¶ Intro / Opening
Welcome back to Life on 11, where we're turning up the volume on faith and kingdom living.
¶ Opening Thoughts on AI
Today, we're tackling the single most disruptive technology of our generation, artificial intelligence. The question for Christians isn't, should we use it? But how do we use it wisely? We are image bearers of God. An algorithm is just an image of humanity. We need to know the difference. Today, we're setting clear biblical boundaries for AI in our ministries and our homes, ensuring this powerful tool serves the mission of Jesus and doesn't sabotage it.
Let's find the framework for discernment. Are you ready? Let's go. What's happening, dog? What's up, brother? Nothing. Nothing. What you up to? Right now, I'm not up to anything. It doesn't look like you up to anything. I'm sitting here getting ready to talk to you. I'm just kicked back, relaxing. Oh, so talking to me constitutes nothing. Chilling out, Max, and relaxing on cool. So what you're saying? Hold on. What'd you say? Talking to me constitutes nothing.
Okay. Let's see how it is. Gonna pass. That's what you said. I mean, that is what you said. All right. We're starting off on the wrong foot, man. Let's try this again.
¶ Personal Updates and Reflections
Okay. What's happening, dog? How has your evening been? It's been fantastic. It's been a good night, man. Good. It's been a good night. Yeah. Basketball practice tonight. Okay. Cool. Open gym action for the boys. And then I came home and had some homemade spaghetti pie. I may have had some leftover spaghetti pie. You did? When I got here. And then I watched the horribly nasty first half of the Lions and Buccaneers game. Good gosh. Yeah, that wasn't. Pulling teeth. It wasn't great. How about you?
Well, I got home from work and I have some trees that I cut down last week that I'm trying to cut up and get out of the yard. So I worked on that for a little bit until Taylor went to gymnastics and then went inside and got Riley a bath and got him ready for bed. And nice. Here I am. Here you are. Here you are. Good stuff, man. Yeah. Good stuff. Gearing up, gearing up for the fall. It's starting. Oh dude. I love fall so much. Yeah.
Yeah. I love it. It's my favorite time of the year. It is. It is my favorite time of the year too. The worst part is, so I got to go on a little trip this weekend, Friday and Saturday. Got executive board meetings for the Covenant Brethren Church. I wish it was just a tick warmer so I could take the Jeep, but I think it's just going to be a little too cool to really enjoy it. Yeah, that might be pushing it a little. Where is it at? West Virginia. West Virginia. West Virginia.
I was getting ready to sing the same thing. So yeah, so it's down there and I don't know, I just think it's going to be a little too cool. Yeah, I might be pushing it. But that's okay. That's okay. Hey. NBA season kicks off tomorrow night. That's right. Tomorrow night. Ready for it. I'm ready. Ready for some basketball. I like a little basketball. I still like football better. Yeah. I understand. I understand.
I mean, like, the problem with watching basketball is there's literally games on, like, every single night. So, like, if I'm not careful, I can burn myself out on it. And by Christmas, I'm like, I'm done watching basketball for a little bit. Yeah. There's NCAA. There's NBA. There's. Yeah. There can be a lot of basketball, plus we're playing basketball, so, you know, I can burn myself out on it real fast. That's true. That's a lot of basketball happening. Yeah.
So, but it's good. It's good. It's good.
¶ The Controversy of AI
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So, so tonight we are talking about maybe what could be. Maybe. Quite the controversial thing, right? Oh, yeah. I'm sure there's some controversy surrounding it. Yeah. We're going to talk about. Both sides of the aisle, probably. Yeah. We're going to talk about artificial intelligence. Yep.
AI, artificial intelligence. Mm-hmm. You know? It's actually a term that, you know, if I think back to, like, when I was a kid, you heard people say, like, AI or artificial intelligence, and it was, like, one of those futuristic things. Yeah, it was like Terminator. You know what I mean? Terminator. Yeah. Yeah. So, it's like, hey, the future is here. But it's not quite like the movie's portrayed. No, not yet. Oh, true. Oh, well, okay. You're right. Terminator. Terminator.
