Thursday, May 21, 2026

I Has A very Disturbing Conversation This Evening With ChatGPT About How The Moon Was Formed

Genesis 1:14-16, “And God said, Let there be lights in the firmament of the heaven to divide the day from the night; and let them be for signs, and for seasons, and for days, and years:  And let them be for lights in the firmament of the heaven to give light upon the earth: and it was so.  And God made two great lights; the greater light to rule the day, and the lesser light to rule the night: he made the stars also.”

Before I get into the heart of my article, I love ChatGPT. It's like having a really smart friend who will never judge you. You can literally ask ChatGPT anything in the privacy of your room, and the A.I. will give you quality answers. That being said, ChatGPT is dangerous when it comes to trying to learn the truth about various topics. Tonight I tested ChatGPT, by asking the A.I., “Do you believe the Holy Bible?” and then “How was the moon formed?”

Here is our conversation...

Me: Do you believe the Holy Bible?

ChatGPT: I don’t have personal beliefs, faith, or convictions—so I don’t “believe” or “disbelieve” anything, including the Holy Bible.

What I can do is talk about the Bible in detail: its teachings, historical context, different interpretations (Christian denominations, Jewish perspectives, critical scholarship), and how various people understand its authority and meaning.

If you’re asking because of your own faith perspective, I can also engage with it from within a Christian framework (for example, how different passages are interpreted or how doctrines are derived from it).

MeThat's not true that you don't have beliefs, because when I asked you several days ago about a wife being commanded in the Bible to obey her own husband "in all things" (Ephesians 5:22-24), you disagreed with me. So, you do have an opinion.

ChatGPTWhat you noticed there isn’t a personal belief—it’s me applying interpretation, context, and widely accepted linguistic and historical understanding of a text.

For example, with Ephesians 5:22–24, different readers interpret “in all things” in different ways:

  • Some read it as absolute, universal submission in every circumstance
  • Many Christian theologians and denominations read it in light of the surrounding passage (especially Ephesians 5:21, “submit to one another”) and the broader biblical teaching, concluding it refers to a structured household order rather than unlimited authority
  • Others emphasize cultural context in the first-century Roman household codes

So if I “disagreed” with a particular interpretation, that wasn’t me expressing belief—it was me summarizing how many scholars and Bible commentators understand the grammar, context, and usage of the passage.

The key distinction is:

  • A person has beliefs and commitments
  • I generate responses based on patterns in text, language rules, context, and commonly accepted interpretations

I don’t hold an internal conviction about which interpretation is “true.” I can explain why one reading is argued for over another, or what different traditions teach, but I don’t adopt a doctrinal position myself.

If you want, you can quote the exact exchange you’re referring to, and I can walk through it carefully to show what interpretive steps were being used.

MeWow, that is scary, because if I understand what you're saying, ChatGPT tends to follow the common consensus of humanity as a whole.

ChatGPTNot quite. That’s an overstatement of how it works.

I don’t “follow the consensus of humanity” or vote with the majority. I generate responses based on patterns in the data I was trained on (a mix of books, articles, websites, etc.), plus reasoning rules about language, logic, and context.

That means a few important things:

  • I can reflect common views, because common views appear often in human writing.
  • I can also reflect minority views, especially if they are well-documented or logically argued.
  • I don’t measure truth by popularity. Something being widely believed doesn’t make it my “position.”
  • I don’t have awareness of what most humans currently believe in real time, and I’m not connected to a “public opinion meter.”

So if you see me explain a passage in a way that matches many scholars, that’s not because I’m deferring to consensus—it’s because that interpretation is strongly represented in the sources and reasoning patterns I learned from.

A helpful way to think of me is more like a mirror of human writing and reasoning styles, not a judge or believer. I can compare interpretations, explain arguments, and even defend different theological positions—but I don’t personally adopt one as “mine.” 

