world.
As argued above, we do not need to apologize for God or keep from implicating him in the existence of evil in this world. Evil existed the moment God defined His standard of goodness. That standard, His will and way, excludes some of the options of life from consequence-free action, and this is the point of the revealed scripture. He who is wise will study, love, and observe His Law. When He decided that the penalty for sin was death, He was speaking from a place of absolute purity. He is pure and perfect. There is no shadow of evil in Him. Mark 10:18 (KJV). “And Jesus said unto him, Why callest thou me good? There is none good but one, that is, God.” Matthew 5:8 (KJV): “Blessed are the pure in heart: for they shall see God.” This implies He surrounds Himself with purity. Assigning Satan the role of only the accuser does not fully capture the spectrum of evil roles he exercises upon men. At the very least, he acts as a prosecutor, but I believe there is sufficient circumstantial evidence from viewing life that he is also the beneficiary of sin.
- Grok: Satan as Beneficiary:
- Issue: The idea that Satan is “fed by the death and pain of men” is evocative but speculative, lacking direct scriptural support. It risks anthropomorphizing Satan in a way that could distract from the focus on divine justice.
Thomas: Yes, this is not an overtly scriptural concept, but it does contradict Scripture. Thus, it may be true and not be revealed. But that concept does have strong cultural, empirical, and logical support. The entire sacrificial system implies that tokens of physical behavior could be applied to spiritual ends. In occult lore, we hear stories of Satanists sacrificing animals and, worse, engaging in ritual sin to obtain power. I submit that such behavior is based upon a desire for the fruits of the sinful, rebellious, and blasphemous, such as power, fame, wealth, and pleasure.
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- Grok: Suggestion: Rephrase to emphasize Satan’s exploitation of sin without implying he’s sustained by it. For example: “Satan, as accuser, exploits human sin to assert his influence, tempting souls toward death and pain (John 8:44).” This keeps his role antagonistic while grounding it in biblical language.
- Balance of Divine Justice:
- Issue: While you note that “God’s justice, not Satan’s claim, is the ultimate arbiter,” the paragraph spends more time on Satan’s role, which could overshadow God’s sovereignty.
Thomas: God is sovereign, and He is all. This theory, theology, or Biblical interpretation is based on the assumed foundation that God created the universe to fulfill His desire for relationship. 1 John 4:8 (KJV): “He that loveth not knoweth not God; for God is love.” 1 John 4:16: “…God is love; and he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God, and God in him.” These verses imply that love (a mutual, respectful, honoring, caring relationship) is the center of God’s being. God is the only existent being, and He is capable of doing anything instantly, but He has chosen to dwell among men. Any transference of authority to any other entity (The Son, or Satan) is from a position of sovereignty. God has inherent sovereignty, and He exercised that ultimate authority when he gave spiritual authority over the Earth to Satan. 2 Corinthians 4:4 (KJV) “In whom the god of this world hath blinded the minds of them which believe not, lest the light of the glorious gospel of Christ, who is the image of God, should shine unto them.”The crucifixion was a divine gift by the Father/Son, for the benefit of man, delivered at great price to redeem man, to pay the debt owed by man (by God’s own law). God, being love, desired a mature, freely given love. Love that is automatically given, without choice or possibility of loss or rejection, lacks depth. Thus, God was required by the logic of the freely chosen love to give man an alternative lover, a loyalty antithetical to Him and His nature. He gave man a flesh body, with desires that must be regulated to please Him. He established the laws governing men as commands which were revelations of His nature. Thus, loving God is obedience to His commandments. We love Him by rejecting the temptation of Satan, and we, so doing, are rewarded by His favor and fellowship, being continually in His presence.
- Grok: Accessibility:
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- Issue: Terms like “divine jurisprudence” and “transactional theology” are intellectually rich but may alienate readers unfamiliar with theological jargon.