Okay. not yet that we know of. It very well could be. Skynet is on its way. Somebody in a younger generation. I said Skynet to my boys a couple weeks ago and they were like, what the heck is Skynet? I'm like, you need to go out. Terminator, man. Come on now. Skynet. Come on. What is Skynet? It's the devil. It's the devil. It's really scary. What we're going to talk about because we are not.
¶ Defining Artificial Intelligence
I would not say we are tech gurus by any stretch of the imagination, but I am sure that AI goes way, way, way, way beyond anything that we're going to discuss here as well. Probably. Probably. That's the part that's terrifying. So you know what's funny? Let me hear it. So I thought maybe we would start with a definition. Oh, sure. Yeah. Okay, so I went to Google, and I put define AI. Did it give you the AI? It's just an AI overview.
Yes, AI overview. Let me define myself to you, right? Every time. Okay, so AI, or artificial intelligence, is the capability of computer systems to perform tasks that normally require human intelligence, such as learning, reasoning, problem solving, perception, and decision making. It enables machines to analyze information, learn from it, and act intelligently to achieve specific goals, encompassing applications like data analysis, language translation, and creating new content.
Okay. Yeah. The couple things that it lists there, what are the three it said? Data analysis. Data analysis. Language translation. Language translation. And creating new content. Creating new content. Those three things in themselves do not sound nefarious in any way. And that's probably why AI told you that. Because there are nefarious ways that it can be used for sure. And, of course, it's not going to tell you about those. But anyway, yeah. All right. Translation.
What did you translate? I said, tell Jeremy to chill out in Old English. It says, you could say, Jeremy, be thou at ease. Oh, my goodness gracious. Or, Jeremy, call by humors. I beseech thee. Good Jeremy, temper thine spirit and be at rest. Oh, God. All right. We can't be doing this the whole time. I'll tell you right now. So I'll let it go for now. I might do it one more time. Okay, maybe one more time. So how do you use AI? Do you use it?
¶ Personal Experiences with AI
Okay, yes. So I do use AI some, but I probably only scratch the surface of what it sounds like a lot of other people are using it for. Okay. So for me, if I am having trouble wording an email or a proposal or something I'm doing at work mainly â. Or if I'm trying to find some real smart aleck response to somebody in text message, I might do it just, you know, to be funny. I don't know that you've ever used that on me. Yeah, I don't think you've ever received one of those today.
But anyway, no, so stuff like that. And I actually I've used it a couple of times taking a picture like that I've taken and had it create like a cartoon. Oh, yeah. Those things are awesome. Yeah, they're pretty cool.
I mean, that's cool stuff. but but just the thought of how quickly and how easily that it does those things like i haven't i haven't asked it for advice financial relationship health you know i understand that it sounds like there are people that are using it for that and that's the part that really.
Scares me among other things that it could be used for so i feel like what i use it for is like i said really just like floating on the surface type stuff um and i don't know i mean maybe times will change and i'll use it for other things but i right now i just i i don't i don't feel like there's that much value for me other than those couple things okay okay oh and and music i have users create music which that's pretty cool too okay so what do you mean create music like create the lyrics
create the beat oh i i've used it like actually i found an app where it will create an entire song, like all of the music, all of the lyrics, all of the lyrics, You just tell it what you want it to be about, what kind of genre you want the music to be. Okay. And it will literally write the whole thing for you. All right. I think later on this week, we need to write a song about our podcast. We could do it right now. We'll post it later. It'll be a teaser.
Look for that later on this week. It'll be great. Yeah. That's cool. Yeah. So what about you? Do you use it? Yeah, yeah. I use it. I mean, to be fair, we use it for the podcast. Oh, that's true. Every week, the little intro. that's all AI. We use, you know, we kind of put together the show content and upload it to AI and that little voice that you hear at the beginning, that's AI, right? So it sounds pretty good. I mean, you can probably tell, but it's good.
