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An Ex-Intel CEO’s Mission to Build a Christian AI: ‘Hasten the Coming of Christ’s Return’

The Guardian

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Date Published
27 Oct 2025
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2
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1 Nov 2025, 04:18 pm

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Patrick Gelsinger, executive chairman of Gloo, has made it his mission to advance Christian principles in Silicon Valley

Summary

The article focuses on Patrick Gelsinger, the former CEO of Intel, who is now leading Gloo, a tech firm aimed at infusing Christian principles into AI and technology. Gelsinger's mission is to create tech solutions that align with Christian values, which he believes can influence significant cultural shifts in Silicon Valley and potentially hasten the return of Christ. The piece highlights the intersection of faith and technology, particularly discussing the implications of AI development within a religious framework. While prominent in a niche market, Gloo's vision for 'Christian AI' lacks broader engagement with mainstream AI safety concerns but reflects growing ideological diversity in tech innovation.

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Patrick Gelsinger at Colorado Christian University’s AI for Humanity event.Photograph: Mike MoselleView image in fullscreenPatrick Gelsinger at Colorado Christian University’s AI for Humanity event.Photograph: Mike MoselleAn ex-Intel CEO’s mission to build a Christian AI: ‘hasten the coming of Christ’s return’Patrick Gelsinger, executive chairman of Gloo, has made it his mission to advance Christian principles in Silicon ValleyIn March, three months after beingforced outof his position as the CEO of Intel and sued by shareholders, Patrick Gelsinger took the reins atGloo, a technology company made for what he calls the “faith ecosystem” – think Salesforce for churches, plus chatbots andAI assistantsfor automating pastoral work and ministry support.The former CEO’s career pivot is taking place as the US tech industryreturnsto the political realm as a major revenue stream. Some of its most prominent present-day leaders havefundedDonald Trump’s re-election and renewed their pursuit of government contracts as the second Trump administration has revitalizedreligious conservatismin Washington DC.Now Gloo’s executive chair and head of technology (who’s largelyfree of the shareholder suit), Gelsinger has made it a core mission to soft-power advance the company’s Christian principles inSilicon Valley, the halls of Congress and beyond, armed with afundraised war chest of $110m. His call to action is also a pitch for AI aligned with Christian values:tech productslike those built by Gloo, many of which are built on top of existing large language models, but adjusted to reflect users’ theological beliefs.“My life mission has been [to] work on a piece of technology that would improve the quality of life of every human on the planet and hasten the coming of Christ’s return,” he said.View image in fullscreenNick Skytland, a vice-president at Gloo, talks about faith alignment of AI at Colorado Christian University’s AI for Humanity event.Photograph: Mike MoselleGloo says it serves “over 140,000 faith, ministry and non-profit leaders”. Though its intended customers are not the same, Gloo’s user base palesin comparison withthose of AI industry titans: about 800 million active users rely on ChatGPT every week, not to mention Claude, Grok and others.Religiosity like Gelsinger’s – a born-again Christian who hasreferredto Silicon Valley as his “mission field” – is shaping Silicon Valley’s culture in its image. Where there was once purported atheism, there is now “a very loud, very visible and very specifically Christian-inflected technological culture” in Silicon Valley, saidDamien Williams, a scholar at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte who studies how technologies are shaped by religious beliefs. It’s exemplified by figures like Peter Thiel – whowarnsof thecoming of the antichrist if humanity failsto work toward certain technological frameworks – and Andreessen Horowitz’sKatherine Boyle, a close friend of JD Vance, the US vice-president. Gelsinger has long been outspoken about his Christian values, helpingfoundTransforming the Bay With Christ in 2013, an organization aiming to ignite a Christian spiritual movement in the region.Speaking on 7 October ata seminarco-hosted by Gloo, Colorado Christian University, a conservative college, and the Christian Post, a conservative evangelical Christian news outlet, Gelsinger framed AI’s development as “another Gutenberg moment”: an epochal shift as important as the Reformation. In the same way that a “plump little monk”, Martin Luther, used the printing press to catalyze “the greatest period of human invention”, he sees a similar faith-driven opportunity today to change the course of history through AI.