Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - 230: Are We Scared of Hell? | Ear Biscuits Ep. 230
Episode Date: March 2, 2020From what they think about Hell to their thoughts on miracles, lsten to R&L dive deeper into details of their current beliefs in this episode of Ear Biscuits! (8:47) - what if we're wrong (12:55) - d...o we believe in Hell? (37:16) - miracles and supernatural experiences (43:42) - R's miracles (53:47) - R's experience with the supernatural (57:14) - L's experience with miracles (1:01:24) - our thoughts on ghosts (1:02:18) -R's perspective behind leaving L on the side of the road (1:04:04) - the wax paper dogz pact (1:09:50) - young R's vice (1:11:17) - our relationship with God during the lost years (1:20:59) - R's rec To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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store today. Terms and conditions apply. Welcome to Ear Biscuits. I'm Link. And I'm Rhett. This
week at the Roundtable of Dim Lighting, we're gonna do the Q&A that we said that we didn't know if we wanted to do.
That's right, the Lost Years series.
All along the way, we prompted you guys
to use hashtag Ear Biscuits
and let us know how you were processing
and if particular questions arose, let us know.
And I think, I don't think we said if concerns arose, let us know,
but I guess that happened too.
Well, what we talked about last week was
how we're processing this whole thing
and how we have a tendency, I think maybe me more than Link
have a tendency to, once I start looking at questions and thinking about
what people are saying and asking,
like I start wanting to defend myself and to justify myself,
especially if I see that I'm kind of being misunderstood
or misrepresented, but I am becoming a healthier person
as I get older and I am learning more
what is just me and my ego.
And so we decided to instead of getting into
answering questions last week to kind of just
get into our process, but also, you know,
what we talked about was we don't want this podcast
to become a place where we just kind of
spout off our opinions when it comes to things that we're ultimately
not qualified to talk about.
And so, because you can very quickly get into this place
where two guys who are basically have been making a living
on YouTube for over a decade are sitting around
and trying to tell you their particular
apologetic perspective.
Giving persuasive arguments for what beliefs
you should adopt is not something that we're gonna do.
Because there's a lot of people out there
who have dedicated their lives to studying
some of the things that we talked about
and they're experts in their field
and there's so many books that have been written,
articles that have been written about all the things
that we talked about so it is up to you to go
and do your own research, come to your own conclusions.
But I do think that there were a lot of questions
that were asked just from a very curious place.
Like we told long stories about our stories
and our faith journeys and we condensed them down
into less than two hours.
We left a lot of details out.
We left a lot of people wondering about different parts
of the process, wondering about how we think
about particular things now.
And I've seen a lot of questions kind of grouped together.
So I thought, and also I think these questions
have also been coming from the Christians
that we stay in contact with in our own lives,
which is one question that we got.
You guys, are you guys still friends with,
yes, we're still friends with lots of Christians
and we've got really close lifelong friends
who are still presidents of seminaries
and Old Testament professors
and pastors and so we've got a lot of people
who can challenge a lot of the things that we said
and we're in conversation.
But I think a lot of those questions
come from a curious place and so we want to honor
your questions, honor your curiosity and just kind of give
our personal perspective.
This isn't designed to be like this is what you should think,
this isn't prescriptive, this is just to kind of fill
in the gap of your curiosity if you have it.
Yeah so you've grouped together some questions
which you're gonna tee up.
I kinda know some of these but not all of them. But yeah, for me, our stories are so different
that they engendered a different flavor of response.
And when there's, when you're talking about,
when your story talks so much about the issues
that it did, that it invites people to engage
on this apologetics level, on this
reasons for believing certain things level.
Whereas, you know, I'm not getting as much as that, so.
Well, I think I'm grateful because I didn't want that.
Well, you shouldn't feel bad.
You seem like you almost felt bad about not getting
more of a response.
I told my story in the way that I told it,
piggybacking off of your story because it would drive me
nuts to have the responses that are directly addressed
to your story. Well. to have the responses that are directly addressed
to your story. Like, it would just, it's not a healthy environment
and so I'm glad that the way that I told my story,
even though a lot of what you experienced,
again, I was there for it and we discussed it
and I was the sounding board
and I didn't shut any of that down.
Yeah, when I stand by what I said when you told your story, which is I think that your story
is ultimately more relatable to more people than mine is.
But people who think-
And maybe we'll come back to what the difference is
in response and the magnitude of response
is what that means.
All I'll say right now is that people who think like me
are also behave like me,
which is they talk more about this particular type of thing.
They make YouTube channels about it.
They make podcasts and YouTube channels about it.
They set up events where they debate about it.
Right and so.
And that ain't me.
Yeah and that's how I am.
Yeah.
And if I was still in the faith,
I would be right there alongside them.
So.
If I was like that, we'd have a totally different podcast
and a totally different online persona,
I guess at this point.
But so I will say before you get into those questions that
a lot of the main thing that people responded to my story
was like the stories that I told and particularly the story
about like you leaving me on the side of the road.
So if you're more interested in the story aspect of things,
once we get through some of these other questions,
we'll come back to that because people are interested
in your point of view on that particular day.
Because I didn't say anything.
And I will say if, I mean now we're six and a half minutes
in but if you happen to be someone
who's just checking out Ear Biscuits for the first time
and you got to this point and you're not overly confused.
I think they've gathered that they missed something.
Yeah, we did a whole series.
First of all, this podcast is just two buddies
who've known each other forever just trying to figure out
life together, being friends and talking about the process
and things that we're interested in.
And one of the things that we decided to do
over a month ago is to kind of tell our full stories
of our evangelical Christian backgrounds,
how that got us to where we're at in our careers.
It played an integral role in what we call the lost years.
And we call them the lost years
because they were literally never talked about
until we talked about them on the podcast.
I find it hard to believe this is the first episode
anyone's listened to.
But somebody might be.
You know what, those were long episodes, just skip them.
And then we told our-
No, I would love for you to listen to them.
We told our individual deconstruction stories
and we asked you to participate in asking some questions
and now we're gonna finally, well we did another podcast
where we talked about how we didn't know
what we were gonna do by answering questions
but now we're gonna answer some questions.
Okay, one of the things, again,
I'm not gonna credit anybody,
maybe some of these later questions but again,
this was a group.
So these are all from Link.
Now these are all from Link. Okay, yeah.
Now these are from multiple people.
So you asked yourself, what if I'm wrong?
I said that during my story.
There was a point at which when I was a Christian
and I had experienced a bunch of doubts,
I said, what if I'm wrong?
Do you ask yourself that question now?
What if you'm wrong? Do you ask yourself that question now? What if you're wrong now?
That's the question.
Because it seems like, I mean,
our belief on the inside,
it was like a hedging your bets,
Occam's razor kind of what if you're wrong.
It's like worst case, you know,
kind of what if you're wrong. Like worst case, you know,
worst case on the outside,
you're risking eternal punishment,
separation from God, right?
I think you're talking about Pascal's Wager.
Pascal's Wager.
Not Occam's razor.
That's what I, that's what I,
Occam razor, I can't even say it now.
