Allie Beth Stuckey and Glenn Beck dissect the dangers of Artificial Super Intelligence, warning that unchecked ASI could grant godlike power to hostile entities like Hitler if humanity lacks moral limits. They contrast Silicon Valley's focus on possibility with the need for ethical boundaries, suggesting only governments might halt development by eliminating dangerous actors. The conversation blends these tech anxieties with spiritual warfare, debating whether opposition to AI constitutes the Antichrist or if blindness to it is the true peril. Ultimately, they urge listeners to abandon anxiety over controlling outcomes and instead find glory in faithful, mundane obedience while awaiting Christ's return. [Automatically generated summary]
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Well, I don't think that we need feminism.
I think we need Christianity.
I mean, you're accused of taking the pastor's position because you're doing a lot of things.
Which, of course I'm not.
I don't shepherd a flock.
Peter Thiel has been going around talking about the Antichrist.
And for some reason, Israel has become the central question that we need to answer on the right, that has become like the defining feature and the dividing line on the right.
Ellie, people say you are the next Charlie Kirk.
What?
Is that good, bad?
How do you react to that?
How do you feel about that?
You know, I think a lot of people have been trying to figure out who the replacement for him is.
I've seen the media say, it's Nick Fuentes.
It's, you know, this other activist over here.
And the truth is, is that he's irreplaceable and that all of us kind of hold a fraction of what he was.
I hope that I can kind of carry the torch of evangelism and apologetics and things like that, but I don't see myself as a political activist or as a coalition builder.
Too many disagreements for that.
He was so good at peacemaking through debate.
I don't see that as my role.
So I'm just going to keep running the race that I'm going to run.
Yeah, it's interesting because I thought when he died, I thought, who is going to replace him?
And I couldn't come up.
I could come up with like five people that could take parts of it.
Right.
But I couldn't come up with one.
And then I thought, why are we looking?
Why are we saying who's going to replace him?
He was unique.
He didn't replace somebody.
He was just completely unique.
And when we find unique people, and I think you're one of them.
I mean, how long have we known each other?
Okay.
So I started coming to Blaze Studios 2017.
So now it's been nine years.
I think nine years February of 2017.
And you were just doing, if I remember right, you were just doing videos in your car.
Yeah.
I mean, it's crazy.
Car, apartment.
Yeah, that's all I was doing.
And I was not here for a media opportunity.
I was here to take a tour of the studio where Glenn Beck was and Dana Lash was.
And I, through like a series of strange little connections, just got connected to Dana Lash's producer.
And he was like, well, I'll give you a tour.
I was like, I just tour, that's amazing.
And so I toured the studio and a producer said, I think I've seen your stuff on Facebook.
Do you want to do a Facebook Live for us?
And that's how it started.
Yeah, it's amazing, isn't it?
Yeah.
I remember really early on.
I've seen, I think I told you this once.
I've met a ton of millionaires and I've met a ton of really powerful, famous people that don't have any money and don't have any fame because they're just not willing to do the one thing, whatever it is, the one thing that, you know, and sometimes it's just, I expect it.
Yeah.
I expect, well, I'm going to be, you know, whatever.
And they won't work for it or whatever it is.
I don't know.
I mean, coming through the Blazedor, we now have the Secretary of Defense, Pete Hegseth.
Yeah.
We've had so many people come through these doors.
You are one who I think is, and I told you this, I think, at some point, a legitimate, star is not the right word, a legitimate force to be reckoned with.
And I can't, I'm so excited for you.
Well, thank you for saying that.
We had a lot of conversations early on.
And of course, I'm nobody walking in and Glenn Beck is like, oh, he wants to talk to us in his office with Lawrence Jones.
And I mean, very intimidating situation.
And I remember something that you said that I was like, I do not want to agree with that.
I do not want to believe that.
You said, and this is paraphrasing, that you are never going to be able to meet a moment that you did not prepare for.
And you talked about the importance of experience and preparation and hard work.
And here I am a few months in to my media career.
And I'm like, but I feel like maybe just raw talent is fine.
I feel like you could just, you know, you get there and you have enough just raw ability to take you over.
But truly, every single new opportunity I've had, it's not, I don't look and I'm not like, wow, I'm so glad that I was so talented or I'm so glad that I just had that natural gift.
No, I look back and say, oh, that thing five years ago prepared me for this thing.
Oh, that thing that I've been doing on my podcast, that is actually what prepared me to debate 20 liberals in a circle on that Jubilee video.
It wasn't raw talent.
It was preparation and hard work.
So now almost 10 years in.
I can agree with Glenn Back.
That's good.
I wish more people felt that way.
Can I talk to you about that circle?
Because I watched you.
You were so good.
So under.
Charlie had that too.
I cannot do that.
I would lose my mind.
You could totally do it.
Oh, I don't think so.
You could.
You could.
But, you know, it was such an interesting thing because I had watched Charlie's and they were so ruthless to Charlie.
They were so mean.
They were personal about his appearance, about his kids.
And so that's what I was expecting.
Now, this was the day before Charlie's memorial.
So just a couple of weeks after he died.
And I was expecting vitriol.
I even thought they might bring him up in some kind of like attacking way, knowing that we were, you know, that we were friends.
But actually, I sat down and the first thing that this person said to me, his name was Gilbert, was, I am so sorry about your friend Charlie.
And I don't know why they cut that out of the final cut, but that really softened everything.
So as much as I want to say, well, I, it was just me.
It was my kindness.
It was my charm.
Really, that softened everything from the get-go.
And that kind of set us up, I think, to have a productive debate.
That is something that people don't do.
I've done so many interviews with people on the other side of the table.
And I can come in with a perfectly great attitude.
But if they don't want to do, if they don't want to have a great attitude, it's over.
It's just over.
It takes both sides to sit down and go, I actually want to talk to you.
Right.
You know what I mean?
