D020 A Task Force on AI in The Episcopal Church
Generative artificial intelligence (AI) is technology that enables computers to create original content, such as images or text, resembling human-produced output. AI uses models or algorithms trained on large sets of existing data, text, and images to understand and mimic patterns in that data. While there are many algorithms that are already integrated into our daily lives (such as autocorrect, email spam filters, and recommendation engines), generative AI is a significant step forward in the capability and reach of technology. Generative AI has particularly become more widespread over the past few years with the release of new tools like ChatGPT, Midjourney, DALL-E, Google Gemini, and Microsoft Copilot. This is a rapidly changing part of the technology landscape, the impacts of which we are just beginning to see.
Within The Episcopal Church, we need to consider how this technology affects our life and work together as a community of faith. There are benefits that various forms of AI, including generative AI, can bring to our lives and the work of running church institutions, such as helping with administrative tasks and taking notes during meetings. However, generative AI is still very new, and the benefits and the risks of this technology have not yet been systematically considered by The Episcopal Church or society at large. We need to look very carefully into the implications of AI, as it stands to challenge many of our deeply-held assumptions about the church, particularly in areas of liturgy and theology.
It has been long understood that the liturgies of The Episcopal Church are both the work of the people, and the people’s offering to God. According to An Episcopal Dictionary of the Church, liturgy is “The Church’s public worship of God. The term is derived from Greek words for ‘people’ and ‘work’.” (1) The Church has assumed that its liturgies are human created but the development of generative AI calls this assumption into question, as it is now possible for someone to prompt a machine to create a liturgical text, sermon, or other work out of whole cloth with little to no human involvement. In addition, with computers increasingly able to write papers with just the prompting of a few words, we could face new challenges including an potential increase of plagiarism, misuse and misstatement of our official stances on important issues of doctrine and morality, and the possibility of AI inventing fictional sources, for example, claiming the existence of a Book in the Bible that does not actually exist.
This is an issue that needs to be addressed now. A Task Force provides the opportunity to gather input from a variety of perspectives churchwide, and thoughtfully discuss the practical and theological implications of generative AI. Although this technology is still relatively new, generative AI is rapidly developing and becoming more widely accessible. If we as a church do not study the implications of what this new technology could bring, we will find ourselves farther and farther behind.
(1)Don S. Armentrout, and Robert Boak Slocum, eds., An Episcopal Dictionary of the Church: a user-friendly reference for Episcopalians. (New York: Church Publishing Incorporated), 307.
Explanation
Generative artificial intelligence (AI) is technology that enables computers to create original content, such as images or text, resembling human-produced output. AI uses models or algorithms trained on large sets of existing data, text, and images to understand and mimic patterns in that data. While there are many algorithms that are already integrated into our daily lives (such as autocorrect, email spam filters, and recommendation engines), generative AI is a significant step forward in the capability and reach of technology. Generative AI has particularly become more widespread over the past few years with the release of new tools like ChatGPT, Midjourney, DALL-E, Google Gemini, and Microsoft Copilot. This is a rapidly changing part of the technology landscape, the impacts of which we are just beginning to see.
Within The Episcopal Church, we need to consider how this technology affects our life and work together as a community of faith. There are benefits that various forms of AI, including generative AI, can bring to our lives and the work of running church institutions, such as helping with administrative tasks and taking notes during meetings. However, generative AI is still very new, and the benefits and the risks of this technology have not yet been systematically considered by The Episcopal Church or society at large. We need to look very carefully into the implications of AI, as it stands to challenge many of our deeply-held assumptions about the church, particularly in areas of liturgy and theology.
It has been long understood that the liturgies of The Episcopal Church are both the work of the people, and the people’s offering to God. According to An Episcopal Dictionary of the Church, liturgy is “The Church’s public worship of God. The term is derived from Greek words for ‘people’ and ‘work’.” (1) The Church has assumed that its liturgies are human created but the development of generative AI calls this assumption into question, as it is now possible for someone to prompt a machine to create a liturgical text, sermon, or other work out of whole cloth with little to no human involvement. In addition, with computers increasingly able to write papers with just the prompting of a few words, we could face new challenges including an potential increase of plagiarism, misuse and misstatement of our official stances on important issues of doctrine and morality, and the possibility of AI inventing fictional sources, for example, claiming the existence of a Book in the Bible that does not actually exist.
This is an issue that needs to be addressed now. A Task Force provides the opportunity to gather input from a variety of perspectives churchwide, and thoughtfully discuss the practical and theological implications of generative AI. Although this technology is still relatively new, generative AI is rapidly developing and becoming more widely accessible. If we as a church do not study the implications of what this new technology could bring, we will find ourselves farther and farther behind.
(1)Don S. Armentrout, and Robert Boak Slocum, eds., An Episcopal Dictionary of the Church: a user-friendly reference for Episcopalians. (New York: Church Publishing Incorporated), 307.