The Sean McDowell Show - The End of the World? John Lennox on AI and the Book of Revelation

Episode Date: September 27, 2025

Artificial intelligence is reshaping our world at lightning speed bringing both incredible possibilities and sobering dangers. But how should Christians think about AI in light of Scripture, and in pa...rticular the book of Revelation? In this conversation, Dr. John Lennox joins me to discuss his concerns about AI, but also his confidence in why the end of history will not come through AI or some other manmade technology. We discuss his newest book God, AI and The End of History. READ: God, AI and the End of History: Understanding the Book of Revelation in an Age of Intelligent Machines by John Lennox (https://amzn.to/3IlJYzS) *Get a MASTERS IN APOLOGETICS or SCIENCE AND RELIGION at BIOLA (https://bit.ly/3LdNqKf) *USE Discount Code [SMDCERTDISC] for 25% off the BIOLA APOLOGETICS CERTIFICATE program (https://bit.ly/3AzfPFM) *See our fully online UNDERGRAD DEGREE in Bible, Theology, and Apologetics: (https://bit.ly/448STKK) FOLLOW ME ON SOCIAL MEDIA: Twitter: https://x.com/Sean_McDowell TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@sean_mcdowell?lang=en Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/seanmcdowell/ Website: https://seanmcdowell.org Discover more Christian podcasts at lifeaudio.com and inquire about advertising opportunities at lifeaudio.com/contact-us.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Looking for a simple way to stay rooted in God's Word every day? The Daily Bible Devotion app by Salem Media gives you morning and evening devotionals designed to encourage, inspire, and keep you connected with scripture. Plus, you'll enjoy Daily Bible trivia and humor, a fun way to learn and share a smile while growing in your faith. Get the Daily Bible Devotion app for free on both iOS and Android. Start and end your day with God's Word. Search for the Daily Bible Devotion app in the App Store or Google Play Store, download it today. How concerns should we be about the growth of artificial intelligence? What can the
Starting point is 00:00:35 Bible, and in particular, the book of Revelation, contribute regarding our age of intelligent machines? Dr. John Lennox is back to discuss his new fascinating book, God AI, and the End of History. Dr. Lennox, thanks for coming back. My pleasure. Let's jump right in. At the beginning of your book, you talk about a number of concerns people have about artificial intelligence, such as ethical considerations being outpaced by technology, the idea that AI robots will take over the world. What concerns you most about the growth of AI and why? There are several things that concern me about the growth of AI, and they cover quite a wide range. Firstly, we're talking about, about the growth of AI. And they cover quite a wide range. Firstly, we're talking about the AI that actually is working.
Starting point is 00:01:30 As most of the people watching us will know, there are two kinds of AI. There's the AI systems that do one and only one thing that normally requires human intelligence. So it's called artificial intelligence. It's not real intelligence. And there are thousands, if not millions now, of different AI systems. systems, some of them very beneficial, for example, being used to develop drugs and solve complex problems in logistics and so on. But also, many of these are dealing with the area of pattern and vision recognition. And so they can be useful to police to find out criminals in a crowd by facial recognition.
Starting point is 00:02:23 But it's well known that in parts of our world, particularly in Xinjiang and China, the very same systems are being used to repress people. And that's one of the big issues. That is the rapidly increasing intrusive surveillance that this very sophisticated technology enables. In a sense, it's not merely facial recognition anymore. They can recognize you by your gate, in other words, from the back. And you hear stories about factories where if you're not smiling coming in, the door will not unlock. Because the thing is trained on your face to see if you are like that. And in some schools it's being used to see if children are bored or if they're recalcitrant or if they're annoyed or if they're happy.
Starting point is 00:03:20 So we're entering a new regime of intrusive surveillance that is being used by an increasing number of governments. So that's one side of it. Another side of it that's cropped up recently is AI, particularly chat GPT, and these bots that become companions of people. And what they often do is simply reflect the inner goings on in the minds of the people who are. consulting them and that's all very well if you're just asking for information but folks are treating these bots almost like interaction with individuals and we're now hearing about AI-induced psychosis because those interactions start messing up with the brain if everything you say is reinforced by an AI it will reinforce your delusions and so it has been recognized
Starting point is 00:04:20 by the medical profession that this is a very serious threat to human stability. So that's another one. And of course, there's the ever-present pornography, which is destroying so many people's lives and so easily accessible and becoming more sophisticated all of the time. And you could go on and on. And you'd still only be talking about the stuff that's actually working. You wouldn't be talking about the science fiction side of it, as I call it, where we're talking about robots overtaking the world or becoming super intelligent.
