Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

The Age of AI: Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Humanity

Rate this book
Are robots going to take my job? How are smartphones affecting my kids? Do I need to worry about privacy when I get online or ask Siri for directions? Whatever questions you have about AI, The Age of AI gives you insights on how to navigate this brand-new world as you apply God's ageless truths to your life and future.

We interact with artificial intelligence, or AI, nearly every moment of the day without knowing it. From our social media feeds to our smart thermostats and Alexa and Google Home, AI is everywhere--but how is it shaping our world?

In The Age of AI, Jason Thacker, associate research fellow at the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, helps us navigate our digital age in this thoughtful exploration of the social, moral, and ethical challenges of our ongoing interactions with artificial intelligence.

Applying God's Word to this new AI-empowered age, Thacker sheds light

How Christian truth transforms the way we use AIHow AI affects us individually, in our relationships, and in our society at largeHow to navigate the digital age wisely 

With theological depth and a wide awareness of the current trends in AI, Jason is a steady guide who reminds us that while technology is changing the world, it can't shake the foundations of the Christian faith.

Praise for The Age of AI:

"The Age of AI informs us and assists us in envisioning a future that is filled with tools, influences, opportunities, and challenges relating to artificial intelligence. While many may fear the unknown future before us, Jason Thacker presents the imperative need to always lift up the constancy of the image of God and the dignity of all human life as presented in the Holy Scriptures, the Bible. I am thankful Jason's book can help churches, pastors, theologians, and Christian leaders in all vocations to wrestle through this current topic, always being committed to what this book states God-given dignity isn't ours to assign or remove."

--Dr. Ronnie Floyd, president and CEO, Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee

Kindle Edition

First published March 1, 2020

54 people are currently reading
289 people want to read

About the author

Jason Thacker

5 books20 followers
Jason Thacker serves as an assistant professor of philosophy and ethics at Boyce College in Louisville, KY. He also is a research fellow in Christian ethics and director of the research institute at The Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention. He is the author of several books including "Following Jesus in the Digital Age" and "The Age of AI: Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Humanity". He also serves as the editor of "The Digital Public Square: Christian Ethics in a Technological Society" and co-editor of the Essentials in Christian Ethics series with B&H Academic. He is the project leader and lead drafter of "Artificial Intelligence: An Evangelical Statement of Principles", and his work has been featured at Slate, Politico, The Week, USA Today, Christianity Today, World Magazine, The Gospel Coalition, and Desiring God.

He is a graduate of The University of Tennessee in Knoxville, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies. He also holds a Master of Divinity from The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, where he is currently a PhD candidate in ethics, public theology, and philosophy. He serves as an associate fellow with the Kirby Laing Centre for Public Theology in Cambridge, an advisor for AI and Faith, fellow in science and technology at the Land Center for Cultural Engagement at Southwestern Seminary, and a research fellow with the ERLC Research Institute. He is married to Dorie and they have two sons.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
41 (23%)
4 stars
56 (32%)
3 stars
57 (33%)
2 stars
13 (7%)
1 star
5 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 32 reviews
Profile Image for Ghadeer Hussein.
203 reviews1,444 followers
October 9, 2020
Informative and insightful book about AI and its impact on society and how it is changing human interactions.
The ethical impact of AI is one of the interesting and thought provoking points raised by this book. How will the wars look like with the expansion of using AI.
Profile Image for George P..
560 reviews62 followers
Read
March 3, 2020
Popular thinking about artificial intelligence (AI) alternates between the utopian and dystopian. Will our future be like the 1999 film Bicentennial Man, in which a robot becomes human over the course of 200 years? Or will it be like the 1984 movie The Terminator, in which a cyborg assassin travels back in time to kill the mother of the man who will prevent an AI-initiated nuclear holocaust?

Perhaps the future will be a little of both. As Jason Thacker demonstrates in The Age of AI, humanity is the image of God, and “God gave us specific jobs and responsibilities to perform as we seek to reflect him in this world.” Technology — even complicated technology like AI — is simply “a tool that helps us live out our God-given callings.” The problem is that humanity “brought sin into the world and broke the natural order of things.” Our technology reflects our mixed character as the image of God marred. It helps, and it harms.

Thus, AI holds both promise and peril. In the medical field, AI promises to make more accurate diagnoses and perform more intricate surgeries. But will it also deny medical care to those with low odds of survival? AI promises to make factory work less arduous, but will robots take jobs from humans? Social media helps people connect across distances and barriers, even as AI runs complex algorithms in the background and sweeps up personal data. Is that information safe from hackers, criminals and authoritarian governments?

Underlying these ethical dilemmas is a theological paradox. Some AI advocates — called transhumanists — believe humans are simply complex machines. When machines become sufficiently complex, they too will become almost human, like Robin Williams’ robot character in Bicentennial Man. The hope is such machines will avoid human failings. Thacker identifies the paradox: “We dumb down what it means to be human and treat each other as simple machines, but at the same time put our hope and faith in these machines to solve the problems and ills that we deal with each day.” In the process, we idolize our creations but demean God’s — people made in  His image.

