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I fed 5 major religions into an AI engine. Here is the 'winner.'
Chris ^ | 04/20/2026 | Jay Atkins

Posted on 04/20/2026 10:58:15 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

I recently did something that will likely make both my Christian and atheist friends a little uncomfortable: I asked a popular AI engine to evaluate the world’s major belief systems and tell me which one makes the most rational sense.

To be clear, I didn’t prompt it to favor Christianity. I didn’t ask leading questions or try to stack the deck. I asked it to analyze the heavyweights — Atheism, Buddhism, Islam, Hinduism, and Christianity — using a simple two-step framework: First, which worldview best explains reality, and second, which one does so while requiring the fewest unsupported assumptions? In other words, tell me which one has the highest explanatory power with the lowest evidentiary burden.

As a professing Christian for more than 40 years, what I got back should not have surprised me, yet it did. AI, in seconds, reached the same conclusion I’ve been working towards for decades: Christianity offers the most reasonable overall explanation of reality with the fewest leaps of faith.

Pause and let that settle in. AI ranked Christianity as the most reasonable view of the world.

The analysis I asked AI to do was not complicated, but it was comprehensive. I asked it to evaluate each worldview against the same basic questions:

1. Why does anything exist at all?
2. Why is the universe ordered and intelligible?
3. Why do humans possess consciousness and reason?
4. Are moral truths real or are they just social constructs?
5. Does human life have meaning or purpose?
6. Do the historical and fact claims of each belief system hold up?

I framed the analysis this way, not to pick a winner for rhetorical effect but to see which belief system actually holds together under the pure, rational scrutiny of a machine. When the analysis was done, here’s what happened.

Atheism scored well on simplicity. It doesn’t require belief in miracles or divine revelation. But that simplicity comes at a cost. It struggles to explain the biggest questions: why does the universe exist at all, why is it governed by rational laws, how does consciousness arise from mere matter, and why do we experience moral obligations as something real and binding? In many cases, it simply labels these things as either illusory or as “brute facts” and moves on, but it does not answer them.

Buddhism performed better as a practical system. It offers profound insight into human suffering and provides a quasi-workable path toward inner peace, but it largely sidesteps the deeper metaphysical questions. It gives advice on how to cope with reality, but not what reality ultimately is.

Hinduism fared about as well as Buddhism. It offers a sweeping explanation of reality with concepts like ultimate unity, karma, and reincarnation that attempt to account for both the material and spiritual world. That gives it significant explanatory depth, but with a big tradeoff. The system relies on a complex web of metaphysical claims that can’t be verified or falsified, creating a very high evidentiary burden relative to other worldviews.

Islam held together fairly well. It offers a strong account of God, morality, and purpose, which is understandable given its Abrahamic roots. But it runs into serious historical tension when it comes to the historicity of its claims about divine revelation to Muhammad, Jesus’ crucifixion, and correction of earlier traditions. Islam’s brand of retrospective revision carries a very heavy evidentiary burden that it simply can’t carry.

Christianity, by contrast, occupies a unique position. It offers a comprehensive explanation of reality, why the universe exists, why it is ordered, why we are rational and moral beings, and why we long for meaning. At the same time, it concentrates its evidentiary burden into a relatively small number of claims, most notably the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. That matters because a worldview that explains everything but requires you to believe a thousand fragile claims is not rational. The most reasonable worldview is the one that explains the most while assuming the least. On that metric, Christianity wins.

Of course, I can hear my critics screaming right now, what about science? Isn’t Christianity fundamentally at odds with modern scientific understanding?

Not even close. In fact, one of the more interesting aspects of this exercise was how well Christianity aligns with what science has discovered. Take the Big Bang, for example. Modern cosmology tells us the universe had a beginning, a finite starting point for space, time, and matter. That is not what most ancient worldviews predicted. It is, however, exactly what the ancient Hebrews said God told them happened, and it is exactly what we would expect from a universe created by an omnipotent and transcendent God. “In the beginning God created ...” is not bad for a book written thousands of years before modern physics.

