@yurikoETH
They don’t want you to know this, but you can speak with the real Jesus for free through prayer.
Just Like Me's AI 'Jesus' avatar, voiced like Jonathan Roumie, charges $1.99/min, can pray and remember chats — prompting 61.6% confront vs 13.0% support.
Tech company Just Like Me has launched an AI Jesus avatar users can talk to for $1.99 per minute The AI, based on The Chosen actor Jonathan Roumie, can pray with users, speak multiple languages, and remember past conversations https://t.co/MzYal02rF6
Real-time analysis of public opinion and engagement
What the community is saying — both sides
many see charging for “AI Jesus” as a corrupting profit motive — “Jesus would flip tables,” “for the love of money” and similar reactions condemn turning spiritual guidance into a paywall.
critics warn this product preys on people seeking spiritual help, calling it grifting and a predatory service targeting gullible users.
people worry AI is supplanting real pastoral care — “replacing priests/confession” and eroding authentic human interaction in faith.
commenters fear users will blame the AI for harmful acts or use it to justify behavior, shifting responsibility away from persons.
several replies frame AI Jesus as an “idol” or evidence of an “Anti-Christ” trend — technology becoming a false object of worship.
others point to intellectual property issues (mentions of Roumie/rights and “Christ on Copyright”) and suggest potential lawsuits over likeness and authorship.
the $1.99/min and $49.99/month plans are read not as mere pricing but as a strategy to create emotional dependency and recurring revenue — “betting on repeat emotional dependency.”
a minority applauds the idea as a smart niche business — “brilliant,” “money printer” — seeing it as another rentable novelty.
many replies use humor to undercut the idea, riffing on subscription prompts (“Subscribe to Jesus Pro+”), memes about paid confessions, and joking critiques of the price.
Many see an “AI Jesus” as outright sacrilege: a false god, a digital golden calf, or a demonic/Antichrist imitation that Scripture warns against.
Repeated argument: access to Jesus comes through prayer and the Bible at no cost, so paying for a simulated Jesus is unnecessary and offensive.
Charging per minute or selling spiritual access is criticized as cynical profiteering that echoes the money-changers Jesus condemned.
Concerns that the product preys on the mentally ill, the elderly, or emotionally desperate users and could worsen religious delusions or psychosis.
Beyond religion, commenters worry about the ethics of teaching an LLM to impersonate sacred figures, AI creating false communities, and technology replacing genuine spiritual relationship.
Questions about whether the likeness or voice of actors (e.g., Jonathan Roumie) was authorized and whether this crosses legal or moral lines.
Strong reactions urging removal, repentance, excommunication or even bans — people demanding immediate corrective action.
A mix of sarcastic responses, memes and “life-hacks”: use free Bible apps, craft prompts for existing AIs, or mock the venture as a ridiculous, dystopian scam.
Most popular replies, ranked by engagement
They don’t want you to know this, but you can speak with the real Jesus for free through prayer.
You can talk to Jesus for free anytime.
They tried it with allah but it wouldn’t stop talking to 9yos on Roblox
Man made horrors.
☠️users can talk to for $1.99 per minute or $49.99 a month for a 45-minute call with AI Jesus
Users can also pay $49.99 a month for a 45-minute call with AI Jesus https://t.co/74y7vlhFMN
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