As with the printing press or the smartphone, the question before us is not if AI will influence discipleship, but how we will steward it.
Photo via [link]Lausanne Movement[/link].
For centuries, the church has embraced new tools to fulfill the Great Commission.
The printing press put Scripture into the hands of everyday people. Radio and television broadcast the gospel across nations. The internet connected believers and seekers worldwide. Each technological leap reshaped discipleship, bringing both opportunities and risks.
Today, Artificial Intelligence (AI) represents the latest shift in this story. Like past technologies, AI is neither inherently good nor evil; its impact depends on the wisdom, discernment, and ethics of those who use it.
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As with the printing press or the smartphone, the question before us is not if AI will influence discipleship, but how we will steward it.
We’ve already seen AI prompting timely, relational action in everyday life. During a recent workout, a friend’s phone suggested, unsolicited, that he send an encouraging message to someone recovering from surgery.
Within seconds, he texted an encouraging message. Technology helped him more effectively love his brother.
This simple example hints at AI’s potential to help believers act in ways that reflect Christ’s love. In the same way that past technology booms transformed church life, the AI revolution could enhance discipleship, particularly in forming personal relationships, education, and training, which are each at the heart of helping someone become more like Jesus. 1
Artificial intelligence is rapidly reshaping the way people learn, communicate, and make decisions; and the church is not immune to its influence. Just as past innovations like the printing press and the internet transformed discipleship, AI now presents both fresh opportunities and serious questions for how believers grow in Christ.
At its core, discipleship is relational and Spirit-led; the challenge before us is discerning how to use these new tools wisely so they serve, rather than distort, the call to follow Jesus.
Drawing from our work in church technology and our roles as founders of DiscipleIQ,2 we see several AI-enabled opportunities that align with the ethical framework provided in this volume’s introduction article.
These include, but are not limited to:
Each of these applications comes with ethical considerations, requiring us to design with privacy, consent, and relational health in mind.
Before adopting AI-driven discipleship tools, leaders should carefully examine whether the technology strengthens or weakens the very heart of discipleship: authentic relationships.
The church’s calling is not efficiency but formation, and tools must be evaluated through that lens. Some questions worth asking include:
Asking these questions keeps technology in its proper place, a servant of ministry rather than its master.
When guided by such discernment, AI can help remove barriers to authentic relationships, giving leaders more time to know, love, and walk alongside those they disciple.
At DiscipleIQ, our mission is to help churches connect people more personally and disciple more effectively. We see AI as a tool to enhance Spirit-led relationships, not replace them.
Our platform uses AI-assisted matching to connect people based on location, personality, life stage, career, language, cultural background, and spiritual gifts.
Leaders retain full control, reviewing every recommendation before action. Privacy is safeguarded, consent is explicit, and the end goal is always deeper relationship, not automation.
For example:
All of these are anchored in trust, transparency, and theological integrity.
AI will not wait for the church to catch up. The tools are already here. The choice before us is whether to engage them thoughtfully or risk missing opportunities for kingdom impact.
We believe the way forward requires both imagination and caution; imagination to explore how AI can multiply disciple-making efforts, and caution to ensure every application remains faithful to Scripture, centered on Christ, and focused on authentic, personal relationships.
History shows the church has always adapted to new technologies. The AI era will be no different, if we approach it with biblical conviction, relational focus, and a commitment to stewarding these tools for God’s glory.
Thomas Osborn is a technology strategist and former executive in digital platforms for church education, training, and discipleship. He is co-founder of DiscipleIQ and an advisor to AI & Faith.
Michael Meiser is co-founder of DiscipleIQ, a SaaS platform that helps churches connect people into meaningful discipleship relationships through data-driven matching and personalized pathways.
This article originally appeared in the November 2025 issue of the Lausanne Global Analysis and is published here with permission. To receive this free bimonthly publication from the Lausanne Movement, subscribe online at www.lausanne.org/analysis.
1. Thomas Osborn, “AI Can Help Christians Make Better Disciples,” AI & Faith, June 6, 2024,
2. DiscipleIQ. Accessed August 9, 2025.
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