Beyond artificial words: The pastoral heart in an age of AI
ChatGPT may be efficient, but pastors can't give up on specificity and authenticity, writes Jeremy Wilhelmi.
The Rev. Jeremy Wilhelmi serves as the university chaplain at the University of the Ozarks in Clarksville, Arkansas. His ministry seeks to help students become more compassionate and neighborly as they grow in faith.
ChatGPT may be efficient, but pastors can't give up on specificity and authenticity, writes Jeremy Wilhelmi.
Come alive, O Christ in every broken place so that love fills every gap, writes Jeremy Wilhelmi.
When 14-year-old Emmett Till was murdered, his mother Mamie boldly decided to publish pictures of his brutalized body, revealing the violence of racism to the nation. In the campaign to end gun violence, what can we learn from her courage and creativity, writes Jeremy Wilhelmi?
Jeremy Wilhelmi reflects on encouraging his children to accept all forms of gender and sexuality. Sometimes, this means letting them experience the world without commentary, he writes.
College chaplain Jeremy Wilhelmi encourages college students to be curious as they claim their own faith, often for the first time.
"I’m called to be a chaplain. I didn’t settle for this vocation. I am not a chaplain because I couldn’t cut it in the parish. I truly believe the Holy Spirit guided me here."
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