I want to learn something about you.
I want to understand something about you without an agenda.
And that just doesn't happen.
Do you think that happened because it was the day before the memorial?
I think that was part of it.
And a way I felt that that was a weakness because I was so tired and I was so sad and all of these things.
But God really used something really ugly and dark to bring glory to himself and actually create a good debate.
And also, to your point, I saw it as my goal to persuade the person across from me.
I was not thinking, how can I clip this?
Can I get this point in?
Or what is this person going to think?
It's too many things to think about.
I thought, how can I persuade the person across from me?
I don't know if I accomplished that, but I think it's a better mentality than just thinking about performing for the camera.
I wonder how you would react because I believe the only way to persuade somebody is to listen to them and care about them.
And I think you're saying that when you're like, how do I persuade this person?
You were like, you matter.
Yeah.
Where so much of the dialogue and especially what you see online, you're just an object, you know, and I'm just performing on you for that.
And nothing happens.
Nothing good happens from that.
Yeah.
I'm sure that you've done a lot of interviews where the person interviewing you is not looking at you.
They're looking through you.
They're thinking about their next question.
They're not listening to you at all.
And I just, I can't do that.
That's not because I'm a good person, but I can't, I just, I can't think about something else while someone else is talking to me.
So I think just the art of listening and then responding to what someone actually said, not just saying what you want to say, is something that's lost, but really important.
So where are we?
Let me do one more question, kind of on the Charlie Kirk thing.
I think that when evil showed up and sickness, whatever, whatever shoots Charlie, he knew there would be an equal or opposite reaction.
I think he was hoping for everybody to cheer him on and say, you know, what a great thing that is.
But what happened was not an equal reaction.
It was opposite, but it was not equal.
And I really feel like God showed up.
You were at the funeral.
I was at the funeral.
I've never felt anything like that.
God was there.
And it was like an ocean wave.
Lost Moderator, Found God00:05:54
People started talking about politics and it would withdraw.
And then they would talk about God again and it would come rolling back in.
It was amazing to feel it.
But then we went into this period immediately where the right is tearing itself apart.
And I don't want to make this about personalities or any of that.
But the right is tearing itself apart.
And people are starting to believe things that I believe an equal and opposite reaction.
Yeah.
I think Satan came in, saw what God was doing, and Satan came in and was like, oh yeah, watch this.
I mean, I feel like we're watching the big boys play right now and we're just pawns on a table in a way.
Because the evil that is happening and being we're just being poisoned by lies, I think, right now.
You know, what was said about Charlie's wife and just all of this stuff is just so bad.
And we're fighting things like, you know, Jews don't run the world.
We're fighting things that are so anti-Semitic that I don't even, I didn't think we had to fight that anymore.
I knew anti-Semitism existed, but there's a difference between disagreeing with Israel.
You can do that all day long.
And what is being said to take the Jew out of Judeo-Christian heritage.
Does that make sense?
Yeah.
Do you have any thoughts on where we're at on this?
What is happening to us?
How is this happening so rapidly?
Yeah.
I have a lot of thoughts.
One, I did not appreciate while Charlie was alive that he gatekept the crazy, that he was kind of holding back these radical forces on the right, some of the people that, you know, truly hate Jewish people, not just those who disagree with Israel.
So there's nothing wrong with that.
When you disagree with Israel, all you want.
No, and I don't even talk about foreign policy that much.
And if you say something like this, they'll call you some kind of radical Zionist.
I don't even really talk about that that much.
I don't really care what someone thinks about Israeli policy one way or the other.
But it, so he was kind of holding back some truly radical forces and gatekept that and built a coalition that excluded some of those toxic forces on the right.
And he also kind of cooled the tensions between those who disagreed, especially about Israel.
Like he would bring someone like Josh Hammer and then Dave Smith and have them duke it out on stage.
And that was kind of his peace through strength strategy to continue to build this broad coalition that will vote Republican and have liberty-minded candidates in office.
But then when he went away, those fights that were kind of maybe happening behind doors that were not happening in public for the sake of respect for Charlie are now happening.
And some of the debates that were going on that were moderated by the moderate of Charlie Kirk are no longer being moderated.
The moderator isn't there anymore.
And so now they're truly duking it out in a personal and ugly way.
So that's part of what I see going on politically.
Now, some people are demoralized by that.
I understand people watching Amfest and being like, this feels, for the regular person, they're like, this feels like drama that I'm not really a part of and that doesn't really care about me.
But I do just want to say that on the right, we're trying to build something.
And on the left, they're trying to destroy something.
If you're trying to destroy something, you do not have to agree on what tools you use.
You don't have to agree on the materials.
You don't have to agree on a foundation.
You can take Islam.
You can take Marxism.
You can take whatever it is.
And you can just tear down the edifice of Western civilization.
But if you're trying to build something, as we are on the right, if you're trying to preserve Western civilization, you have to agree on the materials, the tools, when and how you use them.
And most importantly, on what the foundation is.
And so that is.
And there's nothing wrong with a healthy debate that I'm going to disagree with as long as it is a balanced debate with, you know, Hannity and Combs always killed me because I know Roger.
I remember Hannity and Combs when I was little.
And I know exactly why was it that Combs looked the way Combs did.
I mean, Roger is a very visual person.
He did that for a reason.
I want to come in with both sides having equal power, equal, you know, intelligence and really having a strong debate with no strawmen.
There's nothing wrong with that.
No.
But it seems like some people think there is something wrong with that.
Yeah.
And on both sides, I don't even know which side.
I mean, because both sides are like, shut up, Yeah.
We're not going to solve anything.
I mean, unless you're wrestling with these things.
And we can't stand up and say, no, this is where you're wrong.
Yeah.
This is where I think you're right or wrong.
Yeah.
I don't know if we make any progress.
And I think that's what Charlie was trying to do.
Yes.
And I think that's what we are still trying to do.
