A bit long, but stay with me…
I closed yesterday’s “analytics” blog with the idea that the church needs to do more than just count the bodies in the building. Jesus challenged us to be salt and light in the world. An influence. And we can’t do that if we remain isolated.
My friend Mike Metzger pointed out in a recent essay that Pope Leo XIV’s first “encyclical,” Magnificent Humanity: on safeguarding the human person in the time of artificial intelligence attempts to do just that – exert an influence.
Mike’s essay: Dense, Overlapping Networks is short and worth the read in its entirety. He argues that in order to minister well to particular groups of people we should be networking with people from those groups. As one of my math professors would say, “An obviosity.”
By contrast, a number of years ago Mike was a guest at a “faith and work” conference about which he observed, “There didn’t appear to be any businesspeople in attendance at the faith and work conference.”
Striking about Pope Leo’s Encyclical’s debut was that on stage with Leo was Anthropic [an artificial intelligence company] co-founder Christopher Olah. Mike writes:
Leo and Olah, a 33-year-old atheist tech leader, might seem to make an unlikely duo in championing a partnership in developing safeguards for the development of AI. They’re not. For the last 10 years, the Vatican has partnered with networks of tech leaders to address the challenges and opportunities that AI presents. Olah is part of this partnership. On Monday, he highlighted the need for tech leaders to be in dialogue with people who are not motivated by the vast sums of money AI tech companies are chasing — some estimates put Anthropic’s value at about $300 billion — while Pope Leo said the “gravity of the moment” meant the church must lend its moral voice. – Mike Metzger, May 27, 2026
Mike goes on to point that the church used to exert such influence. He quotes from James Hunter’s 2010 book To Change the World:
Hunter asserted that we’re not changing the world as the early and medieval Church did. She had global impact, changing the world by partnering with dense, overlapping networks of elites and the institutions that they lead – be they people of faith, no faith, or differing faiths.
Back to the encyclical, I can’t say I agree with everything Pope Leo said in the encyclical. For starters, it’s about 90 pages long, so I haven’t read all of it! Some that have like parts of it and have a few reservations. Others wholeheartedly endorse Pope Leo’s overall theme. This piece by Russell Moore of Christianity Today is worth the read in its entirety.
I have read the concluding section, and I really like his personal challenges to believers. I offer you snippets without comment (The numbers refer to section numbers in the document, and I have added bullets for clarity):
- 237. Let us remain faithful to the truth! …
- 238. Let us invest in education, beginning with ourselves! …
- 239. Let us cultivate relationships! …
- 240. Let us love justice and peace! …
241. As we look to the future, I would like to recall the image of Nehemiah whom we chose as our companion and guide at the outset. Nehemiah
- heard the cry of a devastated city,
- brought that pain to prayer,
- discerned before God,
- asked for help,
- received permission to return,
- organized the work,
- confronted internal and external resistance and
- rebuilt the walls of Jerusalem with the assistance of the people, brick by brick.
In this era of digital transformation, I see in him a striking parable of our own vocation, which is not to be passive spectators of social and cultural fractures, nor mere commentators on what is crumbling, but men and women prepared
- to enter the construction sites of history — research laboratories, technology companies, schools, the media, institutions and local communities — in order
- to rebuild what has collapsed and
- protect what is threatened. Like Nehemiah, we too are called
- to unite listening and courage, prayer and responsibility,
so that, even when a technocratic mentality or partisan interests seem to prevail, the human city may become a more fitting place to live.
243. After having considered
- faith, which contemplates the Father’s loving plan;
- love, which unites us …
- hope, which sustains our actions in the world,
the fourth pillar of this program for Christian life is prayer.
Catholic or not (Mike Metzger is, and I am not), this is good stuff. His application of Nehemiah parallels mine in my book Everyone on the Wall.
To return to our original challenge, let’s not be content to win on “analytics.” Let’s be about making a difference through what James Hunter calls “faithful presence.”
You are the salt of the earth…You are the light of the world. – Jesus (Matthew 5.13, 14)
Come, let us build the wall of Jerusalem, that we may no longer suffer derision. – Nehemiah (Nehemiah 2.17, ESV)