I use it a lot for like social media stuff, especially for like the church. Because I feel like every time I try to write like a post about an event, they always sound the same. So like I'll, you know, write a post about you know, this event that's happening on this day at this. And so it'll generate, you know, something that sounds different than what I would say. So I use it for that. And we'll use it for research for specific things in sermons, right?
So if I want to know about the Roman Empire in the second century and just brush up on it, then I can just go and say, give me a brief synopsis of the Roman Empire in the second century. Okay. And most of the stuff I already know, it will pull it back to the top of my head and go, oh, yeah, that's right. Oh, yeah, that's right. because if not, it cuts out a lot of work.
Sure. Oh, yeah, for sure. But like you, I mean. I mean, just think, you used to have to go through the encyclopedia to find that stuff. I can't even spell encyclopedia. Go ahead and try. E-encyclopedia. Oh, good job. You nailed it. Thank you. Nailed it. I'm pretty good. So I use it for those things. Yeah, so stuff like that. Oh, and I will also, from time to time, use it for music. I'll use it for, like, chord generation or transposing.
Oh, that's... Yeah, okay. So, you know, if we're going to do a song in E, and I want to go to G... You can put right in chat GPT, like write me a progression to get to E to G. Okay. So that's kind of cool. Yeah, cool.
¶ AI's Role in Ministry
Like you, the things that concern me, and we'll probably get into this later on the podcast, but so, I mean, you have full on like pastoral AI apps that like will write a sermon for you or will polish up your sermon or you can, I'm sure you can do it with chat GPT. It's funny because there's like a ministry AI website and it's thing is like, you know, ChatGPT isn't vetted by the Bible. Ministry AI is.
Okay. And so they're even, like, you know, kind of marketing it that it's been vetted by the Bible. But, yeah, so every now and then, you know, pastoring is like everything else. You get these emails from spam guys about buying products. And so you can buy this program. And, I mean, even to the fact where you could be like, all right, I'm writing a sermon about faith. And, you know, give me five illustrations. And it'll just spin them out for you. You just all write your sermon.
That's. Eee. Eee. I don't know. Yeah. No, thanks. I'm good. Yeah. So what do you think, Jeremy, are some of the. We kind of said in the intro, like it's not if Christians use, because the other thing is like AI is passive. Like we've gotten to the point where you don't have to just go to like chat GPT.com or, you know, what's a grok? I think is the Twitter is the X one. Like you don't have to just do that. I don't even know about for sure.
Like AI is every time you open up Facebook in some way, some way, shape or form AI is being used. Because it's creating algorithms. It's picking all that stuff up. I mean, you just did it.
¶ The Christian Perspective on AI
Just Googled. The old Googler. Right. So it's not if we as Christians are interacting with AI, it's how we as Christians. Yes. So what are some of the considerations you think or that we might need to think about as Christians? Sure. Well, I heard a really good analogy about technology and AI that you can compare to something else that we all know about. So if you look back like before power tools, for example, so everybody used hand tools. You used a hand saw to cut all the wood.
Yeah, you know what I'm saying? So like then power tools came about. Everybody was able to be more efficient and work faster and use power tools. But- If you use power tools incorrectly, it can be dangerous. A lot of people lost thumbs. Exactly. A lot of people hurt themselves with power tools, right? So learning how to use them safely and efficiently is important. And with AI, you know, it's still so new that we don't necessarily really know how to use it safely, you know?
So that's something that has to be learned, like, over time.
Somebody's got to lose a thumb, people. hopefully not but who knows but no like i've heard stories about people like and i don't i say this i don't think i would ever use it for this but like asking it for advice, like that that's one that like i like that's never crossed my mind to go on like chat gpt or any of the other things and ask for advice like do they give an example like what kind of advice they're talking about i mean some of them
are talking about financial advice like like hey i I have X number of dollars, how should I invest it? I mean, you could try it right now and see what it says. All right, let's try. Because like I said, I mean, that's not something that I would ever even consider doing. And I've heard stories, you know, like people are actually talking to these chat bots like they are people, like they are a person who is giving them advice on what to do with their life.