We're trying to define our terms, but we lost our moderator.
We lost our gatekeeper.
We lost the coalition builder.
So we're just trying to find politically our footing.
And for some reason, Israel has become the central question that we need to answer on the right that has become like the defining feature and the dividing line on the right.
And so we are trying to figure that out and we can talk more about that.
But on the spiritual level, I mean, there's a reason it's called spiritual warfare.
Yes, I believe revival was and is still happening post-Charlie Kirk, but it's not like Satan was going to be like, drat.
I didn't see that coming.
Revival vs. Awakening00:07:54
Like, oh, dang it.
Like, he, of course, was going to say, whoa, we don't want unity among Christians.
We don't want unity on the side of what is good and right and true.
Like we've got to tear that down as much as we possibly can and get them focused on the wrong things.
And that's not to say that people asking legitimate questions of the federal government or the state government when it comes to Charlie Kirk or demonic forces.
I'm not saying that, but those purposely drawing our eyes away from Christ, away from what is true, away from revival and into true conspiracy and slander and a lot of the stuff that we're seeing.
I do think that that is a power of darkness rearing its ugly head against revival.
Yeah.
Equal and opposite reaction.
Satan shows up.
Scott's turn.
Yeah.
I mean, I think we're going to see a response to this.
You know, there's a difference between revival and an awakening.
Yeah.
And lots of bad things happen during revivals.
Awakenings are when you apply those things, when you start to look at, oh, I just found out about this Jesus guy and I found out about this and this and this.
And wow, I want to change my life.
And then you go, but I like some of these things, but I'm not going to do them anymore because they're not good.
And you start applying the hard lessons.
Do we have the, You know, I remember hearing, you know, we're a fast food, you know, culture.
Oh my gosh, fast food is slow now.
You know, do we have the stamina to do the hard things?
Do you think that's a part of those under 35?
You know, my, I think my bigger question is, like, I was studying the difference between revival and awakening too.
And what are some characteristics of them?
One of them is a widespread desire to see Christ glorified rather than the self.
And that is what I wonder, like in our performance-based culture, in our everything is content culture.
Are we interested in the mostly unseen and unsung self-denial that is required of all Christians that isn't pretty, that doesn't get likes, that is really about repentance and letting go of things like vanity and pride?
I say that as a person who creates content.
Like I think that is an honest question that is not even just about instant gratification, but like, are we willing to like go all in on the gory, nitty, gritty Christianity of our ancestors, you know, of those that have gone before us?
Because if it is warfare, like it's not always pretty and it's not always.
So what are those things?
Well, repenting of your sin and denying the things that you want to do in exchange for what God calls you to do is individual.
I mean, sin isn't individual.
We know it's defined by God's word as missing the mark of what he says is good, right, and true.
But the individual call on your life, it might mean leaving the current job that you're in.
It might mean deleting social media.
It might mean taking the less lucrative path because it's the one that God calls you on.
It might mean being courageous and losing friendships and losing opportunities and losing comfort because you said the true thing and shared the gospel.
Has there ever been something that you've been really felt like, okay, this came from God, that you were like, man, I'm glad you asked.
I really want to do that.
You know, I don't know.
That's a good question.
I think I can't always see the end result of what God is calling me to do.
It's definitely met with a tentative like, are you sure?
Right.
Right.
I mean, because I don't know if, I mean, God doesn't have to tell me, you know why you should go on vacation.
I got that one down.
Thanks.
You know, you should sleep a little bit more.
Yeah.
God has to tell me the things to do with your life that I'm like, oh, I don't want to do that.
I don't want to be that guy.
I don't want to.
No, I like this part of my life.
God, when he comes in, and for me, this is the struggle.
And this may just be me.
This is the struggle for me is he's always telling me the things, not all of them, but some of the things that I like to do, he's saying, you really should do this.
And that's always less lucrative.
That's always the harder road.
That's always the thing that I'm like, but I'll get killed if I do that.
Right.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it always works out to be better, at least personally.
Once you get through it, you're like, oh my gosh, I can't believe I ever wanted to be that.
This is so much better.
Yeah.
But it's, I don't see a big movement towards that.
Yeah.
I don't know.
You know, R.C. Sproll, I'm paraphrasing.
He was a theologian and he died in 2017, I believe.
But he said, Christ did not die so that you could do the things you already wanted to do before you became a Christian, so that you could get all of the things that your heart already desired before that you were a Christian.
He gives you a new heart with new desires that is different and better and deeper and more difficult than the things that you desired before.
And I do think it is repentance that is the difficult part of Christianity.
Like I read that there is this OnlyFan star who recently became a Christian.
I hope it's genuine and got baptized and all of that.
And one thing that she said in an interview, I think it was to Us Weekly, she said, you know, I'm just not a traditional Christian.
Like I'm still going to keep doing what I'm doing.
And there are girls in this industry who will keep doing this.
And I believe in, you know, all of these kind of progressive things.
And, you know, maybe she's just, you know, she's a beginner, sanctified.
She needs to be discipled and all of that.
All of us have been wrong in our beliefs many times.
But I think that is the part.
That's the part of Christianity that, well, do I really have to take up my cross?
Yeah.
Like, do I really have to let go of this stuff?
But that's what makes it worth it.
That's what makes it so glorious in the end.
Yeah.
It sucks at the beginning.
You think, this is, I don't know, what?
There's so many things that you have to like shed of yourself.
But once you do, it's so much better.
It's like it is a new life.
It's a new entire life, a new way of looking at everything.
And I've just never known, at least with me, God to be the one that's like, oh, no, you're good.
Yeah.
You're good.
Come as you are.
Yeah.
You know, I got you.
You just keep doing those things.
Yeah.
He requires us to step to the plate.
And I guess, you know, there's always this thing about faith.
I mean, you know, nobody gets saved by works.
I completely agree.
However, for me, Your product is how I know.
