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Take It from Me, Don’t Use AI to Cheat in School
“I understand that this is an awkward time in the semester to tell you this, and quite frankly, I feel ashamed writing this email.”
I typed this sentence in a convenience-store parking lot as I sat next to one of my spiritual mentors. These words were a confession to my sophomore physics professor. The paragraphs that followed detailed how I’d grown convicted of copying assignments and shortcutting work all semester (just like most of my peers). Further, I shared that I had dishonored Christ, I would accept any disciplinary consequences, and I would seek to redeem myself in the spring.
Pretty normal Thursday, right?
Unfortunately not. In the age of AI, students are increasingly turning to cheating to coast through school. Even at a prestigious university like the one I attended, it’s common to see classmates in lecture halls citing points produced by ChatGPT or retrieving article summaries from Copilot. Others produce full-length essays in Gemini that are modified by “humanizers” to avoid plagiarism detection. Students can even outsource their exams using automated test-taking software.
Amid this generational transformation in information technology, Gen Zers struggle to choose integrity.
The virus is widespread. Students in every academic setting face the temptation of sidestepping the mundanity of learning. As a result, schooling becomes less about embracing failure and growth and more about how well you can prompt Claude. Perhaps worst of all, students’ seared consciences accept academic cheating as the new normal. Everyone’s doing it, we say to ourselves, so why feel bad?
Fellow students, we need to wake up. Culturally acceptable cheating is a sin that must be dealt with. As a recent graduate and fellow cheater in desperate need of redeeming grace, I want to share some hard-learned lessons that can set you free from guilt and the temptation to cheat.
Count the Cost
The trial quickly became an inflection point of costly Christian obedience in my life. If I received a disciplinary mark on my transcript, I’d be disqualified from the career I’d spent many sleepless nights studying to attain. Sure, I could repent of the sin, but risking my future? Unrealistic.
But as my mentor and I prayed in the car, I realized that Jesus was worth more than all my efforts, reputation, and career aspirations combined. I was reminded of Jesus’s commands and his promises: Whoever doesn’t hate his own life and bear his cross cannot be Jesus’s disciple (Luke 14:26); anyone who leaves house or lands for Jesus’s sake and the gospel will receive a hundredfold in this time, and in the age to come, eternal life (Mark 10:29–30); and Jesus is the treasure worth selling everything to gain (Matt. 13:44–46; Phil. 3:8).
Repentance may be costly if you’ve been cheating. You may lose reputation, opportunities, and future success. Rest in knowing that Jesus holds all things––even your life––in his hand. And on the other side of repentance, you get more of him.
Ruthlessly Pursue Integrity
Following my email, I went through several weeks of an academic trial with my university’s honor council. The repeated question asked of me was “Why turn yourself in?”
The answer I’d often give is that our standard for holiness is Jesus Christ, not what the world calls “normal.” Because Christ protected his integrity to the point of shedding blood (Heb. 12:4), I’m free to imitate him in my work. That meant putting to death anything in me that desired to shortcut my academics.
I’m not saying all AI usage is bad—I use AI regularly to organize, schedule, answer random questions, and even brainstorm. But in wisdom, we must aim at what’s honorable before God and our professors (2 Cor. 8:21) and work honestly instead of maintaining the mere image of godliness (2 Tim. 3:5). Above all, we should seek to work diligently at the tasks God has given to us, even if they’re difficult (Col. 3:23).
You cannot keep your integrity in your own strength. When I was on trial, I couldn’t naturally crucify my pride in my academic image. I couldn’t resist the continued temptation to cheat by mere willpower. You cannot do this apart from Jesus. So allow Christ, not ChatGPT, to shoulder the burden of your work. He’ll give you all the strength you need.
Train for Life
AI is reshaping our souls before we even realize it. It begins with the constant stream of reels and brain-rot memes that erode our attention spans and exacerbate mental health issues. This addiction to ease makes the temptation of AI nearly irresistible; in the coming years, it’ll only become easier to offload our effort to an algorithm.
Repentance may be costly if you’ve been cheating. But on the other side of repentance, you get more of Christ.
However, each time we cheat the process, we aren’t just saving time; we’re training our neural highways to bypass toil rather than endure it. By avoiding the struggle, we lose the capacity for trial and error, conflict resolution, and failure. On the university campus where I serve, I see students increasingly wrecked by anything that cracks the polished image they hold up for the world.
In a comfort-saturated culture, we must push back. We’re called to discipline our bodies and train ourselves for lifelong godliness (1 Tim. 4:7; 1 Cor. 9:27). As Christian students, you’re free to wield AI as a tool, but your hearts must be tuned to the sacred work of failing and persevering by faith. The way you honor Jesus in your classwork now will set you up for all of life.
Be Loved by the Church
The week of my confession, my pastor invited me to confess my sin to our congregation at an evening service. I was terrified of being perceived as the sinner I pretended not to be. But God gave me strength, and afterward, I was approached by a girl at a nearby university who was also struggling with cheating in her physics class.
After her, a woman in her 70s came up to me and reminded me of God’s love and told me this was once her story too. And a young couple shared their struggle with financial integrity, saying my confession encouraged them to bring their sin into the light.
The way you honor Jesus in your classwork now will set you up for all of life.
What that night revealed to me is that in my lowest moment, not only did I need Christ, but I also needed the church. And friend, you need the church too. We need to see other people’s repentance and to encourage them with our own. We need to invite others to speak into our struggles, whether AI usage or something else. Your brothers and sisters in Christ will not see you as the world does—instead, they’ll help you toward heaven.
Be known and loved by the young, old, married, single, widowed, sick, joyful, and sorrowful. We cannot handle AI––or any other temptation––otherwise.
Find Joy in Obedience
After a few months of trial, the honor council delivered its verdict. It came as a private letter and was destroyed at graduation. The transcript possessed a simple reflection: “Zach became a Christian more or less a year ago . . . and admitted his errors because he wanted to honor Christ.”
Joyfully cross-bearing for Jesus displays his worth before a comfort-loving culture that mocks costly obedience. Let your light shine boldly before others, so that even when they speak against you, they may see your good deeds and glorify God (1 Pet. 2:12; Matt. 5:16).