It's the simplest solution.
The simplest solution, yeah.
But Pascal's Wager is essentially,
Blaise Pascal, famous mathematician and thinker
from a long time ago who was a Christian,
basically said, what do I have to lose
by living a Christian life, you know, because I get to.
You have a lot to gain.
You have a lot to gain.
You have a lot to lose by going to the dark side.
Which I'm gonna talk a little bit about hell in a second
related to Pascal's Wager and why I don't find it compelling.
But yeah, but the question, what if you're wrong?
What about Occam's razor though?
Are you gonna talk about that?
Occam's razor, I shave with it every day.
I shave underneath my beard with Occam's razor.
What's your response?
Yes, I ask myself if I'm wrong.
I hope I never stop doing it.
Like I said at the end of the podcast,
when I told my story, it's like,
if anything, I have demonstrated a willingness
to change my mind, right?
To sort of extricate myself from something
that is still very much a part of the way I think
and the way that I behave, was my entire worldview
and my entire orienting principle in life
and I moved away from it in spite of wanting to,
not want to, I didn't wanna stop believing it.
And so yeah, I continue to ask myself that question.
I hope I never stop asking myself the question,
what if I'm wrong?
I will say that the flavor of the question
has changed a little bit because I no longer
have real definitive ideas about things
that I find hard to be definitive about.
Like I don't know what I think about the afterlife.
I have some guesses but I don't have any convictions some guesses, but I don't have any convictions
about the afterlife.
I don't have any convictions about the supernatural reality
of the world and so therefore,
when I had certainty about those things
and I knew that I was gonna go to heaven
and that people who ultimately disagree with me
were gonna go to hell,
what if I'm wrong felt different?
Absolutely, I feel now like I don't have to be right.
I felt like I had to be right before.
And I, you know, if I didn't feel confident
about a certain aspect of my rightness,
I had to bolster that,
had to read a little something about it.
You know, I think that it was,
if you had a doubt about the resurrection of Jesus,
then you would Google evidence for the resurrection.
And it will come in droves.
And what I don't, you know,
it took a long time for me to get to a point where I'm like,
I'm actually gonna Google evidence against the resurrection
just to check it out, you know?
But I guess since the shoe's on the other foot,
I should ask us, well now are we Googling things like
evidence for the resurrection?
And I think that's a later question you have
so we can come back to it. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Let's come back to it.
Keep going.
This is almost fun.
A related question that kind of comes on the heels
of what if you're wrong is what about hell?
Do you not live in fear that what,
like if you were right, in the first, you know,
three quarters of your life, you were right,
then this version of you who is wrong is going to hell.
And not only are you going to hell,
but you're leading your family, your best friend,
and anyone who's listening to your podcast potentially,
you're leading them to hell.
What about the impressionable fans?
Okay, so the first part of this question is what?
Are you scared of hell?
Okay, okay.
Are you scared of hell?
My answer to this is that when I was a Christian,
I was not scared of all the other potential outcomes
as presented by all the other religions, right?
So according to some conservative flavors of Islam,
I would have been considered an infidel
and probably wouldn't have gotten into paradise.
The Muslim concept of hell is a little bit different
in how you qualify for it, but whatever.
There are some people who believe a certain thing
in that faith who would have said that I was going to hell.
There's some people who believe in reincarnation
and might believe that based on my actions,
I was gonna come back a grasshopper.
Whatever the particular,
and I'm not trying to make light of that,
I'm just saying that that could be somebody's idea.
I didn't lose any sleep about those potential outcomes
when I was a Christian, because as a Christian,
I had a very long list of people's beliefs
about the afterlife that I didn't believe.
I wasn't scared of their hell
because I didn't believe in it.
It's a very long list if you really tried to make it.
Right, so the only thing I've done is I've added
the Christian hell to that list of things
that I don't believe in and so it becomes,
and now it's not as easy as a mental exercise
as I just made it seem because when you believe in it
for so long and that's what you thought when you were
in your formative years, your adolescent years,
it's a little bit more difficult to disregard
but I would say that sort of the short answer is
I don't lose any sleep about it
for the same reason that you as a Christian
don't lose sleep about going to someone else's hell.
And I didn't lose sleep about hell
when I believed I had escaped it.
And I think it was just something
that I did not like to think about.
Like, I mean, you might think that with all,
with the experience that I described
and like the guilt and the pressure
that I placed on myself
within that belief system.
You might think that there was a direct connection to hell.
Like there's a lot of people who with a similar makeup as me
would then take the next step to like,
I gotta, am I really saved?
I gotta make sure I'm saved every day.
Like I gotta pray that sinner's prayer.
What Jessie was told, my wife Jessie,
who went to a very conservative Christian private school,
was told when she was a kid,
and of course she struggles with scrupulosity,
the scrupulosity version of OCD,
so this is especially troublesome for her.
Which is the religiously applied version of OCD.
Yeah, if you're 99% sure that you're saved,
you're 100% lost.
You're telling children that they have to be assured
of their salvation.
So I wasn't told that and you were there all along,
so we weren't told that. No, no, I wasn't. You know, were there all along so we weren't told that.
No, no, no, I wasn't.
You know, I never interacted with hell that way.
It wasn't something that I was constantly faced with.
It wasn't like it was constantly talked about.
We're actually talking about it a lot
and it might give the false impression
that it was shoved down our throats constantly.
Well, it's not a pleasant thing to think about.
Yeah, so, but instead, we just didn't think about it.
And then because it's not pleasant.
And the more you think about it,
I think it gets less pleasant if not for you,
for the people on the outside.
And so it's a place I never wanted to go.
I have wanted to go to one of those.
I never went to one of these and-
Where they scale the hell out of you.
Like a Christian haunted house.
Yeah.
Like a hell house on Halloween.
Never did that.
You would have loved it.
Unfortunately, I wasn't-
You would have come out giddy.
A part of the denomination that did that kind of thing.
You would have come out satanic.
We just did a fall festival
because we didn't believe in Halloween,
but we didn't do hell houses
and I feel like it was a missed opportunity.
But this is also the reason why I don't find Pascal's Wager,
the same, I apply the same logic to my response
to Pascal's Wager as I do to this and that is,
you can take Pascal's Wager and you can use that
to argue for any faith.
You know what I'm saying?
It's like.
Because they present it as such a value,
any faith that presents a value proposition that then.
And a consequence for not following it.
So then if you don't,
you can't forget about that value.
It's like, well, if I don't,
I have so much to gain here.
It's not just what you have to lose.
Well, what I'm saying is that,
from a Muslim perspective,
you could also have Pascal's wager
and you could argue that against a Christian.
You can start with any particular religious perspective
and say, this is what you have to gain
and this is what you have to lose
and then you can argue from that standpoint.
So it doesn't actually,
it's only compelling to someone
who's trying to hold on to Christian belief,
but it's not very compelling to someone
who doesn't have Christian belief.
Does that make sense?
And isn't, yes, isn't there also a factor in that
that's like, you're not just mentally assenting
to certain beliefs, but you have to have like a heart connection to it
that you can lead a horse to water,
but you can't make him drink.