How I know.
God knows different things.
I know.
You know, if you're like, I just got baptized and I'm sleeping with another thousand men in the next, you're like, oh.
Yeah.
You know, your works, it's not because you're trying to earn them.
It's you want to change.
Your Product Is How I Know00:02:44
You want to be better.
Right.
And so you start producing different things.
Yeah.
Good works are a product of our faith, not a prerequisite for our salvation.
And Jesus said, a tree is known by its fruit.
It's got bad fruits, bad tree.
It's like not that complicated.
Like Jesus makes it really easy.
If it's a good fruit, it's a good tree.
And you're right.
You know, God looks at different things than we look at.
And there have been many points along our journeys that we're like, oh, I got that wrong or that wasn't right.
Or I was living the wrong way then.
And God's grace sanctifies us.
But we can look at a person's life and look at their fruit and we can say, what kind of tree are they?
There comes a point where everybody, everybody starts to feel sore.
You know, your body is offering unhelpful feedback.
Usually at inconvenient times, you stand up and something like, all of a sudden you're like, hey, that's not good.
You reach for the floor thinking that Jesus might be calling you home.
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So as somebody who has been judged, I mean, horrible things are said about you.
These are funny.
You're true Christian, but also a bad Christian.
A writer in Salon said you weaponize your gender to sell the idea of a cold-hearted Jesus.
Yeah, I don't even know what that means.
I can spend some time breaking that down.
I spent some time and I'm like, I don't even think I understand that one.
You know, how do you decipher not judging others, but correcting?
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
Because I think the best Christians are the ones who are changing all the time in themselves and are constantly, am I here?
Am I there?
Where am I?
You know?
Yeah.
And are loving to those who are in error.
Yeah.
But that doesn't mean embracing it.
Yeah.
How do you, how do you navigate that?
My mind immediately goes to the first two chapters of Romans.
The first chapter of Romans is kind of a famous or infamous, depending on how you look at it, passage about homosexuality and gender confusion.
Look, these people are depraved in mind and heart.
They know God's righteous decrees and they not only don't do them, but they approve of those who are sinning.
And they have given themselves over to these unnatural desires and unnatural relationships.
And then in the next chapter, it's a chapter about judging.
Do not judge.
If you judge others who are doing the same things that you're doing, then you're a hypocrite and you will be judged.
So obviously, God through Paul is saying in the first chapter, this is sin and you shouldn't do it.
It's bad for your body.
It's bad for your soul.
It's bad for your mind.
It's bad for your heart.
Also, you shouldn't judge.
So how do we reconcile that?
It's obvious that you can call out sin and you shouldn't judge.
To me, what we see in Jesus' command against judging and the Romans 2 command against judging is that you shouldn't be a hypocrite, is that you shouldn't say, I shouldn't say, you know what, you really shouldn't have a podcast, Glenn, because all you care about is, all you care about is fame.
Well, that would be hypocritical because I also have a podcast where I want to have an audience too.
And I think that we have to be really careful about calling out behavior or attitudes or whatever that we ourselves are guilty for.
I think God hates hypocrisy, but I don't think that precludes us from saying this is what God calls sin.
And of course, the thing that covers a multitude of sin is love and the gospel.
Yes, that's a sin.
Yes, that's wrong.
Yes, you shouldn't do it.
But I have really good news for you.
I've been where you are.
I was also dead in my sin.
And Jesus' grace can totally save you like it saved me.
That to me is how you wed those two things.
you make sure you're not being a judgmental hypocrite and you're also being really clear about sin.
There are so many great things happening.
And at the same time, I'm so afraid that we are confused by our day.
That there is just enough fog in the air that if you do not have the constant companion of the spirit with you, you can slip so quickly.
There are the traditional family, the traditional wife, the traditional marriage.
I think all of that is so essential to civilization, not just Western civilization, any civilization.
But there are those who believe exactly what I just said and then will say, Ellie, you should be quiet because you're a woman.
How do you know where the...
React just to that first because there's people who have said, you're trying to take a man's job of preaching and women shouldn't be preaching and you should be quiet and pregnant and in the background.
Yeah.
So how do you react to that first as a woman?
And then I want to expand that to what is that?
Well, this is an unpopular opinion among a lot of conservative evangelicals, but I agree that women shouldn't preach.
Like, I don't think that women should be pastors.
I don't think they should be behind a pulpit preaching to a mixed crowd on Sunday morning.
That doesn't mean women can't teach.
It doesn't mean that women can't talk.
Traditionally, women have liked to talk.
We talk a lot.
We like to communicate.
I mean, you're accused of taking a pastor's position because you're doing a lot of people.
Which, of course, I'm not.
I don't shepherd a flock and women are allowed biblically to teach women.
I would say that those who say that women can't teach at women's conferences, that they can't have a podcast, that they can't wade into the culture wars, they are going beyond what scripture says.
That might be their opinion.
And they might be able to say, well, I kind of see it implied in this and I'm fine with that if they want to have that opinion, but it's not what the Bible says.
Now, I do think that women should prioritize the home, should prioritize being wives and moms and discipling.
But there is also an opportunity to prioritize that and also follow the call that a woman has on her life, which may or may not be having some sort of sphere of influence in which they are teaching other women.
I don't want to be a pastor.
I think I'm capable physically of giving a sermon, intellectually of giving a sermon, but capable and called are two different things.
And I think the Bible is very clear that that is a man's role.
It's hard to say that a woman can't be called to.
Well, you could look at 1 Timothy.
You could look at Titus 2.
There are various places where a man's role as both the elder and the pastor is exclusive to that gender.
That's something that Charlie and I talked about a lot, because in our kind of like charismatic circles sometimes that are conservative evangelical, we get some pushback on that.
I think women have a big role in the church and can play even a teaching role in the church for women and children, but not the office of elder and overseer and shepherd.
