In recent years, commencement ceremonies have become stages for more than celebration. They have become battlegrounds for ideas. Across several universities, commencement speakers discussing Artificial Intelligence have been met with visible discomfort, protests, and in some cases outright booing from graduating students.
While previous generations worried about globalization, outsourcing, or economic recessions, today’s graduates face something far more personal: the possibility that the very careers they spent years preparing for may be transformed, or even eliminated, by intelligent machines.
For many students, AI is not an exciting innovation. It is an existential threat. The question Christians should ask is not simply, “Why are students booing?” The deeper question is, “What does this reveal about the times in which we live?”
A Generation Raised on Promise
For decades, young people have been told a familiar formula: go to school, get good grades, earn a degree, and build a successful career. This promise has been repeated by parents, teachers, guidance counselors, universities, and governments alike. Yet as students walk across graduation stages today, they are entering a world where AI systems can already write reports, generate software code, create marketing campaigns, analyze legal documents, produce artwork, answer customer service inquiries, and even perform tasks once reserved for highly educated professionals.
Many graduates are realizing they may be competing not only with other people but with machines that never sleep, never demand benefits, and improve at astonishing speeds.
Their concern is understandable. When a commencement speaker celebrates AI while graduates worry about paying off student loans, the applause can quickly turn into boos, and it has.
The Anxiety Behind the Reaction
The negative response to AI discussions is not simply about technology. It is about uncertainty.
Many students sense that society is changing faster than they can adapt. They see headlines about corporations replacing workers with AI. They hear executives discuss automation. They watch entire industries being transformed in real time. They are being told that, in order to qualify for an entry-level position, they now must have experience. Is that the goal of starting at an entry level, to gain experience for future growth?
The result is growing anxiety. Ironically, many secular voices are beginning to recognize something Scripture has warned about for centuries: humanity’s pursuit of knowledge and power often creates problems it cannot control.
Technology itself is not evil. Human hearts remain the issue. The same AI system can be used to accelerate medical research or generate deception. It can help educate children or manipulate public opinion. It can enhance productivity or contribute to widespread unemployment.
Technology reflects the intentions of those who wield it.
The Tower of Babel Revisited?
The Bible records humanity’s first great technological rebellion in Genesis 11. At Babel, mankind united around a common purpose. Their goal was not merely architectural achievement but independence from God. Their action was rebellion against God.
They sought to build a civilization centered on human capability and human glory. The Lord intervened because humanity’s collective ambition was leading them further from dependence upon Him. Today we witness something remarkably similar. Global leaders, technology companies, governments, and researchers increasingly speak of AI as the solution to humanity’s greatest challenges. AI is being presented as the solution to disease, climate change, economic instability, education, and governance.
Some even suggest AI could become humanity’s most trusted advisor. In effect, many are looking to technology for answers that ultimately can only come from God. While AI is not the Tower of Babel, it reflects the same temptation: placing confidence in human ingenuity rather than divine wisdom.
The Rise of a Digital Priesthood
Historically, people turned to pastors, teachers, parents, and community leaders for guidance.
However, today millions are increasingly turning to algorithms. AI systems are rapidly becoming counselors, advisors, tutors, therapists, and information providers. A growing number of people are more likely to ask an AI chatbot a life question than seek biblical counsel.
This trend should concern believers. The issue is not whether AI can provide information. The issue is whether people begin assigning authority to machines that belongs only to God. The prophet Isaiah warned: “Woe unto them that are wise in their own eyes, and prudent in their own sight” (Isaiah 5:21). A society that places ultimate trust in artificial intelligence may discover that intelligence without wisdom becomes dangerous.
Prophetic Implications
Bible prophecy does not specifically mention artificial intelligence by name. However, it does describe a future world characterized by unprecedented global connectivity, centralized control, surveillance capabilities, economic monitoring, and deception.
The technology emerging today is making many of these capabilities possible. The book of Revelation describes a future system in which buying and selling can be controlled. It describes a world united under global authority, and it warns of unprecedented deception. While AI itself is not the Antichrist, it may become one of the most powerful tools ever created for implementing systems of control.
The same technologies that make life easier can also make freedom more fragile. University students are sensing this tension. Even if they cannot articulate it in biblical terms, many recognize that something significant is changing.
Why the Church Must Pay Attention
The Church cannot afford to ignore the AI revolution. Some Christians dismiss technology discussions as irrelevant to spiritual matters. Others embrace every innovation uncritically.
Neither approach is wise. Believers are called to exercise discernment.
Yes, technology presents tremendous opportunities for ministry, education, communication, and outreach. Yet it also presents unprecedented opportunities for manipulation, deception, and dependence upon systems that may increasingly oppose biblical truth.
The Church’s task is not to fear technology. The Church’s task is to understand it through a biblical worldview. We must teach the next generation that their identity is not found in their careers. That will be what they do, NOT who they are. We must teach the next generation that their value is not determined by economic productivity. Their hope is not rooted in technological progress. Their security is found in Christ alone.
The Real Answer to the Fear
The students booing commencement speakers may be expressing more than frustration. They may be revealing the deeper fears of an entire generation. Fear of being replaced, becoming irrelevant, or of losing control of the future. Yet Scripture reminds us that the future has never belonged to humanity, it belongs to God.
Technology will continue advancing. Itโs not going to go backwards or stop. Artificial intelligence will be allowed to become more powerful. The world will continue moving toward conditions that resemble the prophetic warnings of Scripture.
But believers need not fear. Jesus Christ remains sovereign over every technological breakthrough, every global system, and every future development. The answer to artificial intelligence is not artificial hope. It is eternal hope.
As the world increasingly looks to machines for salvation, the Church must continue proclaiming the only message that truly saves: The Gospel of Jesus Christ. And perhaps that is the greatest lesson hidden behind the boos echoing across university campuses today. Students are searching for certainty in an uncertain age. The world offers algorithms. God offers truth.




