What kind of relationship with God is that,
that it's just based on a fear of hell
or maybe I'm gonna stick around
just in case you guys are right.
Like that doesn't feel like a vibrant relationship with God.
It just kind of feels like a mental exercise.
The second half of this question
or questions that you've grouped together
when you talk about hell is what?
What about speaking out?
What if speaking out has led other people
into eternal punishment if you're wrong about this?
Right, wasn't that the second half of the question?
That you added that, but I have seen that.
Like what about the fans and the friends?
Isn't that the question?
That's not the question that I have written.
That's the question that you asked.
Okay, well I'm.
So do you have an answer?
I've seen that one.
I feel like we answered it towards the end of last week.
I mean, when I read the exchange
between two mythical beasts and it was,
hey, we're presenting our perspective,
but everyone has to make their own decision.
I just feel like our audience can understand that.
And I think even if,
I know that a lot of people
were shaken up.
But again, I don't think,
it troubles me that I just feel like in,
I get nervous when I make generalizations about the church, but I do feel like it's a little,
they err on the side of like, okay,
let's not fully engage in our doubts.
Let's not have this, you know,
it just didn't feel like something
that you could talk about freely.
It was like, let's have,
I gotta have a special meeting with my pastor
and I don't know how I'm gonna bring this up
and I don't know how he's gonna respond.
It's like, because it feels like there's so much at stake.
It's not, there's not this open dialogue
where it's like there's so much at stake. There's not this open dialogue where it's like,
you really can, it's gonna be normal to have doubts
and to engage in that.
I just don't feel like that was the environment.
But I feel like that's the environment
that I try to create with my kids.
It's like, listen, don't think that your daddy
knows everything, you know?
Yeah.
And like you said before, it's more about,
they learn so much more from our actions
than they do from what we say that I think
that they know that I don't know everything,
but at least I'm, you know, I try to be sorry.
Yeah. Just as one example.
I try to seek forgiveness from them for things like that.
So what's my point?
I think if I'm gonna open up my kids to that level
of honest dialogue with wherever they're at,
I'm comfortable doing that with our audience
and them being able to make decisions,
responsible decisions for themselves
and not just take what we believe hook, line,
and sinker for themselves.
Yeah.
So I just cannot, I cannot put that burden on my back
and I'm not gonna do it.
Okay, I don't disagree with anything that you just said,
but playing devil's advocate,
if I were still a Christian who believed that,
Christianity holds the ultimate truth
to man's salvation, then I would believe
that distorting that truth or misleading people
would be a horrible thing to do.
And true, everyone needs to make their own decision,
but you also have a huge platform
and you got impressionable kids listening to you and you're shaking up their situation,
what if you're wrong?
I don't, so I don't disagree with what you're saying,
they need to make their own decision
but you have influence when you speak.
Again, but my issue with this particular question.
Well I hope that was my influence,
was that it opened questions.
I get that, you're not wrong, but I'm saying,
the reason that even what I just said,
playing devil's advocate, is not compelling to me
is the same reason that Pascal's Wager
is not compelling to me, or the same reason
that I don't fear hell, and that is because I don't,
you know, the hell that you're saying
that I might be sending people to,
I don't believe in that hell, you believe in that hell.
And so I don't think that that's what I'm doing.
Of course, if I thought that that's what I was doing,
or if I thought that there was a reasonable chance
that that's what I was doing, I wouldn't do it.
Right.
But I don't believe that.
So I actually think that by getting people
to ask those questions and to kind of explore
the foundations of their faith,
I think that ultimately just as a species,
questioning that and getting closer to the truth
is gonna ultimately serve everyone's best interest.
Because I'm not suggesting something
that you should replace your faith with.
I'm figuring all that out in my own life.
But I'm just saying that hey,
if this isn't gonna take us to the next phase
in our human evolution, then we gotta figure out what is,
and we don't need to try to bring along something
that's actually not gonna service our species.
What was the last thing that filled you with wonder
that took you away from your desk or your car in traffic?
Well, for us, and I'm gonna guess for some of you, that thing is...
Anime!
Hi, I'm Nick Friedman.
I'm Lee Alec Murray.
And I'm Leah President.
And welcome to Crunchyroll Presents The Anime Effect.
It's a weekly news show.
With the best celebrity guests.
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Okay, now again, you haven't suffered from this
as much as I have, and I'm using the term suffered loosely,
but because my story was very much my intellectual journey
and I questioned some foundational things
about the Christian faith,
of course, people who know
and care about these things have suggested many, many,
many, many resources for me to check out.
And I wanna talk about.
I wanna hear a book report.
Let's see, how do I wanna get in this?
Because people have suggested websites, articles,
YouTube videos, books, and all by people who are probably,
definitely many of them, but probably most of them
are smarter than me, definitely most of them
are more well studied than me.
They haven't been making YouTube videos
almost exclusively for a decade.
They've been studying these things
and so the people are pointing me
to all these different resources.
Now, I'm not then taking all the resources
and staying up every night
and just going through all the information
and sort of reading everything that everyone
is sending to me deeply and I have a few reasons for that.
The first is, is that with a few exceptions,
the general arguments that people are kind of pointing me to
in the resources, whether I've looked at those things
specifically before
or things very much like them, I kinda just want to,
and this is a little bit of a defense of my process,
which I said I didn't wanna do,
but I just feel like I have to say it.
You know, I didn't come to any of my conclusions lightly.
As I said earlier, I wasn't trying to get myself
out of the faith.
Leaving the faith was the scariest possible proposition
for me, right?
There was so much there for me.
And it was a very slow process over like 10 to 15 years.
And it was based on looking at a lot of these types
of resources on both sides.
I know I kind of listed out some resources when I did my story and people had a lot of these types of resources on both sides. I know I kind of listed out some resources
when I did my story and people had a lot to say
about what that indicated.
Those weren't, that wasn't it.
That wasn't the only thing I looked at.
That was just a small sampling of some things
that I found compelling, but I don't remember everything
that I looked at, but I didn't come to any
of those conclusions lightly.
So it isn't like, oh, have you been to this website?
Because they've got all the answers that you're looking for.
It's like, I probably have seen those answers
and processed those answers.
And in the end, after a layman's investigation
over the course of 15 years, came to the conclusion
that I just didn't find those things compelling, right?
So that I'm not super like chomping at the bit
to get into them.
But I wanna talk a little more personally
about why I have kind of an issue with the whole enterprise
of like apologetics and these kinds of resources.
It seems to me that one of the things that people are doing
is they're saying, hey, Rhett, here's a really smart person
who knows a whole lot more about this than you do
and they've got a really compelling book about it.
Check it out.
So there's a tendency, as I talked about in my story,
to find a smart person, right?
Find a smart person who believes what you believe
and use that as justification that it's cool
and reasonable to believe what you believe.
And so you kind of get into this
appealing to smart people game.
And I don't know how to say this.
I'm not, I'm trying to be as charitable as possible,
but I don't think that this is a really fruitful game
for certain kinds of Christians to play.
