When Machines Touch Mystery
How I Built an AI Tool to Assist With Biblical Dream Interpretation — And Why It Does Not Replace God
My dreams began arriving in such volume that interpretation became nearly impossible. Some nights brought a few; others, a dozen or more. By morning, I was behind.
So I did what any modern-day dreamer with a Bible, a journal, and a curiosity for technology might do—
I built an AI tool to help me.
But let's be clear:
AI cannot hear the voice of God.
It cannot commune with the Spirit.
It cannot enter the realm of revelation.
It is dust and circuitry—yet dust and circuitry can still organize, retrieve, and learn.
And that means it can serve the servant of God.
Why I Built It
As dreams multiplied, I wondered if a Scripture-trained AI could speed interpretation without replacing revelation's Source.
Because I'm skilled in AI, I built a system whose foundation was the Bible.
Then I added trusted voices on biblical dreams—John Paul Jackson, Dr. Joe Ibojie, Adrian Beale, Adam Thompson, James Goll—and theological guides like John Wimber, Wayne Grudem, and Jack Deere.
To guard purity, I deleted all modern psychological models—Freud, Jung, and others. This was not a suggestion; it was a purge.
My Symbol Library
I also trained the model on the prophetic language God has built with me:
- Range Rover → Life direction or power
- Convertible → Open heavens
- Sheila (my wife) → The Bride of Christ
- LinkedIn → Get more linked in with the Spirit
- U2 → "You too" — divine invitation
- The Rolling Stones → Resurrection
- Tim Stassi → Jesus as faithful friend
These are not random. They're patterns confirmed through Scripture and prayer. The AI doesn't invent meaning—it recognizes it.
Does It Work?
Surprisingly, yes. When trained and corrected, AI becomes a rapid-response assistant—sorting, recalling, and organizing insights faster than I can by hand.
Yet it remains only a servant.
AI does not hear God or discern spirits. Only the Holy Spirit does that.
Used rightly, it helps me stay faithful to the vast volume of revelation God entrusts.
The Takeaway
We stand at the meeting point of two worlds—
the ancient world of dreams and the emerging world of artificial intelligence.
One carries revelation.
The other, information.
When information bows to revelation, tools become servants—and servants help build the Kingdom.
My AI Bible Assistant isn't divine or prophetic. But it's fast, disciplined, and obedient to the Word it was trained upon.
When God increases revelation, He also provides the means to steward it.
Sometimes that's a journal.
Sometimes a whispered prayer.
And sometimes… a small machine helping you keep up with Heaven.
