— The Prophetic Mission of the Church in an Age of Civilizational Transition —Luke 19:40
Introduction: The Stones Have Begun to Speak
On the day Jesus entered Jerusalem, the Pharisees demanded that the disciples be silenced. Jesus answered:
“I tell you, if these were silent, the very stones would cry out.” — Luke 19:40
This is not mere rhetoric. It is a cosmic declaration. The glory of God will be proclaimed. If the church falls silent, God will accomplish His purposes through other means — even through stones crying out.
Today, at this civilizational turning point of the 21st century, these words ring out again.
In an age where AI generates human language, algorithms shape public opinion, and platforms distribute worldviews — what is the church proclaiming? At the threshold of this new digital civilization, are we crying out in praise, or have we fallen silent?
1. What Kind of Age Is This? — A Civilizational Turning Point
Human history has experienced three great civilizational transitions: agricultural civilization, industrial civilization, and the digital civilization we are now entering.
The transition that futurist Alvin Toffler foresaw as the “Third Wave” is now happening in real time. And at every civilizational transition, one question inevitably arises:
“Who will design the worldview of the new civilization?”
Christian thought played a deep role in shaping the worldview of industrial civilization. Beneath the democracy, separation of powers, and human rights that the American Founding Fathers designed ran the biblical conviction that “human beings are created in the image of God.”
But who is designing the worldview of digital civilization today?
The technological elites of Silicon Valley are designing it — people who reduce human beings to data points, predict behavior through algorithms, and seek to replace decision-making with AI.
Where is the church?
2. What Is Filling the Space Left by Silence?
The space left by the church’s silence is being filled by other voices. We must face this honestly.
First, AI is becoming a spiritual guide. Millions of people bring their deepest questions not to a pastor but to AI. The fear of death, the meaning of life, the wounds of broken relationships — algorithms are answering all these existential questions around the clock.
Second, platforms are becoming sanctuaries. YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram are not simply media — they are spaces that form worldviews. People sit before these platforms for hours each day, having particular values and desires repeatedly instilled in them. The church worships once a week; the influence of platforms occurs dozens of times every day.
Third, ideology is replacing the gospel. Various political ideologies are offering people salvation narratives in the form of quasi-religions. Where the true gospel of the Messiah is not heard, false answers overflow.
This echoes the very warning of that passage — when those who should be crying out fall silent, other things fill that space.
3. Why Has the Church Fallen Silent?
A Church Optimized for Industrial Civilization
The structure of the church today is a product of industrial civilization. The Sunday worship gathering model, the one-way information delivery of the sermon, ministry centered on a church building, a hierarchical structure centered on the senior pastor — all of this was formed in an era when print and mass gatherings were the central means of communication.
Digital civilization demands a fundamentally different mode of communication: bidirectional, decentralized, networked, real-time, personalized. It is becoming increasingly difficult to effectively proclaim the gospel to people of digital civilization through the church structures of industrial civilization.
A Church That Has Lost the Language of Its Age
The gospel is unchanging, but the language through which it is communicated must change with each era. Paul proclaimed the gospel in Athens’ Areopagus using the language of Greek philosophy (Acts 17). Augustine defended the gospel using the language of Neo-Platonism. Calvin expounded Scripture using the language of humanism.
But to what degree is the church today conversant in the language of AI, big data, algorithms, and platforms? Has it been trained to answer the questions of this age in the language of Scripture?
The Weakening of Prophetic Courage
There is a temptation to optimize content for platform algorithms, to measure success by subscriber counts and view numbers, to choose messages that earn likes over uncomfortable truths. This is not a new temptation — it is the same temptation those entrusted with the Word have faced in every age.
4. What Must Be Proclaimed in This Age
① Proclaim the Cross and Resurrection — This Is First and Last
No matter how brilliant the cultural analysis or anthropology we offer, without the cross and resurrection it is not the gospel but merely Christian social philosophy.
Digital civilization promises to conquer death through technology, but cannot resolve sin — the root of death. It claims to correct human behavior through algorithms, but cannot renew the human heart. Platforms promise to provide meaning and identity, but what they offer is an illusion that vanishes in an instant.