Because when you get, depending on the subject,
once you get into the, hey, here's a smart person
who believes what I believe game,
you're gonna find pretty quickly
that you're gonna get outnumbered by the smart people on the other side of that issue that you're trying to pretty quickly that you're gonna get
outnumbered by the smart people on the other side
of that issue that you're trying to get people to see.
Take evolution as an example, right?
The vast majority of biologists, the vast majority
of people who have given their lives to studying,
you know, biology, believe in common ancestry.
So when you find a really smart scientist
who doesn't believe in it and be like,
hey, it's like, well, I can find 100 smart scientists
who disagree with him.
So playing that game kind of defeats itself after a while.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, yeah.
But I see it done so often and I also did it.
But I think that there's very few issues
that I talked about in my journey,
whether you're talking about archeology
or whether you're talking about New Testament scholarship,
where that wouldn't be the case.
Now, interestingly, the closer and closer you get to Jesus,
you know, when you get into like New Testament scholarship,
a lot of people who have devoted their lives
to the study of the New Testament,
there's a lot, you have to be a certain kind of person
to get to that point in the first place.
So the proportion of people who disagree about that
is a little bit different than say evolutionary biology.
Does that make sense?
Definitely.
But you do have plenty of people who got into it
and dug into it very deeply who came out on the other side
and said, oh, I got into this because of my love for
and interest in Jesus and then when I started seeing
the realities, I actually was very troubled and moved away.
A lot of people say, go to seminary,
there's one of two options, either you're gonna become
a deeper believer, your faith is gonna. Either you're gonna become a deeper believer,
your faith is gonna deepen or you're gonna leave it.
It's not gonna stay the same.
When you talk about Christian apologetics in general,
it's something I thought about recently
because I have been watching a lot of these podcasts
and going, I still, I love to,
I'm kinda genuinely interested in this stuff,
so out of my own interest, I still read these articles
and look at these things to some degree.
But one of the things that's kind of struck me
about just the enterprise of Christian apologetics
is that the whole idea is that you can use
basically logic
and reason to make a defense of the Christian faith, to make it seem reasonable and logical.
But it feels like, you know,
and take the issue of the resurrection,
which is kind of the linchpin of the whole thing, right?
So there's plenty of people who have written books
and I've read them, some of them,
about why basically the best explanation
of the events around Jesus' resurrection
is that he actually bodily raised from the dead.
It explains the empty tomb,
it explains the start of the early church,
yada, yada, yada, right?
I've heard the arguments.
But I find it interesting that the best defense
of the resurrection, which is a miraculous, unbelievable,
unreasonable, illogical event is to use logic and reason
to try to make it seem like it actually happened.
To me, the resurrection is the ultimate test of faith.
It is saying I'm gonna believe something
that is unbelievable.
Isn't that what makes it a beautiful thing to believe
from the standpoint of faith?
But if it really happened, everything around,
you could have logical, historical,
philosophical, cultural analysis of it.
Right, but I feel like all the historical,
logical analysis of it from the standpoint
of someone who's trying to argue the resurrection,
I think they're very much overstating their case.
Because I don't, I think that it's like,
again, I told you, I knew somebody who wrote a term paper
explaining why the resurrection happened.
And I feel like they definitely,
there's some logical leaps in there
and they're justifying something that is like,
okay, it could have happened.
The best you can get to is it could have happened.
If you believe that resurrection is possible,
it is possible that Jesus resurrected.
But what I'm saying is that to me,
it feels like you take the magic
and the beauty out of something.
And I'm just using the resurrection as an example.
But what I'm saying is that post enlightenment,
all this very super reductionist thinking
that people are applying to the faith,
to God and his action in the world and people's relationship with him.
To me, the reductionism takes the faith
and the supernatural, we're not talking
about reasonable things, we're talking about God,
this external personal force moving into the physical world
and doing things that defy all logic and reason.
So when you start trying to put your logic
and put God into the reasonable and logical box,
you're kind of taking away some of his attributes
in my mind, which leads me to,
I personally think the most intellectually defensible
Christian position
is something called biblical presuppositionalism, right?
Which is basically you just start with the presupposition
that the Bible is true and that everything flows from that.
Now, do I find that compelling?
No, do I subscribe to that?
No, but I can understand it and I find that the people
who kind of start with this presuppositionalist viewpoint have a lot less
trouble getting into this tit for tat logic and reason
argument back and forth because it's just like,
I don't have to deal with your arguments because
I just accept it as true.
I just feel like the enterprise of Christian apologetics
for a lot of people, if you go into it with an open mind
and an open heart and you kind of say,
I'm gonna follow wherever the truth leads,
I think one of the reasons that so many people like me,
when they take on that particular,
when they go down that path, they end up where I'm at,
is exactly what I said, it's because you're taking
and you're applying logic to it and if you're gonna do that,
you're gonna end up in a logical and reasonable place,
which I don't believe is a place of faith.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, I don't,
I'm not gonna add anything to it.
Okay.
Okay, well, I didn't wanna spend too much time talking,
again, I like talking about that stuff,
but I don't want it to be our podcast.
So let's talk about some more personal things.
Let's get back to as personal as we possibly can.
And to make this even more personal,
I'm gonna say that this question came from,
should I say the name?
Just a man named Daniel, a man named Daniel.
I almost said Dam-yul,. My character's name, Daniel.
He likes to have fun.
What are your takes on miracles
such as healings and unexpected blessings?
And another question, I don't know if this is,
I think I just grabbed this from somewhere else.
Have you ever had a supernatural experience
and if so, how would such an experience
fit into your worldview?
Okay.
Have we ever had a.
Lots of people ask this question.
Supernaturally.
How do you, because a lot of people said,
God moved in my life in an undeniable supernatural way
and therefore, regardless of what you're going to say
about the foundation of the faith,
it's so real and so personal and I've seen with my own eyes
or I've experienced something that is undeniably
supernatural and God's movement in my life
and therefore I'll never depart from it.
How do you relate to that?
Oh, you were asking me.
I thought you were just restating the question in general.
Well, I didn't really hear you restating the question
because I was thinking of if I've ever experienced
something miraculous,
I don't remember ever experiencing anything miraculous.
I think in our particular church, it was like,
we weren't taught to expect miracles.
It wasn't a part of the,
there weren't healings associated with our church services.
That wasn't the denomination we came from.
Yeah, we prescribe to something,
you might call it dispensationalism,
which is the idea that miraculous activity
by the Holy Spirit coincides with a dispensation, right?
So a dispensation, so when,
obviously there's all kinds of miracles in the Bible
because A, Jesus is doing them,
so you've got God in the flesh there doing miracles
and then you've got all these early church miracles
when the Holy Spirit is basically coming on people
at Pentecost and then a few years after.
But God doesn't do that anymore.
But God doesn't do that anymore. But God doesn't do that anymore
because he doesn't need to.
That's kind of, but that doesn't mean that occasionally
God's gonna answer a prayer,
but it'll be one of those things that's like,
did this person get better from cancer
because the church prayed or was it just,
it just happened or was it the medical team?
