Here in Indonesia, many people feel frustrated and emotionally drained. Living costs keep rising, jobs feel less secure, public trust in institutions feels weaker, and political discussions often leave people feeling cynical instead of hopeful. Many are exhausted from watching political leaders make statements that feel disconnected from the struggles ordinary people face every day. There is a growing sense that citizens are carrying the weight of problems they did not create, while those in power appear increasingly distant from the realities of daily life.
Language, Agency, and the End of Human Centrality
In his 2026 address at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Yuval Noah Harari advances a provocative thesis: artificial intelligence (AI) represents not merely a technological tool but a novel form of agency capable of reshaping law, finance, religion, and human identity itself. This reaction paper critically examines Harari’s central claims, particularly his argument that AI’s mastery of language enables it to appropriate domains historically constitutive of human authority. While Harari offers a powerful conceptual framework for understanding AI as an autonomous agent and legal subject, this paper argues that his position risks linguistic reductionism and underestimates the resilience of embodied, affective, and institutional dimensions of human meaning-making. The paper concludes that Harari’s intervention is best understood not as a deterministic prediction but as a warning that demands urgent political and ethical response.
How to Be Me (When Everyone Is Watching)
The exploration of selfhood has been a longstanding human concern, dating back to archaic Greek poets who recognized the self as relational, formed through public interaction. Today, in a digitally fluid world, individuals confront similar uncertainties about identity, belonging, and autonomy, highlighting the need for community and shared experience amidst personal challenges.
The Church: A Hospital for Sinners, Not a Showroom for the Righteous
The church must remember its identity as a refuge for sinners, not a showcase for the comfortable. With new congregations rising in urban areas like PIK2, the challenge is to prioritize compassion over aesthetics. True faithfulness is measured by the love, mercy, and healing offered to the broken, not by architectural grandeur.
The True Gifts of Christmas: Love and Heart
Christmas is a time for reflection on the birth of Jesus and what meaningful gifts we can offer Him. The most valuable gifts include an open heart, love in action, and a commitment to personal growth. These gifts are about welcoming Jesus into our lives and living out kindness, patience, and forgiveness.