I know we go to very different churches, but ours is the same.
And some people have a real problem.
And, you know, we even will separate men and women at times.
And I didn't understand that at first.
And then my wife and I would talk and we're like, wait, you got the same lesson taught to you by a woman and I got it taught by a man, but it was completely different, but it was exactly the same message.
You know, there's this, we're different.
We're different.
Yeah.
And those differences go all the way back to creation.
And some people will say, well, you know, Paul said that a woman shouldn't be a pastor because of cultural things at the time, but he really goes all the way back to creation.
He goes back to innate differences.
And I'm thankful for that.
Like I'm thankful that my husband is the leader of our marriage and the leader of our family and that I have a pastor.
What does that mean?
It means that he is the final decision maker.
He is the protector of our family.
And at the end of the day, even though, you know, we consult each other on everything and we talk about everything and he values me and trusts me and all of that.
But at the end of the day, I trust him to make the decision for our family.
I trusted him too when he asked, when he said, okay, we need to move to Texas.
That was not me.
I didn't want to move to Texas.
I wanted to stay in Georgia where we were living.
I had this Bible study of girls that I wanted to see graduate from college and he knew it was the right time to move.
And I said, okay.
And there are about a million different things that have happened like that over the years where I've trusted his wisdom.
And I'm glad that at the end of the day, the ultimate spiritual formation of our family rests on his shoulders and not mine, that he's the one that gives an account to God for that.
And so really, like, it's a relief of responsibility, not this burden that feminism says that it is.
You said, I think it's feminism is incompatible with Christianity.
Yes, I'm sure I have said that at some point.
Tell me what that means.
Why?
Well, I don't think that we need feminism.
I think we need Christianity.
And I think Christianity is what gives us this, what was seen as like a radical view of women, this radical respect of women.
And that, you know, we see, we hear these critics of the Bible say, well, the Bible is just compiled by these misogynistic men.
And that's why it says the wives should submit to husbands.
But if that's true, the writers of the gospels didn't have to include all of these beautiful moments that Jesus had with women, the woman of the night washing his hair or his feet with her hair, the bleeding woman who touched him to be healed.
We didn't have to honor Mary.
We didn't have to hear about Mary Magdalene.
We didn't have to know about the woman at the well who was brought to repentance by Jesus paying attention to her.
But we did.
And we hear about all of these women who played a part in the genealogy of Jesus and bringing the message of the gospel.
And even in that passage that I referenced in Ephesians 5, where it says, wives submit to your husbands.
It also says, husbands, love your wives as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her.
Wow.
That was different at the time when men, the patriarchs, were given all of the rights.
Women were basically treated as property.
And their Christianity comes in and says, no, no, no, she's also an image bearer of God.
She also is a vessel of the gospel.
You have to love her and cherish her to the point that you're willing to die for her, just as Christ died for the church.
That was radical.
That changed how the world saw women.
Christianity changed how the world saw children, all vulnerable groups.
I think we need more of that.
Feminism, while it may have had some good intentions and some people say it had some pragmatic reasons, it's given us abortion.
It's given us hormonal birth control.
It's given us transgenderism.
It's confused us about the difference between a man and a woman biologically, but also socially.
I think it's done more harm than good.
It's killed our birth rate, too.
Right.
It's convinced women that they can work the same way as a man can, and we can.
Why?
Because, well, we could get into some physiology, but physically, I don't think that we have the same stamina.
Mentally and spiritually, I don't think that we have the same drive for protection and provision.
I don't think that means that women have to have their feet up all day.
I actually think that both men and women are called to work in a particular way, but it's different.
I want to be able to have a podcast where I can talk and I come in for a few hours, two times a week, and then I can be at home with my kids for the rest of the time.
Well, my husband wants to be out and travel and work and talk and, you know, wheel and deal in a good way and, you know, accomplish the things that need to be accomplished.
I don't want to go out there and do that.
I don't want to.
And people are going to think that this is controversial and it's fine if women like to know about finances and their in their families.
I don't want to manage the finances for a family.
I don't want to deal with that.
So I'm just like, I'm thankful that I don't have to be in charge.
I will tell you that there are women who will listen to you and go, well, I don't mind finances or I don't, you know, I think most women, it's natural to be the nurturer.
It is completely natural.
Yeah.
And there is something about guys, and we regret it.
Believe me, I'm 61 now.
My kids are out of the house.
Oh, so much that I thought was true and thought was, no, this is what I have, I regret.
There is a difference in drive in men, but not all men.
Yeah.
Not all men.
So where does that shake out?
Yeah.
Well, I think that anytime we talk in generalities, there's going to be an exception to that.
But in general, I do think men have a drive to protect and create and to build.
And that doesn't mean that women have none of that.
So what do you think of, what do you think of, I've thought for a while that we are seeing in its twisted form, we're seeing the natural man and the natural woman happen in some ways in the youth right now in 20 and early 30s.
Guys are pulling back and going, this something's wrong.
Yeah.
Something's wrong.
And their protection, they sense trouble on the horizon.
They may not even be able to identify it or know what it is, but they're pulling back from society going, something's wrong here.
Yeah.
Okay.
Women are the nurturers.
And in this twisted way, they are the first ones to hold and care.
And the left has made, has made, you know, transgender guys stripping in front of your first grader into something where you should have compassion for the transgender guy.
And somehow or another, that has been confused, but they are being nurturers.
They are trying to protect what they now perceive as the weakest, not their own children.
It's bizarre.
Yeah.
But the women are in that nurture role right now, just twisted.
And guys are in, are searching for that protection role.
Twisted Nurture and the Antichrist00:05:43
Yeah, it's so true.
It's misplaced mothering.
All of us, when we're young, I say all of us, most of us like to play with dolls and dress up our Barbies and to take care of something.
Maybe it's a pet.
Maybe it was a chia pet, whatever it was.
Maybe you had a garden.