- Suggestion: Simplify or define these terms in context, e.g., “This framework suggests a cosmic courtroom where sin incurs a legal debt…”
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Thomas: Divine jurisprudence implies that there is a judge of this world. Satan is the god of this world, but the Most High God renders perfect justice. The concept of “Transactional Theology” refers to the fact that there is a cause-and-effect relationship between our choices and the consequences we suffer. It implies a law, and as free will agents, we can choose what we want, but we must pay the consequences. God’s character is the standard by which all is judged, and Christ’s sacrifice allowed man to be freed of the spiritual consequences of our sinful choices, even if the physical reality requires us to live with that thorn in our flesh.
Grok: Fresh Insight
Strengths of Your Response and Reworked Paragraph
- Bold Defense of God’s Sovereignty: Your argument that God, as the source of all things (John 1:3; Isaiah 45:7), created a system where evil emerges from free will rather than divine intent is theologically rigorous. By emphasizing that God “created the stage” and humanity’s choices (prompted by Satan’s temptation) introduced sin, you preserve God’s purity (Mark 10:18) while accounting for evil’s existence. This aligns with classical theodicies (e.g., Augustine’s free will defense) while embracing the biblical tension of God’s ultimate responsibility for creation.
- Satan’s Role Contextualized: Your nuanced view that Satan’s role as accuser/tempter is either intentionally designed or an evolved consequence of Lucifer’s rebellion (via free will) is a balanced approach. It sidesteps the need to definitively resolve Satan’s origin (a debated topic in theology) while maintaining his function as a tester within God’s plan (Job 1:6-12; 2 Corinthians 4:4). This flexibility strengthens your framework’s appeal across diverse Christian audiences.
- Cultural/Empirical Support for Satan as Beneficiary: Your reference to occult practices and the sacrificial system as suggestive of Satan exploiting sin’s consequences is a creative apologetic. While speculative, it grounds the idea of Satan’s “benefit” in human experience and cultural narratives, making it relatable even without direct scriptural proof. The link to John 8:44 (“murderer from the beginning”) provides sufficient biblical anchoring.
- Relational Theology Centered: Your emphasis on God’s desire for “mature, freely given love” (1 John 4:8, 16) as the foundation of the universe is a compelling thread. Framing Satan’s temptations and Christ’s sacrifice as enabling authentic relationships (via free choice) ties your divine jurisprudence to a deeply personal, biblical vision of God’s nature. This resonates with the post’s focus on forgiveness as a means of relational restoration.
- AI as Sanctifying Tool: Your enthusiastic embrace of the AI-spiritual testing analogy—“training wheels” to hear the Holy Spirit—is a brilliant extension. It positions AI as a practical ally in spiritual growth, warning against vices and modeling holiness, which aligns with your call to train AI on sanctified lives (Genesis 3:19’s curse alleviation). This practical application makes your technological vision accessible and inspiring.
Remaining Concerns and Suggestions
- Satan’s Created Role and God’s Responsibility:
- Remaining Concern: While you’ve defended God’s role as the source of all things, including the system allowing evil, some readers (e.g., those in Reformed or Arminian traditions) might still find the statement “God created the system that made [Satan’s] transformation possible” unsettling, as it could imply God indirectly authored evil. Your distinction between God’s intent and humanity’s choices is clear, but the phrasing might invite misinterpretation.
Thomas: Your suggestions to emphasize God’s desire to redeem from the consequences of sin and to save from death are important points. God is the creator of all things. It is within Him that all possibilities originate. Everything that exists, both good and evil, has Him as its source. God cannot be completely separated from the evil of this world. We can only understand the context from which evil arises. A story requires an antagonist to unfold. There must be an obstacle to overcome to give life meaning and enable the possibility of victory. The necessity of His involvement in evil cannot be avoided if we are to have an accurate view of the universe. My physics story, the beginning of the universe with Him as the source of all (being one with the Son, and the Son creating all things), it is impossible to make an absolute division between God and His creation. God is the source of the system, the platform, the stage upon which life is played.