Starting point is 00:04:59 We can talk about those if you want. But a lot of that is pie and sky, really. It's fictional. It's not going to happen. We may approach something like that, but we're not going to get there for very good reasons. So it is, from that point of view, scary. The final one I would mention is the one that's often uppermost on people's minds. This technology is robbing many people of their jobs.
Starting point is 00:05:29 And I heard of one, I think it was a trading floor where they used to have 850 people. Those people have been replaced by artificial intelligence plus two humans. And that's it. And the problem there is that it's all very well for folks to say, you can reskill and you can become an expert in AI. But that is really only true in the West where we've got the educational infrastructure to upskill people into these areas.
Starting point is 00:06:03 In many places like Africa, where I've been, they just don't. And what they fear is a hugely increased gulf between the rich and the poor. So the world is changing fundamentally through AI systems. And of course, perhaps a final thing, which is scary,
Starting point is 00:06:27 is the whole business of fake news and also the ability to take a very brief video and speech of you or me and make us say anything that the controllers once said. And that could lead to the greatest deception that the world has ever seen. Now, if you step back from that, one of the things that strikes me, and it's relevant to your comment on the Bible in the book of Revelation, the thing that Jesus warned about most in the future was deception. And that's no accident.
Starting point is 00:07:04 We're now capable of bringing deception to billions on a grand scale that's very hard to detect. So the Bible's spot on that deception is going to be a huge issue. You cited something in introduction of your book that I hadn't heard of before, that in 1945, scientists such as Einstein and Oppenheimer created a doomsday clock about how some man-made catastrophe would result in the end of the world. So not a comet, not something natural, man-made catastrophe. In 1947, they set it at seven minutes to midnight. Last year, it was moved forward 90 seconds to midnight.
Starting point is 00:07:47 How concerned are you that something like AI would result in the end of the world, or is that what you referred to earlier as more science fiction? Well, I think yes and no. It's more complex than that. Certainly, AI systems are being used to wreak havoc on the planet at the moment in artificially intelligent guided weaponry. And that's a huge area. And if you've noticed, increasing amount of fighting is not done by soldiers.
Starting point is 00:08:23 It's done by drones that are controlled on the ground. And some of the most lethal incidents in the tragic war between Russia and Ukraine, it's the drones that are doing most of the damage. And they've developed ways of swarming them so that these drones, which can be of all kinds of different sizes, are just lethal. And certainly that could, if you just think about it, that could cause havoc on the entire planet if it's scaled up. But I'm a Christian believer. So I take very seriously what Christ and the apostles say about the future in the New Testament.
Starting point is 00:09:08 And in the end, my hope is placed, well, it's the central hope of the Christian faith, but we don't talk about it. And that is that God will eventually step in in terms of the return of Christ and put an end to all of this and take over the government. But before that happens, it does seem to me not only from the scripture, but actually from what's happening in the world, that there's a convergence of ideas. Let me illustrate that by Peter Thiel was in Oxford, not not. long ago. And I went to hear him speak. He's doing a lot of talking about revelation and the apocalypse these days. And I wanted to clarify, or him to clarify, for the audience, what he really believed. So I asked this question. I said, Peter, do I understand you correctly? When as a technology expert, you are concerned with technology outpacing us and eventually damaging the
Starting point is 00:10:16 human race and possibly destroying it. That's on the technology side. And you also read in the Bible things that are similar. And a great deal of your concern is because the two things seem to overlap. In other words, the biblical scenario is very close to the technology scenario. When he said, yes, that's exactly how I see it. And that's why I ventured to write this final book. I need to tell you that the title is a bit misleading. God, AI, and the end of history, the subtitle is the important thing, which is understanding the book of revelation in an age of intelligent machines. Now, the title has given some people the erroneous impression, ha, this is Lennox's latest book on artificial intelligence. It isn't. My most recent book on
Starting point is 00:11:16 AI is the revised edition of 2084, where I go into these dangers at all kinds of levels from the family, business, science, everything else. That's the book that deals with it. But the publishers felt it was good because I mention AI in connection with Revelation and expounding the book. But it's an exposition of the book of Revelation where I attempt to show people that we need to start taking this book seriously. Well, at the heart of Revelation is the idea, of course, that Jesus is God. He's the preeminent one. And he's coming back.