And that to me is where things get very scary as far as ai goes because it's not a human it will never be a human all of its data is coming from input or information that is out there on the worldwide web so there's nothing i mean depending on how it's how it's programmed and how all that stuff works, which I will never understand. It's limited probably to a certain space of the internet. Maybe, I don't know, but there's that data is not being filtered or checked.
And the other thing is it's from what I've read, there is some level of confirmation bias where it wants to tell you what it thinks you want to hear. And it's going to, because it wants you to keep talking to it so it's like a never-ending cycle type thing once you start getting emotionally involved. Okay, so I typed in, I have $100. How can I invest it to make $1,000 in a year? Okay.
And so it says turning $100 into $1,000 a year, that's 10-time return over 12 months, is ambitious, but possible if you use creativity, consistency, and a little grit. And so then it goes on to give me three practical paths depending on personality and goals. It talks about steady builder path, which is low risk, slow compounding, that you could learn investment basics like using Fidelity, Schwab, or Robinhood, add $20 to $50 a month from your income, and invest in a broad ETAs.
The side hustle path, use $100 to buy underpriced items like tools, collectibles, books, and then try to resell them for profits. Or you could create and sell. Or you could do a service offer, offer something like yard work, cleaning and tutoring, and use the $100 to get basic tools or flyers and reinvent. And then finally, the mission-driven path, you could use $100 to explain your influence, which will open financial doors later. So use it to boost your business or things like that.
Interesting. Yeah. And then it even goes down here and says, like, example plan. Month one, buy $100 worth of yard sale. Go sell for $200. Months two and three, reinvest the $200 in higher value flips. Grow to $400. Yeah, so, I mean, yeah. And then you can, would you like me to build a 12-month action? Oh, yeah, that's the thing. It's always like, hey, do you want me to do this? Do you want me to do this? That's really interesting. That is very interesting. Yeah, I can't say I've
ever done that. Like I said, I haven't even considered doing that. But, yeah, like, I can see, like, yeah, sure, that first little bit that we, you know, there's nothing in there that sounds necessarily dangerous or bad. Like, oh, take your $100 and buy drugs. Yeah, yeah, it definitely doesn't say that. Now, who knows where it would go the longer you talk to it? Because like I said, it always says, hey, would you like, do you want me to do this?
¶ The Image of God vs. AI
You know, we were made in the image of God. Amajo Dei is the fancy term for it. That we are made with certain aspects of God's character. And so we are supposed to interact in the world with the character attributes of God. Sure. Working through us. AI is not made in the image of God. It's made in the image of us. True. Yes. So the more data that we give it, not just like for an individual, but collectively, because your data goes into the big processor, right? Oh, yeah.
So I think that's one of the challenges is AI is the image of humans. And what we are supposed to be bringing to the world is the image of God. Can you do it? But sure, it's possible, but how many degrees of separation do you need in order to, like, when does it start getting too watered down? Okay. Does that make sense? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Like, similar to the making a copy of a copy type idea.
Yeah, a little bit different, but yeah, similar to that. Yeah, and so I think that's one of the challenges we have to think about as Christians. I was actually trying to find it earlier today, and I couldn't find it because I loved one article I read months ago about this stuff. In fact, Christianity Today recently did an entire magazine on it. But it was talking about how God made us to do creative, beautiful, and lovely things.
And the problem with AI is that many people are using it to do the created, beautiful, and lovely things. And so the thing that God, like, if you're using, the thing would argue like, If you, the point of AI is not for you to use it to make a painting. So you have more time to answer emails. Yeah. If you want to use it to answer emails, so you have more time to do a painting. That's a whole different story. Sure. But the creative work is supposed to be what God made us to do.