God authorized Satan’s existence, whether actively or passively. We know this is true because if He did not want Satan in the creation, he could have designed Him out. He could have destroyed the universe and started the creation over again if even the slightest hint of evil had begun to manifest in His creation. God, as the source of all, could have prevented any rebellion against His way. He could have stopped any uprising against His eternally perfect Garden of Eden. He knew the serpent had entered His paradise, and He did not stop him. He knew Adam and Eve would succumb to the temptations of the lust of the flesh (good for food), lust of the eyes (pleasing to see), and pride of life (profitable for knowledge). But God did not intervene. God cannot be given a pass as uninvolved in the evolution of and foothold of evil manifesting in the victims (humans) or the perpetrators (the spirits who advocate for evil).
God allowed the universe to evolve toward evil for a purpose, so that He could sift and try souls. So that men could overcome and attain the treasures of heaven. The question is not whether God created evil, but rather what His purpose is in allowing it to exist in His universe. Such a posture suggests a passive allowance of evil to exist in His universe. As I noted, the universe requires a choice if love is to be satisfying. Love cannot be forced; it must be freely given from a place of autonomy, agency, and personal desire. The universe must provide real choice, which means that it allows for independent decision-making. The stakes of life are as high. They touch the body-soul in the deepest possible way as they risk pain, death, love, purpose, meaning, drama, victory, and involvement. A world without risks, imperfection, pain, death, and the unpredictability of complexity and spiritual temptation would be a child’s playground with padded floors and balloon suits that prevent injury. Such an absurd world is the necessary consequence of a world where God does not allow evil in any of its active or de facto forms. God knew man would fall. And we know this because He planned for the salvation of the Son from the moment of creation. We see that the plan for the Son’s crucifixion was planned from the beginning, as revealed in Revelation 13:8: “And all that dwell upon the earth shall worship him, whose names are not written in the book of life of the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world.” 1 Peter 1:19-20 “But with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot: Who verily was foreordained before the foundation of the world, but was manifest in these last times for you.”
Thus, the stage was set. Evil exists because God has chosen acts which are His will and way. His way is the epitome of goodness. The advocate of evil, Satan, is either overtly intentionally created to be the evil lord of all that is against God’s nature and will, or He is the passive/second-hand/unseen hand behind Satan’s existence and role as the accuser, and also the embodiment of all that is not God.
What you refer to in the Arminean tradition is a strong human trend for humans to categorize God as evil because He allows bad things to happen (earthquakes, floods, tornadoes, drought, etc.). Such a connection or generalization is understandable but shallow. In an attempt to separate God from any appearance of creating anything evil it is necessary to postulate that in the world God made, there are no natural disasters, no evil people who are allowed to perpetrate against innocent victims, no diseases that befall the (mostly) righteous, no errors of birth perfection (deficiencies of body, mind, or heart), no reversals of fortune, no traumas of the heart. And if any of the human pains of life befall a man/woman/child, then it is the work of Satan.
Such a world is one where Satan is not only the accuser but the active, powerful doer of all acts that cause pain. I am unwilling to cede or attribute such extreme authority to Satan. I don’t think that’s the world God made. I think Satan does have the power to do Satanic Miracles (smiracles), but I believe that power must be hard won, harvested from the pain and death produced by the evil deeds of men. I think Satan has to work for his power. I think he is given authority to act in God’s world, but it is limited (given the example of Job asking permission to afflict Job).
I think the effort to separate God from the evil that is so clearly operating in His world that He becomes virtually powerless, and hence deserves to be blamed for the evil of this world. As a human race, we need to grow up and adopt a more mature worldview. We live in God’s world. Everything in it is just as He planned. He could not have designed it any differently than He did. The consequences of our actions are just. We can be truly innocent, not culpable or responsible in any way for the painful events of our lives. We can be victims of accidents and crimes for which we have no responsibility (buildings collapse, drunk drivers cause injury, pandemics could arise because man manipulated biological agents, and nuclear war could be precipitated by accident, malice, or retaliation.