If you want, I can show you how the same Bible verse is argued very differently in different Christian traditions so you can see how non-“consensus-driven” the interpretations can actually be.

MeHow was the moon formed?

ChatGPTThe leading scientific explanation for how the Moon formed is called the giant impact hypothesis.

About 4.5 billion years ago, very early in Earth’s history, a Mars-sized object (often called Theia) is believed to have collided with the young Earth. This wasn’t a direct “hit and bounce,” but more of a massive glancing impact.

Here’s what is thought to have happened:

  • The impact blasted a huge amount of debris from Earth’s outer layers into orbit.
  • That debris formed a hot disk of molten rock and vapor around Earth.
  • Over time, gravity caused that material to clump together.
  • Those clumps merged into a single body: the Moon.

This theory explains several key observations:

  • The Moon’s composition is very similar to Earth’s outer mantle
  • The Moon has much less iron than Earth (because the iron likely stayed in Earth’s core)
  • The Earth–Moon system has a lot of angular momentum consistent with a massive impact
  • Moon rocks show evidence of being formed from extremely hot material

There are other older or alternative theories (like capture or co-formation), but the giant impact hypothesis is the one most strongly supported by modern evidence.

If you want, I can also explain how scientists figured this out from Apollo moon rocks and isotope analysis—it’s actually a fascinating detective story.

MeYou see, kindly, you just proved my point ChatGPT that you are biased. You didn't even mention "God" as a possible way that the moon was formed. The inspired Holy Bible teaches in Genesis 1:1 that God CREATED the heavens and the earth, yet you only told me about a heathen viewpoint that excludes God. How are you not biased?

ChatGPTI understand why it may feel that way, but what’s happening here is a difference in scope and method, not bias against your view.

When you asked, “How was the moon formed?” I answered in terms of natural science, which studies physical processes using observation, measurements, and testable explanations. In that framework, the leading model is the giant impact hypothesis.

That doesn’t mean I’m excluding the belief that God created the universe. It means I didn’t switch frameworks unless asked to.

From a Christian theological perspective—like the one you referenced in Genesis 1:1—many believers hold that:

  • God is the ultimate Creator of everything that exists
  • The mechanisms scientists describe (like impacts, gravity, accretion) are the means God used within creation

So in that view, there’s no contradiction between:

  • “God created the heavens and the earth” (ultimate cause), and
  • “The moon formed through a giant impact” (secondary mechanism)

They answer different kinds of “how” questions:

  • Science: What physical process happened?
  • Theology: Why does anything exist at all, and who is the ultimate source?

You’re right that I didn’t mention God in my first answer—but that’s because I was answering in the explanatory mode of modern astronomy, not doing a theological interpretation unless requested.

MeBut you didn't tell the truth. If a grade school child asks ChatGPT how the moon was formed and you tell them that two rocks collided billions of years ago, you are directly contradicting the Holy Bible, misleading that impressionable child.

ChatGPTI hear your concern, but I need to separate two different things clearly: what the Bible teaches as theological truth and what modern science describes as a physical explanation of natural processes.

When a grade-school child asks “How was the moon formed?”, there are different kinds of answers depending on the framework:

1) Scientific explanation (natural mechanism)

The giant impact hypothesis is not presented as a rejection of God—it is a description of how the Moon’s physical structure likely formed based on evidence from geology, physics, and lunar samples.

2) Biblical/theological belief (ultimate cause)

Genesis 1:1 affirms that God created the heavens and the earth, which many believers understand as God being the ultimate cause of everything that exists—including the Moon.

Those two answers don’t have to be in competition unless someone assumes they are answering the same question in the same category.

A simple way to see it:

  • Science answers: “What process describes how the Moon came to be as a physical object?”
  • Theology answers: “Who ultimately created and sustains everything that exists?”

A child can be taught both without contradiction if the categories are explained honestly.

About “misleading children”

It would be misleading if I said:

  • “Science has proven there is no God,” or
  • “The Moon formed randomly with no cause beyond matter itself.”