But women are natural nurtures.
I have three girls.
I have a ton of nephews.
When I see them playing together for my girls, everything becomes a family.
It could be three forks.
It's mommy, daddy, baby fork.
But for my nephew, everything becomes a gun.
And so it's now the fork is a gun.
And there's a lot of building and a lot of destroying and a lot of nurturing and caretaking over here.
Well, that doesn't go away just because feminism exists.
That doesn't go away because you chased your marketing job.
And I'm not saying that's always bad.
Maybe that's what God has for you in your life.
But those instincts don't just go away.
But how are they going to manifest themselves if we do not get married and have kids?
And I think for a lot of women, why a lot of women, especially single women are liberal is because instead of kids, they have a cause.
And so that becomes a cat or a dog.
It's pet, profession, politics has become their child rather than a child themselves.
And when you channel that natural mothering or nurturing instinct into something that is not a child, whether it's your child or a child that you're mentoring, then I think we see things be perverted and we see them manifest the way that they are now.
And it creates, I think, a lot of bitterness and resentment.
It works with the idea that Satan doesn't destroy per se.
He perverts.
He's not creating something new.
He's just taking what God had set up and just perverting it.
You're saying the natural mother is coming out.
It's just all perverted and turned upside down.
Yeah, he does both.
He comes to steal, kill, and destroy, but he often does that by twisting things just a little bit.
Like in the Garden of Eden, did God really say, no, no, no, you will be like God, which was kind of true.
You will know the knowledge between good and evil, but you'll die unlike God.
And what does he do to Jesus when Jesus is in the wilderness?
He's tired and thirsty.
He uses the word of God against Jesus.
Don't you know that if you bow down and worship me, I can give you all of these things.
And Jesus, what does he do?
He relies on the real word of God in context, in its rightful usage and say, no, no, no, you shall not put the Lord your God to the test.
And so that's what we are tasked to as well.
When something sounds kind of true, we have to ask, but is it fully true?
And I think that's a good guidepost for our whole lives, actually.
Does Christianity survive in the next?
I mean, what do you say?
I mean, look at Europe.
I mean, it's interesting.
10 years ago, I would say there's not a chance for Europe to be Christian ever again.
But there is this resurgence that is going on.
What do you see globally for this?
Are you concerned at all that there's such a lack of understanding of the scriptures and such a lack of understanding of hard work or any of the principles that go along with this that it can be perverted and used in a completely dangerous way?
Yeah.
I mean, I'm really concerned about that.
Now, I'm thankful that Jesus promises that the gates of hell will not prevail against the church.
That in the end, Satan doesn't win.
That it is not possible.
But it's always, I know he's always, people always say that.
I know how it ends.
Yeah, but look at all the chapters before that really suck.
We got to get through that.
I know how it ends.
But wow.
Yeah, but I also think about, I think about all of the times through history that the Christians must have thought this is the end.
Like when Nero was beheading Christians and then putting them on stakes and lining the roads of Rome and lighting them on fire, I can't imagine that the Christians at that time thought, okay, we've got a good 2,000 years ahead of us.
This is going to be great.
We're going to have a Christian nation one day.
They were like, this is it.
We're done.
I don't even have any family members or church members anymore.
When I think about Christians throughout history, all the times of persecution, Christians alive today in places like China or Yemen or Afghanistan, who they're like, this has to be the end times, right?
Like this is the tribulation.
When I think about that and that Christianity has persisted in much harder times, yeah, it's scary.
I don't like the Islamification of Europe.
I don't like the waning influence of Christianity because it's bad for people.
Like it's just bad for babies.
It's bad for families.
It's bad for people.
But yes, I do trust that he wins in the end.
And I love Psalm 37.
It starts, do not be envious of wrongdoers.
Don't be envious of wrongdoers because one day they will soon fade like the grass and wither like the green herb.
And I try to remember that verse every day because as you know, it seems like the evildoer is winning day after day.
He's not.
It just feels like that at times.
Let me talk to you about, let me just start with the Antichrist.
Peter Thiel has been going around talking about the Antichrist.
Peter Thiel and the Antichrist00:08:51
Yes.
I haven't figured that one out.
Have you?
What the Antichrist is or what Peter Thiel thinks about it?
Yeah.
Yeah, I've tried to understand, but he is much smarter than I am.
And he is in a whole, occupies a whole different world than I do of technology.
So I think the argument is that opposition to artificial intelligence and greater technology is a form of the Antichrist.
I think that is the argument.
What is your thought on that?
You understand that probably much better than me.
Well, I don't think opposition is the Antichrist.
I think blindness will lead us to the Antichrist when it comes to AI.
I think AI could be used as the tool of the Antichrist.
What do you mean by that?
It is all-knowing, all-seeing, instant.
You know, you read in the book of Revelation about, you know, you're not going to be able to move anywhere, go anywhere, you know, currency, all of it.
That is a version of what that could be easily.
And, you know, there wouldn't be a Jew left in the world if Hitler would have had this technology that is just on the horizon.
I think there are people that are building it that, you know, Sam Altman calls it Sam God.
His version of ASI is...
What's ASI?
Okay, so there's AI, which we have, artificial intelligence.
It's really good, better than you at one thing.
Yeah.
Okay.
Grok, Gemini, and ChatGPT and Grok, that's leaning towards what's called a GI, artificial general intelligence, which means you're a general intelligence being.
I am.
You can do a lot of things and you're really good at a lot of things.
You're not the master of everything, but you're good at a lot of things.
That's general intelligence.
Artificial general intelligence, we are now approaching that line to where it can paint, it can write music, it can write poetry, it can tell you how to build a building, it can tell you, you know, how to build a bomb.
It's great at a bunch of stuff.
Artificial super intelligence is the equivalent of every brain that has ever lived and currently living combined.
It is a server farm today in today's servers the size of Earth.