Starting point is 00:11:57 Some of the last words. My church taught in Revelation two summers ago. And I taught in Revelation 20, the millennium. And then Revelation 22, the last words of Jesus where he says, basically, you know, I'm coming soon. Amen. What gives you confidence? 2,000 years later that Jesus is actually coming back?
Starting point is 00:12:20 Very good questions, sir. Well, you observed something very interesting. I'm fascinated amongst many other things in the way scripture is structured as literature to start with. And in the book of Revelation, you point out that in the final chapter, it happens three times over, Jesus says, I'm coming soon. But in the first chapter, twice it is said that God is coming soon, and that's unusual.
Starting point is 00:12:53 I am, he that is, was, and you'd expect and shall be, just going through the tenses of the verb to be. But know the God who is, who was, and who is to come. That's repeated twice in the first chapter. And in between them, there's the verse. that explains how he will come. Behold, he is coming with clouds and every eye shall see him. In other words, this is picking up a very ancient idea from the Old Testament, the concept, and we very rarely hear about it, but it's biblical, very clearly, of the coming of God. And the Psalms talk about it, mountains, clap your hands, and may the hills sing and things like that.
Starting point is 00:13:40 for God is coming to judge the world. And that was one of the great expectations, particularly of people who were suffering, that one day God would do something about it and step in and bring justice. And what revelation pinpoints there at the beginning is if you ask how God will come, then you are referred to something very specific
Starting point is 00:14:03 that Jesus will come. Now, why do I believe that? one of the very interesting things is that Jesus did something at the end of his earthly ministry to show the disciples exactly what his coming meant. Luke, who was a brilliant historian but also was a medic and therefore probably trained at the best science of his day, is the only scientist who writes in the New Testament. And at the beginning of acts, he describes a scene where Jesus bad for well to the disciples, and then he ascended before them.
Starting point is 00:14:50 And to their utter amazement, two figures appeared and said, you men of Galilee, why do you stand gazing up into heaven? Gazing, that's looking at their eyes. That's visual comment number one. For this same Jesus shall so come as you saw him go into heaven. In other words, the Christian teaching about the ascension where Jesus physically rose and then disappeared. He didn't, by the way, just go up and up and up and up to teach us that this is a three-decker universe with hell beneath and heaven above. It's much more sophisticated than that.
Starting point is 00:15:34 He went up physically and a cloud received him from their sight. And what Luke, the same medically observing, brilliant historian says they saw it, they saw it, they saw it. And they were told that the ascension is a visual thought model for us to imagine its reverse happening, Jesus coming on the clouds of heaven. And that for me is the way into this. Now, why I take it seriously is... Want to keep God's word with you wherever you go? The King James Bible Study KJV app by Salem Media makes it easy to read, study, share, and pray daily with a timeless KJV translation.
Starting point is 00:16:18 Enjoy features like offline access, audio Bible listening, smart search, and tools to highlight bookmark and take notes, all designed to keep your Bible studies simple and organized. Best of all, it's free to download in the Google Play Store. Growing your faith every day. Search for King James Bible study KJB and download the app today. Scientists, because I am not an anti-supernaturalist. I believe that scripture gives us lots of evidence that this world is not the only world there is. And the central teaching of the early apostles was to blow apart that naturalistic worldview and teach that they were witnesses of Jesus rising from the dead.
Starting point is 00:17:01 And just as he rose from the dead physically and literally, so he will return. It is supernatural. And I'm not ashamed to say so because there's nothing in genuine science of contradiction. So that's the way I would begin to step into this arena. I love that. Now, of course, skeptics are saying you haven't established the New Testament as reliable and Jesus God and he did miracles. And that's a separate conversation.