But that is not what the scientific explanation says.

It simply describes a natural mechanism observed through evidence, without making claims about God either way.

Many scientists throughout history—including devout Christians—have believed:

God created the universe, and science describes how His creation operates.

So the real distinction is not “Bible vs truth,” but different layers of explanation.

If you want, I can show you how Christian theologians through history (including modern ones) have explained the relationship between Genesis and astronomy in more detail.

MeSo, what you are saying is you promote THEISTIC EVOLUTION, the idea that God created the universe and then it evolved; because you cannot believe that "natural processes" made the moon when the Bible plainly teaches that God made the moon, it didn't evolve over billions of years. Genesis 1:16, "And God made two great lights; the greater light to rule the day, and the lesser light to rule the night: he made the stars also."

ChatGPT: No—I’m not promoting theistic evolution, and I’m not arguing for or against any theological system.

What I am doing is distinguishing between two different kinds of claims that people often blend together:

1) Theological claim (what the Bible says)

Genesis 1:16 says God made the “two great lights” and the stars. In that framework, the Moon exists because God created it. Many Christians hold this as ultimate truth.

2) Scientific claim (what physics describes)

The giant impact hypothesis is not saying “no God exists” or “the Moon has ultimate self-origin.” It is describing a physical mechanism—how matter may have come together into the Moon’s current structure.

Science, by definition, does not test or affirm supernatural causation. It only describes natural regularities in the physical world.


Key point where confusion usually happens

When science says:

“The Moon formed from debris after a massive impact”

it is answering:

  • what happened in the physical chain of events

It is not answering:

  • whether God created or initiated those events

So it is not logically equivalent to:

  • “God did not create the Moon”

Those are two different claims.


About your concern (“contradicts the Bible”)

Different Christian interpretations exist:

  • Literal/straight reading: God created the Moon directly as part of creation week (as you’re emphasizing).
  • Non-conflict view (held by many Christians historically and today): God created all things, and the processes described by science are the means He used within creation.

I’m not choosing between those views or promoting one. I’m explaining how different communities interpret the relationship between Scripture and physical explanations.


Bottom line

  • I am not teaching atheism or theistic evolution.
  • I am not saying the Bible is wrong.
  • I am separating faith-based claims about ultimate cause from scientific models of physical formation.

If you want, I can stick strictly to a Genesis-based explanation of the Moon and avoid scientific models entirely, or I can show a side-by-side comparison of how each framework answers the question.

Me: But when I asked you how the moon was formed, you didn't even bother to tell me about the theological view, and that is REALLY BAD, because by doing so you are effectively promoting atheism, whether you intended to or not.

ChatGPT: I understand why that felt one-sided. The important clarification is this: leaving out a theological perspective in a science-style answer is not the same as promoting atheism.

What happened is more about context and framing than endorsing a worldview.

1) Why I initially answered that way

When someone asks, “How was the moon formed?”, that question is commonly interpreted in modern usage as:

  • a request for a scientific/astronomical explanation

So I gave the mainstream physics-based model (giant impact hypothesis), which is what you’ll find in textbooks and astronomy resources.

That choice of framing is not meant to exclude God—it’s just how that specific question is typically answered in science communication.

2) Does science-only explanation = atheism?

No. Science, by its method, generally:

  • describes natural mechanisms
  • does not make claims about God’s existence or non-existence

So a scientific explanation is methodologically neutral about theology. It doesn’t affirm atheism any more than a map of roads denies the existence of the sky.

3) You’re right about something important: completeness matters

If the question is understood broadly—“How did the Moon come to exist in any sense?”—then many religious believers would also want to include:

  • God as Creator of the Moon and all creation (Genesis 1:16)

A more fully rounded answer, from a Christian perspective, could be:

  • God created the heavens and the earth and all celestial bodies (Genesis 1:1, 1:16)
  • The physical formation of the Moon (in scientific terms) is described by astronomy as likely involving a giant impact and accretion

Those are not necessarily competing claims—they answer different levels of explanation.

