St. Francis, why are people always after you?
Lately, a lot of people in my orbit has been discerning the role of AI in our faith life. Artificial intelligence is definitely transforming modern life. It writes essays, diagnoses illnesses, creates art, and answers questions instantly. It could have even written this article! On the surface, we may be celebrating many of these advances as progress, but on a deeper level is the question regarding our humanity? Beneath these modern human achievements lies a deeper question: will AI make us wiser?
Wisdom is not simply intelligence or access to information. Wisdom concerns how we live, what we love, and whether we are becoming more fully human before God.
Modern society often interchanges intelligence and wisdom. We assume that because we know more facts, we must also understand life better. But intelligence alone does not teach us how to live well, as children of God, loved by God.
The twentieth-century Catholic philosopher Josef Pieper warned that modern society values usefulness above contemplation. In Leisure: The Basis of Culture, he argued that human beings risk becoming consumed by productivity and work. Wisdom, however, is born not from constant activity but from silence, wonder, and contemplation. Contemplating the love that God has for us.
AI excels at usefulness and efficiency. It can optimize schedules, summarize books, and automate tasks. But wisdom is not efficiency. Wisdom requires moral judgment, humility, and the ability to recognize truths that cannot be reduced to data.
Thomas Aquinas described wisdom as judging rightly according to divine truth. Wisdom orders the soul toward God. An AI system may process enormous amounts of information, but it possesses no conscience, soul, or moral responsibility. It does not seek truth; it merely analyzes patterns. Convenience can weaken the habits necessary for wisdom: attention, patience, memory, and reflection. Habits that orient us toward God.
Pieper famously wrote, “Leisure is a form of silence.” Such silence is increasingly rare. Somehow, despite the assistance we are getting from technology on reducing our workloads, we are busier than ever. AI promises constant assistance and productivity, yet wisdom often emerges in stillness — during prayer, study, friendship, suffering, and reflection before God. Elijah encountered the Lord in a “still small voice” (1 Kings 19:12).
The saints understood that wisdom is inseparable from holiness. Augustine of Hippo prayed, “Our hearts are restless until they rest in You.” Human beings hunger not merely for information but for meaning. AI can answer practical questions, but it cannot explain why sacrifice matters, why suffering can redeem, or why love demands self-gift.
Pope Francis has warned against the “technocratic paradigm,” the belief that every human problem can be solved through technology alone. Technology itself is not evil. The Church has long embraced tools that serve human flourishing. AI may help doctors, teachers, and researchers perform valuable work more effectively.
But no technology can replace virtue.
John Paul II taught that freedom without truth becomes destructive. Likewise, intelligence without wisdom can become dangerous. AI may help us know more, but it cannot teach us prudence, justice, courage, or temperance. Virtue is formed through grace, discipline, suffering, and love. Teresa of Calcutta recognized the dignity of those society considered useless because she saw Christ in them. Wisdom sees sacredness where the world sees inconvenience.
A mother comforting a grieving child, a priest hearing confessions, or a friend accompanying someone in suffering demonstrates wisdom no machine can imitate. AI may imitate conversation, but imitation is not communion.
So, will AI make us wiser?
Only if we remember what wisdom truly is. If wisdom means faster access to information, AI will certainly increase it. But if wisdom means contemplating deeply, loving rightly, living morally, and seeing life in light of eternity, then no machine can accomplish this for us. AI feeds on data, inputs, and patterns. Wisdom feeds on prayer, silence, humility, and holiness.