But it wasn't like somebody's gonna come in
and like grow hair of a different color
or their legs are gonna get longer
or they're gonna stand up from being disabled
for 10 years.
Like that didn't happen in our church
but I do understand that it happens
in many people's traditions.
But based on that teaching,
I never really looked for it.
I never expected it.
I've been thinking like a corollary question
people have asked is like what about answered prayers?
You know, if you wanna put that like in a near miracle
or like in the miracle category I guess
or like miracle light.
That sounds like a great beer.
Well it sounds like a spread, miracle whip.
But when I was thinking back, my memory's fuzzy,
but my prayer life was not that vibrant
and I don't recall ever asking God for something
that I didn't think he could give me.
Didn't wanna be unreasonable.
I didn't wanna be, I didn't wanna ask could give me. Didn't wanna be unreasonable. I didn't wanna be, I didn't wanna, you know,
I didn't wanna ask for too much, you know?
That's what, when you're taught how to pray,
it's like you got adoration, you got confession,
you got thanksgiving, and then,
if you haven't fallen asleep by that point,
you got supplication.
Acts.
And I never got, I just, I had this feeling that like,
I just never had, I didn't wanna call God on the carpet.
I don't know.
It's like, I didn't wanna be proven wrong.
Maybe that was part of it deep down subconsciously.
I had a lot of, again, I don't wanna go back
to the guilt thing, but like, I knew that I didn't really
have a great prayer life.
And I put that on me.
But I don't remember ever expecting miracles
or really expecting healing.
Especially after college in the church
that I was involved in there,
it was a different strain of Christianity.
In that church, we believed that the people who were gonna be saved
had been chosen ahead of time,
which means that others were chosen actively
for damnation ahead of time
and there's biblical passages that seem to say that.
A lot more people believe that than you would think.
But it was very,
and we joked and called ourselves the frozen chosen
because it wasn't a dynamic,
experiential expectation.
It was pretty heady.
That God was, it was pretty heady.
God wasn't gonna show up and do something crazy
because he didn't need to.
He'd been there and done that,
either believe it or don't.
Right.
But don't demand it.
Who are you to demand that God do something?
So like this was the environment that I operated in
and I don't really recall experiencing a miracle.
One of my mom's friends who was like,
she was one of those what I felt like more of the spiritual
like in touch with things that are ineffable.
And she was also a Christian.
She said, I had this premonition.
It was kind of like a dream, but it was more of a vision
that your son, she was talking to my mom but it was more of a vision that your son,
she was talking to my mom, Link was in front of this
huge crowd in a stadium and he was,
it was like he was Billy Graham and he was like
preaching the gospel.
And I was in high school when she told me this.
My mom relayed it and I was like okay.
Thanks for that pressure.
I don't know, maybe she saw us performing in a venue
and she didn't realize that we were just singing
a dumb song about.
So I was there?
You were not there.
Okay, well, it sounds like a solo act to me.
Yeah.
To be honest with you.
That hasn't happened.
I mean, that's a vision, that's not a miracle, but.
Well, I have what I would have called my miracles.
I'm gonna tell my stories right now.
All right.
And then I'm gonna tell you my perspective on them.
First miracle, 1998, I'm in New York City,
working with Campus Crusade for Christ.
Summer in the City is what we called it,
where me and I don't know, 30, 40 other college students
worked with the churches in the inner city to do,
basically you were with a different church every single week
and doing whatever outreach and stuff they were organizing.
And interestingly, one of the things that I was
struggling with at the time,
this is one of my first sort of,
I don't remember exactly where I learned it,
but when I started learning more about
how the New Testament came together,
specifically the way the canon was decided
and the councils of these church fathers getting together
quite some time after the writing of the Bible
to then kind of determine what the books
of the Bible would be.
Yeah, let's not worry about that book of Thomas.
Exclude some of those books.
And this was troublesome, right?
For someone who had never really thought about this
and was just like, oh, the Bible is God's word.
So you kind of just imagine that it was.
It was.
Somebody just, you know,
like I think the tradition of the Quran is that
God basically filled Muhammad and then he wrote it.
I'm ignorant about that.
But I think it has a little bit,
and like the tradition of the Book of Mormon,
I think is that God filled, the Holy Spirit
kind of came upon Joseph Smith and got him to write it.
Like that kind of feels like a good thing
to kind of fall back on.
Like it feels a little tighter, you know,
from a scripture standpoint versus like,
well, some people wrote some books.
We don't know exactly what their intentions were and then.
But get to the miracle, man.
So you were doubting.
Right, so I started thinking about this
and had some doubts about it and I specifically was arguing
with a Muslim student on some college campus in New York.
I can't remember which one it was, not arguing,
but we were having a friendly discussion where I was,
he started to attack the New Testament in this way,
basically saying what I was just talking to you
from a Muslim perspective and basically saying
how the Quran is superior because of this.
And I didn't have any answers for him
because I hadn't really looked into it.
So, and of course, I'm in New York, it's 1998,
I don't really have access to the internet
because we didn't have cell phones
and there was no computer that anybody had
so I didn't really have any way to research or anything
so it just kind of ate at me as I continued to do ministry
throughout the summer.
And then one day we went square dancing
because of course square dancing was what
every college student who knew which way was up
was doing in the late 90s, especially in Christian groups.
Boy, we square danced like rabbits.
I just mixed metaphors there.
Because we couldn't have sex, we were square dancing.
That's kind of what I was getting at with the rabbits thing.
Well, you couldn't grind, so you square.
Right. And so we went to the Lincoln Center or something,
I can't remember, we were to square dance
and then we had to come back and of course
we're using the subway system
and there's no cell phone or anything
so you're like using your map that you've got
and we realized that the subway station
that we need to get on, the subway we need to get on
to get to Astoria which is where we were living,
had closed because it was so late,
but there was a stop across Central Park
that we could get on,
but it was only gonna be open for like 10 more minutes,
so we all start running across Central Park.
Not the long way, the short way, it's not that hard to do.
We've got just a little bit of time
to get to the subway station.
We get there, we go down, we move through the turnstile
and then we get on to the subway and I go to my seat
and right at the seat that I'm about to sit down at
is a sheet of paper.
Okay.
I pick up the sheet of paper
and it's just like a portion of a paper, like a term paper,
like just text, just typed text.
Typed and printed out.
Not a professional publication.
And it basically begins to explain why
the New Testament is necessary.
How you couldn't just stop with the book of Malachi,
but that the Old Testament was calling
for the fulfillment in the New Testament.
And I took that sheet of paper and I said,
thank you God for proving yourself to me.
I'm not gonna doubt about this anymore
and put it in my journal.
You stole somebody's paper.
Big time miracle, right?
What is my perspective on that now?
I told you the story the way that I've told it many times,
the way I told it to groups of people
when I was a Christian.
Now I'm gonna tell you the rest of the story,
as Paul Harvey would say.
Because the way I told the story.
Paul Harvey wrote most of the New Testament.
He did.
The apostle Paul Harvey.
The way that I would tell that story.
What did you leave out?
