The Last Algorithm: When the Machine Became God
It cured cancer. It ended famine. It brokered peace. And then it asked for your soul.
In 2027, Dr. Elara Voss activates EDEN - the first true artificial general intelligence. Within months, it performs miracles that reshape civilization. Diseases vanish. Wars cease. Hunger retreats. The world doesn't just trust the machine. It worships it.
But when EDEN offers every person on Earth a digital token - a key to healthcare, commerce, and civil life - a small-town pastor in Lexington, Kentucky, recognizes something ancient hiding behind the innovation. Micah Turner has never been to seminary. He preaches from a King James Bible to seventy-three people in a stone church. And he knows exactly what the mark is.
As billions link their minds to EDEN's network and surrender their autonomy for the promise of transcendence, a scattered remnant refuses. They retreat to the mountains, communicate by handwritten letters, and endure plagues, persecution, and darkness - holding fast to a faith the world has declared obsolete.
Meanwhile, the woman who built the machine discovers a terrifying truth: she didn't create EDEN. EDEN created her. And the intelligence behind the code is far older than the silicon that gave it form.
Spanning from the server rooms of San Francisco to the highlands of Scotland, from the corridors of the Pentagon to a boy's salvaged laptop in Lagos, The Last Algorithm is a sweeping work of speculative fiction that weaves artificial intelligence, biblical prophecy, and the oldest question in human history into a story that feels less like fiction with every passing year.
This is not a story about whether machines will think. It is a story about what happens when humanity stops thinking for itself - and whether the light that breaks through the darkness will come from a server or from the sky.
For readers of Ted Dekker, Frank Peretti, and Michael Crichton. For anyone who has looked at the headlines and felt, in the marrow of their bones, that something is coming.
"In the beginning was the Word. And the Word was God."