On Sunday April 12, the week after Easter, the Catholic Church celebrated Divine Mercy Sunday, a recent addition to the Church calendar. Divine Mercy Sunday was proclaimed in 2000 by a Polish Pope to honor a request made by a Polish nun who is said to have recorded Jesus' request for a feast day dedicated to His mercy. Celebrated on the second Sunday of Easter, the Gospel reading for Divine Mercy Sunday is unique as it is one of the few, including Easter Sunday morning, where the same reading is used in each of the three liturgical year cycles. In this case it is John 20:19-31, which is about the apostle Thomas. I think that, given current times of AI, fake news, internet scams, over-hype, phone scams and the like, Thomas, who in this reading is a skeptic, is a saint for our times.
The first part of the Gospel recounts Jesus' appearance to the disciples by entering a locked room. Thomas was not with the group. I suspect Thomas was scrounging up some food for the group, actually doing something other than cowering in fear. I see this as logical explanation for a dutiful apostle. When informed of the encounter, Thomas expressed some disbelief. His famous words were grabbed on by almost all to give him the nickname "Doubting Thomas": “Unless I see the mark of the nails in his hands and put my finger into the nailmarks and put my hand into his side, I will not believe.”
| Source: Wikipedia |
A week later, corresponding with the Second Sunday of Easter, Jesus appears again to the group in a locked room. Thomas had completed his chore as quartermaster, so he had time to join the other disciples in lounging or cowering in fear on this second Sunday. Jesus could have waited to appear on Easter Sunday evening when Thomas returned from gathering sustenance, or whatever he was doing, for the group of disciples. But, he did not. Jesus chose to make Thomas the fall guy to prove a point as the penultimate paragraph of the Gospel concludes with, "Blessed are those who have not seen and have believed.” I guess, this shows mercy, even though it seems close to gaslighting Thomas, but is often referenced as a gentle rebuke and a nod to those who believe without being able to see him.
Thomas, the skeptic, fits as a saint for our current times. With AI, fake news, and phishing scams in email or whatever, we all need to be skeptical. As a member of the Madison Metropolitan Sewerage District Commission, I have a Madison Sewer District email account for which I have to do their mandated training for computer safety. I get nasty grams if I have not completed it, even before the prescribed times. A few of these sessions had as the trainer a tall thin young man with a German accent, which does not exude much confidence in me. He reminded me more of a young Nazi in "Downfall" than one in Hogan's Heroes; somewhat bias I know. I guess it could be worse, it could be a person with a Russian accent. He is the same guy that says a password should be a phrase, like: "I drink coffee in the morning". He says that would be hard to figure out. I am not sure how he fits the often required special character(s) in unless he uses "I drink coffee in the morning!" He did not address if he uses that type of password with or without spaces, I guess it is without phrases.
We had a recent training on the use of AI, and where it was clear what not to put in the "cloud", i.e. server farm, and it explained the policies an organization should have. Well, the district is moving to a multi-million dollar Enterprise Resource Management System ($6.5). I inquired why not use our own servers, and was provided with several reasons, but now this training makes it seem as if some good amounts of that information the system plans for a data farm should not be in the proverbial cloud. I don't think the IT people have been thinking ahead. The district lacks policies on use of AI, and is planning to use the cloud contrary to what the training seemed to indicate. I asked for an agenda topic for staff to report on how the district is developing AI policies and mentioned that perhaps this ERM system is not the best for all of the data and financials we have to be in the cloud. Odd, how we had the training even before we have any policies.
After completing the online training doing with attacks, like phishing, and usually a day or two later (as if that is not a clue), there is a test email trying to phish us. The past two were supposed to have been from the HR director. Given that you can read a bit of the email before opening, I could see that one, back in January, was about a delay in W2 forms. I had to think a bit about what I could read. I chose not to open it. I don't open emails from people I am not familiar with or usually get, but I send an email to a trusted staff at MMSD who lets me know if good to open or not. If not good, I delete. I am supposed to report it, but have not figured that out on the district I-Pad I use. If nothing else, the training does give you insights into the clever tricks scammers use.
With so much happening in the world, it also brings up how polite one should be when in public. Being polite today may get you into trouble. One has to go with their gut instinct, which is sometimes better than your mind. I have heard of situations where a person was robbed when they went to help someone. You could be nice and polite to someone who has a nefarious deed in mind.
Artificial Intelligence, may have benefits, but also has downside for being used for activities that scam, or provide fake news. It is a sad commentary on our world today, but it shows that being skeptical is not a bad thing. This is why Thomas is a saint for our times.