“AI is changing everything about our world and society,” writes Thacker. “And we aren’t prepared. Reading The Age of AI is a good starting place.

BOOK REVIEWED
Jason Thacker, The Age of AI: Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Humanity (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2020).

P.S. If you liked my review, please click "Helpful" on my Amazon review page.

P.P.S. This review is cross-posted from InfluenceMagazine.com with permission.
Profile Image for Taylor Barkley.
401 reviews3 followers
March 16, 2020
A fine introduction to AI, theology, and ethics for those who are looking for a place to start. It’s brief and very readable! The chapter on privacy adds much needed treatment to an underdeveloped body of writing and thought on the subject from a Christian perspective.
Profile Image for Nathan Marone.
279 reviews12 followers
Read
June 21, 2023
A little basic. Probably aimed at someone who has not thought about these issues at all. For that reason, it wasn't terribly helpful to me, but Thacker does have some good thoughts on the nature of human responsibility, especially in his discussion of AI in warfare.
Profile Image for Grant Humphreys.
27 reviews11 followers
January 26, 2021
Good overview of the evolution of A.I., how it impacts society and culture, and how we should ethically leverage it for the flourishing of mankind. This is one of the few books that I’ve come across that approaches A.I. from a Christian worldview and applies truth from scripture to the subject.
Profile Image for Sarah Robbins.
613 reviews8 followers
July 15, 2020
Excellent book for believers wanting to engage with the current trends in technology.
Profile Image for Mwansa.
211 reviews26 followers
August 12, 2023
This book presents AI holistically like Captain Kirk's introduction to Star Trek with a mission to explore strange new worlds. It also shows that we are at the beginning of the revolution. To some extent, we don't even know what it is yet. Mark Zuckerberg struggled with this in the early years of developing Facebook. He knew it was big and had the potential to be bigger but couldn't quite put his finger on it until he had a proper grasp of the term "social network."

One of the big standout matters the book brought out is the need to rethink ideas of privacy and intellectual property. The non-believing world has taken these two concepts to extremes that have hindered development. Unlike academics where ideas can be built upon and referenced, almost every other field is shrouded in secrecy and locked away behind gates of intellectual property. AI as an aggregating tool is only as powerful as its sample base and provides its users with the means to extrapolate from existing data and create all kinds of new things. The gates of privacy and intellectual property, as currently framed by the non-believing world, cannot hold against the battering ram of AI.

If Christians do not rightly frame the discussion then we will get even more chaos when the inevitable collapse happens.
Profile Image for Alistair Chalmers.
Author 1 book22 followers
March 6, 2020
Artificial intelligence is not a topic that I've looked into much, I'm not great with technology. But this is an area that Christians must become aware of and engage with.

In this book you'll hear of some of the progresses that have been made with AI, it goes much wider than one might initially think. AI is involved in banking, medicine, warfare, work and even in our homes. So it's pretty important!

This book explores the benefits, limitations and dangers of AI. The fundamental conviction is that people are made in the image of God and the whole book stems from this. Thacker engages with those who think that one day AI will surpass its human creators and deals graciously with the lack of understanding about the beginnings of humanity. I thoroughly enjoyed this book and would recommend it to you :)
1 review5 followers
May 17, 2025
Loved it!

Very insightful!