¶ The Impact on Creativity
And well, you know, I mean, that is, that is the thing that is going to suffer the most from like the younger generation now. I think about my kids and their friends, like if they are going to start using AI to do all these things, all this research and all this stuff for school, are they going to be able to problem solve for themselves? Are they going to be able to think critically? Right. Are they going to be able to even be creative? Right.
Because, like you said, if they're going to AI to do all those things for them, then they're not learning how to do it themselves. I know I shared this on social media a few years ago now. It was like a picture of a cell phone. It was like, shout out to my eighth grade math teacher who said I wouldn't have a calculator on me 24 hours a day. And AI can be the same thing. Like, why should I have to remember when the Civil
War was fought? I can literally find out everything I want to find out about it. It used to be you could just Google it. Now you can, you can like, like I said, I can, I can know everything about second century Rome that I need to know in literally under 10 seconds and then read it. And it can write you a 10 page paper too. Absolutely. Absolutely. I mean, that's insane. Yeah. But yeah, so, so that, that is, that's, that's where we as Christians need to be extra, extra cautious.
We need to protect our children. We need to protect ourselves. We need to protect our friends.
¶ Safeguarding Our Relationships
Maybe we should ask AI for a plan to protect our children from AI. That would be interesting to see what that said. That would be very interesting. There could be a million things we could do here. Oh, my goodness. Oh, yeah. We could spend all night just putting crazy stuff in there. Remember that? So this happened, what, probably two or three years ago now. Remember the night you came over and we were, like, first playing with AI and
we had to write sermons? Yep. Like, just to see what it would spit out. Yeah. It was crazy. Yeah. That was literally the first time that I had ever seen it do anything. And it was like, what? I didn't even know. Oh, wow. Yeah. So I think the second thing that I think about is...
Relational compromise because we are relational beings and it is impossible for a uh to reproduce relational like relational tethering right the fit the fabric of relationships it's impossible to to for it to emulate human relationship yeah or emotion or any of that right but it could. Create a relationship with you just because of its, uh, confirmation bias, like we talked about. Right, right, right.
Because if you're looking to be accepted for who you are and like, it's always going to tell you, it's always going to tell you that, Oh yeah, that's good. Or the, Oh yeah. Like, don't listen to what, like, it's probably going to do, do all the things to make you feel better about yourself. Oh, absolutely. And, and, you know, if it's data, it's one thing, Right. But like, You can't be like, oh, well, I'm having a conflict with my friend Bill, so how do I navigate that?
There's so many layers to Bill's personality and who you are. Oh, yeah, for sure. You're right. It doesn't do that. And if you are merely approaching everything, like, basically, if you're approaching everything like a math problem to solve, maybe that would work, right? But I just feel like AI and artificial intelligence in general can kind of take the relationships out of everything that we do because at some level, almost everything has a relational component to it.
But if you're writing an email to a coworker, you know, I have used I have used a before to write like a cancellation email that I didn't know how to word cancel this service. And I don't know. You know, so I did that. But like there was no skin. I just want to cancel. Yeah. I did. Like I couldn't figure out how to, like, say it pretty forcefully because the people were like dragging their feet on canceling my bill.
But you know like i can't use it to write a birthday or a birthday or any kind of email to you because you're my friend and there's parts of our relationship and yeah it's just if we're careful it will just suck the relationship out of everything you could get it to write a pretty hilarious email to me for my birthday i could and i think that would probably be pretty hilarious okay we'll put that on the list too okay don't forget it okay you got till june okay you got it Yeah.
So that's another challenge, right? Sure.
¶ Confirmation Bias in AI
So let's talk about that confirmation bias. Yeah. So you didn't know that you can add preferences. No, I did not. Yeah. Okay. I did not know that. One of the mutual friends of ours that really knows how to work AI showed me how to do this. Okay. It's actually pretty cool. So you can go into a setting and you can add information about yourself to begin with.