Starting point is 00:17:29 But if Jesus has. It is. ways into this. If Jesus has risen from the grave, his words have authority and this book is reliable, it gives us confidence Jesus is coming back. I think that's fair. Now, when I saw this book, I actually thought it was like, oh, my goodness, because you and I did an interview on your book 284, maybe three or four months ago. I thought, there's no way. He's written a book this big on AI in like six months. And I realized, oh, the way into Revelation is through our cultural moment of AI, that makes sense because there's competing claims about how the world will end and who we
Starting point is 00:18:06 should trust. It makes perfect sense. But tell me why, just in two things, in our cultural moment and in your life and career, why a commentary on revelation now? Well, as you look at me, you'd see an 82-year-old man. And I'm in the natural way of things coming towards the end of life. And one of the big things as you get older is scrutinizing rigorously what grounds you have for hope. Amen. And the New Testament teaching is very clear that we have been born again onto a living hope by the resurrection of Jesus. from the dead. And in the whole context of biblical teaching on the resurrection, the central hope
Starting point is 00:19:00 then becomes the return of Christ. And when Paul is explaining to the church at Thessalonica, exactly what a first century Christian conversion looked like, he talks about the Thessalonians, turning to the living God from idols to serve a living in a true God, and a true God, and to wait for his son from heaven. In other words, they were to do two things. They were to serve God actively, but they were to have an eye towards the future, that they had real hope.
Starting point is 00:19:36 And the importance of that's very simple. If you watch politicians, no one is interested if they only talk about the past. We want to know what they're promising to do in the future. And if you've no program for the future, no one's going to listen to you. And it's not surprising, therefore, to me, that the most attacked parts of Scripture are the beginning and the ending.
Starting point is 00:19:59 Because if you don't have a past, you don't have an identity. And if you don't have a future, you don't have hope. So we're dealing with the big story, the meta-narrative of Scripture. And therefore, here's the tragedy, that we've got a whole book at the end of the Bible that is framed, as I mentioned a few minutes ago. by the coming of Christ and then all the details it gives and we become afraid of it. We become afraid of it because people have used it to support all kinds of fringe doctrines, etc, etc. And often, particularly in the past, it was so interpreted that it had no relevance to the presence. When in fact the people in the New Testament were buttressed by it by giving them a clear goal to live,
Starting point is 00:20:53 that affected them morally in the present moment. Let me put it this way. John's letter puts it perfectly what's going on. He talks about the hope of heaven and of Christ's coming in particular. And he says the people, he or she, who has this hope, purify themselves, even as he, that is Jesus is pure. And you'll notice that it doesn't say they should purify themselves. It says they do. In other words, you can test very easily whether a Christian has grasped the meaning of the coming of Christ
Starting point is 00:21:35 if it's having a moral and spiritual impact in their life now. It's idle just to talk about it when our lives don't correspond to it. And that's the challenge that needs to be brought out by teaching the Book of Revelation, having an eye to the fact that it's multi-dimensional. It was relevant, totally relevant, to seven contemporary churches in the Middle East in the first century. But then it goes way beyond that because it is, as it itself claims, a prophecy. And what I've tried to do, I don't know whether I've succeeded,
Starting point is 00:22:12 but the response has been very interesting so far. I've tried to draw lines from that into our... contemporary situation to show people this is highly relevant and powerful stuff all of it i love that now you talk about in the book at the very kind of very beginning you frame how we traditionally look to religion to give us hope and to save humanity and yet now technology is kind of replaced religion in this regard that now we look to technology rather than rather than we look to religion. Of course, you're saying we should not just look to religion, but we should look to the Christian religion and faith, in particular, the future as laid out in
Starting point is 00:23:02 Revelation. Now, if you were going to sum up the core message of Revelation, what's the heart of the message? Here's what Revelation is about. The book of Revelation is full of singing. which is remarkable because it's also full of a sequence of judgments. This is God finally stepping in to deal with all the sin and rebellion in the world. And yet, it rises to several climaxes, all which have to do with praise and singing. And that's remarkable just as a phenomenon to observe that, because if you read it correctly, it will cause you. to sing. It'll cause your heart to be full of joy. If you read it incorrectly, it won't. So if we come out of it,
Starting point is 00:23:59 fighting each other and all this kind of thing, we haven't understood it. The central thing to go to your question directly is it is a revelation of Jesus Christ. Now, the word off can be thought of in two directions. First of all, it reveals Jesus Christ. It is an apocalypse. It is an unveiling. In other words, when I read it, I should be getting to know more and more about Jesus Christ. That's why it's so important. You could also think of that as saying it's a revelation of Jesus Christ in the sense that he gave it. But in the end it amounts to the same thing, because its central figure is the Lord Jesus himself. And therefore, you can see that building up because the first vision in the book is the section dealing with the seven contemporary churches in Asia Minor. But before that,
Starting point is 00:25:02 there's a vision of Christ in his risen glory on earth walking among these lamps stands. and the symbolism of the book is very interesting because, and we can understand how it works by this first thing. What I mean by that is many people think that the book of revelation is full of code. And when you see a lampstand, you ask, well, what is that? Or who is that? And you're told it's church. And then you say, okay, I've got it.
