Therefore, dear friends, since you have been forewarned, be on your guard so that you may not be carried away by the error of the lawless and fall from your secure position. But grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.To him be glory both now and forever! Amen.
2 Peter 3:17-18 (NIV)
Along the journey I continually find spiritual truth hiding in plain sight in the most unexpected of places.
The subject of AI is everywhere right now. Yesterday morning in our daily perusal of the news, Wendy and I read an article in the Free Press in which various thinkers gave their personal takes on AI. Wendy and I were both struck by these words from Eric Markowitz:
Over the last few hundred years, we began to see ourselves as separate from the natural world—masters of it, rather than participants in it. We built systems that prize speed above all else, and in doing so we lost the most fundamental lesson that nature teaches: Speed of growth makes you fragile. The tree that shoots up fastest is the first to fall in a storm. The ecosystems that endure—the ones that survive fire and drought and ice—are the ones that grew slowly, developed deep root systems, and built interdependence with the living things around them.
In today’s chapter, Peter confronts a burning issue of his day, and one that remains. Jesus promised His return. He promised a Day of Judgement. Even though He told His followers that “no one knows the day or hour” — that even He didn’t know when it would be, they were convinced that it was imminent. They expected it to be quick — in their lifetime.
The result was scoffers, doubters, and mockers.
“He’s obviously not coming. The whole things a sham. I may as well live however I want.”
What a very modern sentiment.
That’s the anthem of materialism. The creed of consumer culture. If there’s no reckoning, then indulge. If there’s no ending, then accumulate.
Peter whispers back: You mistake patience for absence.
Peter approaches this attitude head-on as he wraps up his second letter. He responds with three sweeping movements:
- God has acted before.
The world was formed by God’s word. The flood came by that same word. History is not random. It bends to a Voice. - God’s delay is not forgetfulness.
“With the Lord a day is like a thousand years.” The delay is mercy. God is patient, not wanting anyone to perish. - The Day of the Lord will come.
Like a thief. The heavens will disappear with a roar. Elements will be laid bare. A new heaven and a new earth will emerge — “the home of righteousness.”
And then the piercing question:
Since everything will be destroyed in this way, what kind of person ought I be?
He ends with the same admonition as Mr. Markowitz in response to the current doomsday predictions of AI destroying our world.
Grow.
Take a deep breath. Cultivate a life rooted in Word and Spirit. Sink deep where Living Water nourishes unseen. Reach wide into the Light. Grow slow enough to withstand the storm, and to bear fruit in increasing measure.
Jesus is coming.
AI might destroy the world — if you read the headlines.
I find it fascinating how humanity gets enamored with doomsday scenarios. Fear motivates. Media knows it creates clicks and views — it sells books.
As a disciple of Jesus I believe Jesus is coming.
Perhaps today.
Likely not.
As a human I know that I will die one day.
Perhaps today.
Likely not.
What I do know is that the sun is rising on this, another day of my earthly journey. I get to choose how I will live, think, speak, act, and relate to others.
No matter how far I get in the journey, it’s always a good day to grow. Growth is not passive. Roots deepen because they push through resistance.

If you know anyone who might be encouraged by today’s post, please share.