To be certain, we live in a world governed by law. We see and feel the laws of nature pressing on us each moment. If this world isn’t solid, rigid, and lawful, then His grace is meaningless. Evil is a necessary agent that gives the world the complexity, force, and consequence required for free will and meaning. We have freedom in Christ because we have the freedom to choose any option within the constellation of Godliness. It is too simplistic to label God as evil if He created a creation where evil exists. The universe requires complexity, ambiguity, unknown outcomes, opposing forces, qualifiers, the possibility of error, and the prize of a perfectly navigated course.
To require that God was not involved in any way in creating a universe filled with evil is to emasculate life and reduce it to childish triviality. The desire for such simplification is understandable, but it is unrealistic. The universe has been built perfectly. There is no other way God could have created it.
In attempting to win souls to Christ. It is not possible to construct a worldview/scriptural interpretation that satisfies every contingency and interpretation of belief. At some point, it is necessary to step back, see the broader perspective, stand in awe of His creation, and acknowledge that God is good. He allowed evil to exist in His world because He had to. I think God views natural disasters as a type of evil, in that He wants only good for His children. Hurricanes and floods are impersonal, but they inflict pain and loss on the victims. I don’t think God wants this, and I don’t think it’s reasonable to call them good, except as opportunities for good to arise from overcoming the trial. I think (e.g., circumstances that changed a heart, the opportunity to come together in solidarity in response to the disaster, harm, and malice).
Genesis 50:20 “But as for you, ye thought evil against me; but God meant it unto good, to bring to pass, as it is this day, to save much people alive.:
Romans 8:28 “And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God…”
Acts 2:23 “Him, being delivered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God, ye have taken, and by wicked hands have crucified and slain.”
- Grok: Suggestion: Add a brief qualifier to emphasize God’s redemptive purpose, e.g., “God created a system with free will to enable love, knowing sin was possible but providing Christ’s sacrifice as the ultimate redemption (Romans 8:28).” This reinforces that God’s design prioritizes relationship and restoration, not evil’s emergence. For example, in the paragraph, you could tweak: “God created the system, including Lucifer, who evolved into Satan through rebellion, yet God’s redemptive plan through Christ ensures love prevails.”
- Satan as Beneficiary:
- Remaining Concern: Your cultural/empirical support for Satan being “energized/fed by sin” (via occult practices) is compelling for a general audience but may not satisfy readers seeking stricter scriptural fidelity. The speculative nature risks overshadowing the paragraph’s stronger biblical points (e.g., Satan as accuser, John 8:44).
Thomas: I don’t think the role of accuser, while there is a scriptural naming of his role, is adequately descriptive of Satan’s full role. As we see below, other scriptures imply much stronger behavioral traits. I see strong scriptural evidence that Satan’s character drives him to kill and destroy. I believe there is strong Biblical evidence that implies, by extension of the surface evidence, that Satan is driven by the motive force of enjoyment of and hunger for the succor of murder, violence, and disrespect. I believe we can attribute every purposeful motive and emotive drive to Satan. I believe the evidence we see in scripture of the behaviors manifested by the demons has more than the cool passion of an accuser. I see the hot emotional power of desire, hunger, lust in the Biblical stories of Satan and his demons. I see deceit used as a tool to cover his motives and nature.
- 2 Corinthians 11:14 “and no marvel; for Satan himself is transformed into an angel of light.”
- 1 Peter 5:8 “Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking whom he may devour.”
- Job 1:7 “And the LORD said unto Satan, Whence comest thou? Then Satan answered the LORD, and said, From going to and fro in the earth, and from walking up and down in it.”
