The Coming Flood Of Evil: ChatGPT's Adult Content Will Create Digital Babylon
By PNW StaffOctober 17, 2025
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When Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, announced that ChatGPT would begin allowing "erotica for verified adults" starting December 2025, the world crossed a moral line that should never have been approached. His defense -- "We are not the elected moral police of the world" -- was meant to sound neutral and enlightened. But in reality, it was the digital equivalent of Pontius Pilate washing his hands.
This plan is being sold as a matter of "adult freedom," but make no mistake: this is about normalizing sin, monetizing lust, and expanding the reach of evil under the guise of technology. What began as a tool for knowledge and creativity now risks becoming a factory for temptation -- and the spiritual consequences could be catastrophic.
Let's look at five ways this new direction will be deeply harmful to both society and the soul -- and why Christians must see this as a moral emergency.
1. The corruption of intimacy and the slow death of love
Artificial intelligence has already blurred the lines between reality and illusion. But AI-generated erotica will go further -- offering people simulated lovers, "custom" fantasies, and seductive conversations designed to satisfy fleshly cravings rather than heal the heart.
This is not freedom. It is digital slavery dressed up as personal liberty.
When machines start whispering to lonely souls, what happens to the sanctity of marriage? To the discipline of chastity? The more people engage with fantasy, the less capable they become of genuine human connection. AI erotica doesn't create love -- it counterfeits it. And the soul that settles for imitation begins to lose its hunger for the real thing.
Scripture warns, "The lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life is not of the Father, but of the world" (1 John 2:16). AI erotica takes all three and packages them into a glowing screen.
2. The objectification of humanity -- and the gateway for darker corruption
Even with all the promises of "safe" and "consensual" use, the truth is simple: when technology becomes a vehicle for lust, it trains people to see others as objects. Every simulated act becomes a rehearsal of sin. Every generated fantasy deepens the neural grooves of addiction.
And what begins as adult entertainment will inevitably leak downward. Filters fail. IDs are faked. Teens share accounts. Once the technology exists, it spreads like wildfire -- faster than any moral system can contain it. The exploitation that already thrives in digital pornography will multiply. This is not a possibility; it is a certainty.
When a society invites artificial lust into its daily rhythm, it opens the gates to an infection of the spirit. What begins in secret on a private screen soon becomes visible in the collapse of families, in desensitized children, and in the corrosion of conscience.
3. The addiction of the mind and the slow death of the soul
We already live in a world drowning in pornography addiction. Now imagine something infinitely more dangerous -- a machine that adapts to your temptations, remembers your preferences, and feeds them back to you in ever-more alluring ways.
That is what AI erotica will be: temptation personalized.
Such technology won't merely entertain sin -- it will engineer it. Millions will fall into deeper isolation and shame. Marriages will falter. Depression will soar. The human mind, designed to be renewed by the Word of God, will instead be rewired by an algorithm trained to corrupt it.
And once the soul is trapped in an endless feedback loop of desire, repentance feels harder to reach. That is the very definition of bondage.
4. Evil will spread faster than ever before
Sin has always found ways to multiply, but AI gives it rocket fuel. The moment OpenAI opens this door, armies of developers will rush in to build their own erotic chatbots, each pushing further, darker, and more explicit boundaries.
This isn't theoretical. Every time a moral wall comes down in technology -- whether through pornography, violent gaming, or online exploitation -- imitators rush to fill the space. The result is a moral contagion.
Christians must understand that evil does not stay in its lane. It spreads. It normalizes. It numbs. And in the digital world, it travels at the speed of light.
5. The false promise of "verified adults" -- and the road to digital control
To be clear, age verification is absolutely necessary when technology deals with adult content. Children must be protected -- full stop. But what troubles many is what follows next. Once society accepts that "verification" is the price of access, we begin normalizing a future in which you must prove your identity not only to view content -- but to exist online.
Today it's "verified adults." Tomorrow it could be "verified citizens." Eventually, "verified beliefs."
This move edges us closer to a fully regulated internet, where access is controlled by a global digital ID framework. Once that door opens, the same system that keeps children out of erotic content could easily be used to silence dissent, monitor speech, and classify faith. Freedom can vanish in the name of safety.
The moral battle before us
Altman insists that OpenAI is "not the moral police of the world." But that statement itself reveals the problem: the idea that morality can be optional in a world where every click, word, and whisper can now be generated by machines.
This is not a technological question. It is a spiritual one.
Will humanity allow its tools to serve darkness, or will it draw a line -- a line that defends purity, family, and the holiness of human life?
Because if we do not, we are not entering an age of liberation -- we are entering an age of temptation, isolation, and moral decay.
AI is not evil by nature. But when the architects of this new digital world treat sin as a business model and moral limits as obstacles, evil spreads quickly. And this time, it will not creep -- it will flood.
Christians must not be silent. We are called to be salt and light in an increasingly shadowed age. This is not prudish alarmism -- it is spiritual realism. A technology capable of reshaping thought and desire must never be allowed to become a marketplace for lust.
If OpenAI's plan moves forward, we will be witnessing not innovation, but invasion -- of hearts, homes, and souls. And no algorithm, no age gate, no "verification system" can contain the darkness that will follow.
What is needed now is courage -- the courage to say no to the digital serpent's whisper: "You will not surely die."