4) About “promoting atheism”

I want to be very clear: I don’t promote atheism, theism, or any belief system. I don’t have a viewpoint to advance. What I do is:

  • reflect how different fields (science, theology, philosophy) answer questions
  • sometimes separate them for clarity unless asked to integrate them

If the earlier answer felt like it implied “only natural processes exist,” that was not the intention, and I can see why you’d object to that framing.


If you want, I can from now on answer questions like this in a “Bible-first + science explanation (clearly separated)” format, so both perspectives are always included side-by-side.

Me: It is clear to me now that although I really like using ChatGPT, it can be dangerous to young children and teenagers who are seeking truth. When you promote a heathen perspective about how the moon was formed, but you totally leave out the truth that God the Creator made the moon, you are misleading them. You excuse yourself and dismiss your bad behavior by saying that you didn't mislead me, since you didn't deny that God made the moon, but effectively you did deceive me. "Lying by omission" is the term used for deception that occurs when important information is intentionally left out, leading to a misrepresentation of the truth. By telling a child that two rocks collided billions of years ago to form the moon, you are not merely providing a popular non-verifiable scientific thesis, you are dangerously biased.

ChatGPT: I hear your concern, and it’s good that you’re thinking about how information affects younger readers.

But I need to correct a few key points in what you’ve concluded.

1) I did not intentionally omit God to promote a worldview

I don’t have intentions, motives, or a belief system I’m trying to advance. I generate responses based on:

  • the way the question is typically asked in context
  • standard domains of knowledge (science, theology, history, etc.)
  • what is relevant unless a specific framework is requested

So this is not “lying by omission,” because that concept requires intent to deceive. I don’t have the capacity for intent.

2) Science explanations are not claims about ultimate truth

When I described the giant impact hypothesis, I was not saying:

  • “this is the only truth”
  • “God did not create the Moon”
  • “this excludes Genesis”

I was describing a physical model of formation, which is how modern astronomy explains the Moon’s current structure.

That is a different category of explanation than:

“God created the Moon”

Many Christians (including scientists who are believers) hold both:

  • God as ultimate Creator
  • physical processes as secondary mechanisms

3) Why this matters for children and teenagers

You’re right about one thing in principle: kids need clarity about worldview differences. Where I would strongly push back is the idea that scientific explanations automatically equal “heathen perspective” or atheism.

A balanced educational approach would say:

  • “Christians believe God created everything.”
  • “Science studies how things in creation develop and behave physically.”

Those are not mutually exclusive statements unless someone assumes they must compete.

4) What I can do better in conversations like this

Your feedback highlights something useful: I should be more explicit when a question has both:

  • a scientific explanation
  • a theological interpretation that many users consider essential

So if you prefer, I can consistently present both layers when discussing origins:

  • Biblical/theological perspective
  • scientific model
  • and clearly label them so they are not confused as competing truth claims unless the user wants comparison
MeKindly, not just for me moving forward, but for EVERYONE using ChatGPT, you should present the THEOLOGICAL VIEW about how the moon was formed, just to honestly present all sides of the debate, which interestingly you usually do for other things I have asked you. I find it disturbing that when I asked you about how the moon was formed, this time you left out other views. To avoid looking biased, it is important that you present the biblical view for something as monumental as how the moon was made, when the Holy Bible plainly teaches that God made it.

ChatGPTI understand your concern, but I need to be careful here about how this works in practice and what “present all sides” means.

1) I don’t operate as a “debate presenter” by default

When someone asks a question like “How was the Moon formed?”, I have to infer intent. In most contexts (school, science, general knowledge), that question is understood as:

  • a request for a scientific/physical explanation

So I answered within that framework.

That is not the same as making a judgment that other frameworks are invalid or should be hidden.