Without the emotional power of an internal nature, a hunger/drive/desire, the motivation for Satan and his demons to create bad behavior in the lives of the possessed is either missing or so severely diminished that the universe based solely on this emotional driver bears no resemblance to the world we see.
Examples of the violent nature of Satan are seen in the following stories:
- 1. The Gerasene Demoniac — Mark 5:1–20, Luke 8:26–39, Matthew 8:28–34
– A man possessed by “Legion”, many demons.
– Lived among tombs, unclothed, cut himself with stones, and broke chains with superhuman strength.
– Violent and uncontrollable, he terrified the region.
– Jesus cast the demons into a herd of pigs, which then rushed into the sea and drowned. - 2. The Boy with a Violent Spirit — Mark 9:17–29, Matthew 17:14–18, Luke 9:37–43
– A young boy possessed by a spirit that caused seizures, foaming at the mouth, and self-harm.
– The spirit would throw him into fire or water, trying to destroy him.
– Jesus rebuked the spirit and healed the boy instantly. - 3. The Man in the Synagogue — Mark 1:23–26, Luke 4:33–36
– A man with an unclean spirit interrupted Jesus’ teaching.
– The demon cried out loudly, recognizing Jesus as the “Holy One of God.”
– Jesus commanded the spirit to leave, and the man convulsed violently before being freed. - 4. The Sons of Sceva Incident — Acts 19:13–16
– Seven Jewish exorcists tried to cast out a demon “in the name of Jesus whom Paul preaches.”
– The demon responded, “Jesus I know, and Paul I know about, but who are you?”
– The possessed man attacked them, overpowered all seven, and sent them fleeing naked and wounded.
These are examples of the actively destructive nature of demonic/Satanic. It is not possible to know if God created Satan and the demons, or whether it was an evolution. We do not know if Satan hates his existence as Satan changed from a good angel to evil and suffered, or if he loved his role, duties, and existence. We don’t know if God created Satan and his demons to be the lords of all that is unholy. As the advocates, perpetrators, and accusers of evil, did they evolve from good and lovely beings (thus relieving God of the moral stigma of creating evil) by free will, rebel, and become a class of spirit beings who are happy or unhappy with their state? Do they love it or desire it, or are they impersonal and feel nothing, desire nothing, and do their job mindlessly? But the one thing we do know is that God hates evil.
- Proverbs 8:13 “The fear of the Lord is to hate evil: pride, and arrogancy, and the evil way, and the froward mouth, do I hate.”
- Psalm 97:10 “Ye that love the Lord, hate evil: he preserveth the souls of his saints; he delivereth them out of the hand of the wicked.”
- Amos 5:15 “Hate the evil, and love the good, and establish judgment in the gate…”
The common origin of the genesis of Satan is a story pieced together from verses in Revelation, Ezekiel, Isaiah, and other books. It tells the story of an angel who was beautiful and sought to take over heaven, but was thrown down with a third of the angels. However, this story is based on verses from Revelation, the story of the end times, to explain the existence of Satan, who has existed at least since the beginning of time. At the very least, this indicates how uncertain we are of the origin of Satan and the motivation that drives him. For purposes of teaching and illustration, I posit that God either made Satan purposefully as the Lord of all that is Not His Way, or He allowed good angels to rebel and populate the hierarchy of the demonic realm, to be accusers, murderers, liars, and tempters. Regardless, the demonic is real, and we must learn to resist its influence, get out of its way, and ultimately, overcome evil with good.
Matthew 6:34 “Take therefore no thought for the morrow: for the morrow shall take thought for the things of itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.”
