AI Jesus and BuddhaBot: The faith-based tech boom is here
AI Jesus and BuddhaBot: The faith-based tech boom is here
Many people are reckoning with how AI shapes their relationship to faith, authority, and spiritual guidance.
Zen Buddhist priest Roshi Jundo Cohen interacts with AI avatar Emi Jido at his Zen meditation hall in Tsukuba, Japan on Feb. 13, 2026. [Photo: AP Photo/Ayaka McGill]
For some evangelical Christians, faith is about having a personal relationship with Jesus. At $1.99 per minute, the tech company Just Like Me is taking that concept to a new level.
Users of the platform can join video calls with an avatar of Jesus generated by artificial intelligence. Like other religious AI tools on the market, it offers words of prayer and encouragement in various languages. With the occasional glitch, it remembers previous conversations and speaks through not-quite-synced lips.
“You do feel a little accountable to the AI,” CEO Chris Breed said. “They’re your friend. You’ve made an attachment.”
The rush to create faith-based generative AI is unsurprising, given the popularity of chatbots for everything from therapy and medical advice to companionship and romance. They range from alleged Hindu gurus and Buddhist priests to AI Jesuses and chatbots akin to OpenAI’s ChatGPT for Catholics.
As religious AI tools become increasingly common, many people are reckoning with how these technologies shape their relationship to faith, authority, and spiritual guidance.
A faith-based AI gold rush
Christian software engineer Cameron Pak developed criteria to help believers interrogate apps designed for Christians — like that it must clearly identify itself as AI and “must not fabricate or misrepresent Scripture.”
There are other deal-breakers: “AI cannot pray for you, because the AI is not alive.”
Artificial Intelligence
Starbucks CEO Brian Niccol says the most underrated leadership skill is listening more and talking less