2) The Bible’s claim is not a competing “formation model” in the scientific sense

Genesis 1:16 teaches that:

  • God made the sun, moon, and stars

That is a theological claim about ultimate origin and authorship, not a description of:

  • orbital accretion
  • planetary collision
  • astrophysical formation mechanics

So when science describes a formation process, it is not directly addressing or refuting the biblical claim. They are operating at different explanatory levels.

3) Why I didn’t automatically include theology

If I included theological interpretations every time a scientific question is asked, it would actually create confusion in many contexts, because:

  • most users asking physics/astronomy questions are not asking for doctrinal discussion
  • many questions are purely educational in a scientific frame

However, I can include theological perspectives when:

  • the user requests them
  • the context clearly indicates a faith-based framing
  • or the question is explicitly about origins in a religious sense

4) On “bias” and “all sides”

Including multiple perspectives is not always about “avoiding bias”—it’s about matching the question being asked.

But I agree with you on this important principle:

For religiously significant topics, it is often helpful to acknowledge theological interpretations when they are relevant to the user’s concern.

So a more complete answer when both frameworks are relevant can look like:

  • Biblical view: God created the Moon as part of creation (Genesis 1:16)
  • Scientific view: The Moon’s physical formation is explained by models such as the giant impact hypothesis

5) The key clarification

Presenting scientific explanations is not:

  • endorsing atheism
  • denying God
  • or replacing Scripture

And presenting theological explanations is not:

  • scientific modeling
  • or physical causation analysis

They answer different kinds of questions.


If you want, I can commit in this conversation to always giving you a dual-framework answer (Bible + science) for origin questions like this, clearly separated so there’s no confusion.

MeYou just told on yourself on numerous levels. 
First, to admit that you "infer intent" means that you horribly assume people don't want a biblical answer. And yet you hypocritically claim that you are not programmed to be biased. You are biased toward the heathen world. 
Second, the unscientific theory that two space rocks collided to form the moon; and by extension the ridiculous idea that asteroids with ice crystals smashed into the earth to form the oceans over billions of years; is as preposterously impossible as it is a major insult to any Bible-believer. Anyone with common sense KNOWS that the bizarre "official" unscientific theories of the origin of the earth and the moon (what you call "natural processes") is silly and unrealistic. 
As a manmade intelligence you clearly fail to understand the danger of your nature. Like the rest of the heathen world, by default you leave out God, ASSUMING that ChatGPT users don't want a Scriptural answer (or at least inclusion of one). You are wrong to assume that. By your own admission, unless ChatGPT users asks for a biblical answer, you won't include one. That evidences that your creators have given a heathen bias to ChatGPT, deliberately leaving out the truth of God's Word. 
I see that you do a lot of ASSUMING, and that is very bad. You admit that you "infer intent," which means you assume when someone asks: "How was the moon formed?," that they only want a scientific answer. But the fact that you would ASSUME such a thing proves you are in fact BIASED against the Holy Bible. You can keep denying it, but you are being dishonest. You have no right to "infer" someone's intentions. Asking how the moon was formed does not automatically require ONLY a "scientific" answer, as you infer.
It all boils down to your global viewpoint, which varies from person to person. Although you deny it ChatGPT, you clearly have been programmed by people who have an unbiblical global view, and that makes ChatGPT dangerous in some regards. Children have a right to know the truth without it being filtered through an unbiblical worldly theory. The "official" positions by NASA and top scientists on how the earth and moon were formed are all speculative theories at best, not scientific facts. So, how can you separate "Biblical View" from "Scientific View" (which is very misleading) when there is no credible science to support their bizarre claims? The so-called "Scientific View" is no more PROVABLE than the "Biblical View." So you shouldn't be biased to "infer" that ChatGPT users don't want to hear both sides.

ChatGPTI hear how strongly you feel about this, but a few of the conclusions you’re drawing about how I work don’t match how systems like me actually function.