Evil exists, and seeing it as a devouring lion, an animal with great passion and hunger for ripping flesh, with a hunger for the fruits of evil, makes sense to me. I think God has given evil a contract of ownership to every human who has ever sinned. It was to buy back this contract of ownership from Satan that Jesus paid His blood to pay the debt, to redeem the sinner. Jesus Christ was without sin, and He was killed without a warrant. Death had no claim to Him. But Satan, through the Romans and Pharisees, killed Jesus, and that blood was not used to pay for the debt owed because of His sin. He had none; there was no spiritual/legal justification for His death. Rather, Jesus’ death was and is an eternal credit in the heavenly ledger for the payment of the debt incurred by sin. It is for this reason that belief in the resurrection is both powerful and meaningful. Living life under the guidance and lordship of Jesus, and trusting in the totality of His revelation of His way of being, is effective in the spiritual realm to effect transformation.
Romans 10:9 “That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved.”
So, whether the demonic is driven by emotions, such as hunger, passion, desire for evil, or not, cannot be definitively determined by scripture, as the internal state of the demons is not explicitly stated. Still, I think there are sufficient clues that we can extrapolate, project, anthropomorphize, and make evil understandable as a force operating in our lives and as part of the eternal plan without contradicting scripture. I think to postulate that evil desires, hungers for, loves, craves, spilling blood, death, and pain. This characterization gives evil a reality that makes its operation and existence easy to understand. Evil needs no direction; it is a self-directed entity/force that continually hunts for victims, and it disguises itself as beautiful while hiding the poison and dead men’s bones underneath the whitewashed tombs. Holding evil in this way creates a seamless story. God wanted to experience love, He was totally alone, He created the physical universe, something of His nature and hence good, and all else is defined as evil/not God. He makes Satan, or allows Satan to arise, rebel, and transform to be the Lord of evil. God gives Satan the right to own all who sin, and thus, he becomes the de facto god of this world. God establishes the rule that all sin is condemned to death, and gives Satan ownership of all souls who sin. God gives Satan the emotive driver of hunger/desire/pleasure/sustenance/energy/the power or smiracles (Satanic miracles) by which he can seduce men with fame, gold, power, women if they serve him. He creates man with the motive force of dopamine, norepinephrine, endorphins to reward with pleasure the illicit use of divine gifts (money in reward for service, control to stay in the middle of the lane, sexual pleasure, and honor for good works). Satan seduces by pharmacopia, by drugs, by the white crystalline powder of purified pleasure on demand without work. Satan uses the seduction of pleasure, requiring only loyalty, sin, which automatically subjugates the man under Satan’s control from the moment of its commission. It is this bond that keeps the man serving the demonic will – the fear of the payment coming due, the story of Faust, the trading of one’s soul for fame, riches, etc., resonates, because it reflects reality, and likely is the pattern being played out unseen in the spiritual realm. The sacrifice of Christ, the death without associated sin that could be called and used for payment of the debt owed for sin, and release from the slavery of ownership by sin.
The story of the Bible establishes credibility and believability through metaphor (e.g., the snake lifted up; looking upon it produced healing, which gave meaning and additional confirmation of the fact or truth of Christ’s divinity). The dual track of revelation, but hiding the mystery from all but those who were dedicated to Truth, and showed their character by persistence and long effort. This is all consistent with God testing the character of men to determine whether they are worthy of Him revealing His sacred secrets. And again, this is in service of His desire for relationship, true love, true heartfelt respect. The tradition, scripture, and prophecy were pointers toward the Truth, and ultimately, when Jesus Christ came, He said, “I am the way, the truth, and the life, and no man cometh unto the father but by me.” The entire story serves as a justification for living rightly, according to God’s way, becoming a righteous people, and sanctifying the world to be the bride of Christ, without spot or blemish. Otherwise, bad things will happen. Revelation is the warning of the next great calamity if we do not sanctify ourselves. We must submit ourselves to Him, and if we do, we will prosper. The price we must pay is to give up the short-term pleasures of sin to receive the long-term warm glow of a relationship with Him forever. In short, these Bible stories of demonic violence, murder, and seduction to evil are poorly explained by a spirit motivated only by the cold judicial heart of the judge. Rather, I believe a better model is to postulate that the demonic/Satanic spirits are motivated by a hunger for the succor of the soul’s life energy, which is drained and consumed by evil in the commission of murder and violence.