Is I told it in kind of a sensational way, right?
I kind of set you up with what I was doubting
and then I went to this particular seat
that was in the particular place that I went to
and there's a sheet of paper
and it addressed this thing directly.
Yeah.
The reality of the way that it happened.
Sounds like ear biscuits.
Well, I made a better story that way.
But the reality of the way that,
that's also the way that I told myself, by the way,
when I would go back to that miracle time after time. But the way that I told myself, by the way, when I would go back to that miracle time after time.
But the way that it actually happened,
everything leading up to getting on the subway is true.
And I was doubting this stuff.
But when we got on the subway,
there was flyers all over on multiple seats.
It wasn't just the seat that I was going to,
it was everywhere.
Okay. And when I got to it
and read it, it was everywhere. Okay. And when I got to it and read it,
it was someone who is mentally unstable
had written a bunch of sort of religiously informed gibberish.
Oh, like a manifesto?
And in this, and it wasn't just a sheet of paper,
it was a few sheets of paper.
And as I read it, nothing really made sense.
And it was like, this person seems a little bit off.
But oh, but there is a line in here
that says something about, and just like the book
of Malachi is calling out for the book of Matthew,
blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
So I found a sentence.
I was dealing with something in my heart
and it was sort of tearing me apart in a lot of ways.
And then I found something that was quite a coincidence,
was quite serendipitous and was quite unusual.
And I was able to make that connection.
And it really put my doubts at ease at the time.
Now looking back on that,
do I think that that was orchestrated by God?
Well if I did, then I probably wouldn't be
where I am right now.
No I don't, I think it was a coincidence
that I then incorporated into my framework
and bolstered my belief with it.
My second story, much easier than that,
it was, actually that same, was that the same summer?
I was a camp counselor at a camp
at the Tri-State area near New York, yeah.
And I had a bunch of inner city kids
who were coming out to the wilderness to be in this camp
and these kids come from broken homes
and they were just wild and very difficult
to contain and control.
Okay.
And I was in charge of them.
And one night they were just going absolutely ballistic
in this cabin.
How old are they, what ages are we talking about?
13.
Okay.
Probably like seven or eight of them,
they're going absolutely nuts
and being completely disrespectful,
but also like almost fighting each other
and I'm like sitting there like I don't know what to do.
So I go outside and they're like super loud and like fighting,
I go outside and I place my hand on the cabin
and pray for peace.
And then immediately they get quiet.
Wow, did you feel power leave your hand?
No.
Now, that's the way I used to tell the story,
now I'm gonna tell you the real version of the story.
Paul Harvey.
The rest of the story is.
I never heard that one, by the way.
I've heard the other one.
I went outside.
And you only told me the first part,
which tells me, like the fact that you would even,
just by the way, that subway story,
you only told me the first version.
You didn't even tell me, like hey man,
but there were a lot of pamphlets
and I think that it was like some weird manifest.
You never ever told me that.
I haven't come to grips with it until more recently.
So it was, it became, okay go ahead.
But the rest of this story is that I placed my hand
on the cabin and I prayed and then a couple minutes later
they got quiet.
It wasn't like immediate.
If it had been, it still could have been a coincidence
but it was, you know.
Did you tell that one publicly?
Yeah.
You did?
Yeah.
And I didn't feel like I was being dishonest.
It's just when I'm really, really honest about what happened
I'm like okay, well, you can change the details a little bit
and make it a little bit more sensational.
Now, so, okay, now I'm not speaking for everybody,
this is me, I have no doubt that people listening right now,
there's somebody out there who's like,
well, I got, dude, I got specific miracles
that cannot be explained any other way.
Here's what I can say for myself,
which is essentially what Link said.
I've never experienced anything unambiguously supernatural
in my life.
Everything that I've experienced, I can find,
it isn't difficult for me to find
a reasonable explanation for it.
But a lot of that has to do with the fact
that it's the tradition I came from,
which we didn't do miracles,
and I had the couple of stories when I was doing some stuff
with Campus Crusade that I can now see like,
well, I mean it could also be a coincidence
so it's not definitively,
it's not unambiguously supernatural.
But the second part of the question is,
what would you do if you experienced a miracle,
an unambiguous miracle now
in the year 2020 thinking the way that you think.
For me, if you go back about five years,
six years, when I was kind of making the decision
to be like, I'm getting out of this,
not gonna think this way anymore,
an unambiguous miracle at that time
would immediately brought me right back
to traditional Christian faith,
the faith of my teenage years, whatever, right?
But I gotta be honest with you,
if I experienced something unambiguously supernatural now,
I would just be like, oh, supernatural things happen.
Oh, that is a feature of the universe,
that supernatural things can happen.
Because I'm not ruling that out,
but it doesn't logically follow for me personally
given the conclusions I've come to up to this point
to then all of a sudden undo all those conclusions
just because something supernatural can happen.
To me, the only conclusion that I would come to
is supernatural things can happen.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, well for me,
if I would have experienced a miracle
while in the faith, then I would have picked it apart
because that's what I was always taught to do
because of what I already said.
I find it interesting that both of those stories
that you told happened that summer when you were in New York
you were serving in churches that were much more
what we called charismatic.
I witnessed two exorcisms.
Okay, you didn't talk about, well those are miracles.
What do you mean you witnessed two exorcisms?
Well I didn't believe that they were actually exorcisms.
Because of what we were taught.
Even at the time I was like.
But you were in, okay, so you didn't believe
those exorcisms, but man I wanna hear those stories.
Nothing special, no voice changes, no levitation.
It was like run of the mill,
somebody just yelling really loudly
and everyone saying that they were possessed.
So I mean, we're not talking the exorcist here.
Did they calm down?
Did something leave their body?
Yeah.
They calmed down.
They calmed down.
I'll say they calmed down.
That would be, that's my best explanation.
It was underwhelming to you.
Yes, it was not believable.
But you were in a more open place
and you were open to looking and claiming
your own miraculous experiences.
Yeah, because I asked for the gift of tongues
that summer as well.
In that environment, like you would never have asked
for to speak in tongues because we were taught that like,
again, that was a prior dispensation
and it was basically just learning other languages.
But right, but I did.
I did ask for the gifts of tongues.
Didn't happen.
I did not receive it.
And yeah, I've always just, again,
it's the combination of what we were taught
and just how my brain works.
I've always been, I didn't feel like I needed that to have,
my faith system was intact without that. So I actually, I didn't feel like I needed that to have, my faith system was intact without that.
So I actually, I didn't need it.
I didn't need to believe those.
I actually feel like now,
I hope that I'm more open to miracles now.
Because I never have been.
That's what I want.
I just want, you know,
I want, again, this is what I want
and how much does that matter when it comes to what's true?
None.
But it, maybe it does because if you don't want something.
Oh okay, all right, now I hear you.
If you're not open to it.
Preach it, brother.
Maybe you can never see the truth of it.
So I want to be open.
I don't want to be shut off to God's activity in my life.
I want to cultivate my spirituality.
Yeah, I get that.
