Claim: A holographic "AI Jesus" has been created and deployed at a chapel in Switzerland specifically to hear confessions.
CNA finds: St. Peter's Chapel in Lucerne, a historic parish church, recently installed "an innovative project that explores the use of virtual characters based on generative artificial intelligence in a spiritual context" in collaboration with the Immersive Realities Research Lab at Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts.
The AI program was reportedly trained with content from the New Testament, with the goal of allowing the "Jesus" avatar to verbally respond, in one of 100 languages, to questions about the Bible from people entering the confessional.
(Numerous reports described the "Jesus" avatar as a "hologram," which is a 3D projection created with lasers; but a Deutsche Welle video of the installation in action showed that the artificial face of "Jesus" merely appeared on a curved computer monitor behind the confessional screen.)
The installation is titled "Deus in Machina" (a Latin phrase meaning "God in the machine" and a play on the more commonly used literary phrase "Deus ex machina"). An announcement from the lab said the project, which is described as an "art exhibit," "encourages thinking about the limits of technology in the context of religion."
The breakdown: Despite being placed in the confessional booth, the parish notes on its website that the AI installation is intended for conversations, not confessions. Confession, also called penance or reconciliation, is one of the seven sacraments of the Church and can only be performed by a priest or bishop, and never in a virtual setting.
A theologian at the Swiss parish said the project is also intended to help to get religious people comfortable with AI and reportedly said he does see potential for AI to help with the pastoral work of priests, given that AI can be available any time, "24 hours a day, so it has abilities that pastors don't."
Peter Kirchschläger, an expert in theological ethics, opined to Deutsche Welle in response to the theologian's comments that "we should be careful when it comes to faith, pastoral care, and the search for meaning in religion. This is an area in which we humans are actually vastly superior to machines. So we should do it ourselves."
The Swiss art project is the latest in a series of attempts -- including an embrace of the technology at the Vatican itself -- to make AI work in service of the Catholic faith, which so far has yielded mixed results.
CatéGPT, for example, an artificial intelligence chatbot designed by another Swiss, engineer Nicolas Torcheboeuf, aims to provide answers to questions about Catholic teaching by drawing on authoritative documents. Other similar AI-based services have gained popularity, such as the U.S.-based Magisterium AI.
Less successful was an AI "priest" created and unveiled earlier this year by the California-based apologetics apostolate Catholic Answers, which was criticized by some users for its video game-like priestly avatar. Moreover, at least one user managed to goad the priestly character into hearing their confession, prompting a statement from the apostolate in which it promised to replace the priest character with a lay character named "Justin."
The verdict: The "AI Jesus" project exists, but it's not intended to hear people's confessions, or to replace a priest. Rather, it's an art exhibit created by researchers at a local technical university in concert with theologians who say they want to raise questions about the use of technology in religious settings and to demonstrate the ability of AI to answer questions about the Bible.