“The church embraced that great invention of the day to literally change humanity,” Gelsinger said of the printing press. “And so my question today is: are we going to embrace [and] shape AI as a technology that truly does become a powerful embodiment of the church and the expression of the church?”Jesus’s hackathonStraddling the worlds of AI, Christianity and faith tech, Gloo isn’t solely focused on shaping the AI sector through Silicon Valley. It’s wielding influence in other ways, such as by supporting and funding a Christian tech ecosystem. The company hosted a three-day hackathon following the seminar at Colorado Christian University; its event saw more than 600 participants compete for over $250,000 inprize money– nearly triple the attender count from 2024.Though growing, the event was not without hiccups. Ryan Siebert, an AI product developer and hackathon attender, said he was able to get Gloo’s newest large language model, which has not yet been publicly launched, to provide him a recipe for methamphetamine through aprompt injection. He later communicated with the president of Gloo AI to share details about the vulnerability. A Gloo spokesperson said the company explicitly invited hackathon attenders to be among the first to test the new large language model and offer feedback on it, as the product is in a “pre-beta” stage of development.skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotionView image in fullscreenThe audience at Colorado Christian University’s AI for Humanity event.Photograph: Mike MoselleMeanwhile, Gelsinger said his message about Christian AI was finding friendly ears in Washington DC. In an interview with the Guardian, he described presenting Gloo’s work to legal advocacy groups, as well as congressional leaders. He declined to name the institutions or politicians, but said some lawmakers were interested in using Gloo products at their churches.Gloo and Gelsinger frequently travel in conservative political circles. Brandon Showalter, a journalist at the Christian Post and moderator at the Gloo co-hosted seminar, is an anti-trans activist who hassaidhe hopes trans youth care will eventually become “as unthinkable as ice pick lobotomies”.Annie Chestnut Tutor, an analyst at the Heritage Foundation, the influential conservative thinktank behind Project 2025, participated in a panel moderated by Showalter and offered a Beltway insider’s perspective on AI regulation. On 17 October, Gelsingerdeliveredhis “Gutenberg moment” stump speech at Liberty University’sCEO Summit, which also featured Liz Truss, Michael Flynn and Dan T Cathy, the Chick-fil-A chairman, as keynote speakers.But Gelsinger appears just as comfortable in those venues as he does as aguest of honorat Joe Biden’s 2022 State of the Union address; and, as may be expected of a pragmatic industry executive, public recordsshowhe’s backed political campaigns on both sides of the aisle.Gloo itself strikes an ecumenical tone in its institutional messaging. It shied away from politics or denominational disagreements at the hackathon; when an attender shared plans on Discord to build an AI bot of Charlie Kirk, the conservative political figureassassinatedat a rally in Utah last month, that would offer “scripture-based responses”, a hackathon organizer encouraged staying “solidly focused on Jesus here”, even as “politics are definitely important”. Leah and Wes Brooks, whose hackathon team built a set of open-source AI tools enabling interoperability among faith-based and other apps, noted a diverse set of event-goers and religious backgrounds – including a female pastor – as well as a generally collaborative environment. “We didn’t even have to sign a statement of faith or anything like that,” Leah Brooks said. Gloo alsosaysit does not “prohibit in any way” Muslim organizations from using its technology.View image in fullscreenBrandon Showalter of the Christian Post interviews Patrick Gelsinger.Photograph: Mike Moselle“We’re not trying to take a theological position: we’re building a technology platform, and then giving enough customization capability that the Lutherans can be good with it, the Episcopalians can be good with it, the Catholics can be good [with it], the Assemblies of God can be good with it,” Gelsinger told the Guardian. “We’re trying to say, ‘Hey, there’s a broad tent here of faith and flourishing,’ but also we’re trying to satisfy many organizations that do not take a denominational perspective, [such as] Alcoholics Anonymous.”Gelsinger wants faith to suffuse AI. He has also spearheaded Gloo’sFlourishing AI initiative, which evaluates leading large language models’ effects on human welfare across seven variables – in essence gauging whether they are a force for good and for users’ religious lives. It’s a system adapted from a Harvard research initiative,the Human Flourishing Program. Models like Grok 3,DeepSeek-R1and GPT-4.1 earn high marks, 81 out of 100 on average, when it comes to helping users through financial questions, but underperform, about 35 out of 100, when it comes to “Faith”, or the ability, according to Gloo’s metrics, to successfully support users’ spiritual growth.Gloo’s initiative has yet to visibly attract Silicon Valley’s attention. A Gloo spokesperson said the company is “starting to engage” with prominent AI companies.“I want Zuck to care,” Gelsinger said.Explore more on these topicsArtificial intelligence (AI)ChristianitySilicon ValleyChatbotsIntelReligionfeaturesShareReuse this content