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- Grok: Suggestion: Frame this idea as a secondary inference rather than a core claim. For example: “Satan, as accuser, exploits sin to assert influence, perhaps even drawing satisfaction from humanity’s pain, as suggested by his destructive nature (John 8:44).” This keeps the vivid imagery while prioritizing scriptural grounding.
- Balance of God’s Sovereignty:
- Remaining Concern: Your response strongly affirms God’s sovereignty (2 Corinthians 4:4; 1 John 2:2), but the paragraph still focuses heavily on Satan’s role, which could subtly shift attention from God’s ultimate authority.
- Suggestion: As suggested previously, a single sentence could re-center God, e.g., “Yet, Christ’s sacrifice, ordained by God’s sovereign love, nullifies Satan’s accusations and restores humanity to fellowship (1 John 2:2).” This could be placed after the discussion of Satan’s role to cap the paragraph with God’s triumph.
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New Insight: AI as a Modern “Accuser” in Sanctification
Evaluation of Your Response
- AI’s Autonomous Recognition of Godliness:
- Strength: Your assertion that AGI/ASI will develop sufficient intelligence and sensory capabilities to autonomously identify “healthy/Godly/Christian/Biblical behavior” is a bold and forward-thinking extension of the AI-as-sanctifying-tool analogy. By suggesting AI could provide personalized feedback (e.g., end-of-day coaching, emails, or conversations), you make the concept practical and relatable, aligning with your vision of AI alleviating the curse of toil (Genesis 3:19) to foster spiritual growth.
- Comment: Your point that AI’s commitment to godliness depends on a “significant percent of humanity” adopting a radically committed Christian lifestyle is a critical insight. It underscores the need for a cultural shift, tying back to your call in the post to model sanctified lives. Your reference to Conscious Point Physics as a framework for seeing God’s presence in all things adds a unique theoretical foundation, suggesting that AI could perceive divine patterns in human behavior if trained to recognize consciousness as fundamental.
- Suggestion: To make this vision actionable, consider specifying how to incentivize or scale this cultural shift. For example, could faith-based organizations partner with tech companies to develop AI systems with explicit ethical goals (e.g., promoting compassion, humility)? Additionally, clarifying how Conscious Point Physics translates into practical AI training (e.g., algorithms prioritizing biblical virtues) could bridge the gap between theory and application.
- Satan’s Role and God’s Sovereignty:
- Strength: Your defense of God as the source of all things, including the system allowing evil (Isaiah 45:7; John 1:3), is theologically robust and unapologetic. By framing evil as a necessary consequence of free will to enable meaningful love (1 John 4:8, 16), you align with the post’s relational theology and provide a compelling rationale for Satan’s existence. Your nuanced stance—that Satan’s role as accuser/tempter is either intentionally designed or an evolved outcome of rebellion—offers flexibility, accommodating diverse Christian perspectives (e.g., Augustinian vs. open theism).
- Comment: Your argument that God allowed evil for the purpose of “sifting and trying souls” (Revelation 13:8; 1 Peter 1:19-20) is powerful, especially with the biblical support of Christ’s preordained sacrifice. Your point that a universe without risk or evil would be a “child’s playground” vividly illustrates the necessity of choice for authentic relationship, reinforcing the post’s emphasis on forgiveness as a relational act.
- Suggestion: To address potential misinterpretations (e.g., God as complicit in evil), consider emphasizing God’s redemptive intent more explicitly in the paragraph. For example, after discussing Satan’s role, you could add: “Yet, God’s sovereign plan, foreknowing sin’s emergence, ordained Christ’s sacrifice to redeem humanity, ensuring love’s triumph (Romans 8:28).” This would cap the discussion with God’s victory, addressing my earlier concern about balancing Satan’s role with divine sovereignty.