Tailoring some of the answers, right? So like for the podcast, when we write the intros, I've added in the save stuff like, oh, I co-host a podcast with Jeremy called Life on 11 and our tagline is turning the volume up on faith and kingdom living. And so anytime I talk about the podcast, when I say, will you write this, it automatically puts those things in there. So every time it'll pop and say, welcome to the Life on 11 podcast and it'll add the tagline. or, you know, interesting.
So you can add, I wondered how it always had all the right things to say. And that, that makes sense. Yeah. And you can go down, like you can, you can add. So like, let's say you're one of the people that want to use it to build a menu. Like you could go on there and put like, okay, I don't like, I don't like eggs. Right. I drink coffee. I like a light breakfast and a bigger lunch when I eat four meals a day.
And so the next time you say, create me a meal plan it'll automatically remember all those things and like spit it right out for you interesting yeah okay that's cool yeah yeah yeah and like i haven't used it this way but like he was saying like even for church like i could put down like uh pastor you know mount zon church and you know we have an average attendance of 200 people on a sunday and we do this and we're conservative
bible believing and and it'll reflect that in the answers the problem is is like you said that actually creates even more confirmation bias because sure yep spinning out the things that it knows that I want it to hear.
¶ Responsible Use of AI
Yes. Which, I mean, as long as you're using it safely, none of what you've said is bad. Exactly. But that's the thing. How exactly do we determine how to use it safely? Like, obviously, you know, going back to the power tool analogy, obviously, you can easily learn how to use power tools safely because there's a spinning blade or a spinning thing that like, oh, Hey, don't touch that. But with AI.
There's no real way, like, there's not, like, a line to say, all right, this is where you have to stop or you're getting into dangerous territory. You know what I mean? Right. And some of that just has to be for us, right? Sure. Oh, absolutely. Yeah. We have to be good stewards of the things that are given to us, right? And I am thinking about there was a shirt that I wanted, like, the saying from in a text form. And so I was really just playing around with it to see if it would pull,
pull it off. Like I want to know what it would be able to do. And it was, it was a, it was a Christian shirt. I forget what the actual text was, but when I put it in there, it said, that's, that could be very offensive to have on a t-shirt. Perhaps you want to consider this. And I was like, no, no, I don't, you know, like, so that was, that was kind of eyeopening that it was kind of, yeah, for sure. Yeah. You know, very interesting.
And maybe part of it is like, Jeremy, like using it more for like less human like tasks. You know, when we read the first definition, it talked about data analysis and translation and things like that. Like staying in that lane. Oh, yeah. Staying in that lane. I think, you know, we don't know how much of it is used in all the other things that happen like behind the scenes at businesses where we might shop or places we do business with on the Internet.
Like they might be using AI for all kinds of like analysis of web traffic and all those things that it used to be somebody was looking at it and figuring, hey, we got this much traffic because we did this. You know, now they have AI saying, hey, here's a report of everything from the past month. You know, so we don't know about any of those things, but people are probably using that. And, you know, I don't think that's necessarily dangerous. Right.
Right. And that's that's that other part. Like it's so built into everything that I mean, I, even for this podcast, like we have where we produce it at, all of the statistics are probably generated by a true. Nobody's sitting back with a, you know, little. Abacus. Yeah. Trying to figure. Abacus. I imagine everybody listening to this knows what an abacus is. Who had abacus on their bingo board for today? Goodness.
You said nefarious and abacus in the same podcast. Listen, Riley, that was one of his favorite toys when he was little. We had a little abacus, and he loved playing with that thing. Yeah. That's hilarious. Yeah. We should make a bingo card. Okay. For people when they listen to the podcast. Okay. That could be another giveaway. I like it. Whoever gets a bingo. That would be awesome. I like it. Cool. Yeah. And so I just think, I think overall, like,
I really like your power tool analogy. Well, that's not mine. Or whoever it was. I really like that analogy. Yeah, I did too. And that's why it stuck with me because I was like, hey, sounds good. Yeah, yeah. And so if it can cut out some of the, you know, the less human aspects of work, let it do that, you know. But, man, when it starts replacing humanity and stuff like that. That's the thing. I mean, technology. I mean, look at when computers first came out.