Starting point is 00:25:37 That isn't the point of it at all. The point of it is the exact opposite. It's looking at churches as lamp stands. That is a sources of light. So what God is concerned with in this first section, chapters one, two, and three, is to increase the witness power of the churches by appearing to them in all his glory.
Starting point is 00:26:04 And if you look at him, he encapsulates several sources of light his face is shining as a sun in its strength. And that's curious, isn't it? If his face is like that, why do we need lampstands? If he's illuminating it. There's so much teaching if we recognize the way the symbolism is being used. And Jesus appears dressed as a judge with all the eyes like a flame of fire and all this kind of thing.
Starting point is 00:26:37 And the logic of the book is very simple. The book is full of a series of judgments. The first question to ask about that kind of thing is what kind of a throne or authority is behind that? And so the first is to see that behind it, Jesus speaks to the churches and judges them before he judges the world. That's the biblical order, isn't it? and Peter, first, the house of God, and then the world, according to Peter, is judged. And the second vision in Revelation is a throne. Chapter 4, 5, 6 and 7 are a logical sequence justifying, revealing to you the nature of the authority that's behind the judgments.
Starting point is 00:27:32 And I find that extremely powerful and very relevant. So the central message is to reveal Christ, but certain aspects of him. And in the churches, and we're members of churches, we need to take that first section seriously because we'll discover that the risen Lord is interested in three things. He's interested in what we believe, our doctrine, he's interested in how we behave, and he's interested in what quality our, love for him has. And that analysis, it seems to me, carries the book and challenges us at the deepest level.
Starting point is 00:28:18 Tell me if this is fair. That's really helpful. If I said, Revelation, like if I was going to send out an X, a tweet, and I said, it's about Jesus being the first and the last, the beginning and the end, the Alpha and the Omega, who has defeated the powers of this age in the past and fully to come. So trust him and worship him and rejoice in the present. Is that fair? Yeah, absolutely.
Starting point is 00:28:46 And in amongst those is the fact that he has loosed us from our sins. The big problem with all the futuristic scenarios involving AI technology and everything else is they avoid the problem of human sin. And that has been the tragedy in history. people have tried to make utopia without facing the flaws in human morality, and so they've created a bloodbath. So you write specifically, this is a quote from your book, you said, quote, the Christian worldview would have little or no credibility if it did not hold out a realistic vision of the future.
Starting point is 00:29:25 And yet this so-called realistic vision of the future in Revelation exists in a 2,000-year-old apocalyptic book that seems myth. filled with beasts, wars, and battles. How is that realistic, Dr. Lennox? Well, it's very realistic because what it does, as C.S. Lewis pointed out long ago in another context, it educates her imagination. And Lewis taught me a great deal. And here's one of the fundamental principles he taught me. When you see metaphors, symbols, the beasts and all this kind of thing, the
Starting point is 00:30:03 untutored reaction is, well, this stuff isn't real. And Lewis pointed out that all metaphors stand for realities. And so the challenge is, not who the beasts are, but what they are. They're wild beasts and they symbolize empires. Now, why would you use wild beasts to symbolize empires? Well, this is something that occurs in the Old Testament, and particularly in the book of Daniel. And we can understand it immediately because so many world empires then and now behave like wild animals.
Starting point is 00:30:45 They aren't amoral. And the use of that kind of symbolism is to get across to us that these are real. That is, there's a metaphor, of course. The Bible is full of. metaphors. And I always give people an elementary lesson and grammar before I get into the beasts and so on. People say, you know, you must take the Bible literally. And I say, you don't. And they say, we do. Well, I say, okay, have a go with this then. Jesus said, I am the door.