Or consider the deeper assumptions that make science possible in the first place: the universe is orderly, the laws of nature are consistent and universal, and human reason is capable of understanding them. Those are not scientific conclusions. They are philosophical starting points. And historically, they emerged from the distinctly Christian view that creation reflects the rational mind of its Creator. Science and faith are not in conflict. If they appear to be, it’s a good sign you’re reading one of them incorrectly. The idea that Christianity is anti-science is not just wrong, it’s backwards.

Again, none of this “proves” Christianity is true. Faith is not the product of an algorithm, and salvation does not come through data analysis. These questions ultimately require personal engagement through study, reflection, and prayer. But this exercise does show something very important: Christianity is not a leap in the dark. It is not the abandonment of reason. It is not blind faith in ancient superstition. If anything, it’s the opposite.

For 2,000 years, serious Christian thinkers have argued that faith is grounded in reality, that it makes sense of the world as it actually is. Critics have long dismissed that claim as wishful thinking. Now, in AI, we have a new kind of tool, one that is relentlessly logical, culturally neutral (or so they say), and unimpressed by rhetoric, running the same analysis and arriving at a remarkably similar conclusion. That should at least give us pause.

There is a tendency among some Christians to view artificial intelligence with suspicion, as though it represents a threat to our faith. I don’t see it that way. AI is not a worldview. It doesn’t have beliefs. It doesn’t have a soul. It doesn’t even have opinions in the way we think of them. What it does have is the ability to process information and follow logic wherever it leads. If, as we believers profess, Christianity is true, if it really is grounded in the nature of reality itself, then that kind of analysis should not scare us. It should confirm what we’ve been saying all along. And in this case, it does.

AI is not going to answer the big questions for us, but it might help us see which answers make the most sense. For some skeptics, that might be a lifeline. And for that, we should be thankful.


By day, Jay Atkins works as a Government Affairs attorney for a California-based technology company. By night he is a lay author and Christian apologist. He thinks and writes about proofs for faith and how they intersect, or should intersect, with public policy.


TOPICS: Religion & Culture; Religion & Science; Theology
KEYWORDS: ai; aiworship; atheismisblindfaith; religion

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1 posted on 04/20/2026 10:58:15 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

Bookmark


2 posted on 04/20/2026 10:59:47 AM PDT by Magnum44 (...against all enemies, foreign and domestic... )
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To: SeekAndFind

Very interesting thought experiment. Thanks for sharing.


3 posted on 04/20/2026 11:01:47 AM PDT by fidelis (Ecce Crucem Domini! Fugite partes adversae! Vicit Leo de tribu Juda, Radix David! Alleluia!)
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To: SeekAndFind

Separate Christianity from Catholiism
and see what you get.


4 posted on 04/20/2026 11:02:04 AM PDT by Big Red Badger (Resist Satan's Tyranny )
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To: Magnum44
Accept Jesus Christ as you personal Lord and Savior, wrap yourself in his love and grace, repent and beg for forgivness and be saved for all eternity.

Anything else is deception designed to separate you from God and eternal life in Heaven. Amen.
5 posted on 04/20/2026 11:04:31 AM PDT by The Louiswu (USA FIRST...USA FOREVER)
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Islam held together fairly well. It offers a strong account of God, morality, and purpose, which is understandable given its Abrahamic roots …
There are no such roots. There are only assertions of a connection to Abraham and his religion; everything else is purely and utterly pagan.
6 posted on 04/20/2026 11:05:06 AM PDT by Olog-hai ("No Republican, no matter how liberal, is going to woo a Democratic vote." -- Ronald Reagan, 1960)
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To: SeekAndFind
in AI, we have a new kind of tool

Sorry, all, but I really, really hate the BS term "tool". AI is a menace to the survival of humans in my opinion.

7 posted on 04/20/2026 11:06:17 AM PDT by frank ballenger (There's a battle outside and it's raging. It'll soon shake your windows and rattle your walls. )
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To: Big Red Badger
"Separate Christianity from Catholicism

and see what you get."

Roe v Wade

8 posted on 04/20/2026 11:08:48 AM PDT by StAnDeliver (Trump II)
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To: SeekAndFind

Garbage in, garbaage out. It all depends on the input.


