Unprecedented technological advancement is compelling humanity to confront ideas about morality. This video examines how artificial intelligence (AI) — the ability of machines to perform tasks that are typically associated with human intelligence, such as learning and problem-solving — raises profound ethical questions from a faith perspective. Leaders from religious traditions across the globe describe how their faiths view technology and what AI could mean for the future of human flourishing. Speakers in the video include: David Zvi Kalman, Scholar in Residence and Director of New Media, Shalom Hartman Institute of North America; Rt. Revd. Dr. Steven Croft, Bishop of Oxford, Founding Board Member, Centre for Data Ethics and Innovation; Muhammad Aurangzeb, PhD, Professor of Computer Science, University of Washington; Revd. Dr. Harriet Harris, University Chaplain, University of Edinburgh; Rabbi Geoffrey A. Mitelman, Founding Director, Sinai and Synapses; Father Paolo Benanti, Professor of Ethics and Moral Theology, Pontifical Gregorian University; Chokyi Nyima Rinpoche, Abbot, Ka Nying Shedrub Ling Monastery, Kathmandu, Nepal; Junaid Qadir, PhD, Professor of Computer Engineering, Qatar University, Doha, Qatar; Professor Aviad Hacohen, President, Academic Centre for Law and Science, Israel; Philip Larrey, PhD, Chair of Logic and Epistemology, Pontifical Lateran University, Vatican; Brad Smith, President and Vice Chairman, Microsoft; Dr. Hamza Yusuf, President, Zaytuna College, Berkeley, CA; Dr. Zeshan Zafar, Executive Director, Forum for the Promotion of Peace in Muslim Societies, Abu Dhabi.