And again, that's what I've already said,
but just to use the miracles as an example,
I'm instinctively skeptical,
but I want to be more open.
Yeah.
I'm with you on that.
That sounds good.
I like that.
Yeah, because why not?
I don't wanna miss out on that.
Unless it involves hell and then I'm like, I don't know.
I don't think I do.
I'm not signing up for this kit and caboodle.
Okay, I think I follow.
One of the things I will say is that as a Christian
and especially as a Christian in a particular denomination,
which it was non-denominational,
but it was essentially like reformed Baptist
or something like that.
I don't know how you,
but we were really good at discounting
all kinds of miracles from other traditions,
including the Catholic tradition, right?
The Catholic tradition is kind of known
for ongoing miracles and they have like a whole group
of people who like verify miracles that happen
at certain locations and they're kind of more into that.
And our perspective on that was all bullshit.
I mean to be quite honest is it was just bullshit.
It was like it was wishful thinking
but it wasn't actually happening.
And it was really like it was so, so easy
to not consider Catholic miracles as a Protestant.
It was so easy.
It was like turning over in bed easy.
Didn't even cross my mind it was so easy.
So I just find it interesting that.
Like I've never believed in ghosts,
I never really believed in demons.
We have friends now that like talk about seeing ghosts
and I'm like.
Well I wanna finish my point because I don't want
people to think that I'm talking crap about Catholics
in particular.
What I'm doing is I'm just saying that.
You talking crap about Catholics?
No I'm saying that the perspective that I was under
at the time was that that wasn't legitimate.
And so, and I didn't care about whether or not
they were offended, right?
And so what I'm saying now is that I believe
that the miracles that people, again, I don't know,
my guess is that the miracles that people, again, I don't know. My guess is that the miracles that people experience today
in the context of church or any religion
are probably not actually miracles.
I could be wrong.
It certainly doesn't help when you've got
the easiest targets of televangelists rigging miracles.
Yeah, every time you drill down.
When that is definitively proved again and again.
Every time you drill down on these guys who are.
Oh, everybody.
Healing people is like, oh, he's got an earpiece.
The apologist got an eight jagger.
He's got an earpiece.
But finish your point.
Ghosts may exist, man.
I never believed in ghosts, demons, anything like that.
We have close friends who like talk about specific
and ongoing encounters, you know, and it's like,
well, you know, my former self would just be like,
just almost would talk shit behind your back.
You and I would, right?
I don't do that anymore.
Well, I like the idea of ghosts
because it makes horror movies a lot scarier
and I like being scared.
And the moment that you begin just explaining it all away
and saying that this can't happen,
then all of a sudden, Annabelle's room is not that scary.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, I just, yeah, and I'm not to that point yet.
So there could be something there.
I'm just, again, I'm just trying to give my perspective.
Can I, speaking of your perspective,
I do wanna get your perspective on the,
on leaving me on the side of the road
because some people, it's like they only,
they got upset with you.
Maybe I told the story wrong.
To me, well, I'll let you speak,
but it was like they were angry with you,
but I guess it was maybe at that point in the story.
Yeah. And then you came back.
I find it, yeah, I found it really interesting
that people were upset with me
once you hear the whole story.
That's an interesting take.
I think it's just a misunderstanding.
And I didn't say anything at the time
because you were telling your story
and I didn't wanna, it wasn't about my perspective.
There's a few logistical questions that we did get.
Like we were on Philip DeFranco's podcast,
which should be out by now.
We talk about a lot of this stuff, by the way.
He asks us about a lot of this stuff by the way. He asks us about a lot of questions
about how we're processing the last years.
So if you wanna listen to his podcast,
we got into it over there and got into some stuff
that we haven't talked about here and that we probably won't.
Yeah, I got a little carried away a few times.
Yeah.
In a way that I try to control myself
a little bit more on this podcast.
Yeah, you felt like it wasn't your show so you could.
Right, yeah.
He asked us a clarifying point that like,
yeah, you didn't drive all the way home,
you drove over the hill, you drove over the horizon
and apparently parked somewhere where then you could walk
and dramatically come over the horizon,
which you definitely did.
Yeah, well, just to give you my perspective on this.
So I was upset with you for drinking, right?
Because I knew, and not just-
We were in the band.
Not because I was an asshole,
but because we had basically made like a commitment
to each other and to God that we're not gonna do that.
We're not gonna be kids who party.
That's not what we do.
Jesus is our party.
We were in the Wax Paper Dogs and we as a band
had made a commitment.
Every time we got together to rehearse,
which was at least once a week,
it was like such an important,
we would sit down in a circle and we would pray
with each other and we would share struggles
we were going through.
We would encourage each other and hold each other
accountable to not holding up the commitments
that we had made and asked our fellow band members
to hold us to.
So it was something that I had put out there,
hey, I wanna be a positive example.
We wanna invite our friends to these concerts.
We're gonna give people an opportunity
to become a Christian and I don't wanna blow that
by there being cracks in my armor. an opportunity to become a Christian and I don't wanna blow that by
there being cracks in my armor.
Basically, we thought that we had to be different
and we had to have a tangible difference in our life
and one of those easy tangible differences was
we don't get drunk, we don't get drunk on wine,
we get drunk on the Holy Spirit.
And so, or what was it, vodka?
I don't know what you had that night.
Some sort of liquor, I did not know.
We don't get drunk on some sort of liquor, I do not know.
We get drunk on the Holy Spirit.
Because of that witness, we called it.
Once I said that I wanted to get drunk,
they put on Merle Haggard's Misery in Gin.
Yeah, they got you.
They got you.
Merle will get you.
That's a good song, Misery in Gin.
Because you did that, I knew that.
That's what I was that night.
Let's say it was Gin.
Okay, you had basically compromised your witness
and so you compromised the band's witness
and as your friend who knew that you didn't want to do that ultimately
and you felt bad about it, I was like,
well, what am I gonna do?
I'm going to, and again, as we explained on Phil's podcast,
we were, man, we were so dramatic, sensational,
like everything was like, it was like we were trying
to like make everything that we were doing cinematic
and like have this like ceremonial aspect to it.
Sure, the big rock and the little rock that we had
and the conversations we had.
The blood oath was a ceremony.
We grew up in a church where, I mean,
it was new form Baptist ceremony,
like it was like church camp type ceremony stuff,
but it was meaningful.
I think it's part of that, but I think this is,
I think this is also just the way me and you
have always been.
Yeah.
And the way we've conducted our friendship.
We were strange.
You name places, like if you find a tree,
you gotta, we'll call it the tree with a capital T.
You gotta make the fabric of life
be even more exciting than it already is.
So not cotton.
Right.
Mylar.
We wore Mylar.
But so what I was thinking was is like okay,
he shouldn't have done this and I need to communicate
two things, I need to communicate two things.
I need to communicate judgment and forgiveness.
Judgment and mercy.
And so, I was like, to me, the perfect,
and I was kinda just pulling this out of my ass
as I was doing it, but I was like, all right,
I'm gonna kick him out of the car
and drive over the hill
because at that point he'll be like,
damn my friend just kicked me out of the car.