May the Lord keep the coming generation from idolizing AI, and may He teach us to use AI with a sense of God’s fear, for Christ’s glory, and our good!
Profile Image for Seth Woodley.
162 reviews3 followers
March 8, 2020
This book is thoughtful and filled with practical wisdom for the present and the future. Thacker explains AI in a way that anyone can understand, and he examines the way it could affect a variety of areas in our lives and societies. There is something in here for everyone, and this book will serve as a helpful guide for years to come.
Profile Image for Tim.
118 reviews7 followers
June 14, 2021
I recently started to be interested in AI and was looking for a starting point for reading about it. Thacker's book caught my eye and is the first I've read on the topic with at least three more on my to-read list. It is as good a place as any other for anyone. I most highly recommend it for people of faith, specifically Evangelical, Bible-believing Christians looking for wisdom how to reconcile "the Age of AI" with biblical faith as artificial intelligence proceeds and continues to come more and more into our present reality. One of the best books I've read so far this year.
Profile Image for Jonathan Watson.
Author 3 books6 followers
June 5, 2025
AI is reshaping our society and day-to-day experience in profound and even alarming ways.
In this book, Jason Thacker offers an informative and theologically grounded reflection on our brave new world. Even though many new developments have emerged since the book’s publication, the author has written in a way that has preserved its relevance. While he maps some disheartening trends and expresses genuine concerns, he encourages readers to engage the relevant issues with courage and to face the future with hope. Warmly recommended!
Profile Image for Nicholas Lewis.
195 reviews8 followers
November 29, 2021
Jason Thacker’s book is more of a primer than a fully developed research project on a practical theology of dealing with A.I. but it serves as a wonderful introduction to the ethical dilemmas modern technology like A.I. presents to the Church. It’s a great conversation starter and for those working in the technology field, I think this is a book that you should read to begin to formulate discernment on the use and development of these powerful A.I. tools. I hope more books like these appear on the market to engage in thoughtful conversation and research for these modern developments and concepts.
Profile Image for Lara.
815 reviews2 followers
Read
June 30, 2023
I had downloaded this audiobook for another approach and information on AI to listen to while at work. I hadn't realized that it was a Christian approach to AI when I first downloaded it. Still gave it a try for a portion of it. Having worked in AI for the last two months, Thacker's approach to AI is much of what I've already read on in the last two months of a general introduction. Saying that I work for a research lab, I was curious for a different viewpoint, but essentially then passed on it because he doesn't add much aside from the Christian standpoint of what I already know, and is not relevant to what I'm working on for our curriculum.
Profile Image for Mason.
207 reviews
December 5, 2023
6.7 This was definitely not what I was expecting. A lot of weird coincidences recently. I actually liked this frame of reference, and I really really liked the author, however, underneath the authenticity you can't help but wonder. Was definitely a good book. There are definitely many things that unfortunately go unexplored due to hand waving but overall it was still enjoyable. I have a feeling this guy gets a lot of heat in his day to day. It seems like people in this field usually have a little more nuanced approach to spirituality but I highly respect anyone willing to defend the mainstream.
Profile Image for Jacob.
90 reviews5 followers
April 6, 2024
Basically fleshes out with stories and examples the ERLC’s “Artificial Intelligence: An Evangelical Statement of Principles” from 2019, which I believe Thacker helped to write. I did notice an additional chapter on Data & Privacy, and nothing on “Public Policy,” but those were the only differences in the chapter/topic headings of the two texts.

Honestly, unless you just really want the details or basis for certain positions, you could read the Statement of Principles (https://erlc.com/resource-library/sta...) and be just fine without reading this book.
Profile Image for Austin.
96 reviews5 followers
December 5, 2020
This was a surprisingly simplistic treatment of the A.I. issue. I was definitely expecting better, since Jason Thacker brings considerable credentials to the table. But I found Bible verses shallowly or dubiously applied, cliched questions, and not particularly insightful answers to those questions. I did finish the book, but it was out of sheer self-discipline and respect for the person who recommended the book to me, not on the merit of the book itself.
Profile Image for William Ashley.
Author 1 book1 follower
September 5, 2023
As excited as I was when I discovered this book, it left a lot to be desired. It was interesting, but not what I had hoped. That may be partly due to the 2021 publication date, and I was interested in many of the current moral issues dealing with the most recent "mind-blowing" advances in AI (i.e. writing papers, eduction, etc.) Additional chapters need to be added if book ever has another publishing.
Profile Image for Annelise.
325 reviews
March 27, 2024
AI but from a Christian perspective... I loved it. I wish more books were written with this mindset and application. This book touched on so many different applications of modern technology. I think it was well-written, briefly-written, and a book that I wholeheartedly recommend for anyone looking to raise a family in today's technology-driven society with Christianity at the foundation of it all.
Profile Image for Kyle Bueermann.
71 reviews4 followers
April 29, 2022
This was a helpful primer on the development of AI and how to approach it from a Christian worldview. AI is not something to fear as much as it is something to understand. There are good uses and, like everything else, potential downsides and dangers. Thacker does a great job of processing both sides.
Profile Image for Frank Peters.
1,027 reviews58 followers
February 14, 2025
This is a good book, and an excellent introduction to AI, for someone who doesn’t know what it is. For someone with an understanding of AI, 90% of the book is an introduction. Thus, I can recommend the book for someone who is new to AI and is interested in a Christian response. But I would not likely recommend it to anyone who is familiar with AI.
Profile Image for Mam.
845 reviews1 follower
June 4, 2020
I read only a couple of paragraphs, sorry - not what I had thought.
Profile Image for Ruth Scaife Scaife.
66 reviews
July 18, 2021
Good thought provoking book. After reading it I'm not sure which side the author is on whether for or against it. But I liked the parallelism to Biblical principals.
131 reviews
December 1, 2021
An interesting exploration of faith and a relationship with God in the age of Artificial Intelligence.
297 reviews2 followers
August 21, 2022
Added to notes
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Greg Parker.
120 reviews4 followers
August 15, 2023
A solid survey of the developments in AI and its far-reaching hand into various fields. For those looking for more than an introduction to AI there will be some disappoint.
Profile Image for Kate.
166 reviews1 follower
June 19, 2025
challenging informative reflective fast-paced
Profile Image for Emma LeBouef.
207 reviews4 followers
December 1, 2025
a little outdated but an interesting read! was cool to see the thoughts of what the future may bring and the ethical concerns that may align with that and to see it playing out now.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 32 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.