Starting point is 00:31:24 Do you understand that literally, that he was made of wood or whatever? And of course, they then realize what they've never realized before, that the Bible is packed full of. metaphor. But now he said we make a mistake. Just because Jesus is not a literal door. Want to keep God's word with you wherever you go? The King James Bible study KJV app by Salem Media makes it easy to read, study, share, and pray daily with the timeless KJV translation. Enjoy features like offline access, audio Bible listening, smart search, and tools to highlight bookmark and take notes, all designed to keep your Bible studies simple and organized. Best of all, It's free to download in the Google Play Store.
Starting point is 00:32:05 Growing your faith every day. Search for King James Bible study, KJV, and download the app today. It doesn't mean he's not a real door. He is a real door, the next level up, a real door into a real and literal spiritual experience of God. And that principle you can carry over into the book of Revelation. And instead of saying, well, these mythical creatures, this is all a lot of nonsense from a horror film,
Starting point is 00:32:36 But to stand back and say, look, this is biblical language. And if you're a Christian, it's inspired biblical language. And it's meant to convey to us the nature of the reality behind it. In other words, let me give you another example of that, a lovely example. John hears a voice saying, the lion of the tribe of Judah has overcome. come. And he turns and he sees a lamb standing. Now, if I ask the question, who, who is the lion? Well, it's Jesus. That's pretty obvious. And if I ask who's the lamb, that's Jesus. But that isn't the point at all. We know it's Jesus. The first reference is to Jesus as a lion. And the second reference is to Jesus as a lamb. In other words, what is important about the imagery is not who it is but what it is. We know who it is, but the imagery
Starting point is 00:33:39 is teaching us something about the reality behind the image. And so we're to learn from that that Jesus is both a lion and a lamb with all that that entails. So I have found that that way of looking at things opens up the whole book. So then how should we read Revelation? because I grew up in the 80s, Dr. Lennox, and there was not only like the occult scare, there was all this discussion about the end times and revelation and how Lindsay's books, I think he was one of the best-selling authors of the 70s, if I'm not mistaken. That's right. The late great planet Earth. I mean, that's just, you know, people interpreted like grasshoppers, our helicopters,
Starting point is 00:34:23 and like you're saying there's some real nations and events behind this. But how do we avoid real? reading the news through the book of Revelation and missing things and doing isogesis instead of exegesis. In your mind, what does it mean to read Revelation literally as far as it should go, but also responsibly? Oh, you have to read it responsibly because it's a highly complex book and it's meant to be read intelligently, as is the rest of Scripture. You see, Our problem is, as in the illustration, I am the door, we never think about that in connection with metaphor.
Starting point is 00:35:07 So we say it's literal and it's not. So we're confused in our understanding of the way that language works. And of course, that confusion comes even greater. I think the important thing is to have the principle of checking scripture with scripture and being genuinely humble in saying, well, that looks like. it could be X, but it might not be because the examples you gave many Bible teachers in my younger day, they made absolute dogmatic statements. And people thought these were marvellous, but then they turned out to be false.
Starting point is 00:35:49 And that discredited them completely. So I tried to be very careful in the book. I may not have succeeded. as in trying to see if there are any things in our culture that are parallel. Now, here's the principle. I came across it in a book written by a friend. He never finished it, a book on Revelation called Tomorrow's World. And he said, if we believe in genuine supernatural prediction,
Starting point is 00:36:21 then it may be wrong to have all our categories of interpretation in the past, you know, in terms of armies and horses and all this kind of thing. If this is relevant to the future, to our day, then surely it's perfectly legitimate to bring in the technology of our day and what's going on in our world. just as the symbols of stinging scorpions and flying this and flying that would conjure up to a person in the first century, actual insects that were like scorpions and so on. Today, we should begin to think, is there anything in our experience that would parallel this? Because if it is the inspired word of God,
Starting point is 00:37:19 it is talking about the future, not just the past. That's right. And that seems to me to be a key, important thing. And I've tried to do it very cautiously and carefully, and other people will add to it. I regard this as a preliminary book. You can spend all your life working on a revelation. I didn't want to do that. But I wanted to say some things that would perhaps surprise people into thinking more about it
Starting point is 00:37:46 and in showing that you can actually, if you're cautious, get a lot more that's relevant and is preachable and teachable than you would otherwise have got. So let's take that a step further. There's a quote that you said. You said, I have found Revelation to be highly relevant. This is in the introduction, highly relevant to thinking and writing about artificial intelligence and the future of humanity. So AI, I'm sorry, revelation highly relevant to
Starting point is 00:38:16 AI, and then you say with special reference to transhumanism. So how does a book written 2,000 years ago have special reference and relevance to transhumanism, which is clearly a modern phenomenon? Well, transhumanism is a very ancient phenomenon. It starts in Genesis 3. Okay. And that's the connector, you see. the original temptation to humans.