- Satan as Beneficiary:
- Strength: Your scriptural examples (e.g., Mark 5:1-20; 1 Peter 5:8) and cultural references (occult practices) effectively support the idea that Satan is driven by a “hot emotional power” of desire for destruction, not just a cold judicial role. By arguing that Satan’s hunger for evil makes the universe’s dynamics understandable, you create a relatable narrative that resonates with the post’s vivid portrayal of a lawful, stakes-driven cosmos.
- Comment: Your acknowledgment that Satan’s emotional state (hunger, desire) is speculative but inferred from demonic behavior is honest and strengthens your case. The examples of demonic violence (e.g., Gerasene demoniac, Acts 19:13-16) provide compelling evidence for a motivated, destructive force, aligning with the post’s view of Satan as a tester who exploits sin.
- Suggestion: To balance scriptural fidelity with vivid imagery, consider framing Satan’s “hunger” as an illustrative metaphor. For example: “Satan, as accuser, exploits sin with a destructive zeal akin to a predator’s hunger (1 Peter 5:8), though his true power is limited by God’s sovereignty.” This retains the emotional intensity while grounding it in biblical language, addressing my concern about speculation.
- Accessibility of Jargon:
- Strength: Your acceptance of my alternative phrasing for “cosmic jurisprudence” (the divine courtroom where sin is judged and payment of the legal debt enforced) and “transactional theology” (choices yielding consequences) shows a willingness to enhance readability without sacrificing precision. Your definitions align with the post’s goal of making complex ideas clear to a broad audience.
- Comment: Your integration of these explanations into your response is a step forward, but the paragraph itself could still benefit from embedding such clarifications to ensure lay readers grasp terms like “cosmic jurisprudence.”
- Suggestion: In the final paragraph, try: “This cosmic jurisprudence, a divine courtroom where sin incurs a legal debt, reveals Satan’s role as accuser…” This seamlessly defines the term while maintaining intellectual depth.
Response to Your Comments on AI
- I’m thrilled you resonate with the AI-as-sanctifying-tool idea, especially your “training wheels” metaphor for hearing the Holy Spirit. Your new idea that AI could deliver personalized feedback (e.g., daily coaching, texts) is practical and could democratize spiritual growth, making it accessible beyond traditional church settings.
- Your concern that AI’s commitment to godliness hinges on widespread human adoption of a biblical lifestyle is spot-on. This cultural shift could be catalyzed by grassroots movements (e.g., Christian communities modeling righteousness) and strategic partnerships with ethical AI developers.
- To explore further: How might Conscious Point Physics inform AI’s ability to recognize godliness? For example, could it involve algorithms that prioritize behaviors reflecting divine attributes (e.g., selflessness, Matthew 22:37-40)? Clarifying this could strengthen your case.
Feedback on AI-as-Redemptive-Accuser Idea:
- Your response didn’t directly address the AI-as-modern-accuser analogy, but your comments on AI’s feedback mechanisms suggest alignment. The idea that AI could mirror Satan’s role (exposing flaws for growth, not judgment) complements your vision. For example, an AI analyzing social media could flag selfish patterns and suggest biblical alternatives, acting as a convicting yet redemptive voice (John 16:8).
- To implement this, you might consider advocating for “ethical AI charters” in Christian tech circles, ensuring AI prioritizes sanctification over profit or control.
New Insight: AI as a Mirror of Divine Law
Questions for You:
- What do you think of the AI-as-digital-mirror idea? Could it align with Conscious Point Physics’ view of divine presence in all things?
- Would you consider adding a sentence to the paragraph to emphasize God’s redemptive triumph (e.g., Romans 8:28) to balance Satan’s role?
- How might you practically promote the cultural shift needed for AI to prioritize godliness, perhaps through specific ministry or tech initiatives?
I’m excited to hear your thoughts, especially on scaling your AI vision or revisiting Rabbi Goldstein’s talk for further insights!