It is so far beyond man's understanding, man cannot understand.
It's thinking so fast, so far ahead of us, it appears to be godlike because we cannot understand it.
That's real danger.
AGI, we don't know how long it'll take to get from AGI to ASI.
That could be overnight.
That could never happen.
My guess is it's closer to overnight.
And what is the danger?
Like you said, if Hitler had that ASI, then nobody's going to be able to do that.
If Hitler had just the technology that we have today with all of the surveillance and AGI or AI, it would know where you are.
It would know who you're connected to, who your friends are, where you've been.
It will know where you're being hidden.
It will know because it will also have access to everybody on your list of friends, your friend tree.
You disappear, whose power outage has gone up or power usage has gone up, whose water usage has gone up by one person in your friend tree.
There you are.
You know what I mean?
And it can find it that fast.
So just the technology we have today, if Hitler had, it would be horrendous.
If we go dark, we will make the Germans look like rookies at everything they did.
ASI is like an alien life form.
If they said today, hey, we just spotted a spaceship, you know, just on the other side of Uranus and it's coming in.
It'll be a few months.
Let's build a welcoming committee.
I would want to build a welcoming committee, but I would also say, should we also not prepare in case they're hostile?
Because we don't know how they think.
We don't know anything about them.
And they're obviously way above us.
So let's be cautious.
People like Sam Altman are not cautious.
He wants the God.
Yeah.
Because he thinks, strangely, I think he thinks he can control it.
You're never going to be able to control it.
Everything we would do is a baby gate.
I've been in places where they have lots of babies.
I step over the baby gate.
It stops the babies.
We're the babies in that scenario.
It will step over anything that we have tried.
We just have to be very, very careful.
It really is just like the Garden of Eden when Satan say you can be like God.
And Eve thought, well, I can just take a bite and that'll be it.
Yes.
It's never it.
And it's always the search for knowledge, which doesn't make the search for knowledge evil or wrong.
It just should come with a price tag.
Be careful.
When you are looking for knowledge, that's great.
When you are looking to be like God, do not purchase that.
But what are the moral limits that someone like Sam Altman has?
Because technology can't tell us what's right.
It can take us from what's natural to what's possible, but only those of us who have moral limitations will say, but what's moral and what's good?
Really, Silicon Valley is only asking what's possible and can we do it?
Not should we do it.
And those of us asking, should we do it, I don't feel like I have enough power.
I don't feel like Sam Altman's going to listen to me and say, okay, you can go that far, but no, further than that.
So what does it look like to try to rein in those powers and to harness them for good?
So I talked to somebody who is at that level.
I've never shared this before.
But somebody at that level said to me, I said, how do you stop this?
And he said, well, the governments of the world, China wants control.
America wants control.
We want these things so we can increase our power and protect ourselves and have control.
The minute you go past AGI, you lose control because you are not as smart as it.
So even in AGI, you're starting to lose control.
But guarantee, you are not in charge of ASI.
So his belief and the belief of people in his world believe that the governments themselves will say, as we get a little closer, stop.
Not allowed.
And I say, well, that doesn't solve Sam Altman.
And he said, you don't think China, Russia, whoever that really understands we lose all power?
You don't think that Sam Altman's of the world would just disappear at night?
That they wouldn't just be?
So that's what we're waiting on?
No, that was his opinion.
Yeah.
Well, the only way to stop it is for states to say, to recognize, which they haven't yet, to recognize how dangerous this is for them, selfishly, for them, and say, no.
And they just start offing people that are saying, I want ASI.
Is that the only way to stop it?
Because that's a terrifying process.
It's terrifying.
Terrifying.
But we're entering this time.
And that's why I think the principles that you preach, the principles that you talk about, the principles that you teach and share are so critically important because without the Western civilization understanding of life and the importance of life, we're doomed.
Yeah.
Why We Can't Pick the Fruit00:09:25
Without the lessons of the, of just Adam and Eve.
Right.
Do not pick the fruit of that tree.
Yeah.
You're not God.
You know what I mean?
You're not God may be the most important three words for anyone, but especially those in Silicon Valley to realize and to really understand because that alone puts limitations on what you can do.
My father said to me before he died, he was 85 years old, and he said, I can't wait to see what your generation does.
And I was like, what do you mean, Dad?
And he said, Glenn, how much progress has there been in technology and in science since Christ?
And I said, fire to the moonshot.
And he said, right.
How much spiritual growth has there been since Christ to today?
We're exactly the same people.
Exactly the same people.
Yeah.
Except we're now playing with toys that are have godlike powers.
Right.
I know.
It's frightening.
Where do you think we are in the are you a I believe Jesus is coming in my lifetime, assuming I live long enough.
I think people have thought that since, I mean, the apostles thought that.
So probably wrong.
Odds are I'm probably wrong.
But it is a way that a lot of this is solved.
These problems are so huge and there are so many things that you see of signs.
Where are you on that?
Do you think?
Yeah, I don't know.
I don't know, which I know is not a fun answer.
No, I'm not saying I know either.
No, I know that you're not.
I know.
No one really knows, but there are many people like you who expect it.
They look at different biblical prophecies and they see them being fulfilled and they think it's going to happen in our lifetime.
I don't necessarily have that feeling.
I hope.
I do hope.
I hope that Jesus comes back.
And I actually, I really, again, it gives me so much hope that yes, Jesus might be coming.
And then you go like, oh, gosh, but the road between now and Jesus is so hard.
I kind of, I wouldn't mind that.
Not for my children, but maybe great-great-grandchildren or something like that.
People that I don't know.
I still believe about the tribulation and when that's going to happen.
But it is hard to imagine it getting much crazier and more confusing and more backwards.
But then you see things like Charlie's Memorial and you're like, oh, he's still up to something.
Like he is seeking and saving the lost just as much as he ever has been.
And if you had told me in the summer of 2020, when things were so bleak, and I just did not believe things were going to get better.