9 posted on 04/20/2026 11:09:11 AM PDT by Pirate Ragnar
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To: SeekAndFind

The famous SF story by often satirical author Fredric Brown “The Answer”.

Analysis:
The Answer by Fredric Brown (Angels and Spaceships, 1954) opens with a scientist called Dwar Ev completing a connection and then moving towards a switch:

The switch that would connect, all at once, all of the monster computing machines of all the populated planets in the universe—ninety-six billion planets—into the supercircuit that would connect them all into one super-calculator, one cybernetics machine that would combine all the knowledge of all the galaxies. p. 36

Ev then asks the super-computer if there is a God, and it replies (spoiler), “Yes, now there is a God”. Then, when Ev rushes towards the switch to turn the computer off, it zaps him with a lightning bolt.
This is one of these squibs (it is less than a page long) that you find (a) pretty neat when you are twelve, but (b) a not very good gimmick story when older. The real sense of wonder here lies in the idea of ninety-six billion inhabited and interconnected planets.

From SFShortStories site.


10 posted on 04/20/2026 11:10:10 AM PDT by frank ballenger (There's a battle outside and it's raging. It'll soon shake your windows and rattle your walls. )
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To: SeekAndFind
Not even close. In fact, one of the more interesting aspects of this exercise was how well Christianity aligns with what science has discovered. Take the Big Bang, for example. Modern cosmology tells us the universe had a beginning, a finite starting point for space, time, and matter. That is not what most ancient worldviews predicted. It is, however, exactly what the ancient Hebrews said God told them happened, and it is exactly what we would expect from a universe created by an omnipotent and transcendent God. “In the beginning God created ...” is not bad for a book written thousands of years before modern physics.

Always thought “Let there be light” was a pretty good way to phrase the Big Bang to a bunch of shepherds and such.

11 posted on 04/20/2026 11:11:23 AM PDT by piytar (NEVER FORGET Ashli Babbitt, Rosanne Boyland, Corey Comperatore, Iryna Zarutska, and Charlie Kirk!)
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To: SeekAndFind

I would have changed #5 to “Does ALL human life have value.”


12 posted on 04/20/2026 11:14:49 AM PDT by Vermont Lt
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To: SeekAndFind

ask it which one is most violent to the others


13 posted on 04/20/2026 11:17:05 AM PDT by Mr. K (no i think 10%consequence of repealing obamacare is worse than obamacare itself.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Ask it which has had the greatest and most positive effect on human civilization.


14 posted on 04/20/2026 11:18:41 AM PDT by RoosterRedux ( )
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To: Pirate Ragnar

and the programmer...


15 posted on 04/20/2026 11:22:20 AM PDT by moonhawk (Jeffrey Epstein did't kill himself; George Floyd did.)
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To: Vermont Lt

And the computer database says! AI is nothing but a computer database that spits out stuff just like Google Search.


16 posted on 04/20/2026 11:24:20 AM PDT by Pol-92064 (tax)
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To: StAnDeliver

No. That’s what happens when you eliminate Christianity altogether and substitute Marxism.


17 posted on 04/20/2026 11:24:26 AM PDT by Olog-hai ("No Republican, no matter how liberal, is going to woo a Democratic vote." -- Ronald Reagan, 1960)
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To: Pirate Ragnar
Garbage in, garbaage out. It all depends on the input.

Just regurgitated faster. A positive thing for the screen-addicted.
18 posted on 04/20/2026 11:24:36 AM PDT by larrytown
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To: SeekAndFind

“Atheism scored well on simplicity. It doesn’t require belief in miracles...”

#####################

A complete crock of shyte. Atheism can’t explain the beginning of the universe, the creation of life, the origin of species, or human consciousness.

“Simplicity”, yes, for the simple-minded. But it certainly DOES require faith to explain the above. A LOT of faith.


19 posted on 04/20/2026 11:27:57 AM PDT by Eccl 10:2 (Prov 3:5 --- "Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and lean not on your own understanding")
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To: SeekAndFind

I asked two sperate AI engines this - none came even close to what this author is claiming.


20 posted on 04/20/2026 11:29:04 AM PDT by eboyer
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