Only one event reaches the root of all these problems:
“Christ died for our sins in accordance with the Scriptures, was buried, and was raised on the third day in accordance with the Scriptures.” (1 Corinthians 15:3-4)
No matter how much civilization advances, this message will never grow old. In fact, the more civilization advances, the deeper the need for this message becomes.
② Proclaim Who Human Beings Are — Imago Dei
AI says: “Human beings are information processing systems.” Algorithms say: “Human beings are predictable behavioral patterns.” Transhumanism says: “Human beings are an imperfect version in need of an upgrade.”
Against all these voices, the church must proclaim:
“So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him.” (Genesis 1:27)
Human beings cannot be reduced to algorithms. They are not data points. Human beings bear the image of God (Imago Dei), a dignity that no technology can bestow and no algorithm can strip away. The more digital civilization attempts to define human beings by their data, the more radical this proclamation becomes.
③ Proclaim What True Freedom Is
Digital civilization offers two false freedoms: what appears to be infinite choice, while algorithms are already guiding those choices; and what appears to be a voice for everyone, while platforms decide which voices are amplified.
Against this, the church must proclaim:
“You will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.” (John 8:32)
True freedom is not found in the number of options available. It is found in being liberated from the dominion of sin and restored to the human beings God created us to be. This freedom no platform can provide — it is given only in Christ.
④ Proclaim What True Community Is — Koinonia (κοινωνία)
The deepest paradox of digital civilization is that the most “connected” age in history is simultaneously the loneliest. You can have tens of thousands of followers and still be profoundly alone. Japan’s hikikomori phenomenon, Korea’s generation abandoning relationships, the epidemic of loneliness in the West — all of this testifies that digital connection cannot replace personal community.
This is precisely where the church has its place. The church is not a community matched by algorithms but one bound together by the blood of Christ.
“And they devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers.” (Acts 2:42)
This community — meeting face to face, calling one another by name, bearing one another’s burdens — is the essence of the church that no platform, no AI, can replicate.
5. To Those Entrusted with the Word
This age demands two things simultaneously from those entrusted with the Word: depth and breadth.
Depth means putting down roots ever more deeply into Scripture and theology. The questions of this age may appear new, but Scripture has held the answers for thousands of years. To stand firm in the vortex of digital civilization, the anchor of the Word must be driven deeper than ever before.
Breadth means understanding the language and realities of this age. We must know how AI works, how platform capitalism shapes human desire, and where digital governance is headed. You cannot proclaim the gospel to a world you do not understand.
Just as Paul in Athens surveyed their temples, quoted their poets, and understood their philosophy before proclaiming the gospel (Acts 17:23-28), we too must survey the realities of digital civilization, understand its language, and proclaim the gospel in its very midst.
In the era of the Industrial Revolution, the evangelical community centered around Wilberforce proclaimed the gospel through the abolition of slavery; Spurgeon through preaching; Hudson Taylor through inland mission to China. In the era of the digital revolution, that calling is given to us who live in this age.
Conclusion: This Moment Is the Moment
On the day Jesus entered Jerusalem, the disciples’ praise was not mere emotional expression. It was a proclamation made at a turning point in history — the long-awaited Messiah had come, and a truth the whole world needed to hear was being declared aloud.
The place where we stand is that same kind of turning point.
History does not wait. In this decisive moment when the worldview of digital civilization is being formed, if the church falls silent, other things will cry out. Algorithms will cry out. AI will cry out. Ideology will cry out.
But the Lord did not call us to play the role of stones.
“You are the salt of the earth… You are the light of the world.” (Matthew 5:13-14)
Salt that merely exists is not enough — it must dissolve into what surrounds it. Light that merely burns is not enough — it must shine into the darkness.
Go into the heart of this new world called digital civilization. Learn its language, stand in its public square, and answer its questions with the gospel.
If you do not proclaim, the stones will cry out. But if you proclaim — in this age, the glory of God will be revealed.
“This people I formed for myself that they might declare my praise.” — Isaiah 43:21