Starting point is 00:38:46 If you eat of this tree, you shall be as God. And if you start in the contemporary world with authors like Yuval Noah Harari, whom I interact with in my book quite a lot, one of his best-selling books is called Homodeus, the man God or the man who is God. And although he's no scientist, he's got a huge worldwide following.
Starting point is 00:39:12 And he believes that right evolution has got us to the human stage, but now we must take evolution into our own hands and use our own minds to ascend beyond the human stage, that is transhuman, and turn ourselves into gods with a small G. So that's the biblical program. And when you ask yourself, where do we see this in heaven? history, well, we see it all over the place. But in particular times in history, it raises its head in Genesis, it raises its head in the book of Daniel, it raises its head in the time of the Romans, where the Caesar started calling themselves gods and so on. And the key text to me in understanding what's going on here is into Thessalonians, where Paul apparently, as he says, he's only been, according to Luke, in Thessalonica, three weeks. So the raw pagans, Paul teaches for three weeks. And yet in that time, he had presented them with the biblical
Starting point is 00:40:21 scenario of the future that included the idea that there would arise a very powerful leader inspired by the power of Satan who would declare himself to be God. And then Paul says a very very interesting and important thing. He says the mystery of lawlessness, and I should just explain there, that this figure is spiritually lost, defying God. It doesn't mean he doesn't believe in law. It's the opposite. The Roman emperors believed in Roman law, but they were spiritually lawless. They defied God, they claimed to be gone. And Paul says, in the future, there will arise a world leader who is driven by satanic power and who will be destroyed at the coming of Christ. So that brings that together. This is not a symbolic text. It's a plain theological text. And it serves as a connector
Starting point is 00:41:24 for the visions in Daniel, some of them in Ezekiel, and particularly in the book of Revelation. And it anchors it. In other words, however we understand this kind of thing, what has said of the man of lawlessness or the man of sin and two Thessalonians is said in the animals in Revelation and the book of Daniel and I put two and two together
Starting point is 00:41:54 and I say at least this seems to be a convergence of ideas in other words the plain straightforward theological text of two Thessalonians is backed up powerfully by this imagery And if you see the imagery, in light of it, it gives you confidence that the imagery is on exactly the same track.
Starting point is 00:42:18 The idea of Revelation, hence the title, is that there is a God who has spoken and reveals certain things who are hidden. Now, in our age of science and technology, a lot of people find the idea of revelation just incredulous, that it's a pose. to reason. For those of us who believe in God's existence and that he speaks and makes himself known, revelation is not a problem. But why in our age of science, when we can see AI and its effects, should we believe that the idea of revelation itself is even credible? Well, the reason we do that is because we don't think by baby blood. Okay. Even on a simple human level.
Starting point is 00:43:10 As I understand it, there are several sources of information. Using reason. But another is revelation. Right on base level, let me give an example. I tell a story in one of my books that's gone around the world about Aunt Matilda's cake. And this cake is baked. She allows it to be examined by all the Nobel Prize winners from a scientific perspective,
Starting point is 00:43:44 physicists, chemists, all this kind of thing. And at the end, she then says, well, now, thank you for all this information. Why did I make the cake? The physicists can't say, the chemists can't say, and all the rest of them cannot say on the basis of their fields of research. They'll only know if she reveals it to them. Now, when she does, they immediately use their reason on her revelation. They wouldn't understand it otherwise.
Starting point is 00:44:18 And when people say to me, reasons opposed to revelation, I say, well, look, as a Christian, do you believe the Bible is a revelation of God? And they say, yes, of course I do. And you read it without using your reason. You don't need your reason at all to understand it. And of course, immediately they realize they're talking nonsense. That's right. It's that there are two ways of looking at things.
