AI-enabled technologies are becoming increasingly relevant to clinical practice healthcare delivery across the continuum of care. From diagnostic algorithms and clinical decision-support systems to conversational agents and digital patient-engagement tools, AI now mediates many dimensions of the patient experience. Yet, while these developments have prompted extensive debate in medicine, nursing, and bioethics, their implications for clinical spiritual care have received little systematic attention. This presentation addresses this gap by exploring how AI intersects with the values, practices, and professional identity of spiritual care providers in clinical environments. Drawing on findings from an international, multi-stakeholder Delphi study involving clinicians, ethicists, theologians, and leaders in spiritual care, it synthesizes emerging perspectives on both the promises and perils of AI integration in this domain. The presentation will map areas of convergence and disagreement across professional and disciplinary boundaries and delineate the ethical boundaries of appropriate use cases for AI in spiritual care—such as triage tools, language processing for chaplaincy documentation, and medical decision-support systems— as they are currently perceived by the professional community. By situating these insights within the broader academic fields of digital religion and human-computer interaction, the presentation highlights the need for frameworks that align technological innovation with the spiritual and existential dimensions of patient care. It argues that responsible implementation of AI in this context requires not only technical literacy but also renewed theological and ethical reflection on what constitutes compassionate presence in an increasingly mediated healthcare environment.