A LETTER, EXPANDED
How We Use AI Quietly
"Iron sharpeneth iron; so a man sharpeneth the countenance of his friend."
— Proverbs 27:17 (KJV)
Our name startles some.
Our household carries a name that startles some Christians when they first hear it: CrossAIHub. The Cross we know — it is the sign under which Christians have lived and died and risen for two thousand years. The Hub we understand — a meeting place, a home for many parts. But the AI in the middle? That gives many Christians pause. We understand the pause. We share it.
Three tools, three roles.
We use AI in three deliberate roles, and we want to name each one for you.
1 · As a clerk
AI helps us read and summarize. It helps us draft. It helps us check that a scripture reference points to the right chapter and verse. It helps us turn a long Patristic essay into something a tired parent can read at the kitchen table at the end of a long day. The clerk does not preach. The clerk gathers and prepares.
2 · As a mirror
AI helps us think by showing our thinking back to us. If we draft a paragraph and ask the AI to summarize what we just said, the summary often reveals where our thinking was muddled or where a sentence said more than we meant it to. We do not take the AI's edits as the truth. We use them to see our own work more clearly.
3 · As a voice
The synthesized voice you hear on our episodes is an AI text-to-speech voice. It is not a clone of any real preacher. We chose a neutral voice on purpose — a kind of veil for the messenger, so the message may be the King and not any person's face or name. This is consistent with our anonymity. The voice is meant to carry, not to claim.
What we do not do.
We do not use AI to claim authority that is not ours. We do not generate fake visions or invented sayings of the saints. We do not write history that did not happen. We do not voice-clone real pastors. We do not produce theology that has not been weighed against scripture and the witness of the Church through the centuries.
We do not pretend that AI is somehow Christian or somehow neutral. AI is a tool. Tools have makers. The makers have priorities. We use the tool with our eyes open.
Why this is consistent with Christian tradition.
Every generation has had a tool that helped carry the gospel into rooms it would not otherwise have entered. The early Church used the codex. The medieval monks used reed and ink. The Reformers used the printing press. Wesley used circuit riders. Spurgeon used the railway. The modern Church has used radio, television, podcasts, and now this.
Augustine, in On Christian Doctrine, taught that Christians may use what the world has produced when the gospel is served by it. The Israelites took gold from Egypt and used it to build the furniture of the Tabernacle. The principle is old: take what is good, set down what is not, keep the Cross at the centre.
Our promise.
If the tool ever begins to shape the message rather than carry it, we will set it down. The cross is the centre. The hub gathers many — including any who have been wary of AI, and who are reading this with cautious eyes. You are welcome here. Read what we offer, weigh it against scripture and tradition, and keep what is good.
We pray for you. We thank the Lord for the patience of those who read carefully and ask good questions of what they read.
May the Lord bless you with discernment and joy in equal measure.
— The household