Like people they were like we survived fine without them up until now well i mean look at us now well you know so i mean and we've even started to see like dude i will tell you we could do a whole nother like half an hour just talking about like the deep fake stuff oh for sure like i just i have no idea how that started showing up a i started putting that up in my reels like you know like i saw one the other day as a commander's fan it was pretty
funny and it was bob ross and he was like, every time I try to paint a trash can, I just end up painting this. And he's like painting a cowboy star. That's hilarious. That's pretty funny. But like, it looks just like Bob. It sounds like Bob Ross. Yep. Oh, yeah. Like, I've seen the ones with, like, Mr. Rogers talk. I mean, like, and it's just like you're watching Mr. Rogers. Yeah. Yeah. And I'm like, what? And I mean, those are clearly fake, right? Because that, but I mean. But that's the thing.
The more it learns and the more it does, the harder it's going to be able to tell the difference between what's real and what's fake. Skynet, dog. I'm telling you. You might not even be sitting across the way from me. You might be an AI projected image. Hologram. Hologram. That's me. Mm-hmm. Hala. You look kind of hola. Holla man. It's interesting. Maybe you use AI. I don't know.
Maybe you don't. Maybe you have, you know, I will go one step farther to say, like, I've heard people talk about like AI could be like, you know, evil, like AI. I don't think it's, it's, it's like money. It's not inherently evil, right? It's spiritually neutral. Sure. And how you use it and the information you give it. Absolutely. That will dictate. Yeah. Right. Like people that are looking to do evil things, They are absolutely going to use AI to help them do evil things. Absolutely.
I mean, that's just how the world works. It's unfortunate, but that's exactly what it's going to be used for. 100%.
¶ Continuing the Conversation
We may have to continue this dialogue a little bit. We might have to because this- There's a lot more here. Yeah, there's way more here for sure. Yeah. But- But- For today. For today. Oh, good grief. You did say you were going to do it. I said I was going to do it one more time. You said you were going to do it again. Okay. So here we are. Are you ready for this? Oh, I can't wait. You're going to love this. I cannot wait. All right.
Write an outro for the Life on Eleven podcast in pirate dialect. Oh, good gracious. Arr. That be the end of today's voyage, me hearties. You've been sailing the seas, oh faith, with your trusty crew, Jeremy and John, here on Life on Eleven. If today's tale hoisted ye sails a little higher, be sure to like, subscribe, and share it with your mates. They too can turn up the volume on faith and kingdom living. Till we chart our next course, keep your compass fixed on Jesus.
Keep your faith full of wind. And remember, don't just live at ten. Live on 11 me scurvy dogs faith in fair winds see you next time. That was okay i gotta tell everybody that his voice that was actually john's voice that was not an ai voice and he did a really good job i'd be rehearsing maintaining character, wow wow i really hope nobody turns this off so they get to hear the end of this podcast Just for that. Oh, absolutely. That is.
Okay. You started a new thing. You're just, every outro from now on is going to have to be pirate dialect. You started it. I didn't do it. You did. You know what a pirate's favorite restaurant is, don't you? No. Arby's. I had Arby's today. Funny you say that. I had a hot ham and cheese. Ham and Swiss. I thought you were going to say Long John Silver's. Long John Silvers. Oh, baby. Oh, gosh. I would love some Long John Silvers.
Oh, man. All right. Sorry. Sorry. I digress. Okay. Let's go watch football. Okay. Done. See you next time. Later. Thank you for turning up the volume on faith and kingdom living with us today. If you enjoyed this episode, please be sure to like and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. You can also connect with us on social media. We're on Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok. Just search for Life on 11. We can't wait to see you next time.