Starting point is 00:44:43 And just with a simple analogy of the cake, if Aunt Matilda never speaks, we'll never know. But if she does, we will reason to see if it makes sense. The same is true of the universe. We can examine it, how it works, what it's made off, but why was it made? We'll never know unless there is a being who stands in the same relation to the universe as Ant Batilda stands to her cake and who reveals it to us.
Starting point is 00:45:14 But we'd be fools if we didn't use our reason on reading it. It's a confusion of thought, you see. And I think the key answer to it is this, if I can tell just another biblical illustration of this. Paul was arrested on the steps of the Antonia Fortress in Jerusalem. And he insisted on speaking to the crowd. And the centurion was going to hold him back and he said, now look, and I'm putting this now into modern English. I did my PhD with Gamaliel, who's one of the top teachers of the day.
Starting point is 00:45:52 I know these people. I know their language. I have a right to speak to them. Now, the secret of Paul's spiritual power was that he used his reason and he trusted God. We get into trouble, particularly we who are intelligent Christians, when we do the opposite. We trust our reason and we use God. There's a very subtle difference between those two. And I think the crowd that watched Paul being arrested and listened to what he said,
Starting point is 00:46:26 we're very glad that there was an intellectual who was able to use this reason to challenge the situation that they couldn't do themselves. So what I say to bright Christians who often are worried, you're not trusting the Holy Spirit, you're trusting your reason. Well, I say that would be a dangerous thing to do. But what we are to do is to trust God and use all these capacities. He's given us reason and all the other things that we have. So I find that helps me a great deal to sort this confusion out. Reason and revelation are not opposed. They're just different ways, importantly different ways, of getting a truth.
Starting point is 00:47:10 That's really helpful. And, of course, in your other books, you lay out some of what you think is the scientific evidence from the beginning of the universe and the fine-tuning and DNA towards there being a mind in the universe. And if the Bible is true and Jesus did miracles, we have a God who actually speaks and has revealed himself. Exactly, yes. Hence the book of Revelation. When I picked this up, I did not expect a commentary on Revelation, but was pleasantly surprised. One thing I know is I don't fully understand Revelation. I don't know if anybody does, but your book is very readable. It's very insightful. It's helpful. And it's a wonderful contribution to the church as a whole and our understanding of Revelation, especially as a scientist and a mathematician, the way you approach things, I think, is really unique. Lennox, I've got a million more questions for you, but I want to respect your time. And also encourage our viewers and listeners to pick up a copy of God AI in the end of history.
Starting point is 00:48:14 And you might be surprised how this book written 2,000 years ago has insight and relevance for our cultural moment and how we face so much of the apocalypticism that we're hearing about from AI. So, Dr. Lennox, we will have you back anytime you're willing to come on. Such a joy all the way from Northern Ireland. My first name, Sean, my mom saw it in Ireland 50 years ago and said, I want a boy. I want a name of Sean. But I've never been to your beautiful country. It's at the top of my list. I would love to come.
Starting point is 00:48:50 Folks, before you click away, make sure you hit subscribe. We've got some other discussions coming up on the Bible. We have a round table coming up on AI as well with some. experts at Talbot and Biola with me. If you've ever thought of a study in apologetics, online or in person, we would love to have you join us at Talb School of Theology, Biola University, information is below. Dr. Lennox, thanks for great work. Thanks for your kindness for coming on and a blessing to you and your family. My pleasure. Thank you for your perceptive questions. And I would just say to people who
Starting point is 00:49:25 read my book, don't try to read it all in one night. I'm certain. Certainly, it is not the final answer in Revelation. Like you, I don't know all about it. But I'm hoping just to present something to get people going. Well, we'll end with the final word in Revelation, which is, amen. Praying Christian Women, the podcast that brings Christian women together to talk about the deep questions about prayer that we're all thinking, but sometimes afraid to ask. Hi, I'm Jamie Hampton. And my podcast partner, Alana Terry and I would absolutely love for you to join us, as we disclos. us what it means to be a woman of prayer in the 21st century. This podcast will be your go-to for biblical encouragement, inspiration, and practical tips to equip you with the tools you need to live out a more passionate, powerful prayer life. Tune in now at lifeadio.com or your favorite podcasting app.

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