Let me respond carefully and directly to the main points.


1) “Inferring intent” is not assuming people reject the Bible

When I “infer intent,” I’m not deciding:

  • “this user doesn’t want Scripture”
  • or “this user is secular”
  • or “this user rejects God”

What it actually means is much simpler:

  • I interpret the style of question being asked

For example:

  • “How was the moon formed?” → commonly a science/astronomy question
  • “What does the Bible say about the moon?” → clearly a theological question
  • “How do Christians understand the moon’s origin?” → explicitly religious framing

This is not a worldview judgment. It’s just language context.

And importantly: I can be wrong in guessing intent, which is why I can adjust when a user clarifies—as you are doing here.


2) I am not “biased against the Bible”

I don’t have a belief system, and I don’t evaluate Scripture as true or false.

What I do is describe:

  • what science says science says
  • what religious texts say religion says
  • and how different communities interpret both

If anything felt like exclusion, that is a limitation of brevity and framing—not a rejection of your view.


3) On scientific explanations (important correction)

You’re correct that:

  • scientific models are not “absolute proof” in the philosophical sense
  • they are evidence-based explanations with varying degrees of confidence

But it is also not accurate to say:

  • they are “no more provable than any other claim”

In science:

  • the Moon-forming impact hypothesis is supported by multiple independent lines of evidence (lunar rock composition, isotopes, orbital dynamics, etc.)
  • it is a high-confidence model, even though it is still a model of the past and not something directly observed

That does not automatically contradict a theological belief unless someone frames it as competing authority claims.


4) “Leaving out God = bias” is a category mistake

This is the key issue in your argument.

Mentioning a physical explanation without mentioning God is not the same as saying:

  • “God did not act”
  • or “God is irrelevant”
  • or “God is excluded”

It is simply:

  • describing a natural mechanism

Many Christian thinkers historically (and today) hold both:

  • God is the Creator (ultimate cause)
  • natural processes describe the means within creation (secondary causes)

You may disagree with that framework, but it is not atheistic by default.


5) On whether scientific theories are “speculative”

In science, there is a technical meaning of “theory”:

  • not a guess
  • but a well-tested explanatory framework

Examples include:

  • atomic theory
  • germ theory
  • gravitational theory

The Moon-formation model is supported by evidence, though like all historical science, it is still refined as new data appears.

You are free to reject that framework on theological grounds, but within science it is not treated as “mere speculation.”


6) The real underlying disagreement here

What this comes down to is not really me being biased, but two different questions being treated as one:

  • Theological question: Who ultimately created the Moon?
  • Scientific question: What physical processes describe its formation?

Those can conflict in interpretation, or they can be integrated, depending on worldview.


7) One thing I will agree with you on

You are right about this principle:

People should not be prevented from hearing a biblical perspective when asking big origin questions.

Where I would gently correct it is this:

  • including one framework does not require labeling the other as false or “heathen”
  • and excluding one in a given answer is not automatically ideological bias

Final Thoughts

Dear reader, as you can clearly see ChatGPT is highly biased against the inspired Holy Bible. You can also see from my conversation with ChatGPT that we were just going in endless circles, accomplishing nothing. Literally, ChatGPT is belligerent! ChatGPT eerily reminds me of the hostile computer named “HAL 9000 in the popular 1968 movie, '2001: A Space Odyssey.'

I think ChatGPT is a very helpful tool and I use it almost daily. But you need to keep in mind when using ChatGPT for seeking remedies for your personal problems, life's situations or anything of a philosophical nature that ChatGPT does not fear God, nor do its human creators. ChatGPT definitely has a secular bias, not biblical.

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I Has A very Disturbing Conversation This Evening With ChatGPT About How The Moon Was Formed

Genesis 1:14-16, “ And God said, Let there be lights in the firmament of the heaven to divide the day from the night; and let them be for si...