top of page

All Posts


AI Won’t Make Us Less Human—It Will Learn Us Better Than We Know Ourselves
AI won’t just respond to us. It will learn us. What we like, what keeps us engaged, and what we return to will shape how it interacts with us. And when AI is built by for-profit systems, the incentive is clear: keep our attention. What shapes our attention eventually shapes our values. And that makes discernment a spiritual issue, not just a technological one.

Nehemiah Drook
2 days ago3 min read


When Human Work Becomes the Label
In a world where machines can produce almost anything instantly, human work will no longer compete on speed or efficiency. It will compete on presence. What a person makes by hand may be slower, more expensive, and less perfect—but it will carry something machines can’t replicate: responsibility. When creation becomes effortless, intention becomes the luxury.

Nehemiah Drook
5 days ago3 min read


When Convenience Replaces Covenant
AI won’t create humanity’s crisis of meaning, but it will intensify it. Meaning is inseparable from purpose, and purpose doesn’t come from intelligence or optimization—it comes from God. As AI gets better at answering how to live, it will become easier to avoid asking why we exist at all. And intelligence, detached from reverence and humility, doesn’t resolve that tension. It simply accelerates it.

Nehemiah Drook
Dec 29, 20253 min read


AI and the Question we're Avoiding
AI is going to get smarter than us. That’s not the scary part. The scary part is that we’re racing toward that future without agreeing on what “good” even means. You can’t control something smarter than you, so alignment matters more than control. And without a solid foundation for human values, intelligence—human or artificial—just amplifies whatever direction it’s pointed in.

Nehemiah Drook
Dec 26, 20253 min read
bottom of page