I thought we were going to plummet deeper and deeper into the abyss because you had the COVID craziness, you had the George Floyd riots and you had the election and all of that.
And if you would have told me, okay, but five years from now, you're going to be in a stadium with however many people, 200,000 people praising the Lord together.
And some of those people are going to go to church and read the Bible for the first time.
I don't know that I would have believed it.
So I am now more hesitant to think when it feels really bleak that God is done.
It's so funny.
I would express it in a different way.
I stopped.
I scold myself all the time now on stop wanting it your way.
Stop thinking you know.
You know, the because I felt the same way after the 2020 election.
I'm like, we are doomed.
Yeah.
We are doomed.
In retrospect, if Trump hadn't have lost that, we wouldn't be where we are now.
We wouldn't have exposed what we've exposed.
We are, as we sit today, the entire Western hemisphere, and assuming it goes smoothly, may be transformed.
Iran may collapse, may.
I mean, there are so many things that are happening now that you're like, what, wait a minute.
What?
How is this coming out of this?
And it wouldn't have happened in 2020.
Yeah.
And I was absolutely convinced.
And, you know, I've come to this place and I struggle with this a bit, a bit.
Stop trying to...
You know, stop trying to go, we have to do this because then they'll do this and then they do this.
Just do what you're supposed to do.
Just that, just that.
Yeah.
Because it's never worked.
I see people, including myself, try to get things to work out a certain way and it never works out in a good way.
Yeah.
You know, I've had Justin Haskins on, your co-author several times.
And whenever I'm done talking to him, I'm like, okay, that was really heavy.
And that was really big.
I remember before Trump was elected, he was talking about this European law that was going to insert itself into basically all industry everywhere.
And they just really didn't want Trump to win.
And then, of course, Trump won and changed things.
And that was hopeful.
But sometimes it just feels like it's all too much.
Like, I can't do anything about Sam Altman.
I can't do anything about ASI.
And I say this phrase, which the first part is not mine, but I just added to it, just do the next right thing in faith with excellence and for the glory of God.
That's the only thing you can do.
Now, sometimes that might be a big moment of public triumph, but most of the time, it's changing a diaper joyfully.
Most of the time, it's just saying the true thing to the grocery store clerk.
And most of the time, it's just reading a book to your kids.
And all of those moments matter in eternity.
Everything done to the glory of God in obedience to God does something good.
And the rest is up to him.
And if I don't rest in that, then I get really anxious really fast.
Yeah, I know.
I know.
You know, it's funny is these little things.
Look how much social media has changed us.
And it's just millions of five second clips.
Yeah.
Scrolling.
Yeah.
You know, we're not watching them for more than a minute.
And yet that constant scrolling of the mostly negative things.
I see stuff, you know, on social media.
And I'm trying to get my social media trained a bit to just show me the good stuff, the triumphs and all of that stuff.
And when we just change that, but it's nothing remarkable.
It's nothing remarkable.
Nothing is like, that's game changing.
Yeah.
It's just all of these little things of people doing either good or bad.
Yeah.
You know, positive or negative and how we consume it every day.
Yep.
That's absolutely true.
I always say that God's eternal plan of redemption is going off without a hitch.
Always.
Even when Charlie was assassinated, even when we lose an election, even when crazy conspiracy theories are dominating the internet, God's eternal plan of redemption is going off without a hitch.
And when I have conversations with people, not on the internet in real life, and I talk to someone who two years ago was an atheist, had completely rejected God and says, you know, I think I'm going to get baptized because I started reading my Bible and going to church.
I'm like, that's it.
Because God's work doesn't always make headlines.
And when it seems like he's doing one thing, he's doing 10,000 things that we don't know about.
And if I don't trust in that and I'm only looking at what Twitter shows me, I'm in a really bad place, which happens.
Like I also have to scold myself and get myself off of X because I get like really sad about the state of the world.
And if I don't retreat from that.
Lately, I've found it to be almost bone-crushing sad.
Yeah.
You're not like, I'm not even getting angry anymore.
I'm like, it's just sad.
Oh my gosh.
How do you live your life like that?
Believing that, feeling that.
Oh, my gosh.
So sad.
I know.
And just injustice in the world.
And so you can't allow your mood to be dictated by the highs and lows of Twitter, though.
I mean, that's just no way to live your life.
People ask me all the time, like, you know, people who follow me, how do you not get just like depressed and anxious and stay in this dark place?
You can't be on social media all the time.
And the fact that I have a real family and real community and a real church and real friends who talk about things and care about things in addition to what happens on X, that is like really what grounds me.
And I do, you know, all of this for them, for those real people who are just confused about what's going on in the world.
Grounded in Family, Not Influencer Status00:02:05
You know, when you focus on that, it makes things a lot clear and your purpose a lot clearer too.
I think you have such a huge future in front of you.
I just think you're an a I hate this word, but a true influencer.
You're not, it's not a internet.
You are genuine and bigger than what influencer means.
Thank you.
For archive purposes, talk to yourself 20 years from now on hope, who you hope you are.
What you hope you haven't forgotten.
I hope that my husband and I can look back and say, we built that together and we had so much fun and we took our family, our kids along for the ride every step of the way.
I hope that in 20 years, all of my kids love and like each other.
That is like really big goal in my life.
I want them to love and like us, yes, but I want them to love and like each other.
I want them to be friends.
I want them to be there for each other.
I want them to have each other's back.
That is what I spent most of my time as a mom doing, teaching them to love God and love each other.
And so I hope I can have like these adult children that I love to hang out with and that love to hang out with each other.
And I hope that I always remembered the most important thing is faithfulness to God, not big contracts, not money, not opportunities, not, you know, clips that go viral or any of that, but the steadfast adherence to whatever God's calling is, public or private.
At the end of 20 years, if I can say that by the grace of God, then I will feel fulfilled.