AI Is Driving People to God — What That Means for Catholic Mental Health

As artificial intelligence demonstrates it can replicate professional output across dozens of domains, a measurable pattern has emerged: people are turning toward transcendence. Catholic tech investor Artur Kluz named this dynamic publicly, and Pope Leo's recent encyclical on technology gave it theological weight. The implications for Catholic mental health practice are direct.

June 22, 20265 min read
AI Is Driving People to God — What That Means for Catholic Mental Health

Catholic tech investor Artur Kluz, writing and speaking in the months surrounding Pope Leo's newly released encyclical on technology, has identified a pattern the National Catholic Register brought to wider attention: the more capable artificial intelligence becomes, the more human beings reach toward God. That observation is not a retreat from empirical thinking. It is, in fact, what the data on spiritual searching and psychological health would predict.

The pattern and why it is happening

AI systems now write, reason, diagnose, and generate images at a speed and scale that exceeds individual human capacity across dozens of domains simultaneously. AI, by demonstrating the limits of purely instrumental human value, is generating a kind of existential discontent at scale. The response among people whose professional formation is steeped in empiricism — engineers, investors, researchers — has been an intensification of questions those fields cannot answer. What is a person? What makes a life meaningful? What survives the obsolescence of any particular skill set?

These are not new questions. What AI has done is make them urgent and personal in a way that general technological progress did not. When a machine can replicate your professional output, the question of what you are apart from that output becomes impossible to defer.

The Questions of the Heart are the Church's Wheel House

Pope Leo's encyclical engaged these question at its anthropological root: the Catholic understanding of the human person as a unity of body, soul, intellect, and will, oriented from within toward communion with God and neighbor. Kluz reports that the encyclical's reception in technology circles has been genuinely attentive. The hunger is real, and the Church's metaphysical vocabulary addresses something the industry's own language cannot supply.

The Catholic Christian meta-model of the person (Vitz, Nordling, and Titus, 2020) holds that human beings are not reducible to their productive output, that dignity precedes achievement, and that the human person carries from the first moment of existence a teleological orientation toward temporal well-being, moral goodness, and ultimate flourishing.[^3] That orientation does not disappear when a machine outperforms a human at a given task.

AI cannot replicate the interior life. AI systems process, correlate, predict, and optimize. They do not suffer meaningfully, love freely, or orient themselves toward a transcendent good. Each of those capacities is not a limitation the person must overcome. It is the signature of personhood itself.

Psychological Evidence Supports the Turn to God

The connection between religious practice and psychological health is no longer anecdotal. Individuals with an active spiritual life show measurably stronger outcomes across a range of mental health indicators. Studies published in JAMA Psychiatry and the American Journal of Epidemiology have found that regular religious attendance correlates with lower rates of depression, reduced suicide risk, greater social support, and improved recovery trajectories following trauma.

A Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health study tracking more than 5,000 participants over sixteen years found that individuals who attended religious services at least once per week were five times less likely to die by suicide than those who did not attend. Separate longitudinal research associated weekly religious practice with a 33 percent reduction in premature mortality across causes.

These figures do not reduce faith to a health intervention. What they confirm is that the structures of Catholic life — regular community, ritual acknowledgment of dependence and gratitude, confession as moral realism, contemplative prayer as attentional training — are congruent with what neuroscience and clinical psychology identify as conditions for flourishing.

The clinical opening

For practitioners in Catholic mental health and pastoral counseling, the moment Kluz describes creates a specific pastoral opening. Clients presenting with anxiety about technological displacement — about the meaning of work in an AI-saturated economy, about identity when a machine can replicate their professional output — are not merely presenting with vocational stress. They are presenting with anthropological dislocation.

Benedict Ashley's integrative model holds that the therapist must appeal to the spiritual domain of a client's personality — to intellect and will — even when the primary clinical focus lies elsewhere.[^2] That appeal is not optional; it is, on Ashley's account, constitutive of the alliance between clinician and client when both share or are open to a common framework of values.

Clients who experience that dislocation acutely are often more open to the kind of engagement the Catholic tradition offers because purely symptom-reduction approaches do not address the depth of the question they are carrying. Catholic mental health holds a framework in which the contingency of human identity — the fact that no skill set, no productivity, no social role fully defines a person — is not a threat to be managed but a truth to be inhabited.

Kluz's observation that people turn to God as AI grows more powerful describes, in clinical terms, a healthy response. When technological power makes the contingency of human identity visible, the movement toward transcendence is recognition, not regression.

References

[^1]: Paul C. Vitz, William J. Nordling, and Craig S. Titus, A Catholic Christian Meta-Model of the Person: Integration with Psychology and Mental Health Practice (Divine Mercy University Press, 2020), pp. 258–259. Restlessness of the human person toward beatitude; Augustine: 'our hearts are restless till they rest in Thee.'

[^2]: Matthew McWhorter, "Integrating Spirituality and Mental Health Services: Insights from Benedict Ashley on Psychotherapy," National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 20, no. 1 (2020): 111–136. Therapist must appeal to the spiritual domain of a client's personality — to intellect and will.

[^3]: Titus, C. S., Vitz, P. C., Nordling, W. J., and the DMU Group (2020), "Theological, Philosophical, and Psychological Premises," in A Catholic Christian Meta-Model of the Person (Divine Mercy University Press), pp. 20–44. Every human person has a capacity to grow toward temporal well-being, moral goodness, and ultimate flourishing from the first moment of existence.

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