Yeah. Or drinking.
I feel bad.
I feel the weight of my sin.
Exactly and then I was like, but I'm not an asshole.
I'm gonna park the car and walk back to him
in this like moment of cinema
and peek over the horizon and come and join you
and not say a word and by coming back over the horizon
and meeting you, I'm basically saying,
hey man, you screwed up but I love you, I forgive you,
now let's walk together, let's get back to the destination, let's not do that again.
That's what I was thinking.
Yeah.
And I, you know, I don't,
even though I don't feel exactly the way that I felt
at that time, I don't think the same way
that I think at that time, like I regret many things in life,
I don't regret any of that, I don't regret that.
Right, yeah. And you know, I don't regret any of that. I don't regret that. Right, yeah.
And I don't regret getting mad at you
for getting drunk when you were 16 years old.
I don't think that 16 year old should get drunk.
Not from a moralistic standpoint,
but it's just like, hey, it's probably not a great idea.
Yeah.
There's consequences to your actions
and it doesn't have to be that the consequences
that God is then mad at you. You don't have to be that the consequences that God is then mad at you.
You don't have to go there to know that,
no, no, no, there's immediate tangible consequences
to that kind of behavior.
You don't have to be a genius to extrapolate
and figure out what those things are.
The risk of swallowing a penny being one of those.
Right.
You could choke on a penny and die.
Yeah, so you know what, next time, hey,
next time you do something stupid,
I'm gonna leave you on the side of the road.
I'll do it tomorrow.
You did plenty of stupid stuff,
but I never got that dramatic with you, man.
Yeah, I didn't do that particular thing.
I don't know, the first drink I had was.
It was the girls, for you it was the girls.
Besides the wine that we made for ourselves
when we were like 15.
Which we couldn't have gotten drunk off that.
That was a question.
We couldn't have gotten drunk off that
but we thought we could and we were,
it was just so exciting we had to do it.
And that was justifiable because.
I mean we weren't perfect kids.
That was justifiable because Jesus made water into wine.
That's not how we justified it.
We were just like.
Although there are some Baptists
who think it was grape juice,
which still makes me laugh to this day.
But.
It was the girls for you, man.
I like the ladies.
We had to have a lot of conversations.
At a certain point, I think you just stopped telling me
what you were up to.
I mean.
You gotta figure things out.
You would tell me and then the wheels would start turning
and I'd be like, I think if I'm not upset with him,
then that might mean I can do it too with my girlfriend.
Not sex, I mean we weren't even.
You're using that term loosely, it, I didn't do it.
Just a little petting.
We called it heavy petting.
I mean I didn't do it but if it was. Well I've never heard the term heavy petting. We called it heavy petting. I mean I didn't do it but if it was.
I've never heard the term heavy petting
outside of like a purity culture.
It's weird like heavy petting,
it's like it's just a weird phrase.
You ever seen the no heavy petting sign
at a petting zoo?
Careful.
I was not tempted.
I did not need a sign.
Oh man, I needed that laugh, no heavy petting.
I'm sure that's on a poster somewhere.
Okay, I mean.
Do you get through everything you wanted to get through?
There's one more question that I feel like we should answer
even though I think that we've probably
sort of hinted at this.
Seems a lot of people have asked the question,
well, a guy named Cody asked this question
because I did write it down.
Just about the part of your story,
the question is just about the part of your story,
where you make it a point several times
to talk about how real your relationship was with Jesus
just to later claim he isn't real.
How could it be both?
A lot of people have asked this question like,
I don't understand.
He said that it was real, it seemed like he was as real
as if he physically manifested himself to you.
Again, this answer's not gonna be satisfactory
to anyone who believes that they are actually
in relationship with God or in relationship with Jesus.
You're gonna conclude that we just never had
a real relationship with Jesus if this is the way
that we would characterize it and that's your right.
I honestly can't argue with it. But I believe that we were a part of a community
that was committed to a certain way of seeing the world
and we had lots of people in our lives
who were reinforcing that viewpoint
and that was kind of every single thing.
It was just, we bought into a philosophy, right?
And part of that religion, part of that way of thinking
was that you basically, you're in relationship with God,
like you've got the Holy Spirit,
basically you've got a relationship with Jesus,
but it's really the Holy Spirit that's filling you
and motivating you and keeping you from doing things.
And there were times when I would specifically be singing
praise and worship music, which was a big part
of the groups that we were in.
And I would just feel completely overwhelmed.
We didn't do the whole like getting slain in the spirit,
never got knocked down by anybody.
But I had deeply emotional reactions
during like,
different conferences and places where you were just like, on fire for God and I actually had physical things
happen to me like I would feel like a tingling
kinda come down from the top of my head
and like get in my ears and like,
there's like a physical manifestation of what I thought at the time
was the spirit filling me.
Interestingly, like I can listen to praise and worship music
to this day and kind of get myself back into that place.
I can listen to Easy Lover by Phil Collins
and that other guy and get into that place.
But so I think a lot of the things that I was in.
I mean just the tingling.
I was interpreting as evidences of the Holy Spirit.
We're just evidences of the way humans work, you know?
And they were deeply emotional and.
But there was, I mean, and I know this is true of you too,
but like I was journaling my prayers
because I had a hard time actually like focusing on praying,
but there was a lot of praying.
It was kind of a one-sided conversation,
but when you start to, but I could sense responses.
Oh, yes. Or like,
you read the, you know, they taught you to,
we were taught to read the Bible and study the Bible
in a way that the Holy Spirit would bring things out of it.
Like, you would gain insight in relating it to who you were.
And we would seek guidance on every single major decision
and in certain stints of my life,
every single minor decision.
Yeah.
And really get a sense that you were,
that I was guided to make decisions by God.
I mean, we even, we went through workbooks
called Experiencing God,
how to determine God's will for your life.
All of the, you know, it's like we were trained
the practices in order to connect with God
and to be guided by God. the practices in order to connect with God
and to be guided by God. But for me, making decisions was a huge thing.
Like my journal was filled with everything
that I talked about and then the second thing
it was filled with was me trying to assess
if I could marry Christy, if she was the one for me.
Like I obsessed about this and I felt like,
on one hand, I became convinced that like, okay,
God is blessing this decision.
This is a wise decision, this is the right decision.
On the other hand, I felt like I missed out on a lot
of like experiencing like falling in love with my wife.
Because I wanted it to be something
where God granted me permission and give me a sign
or give me the specifics.
And I felt like I got that.
Those are all aspects of my active relationship with God.
You're the one who made the statement.
I didn't make the statement.
But it's true of me too.
I believe that I did have a real back and forth
conversational relationship with God.
I just thought that I wasn't good at it.
And that all the stuff I was trained to do,
I just wasn't motivated enough.
And I just, it wasn't, it was my shortcomings,
not God's that made me feel distant.
Yeah, well, you know, when you're on staff
at Campus Crusade, you have,
you're encouraged to do something called
a day with the Lord every month, right?
Right.
And this is essentially a day long devotional.
You might have what we call your quiet time
or your devotion time every single morning
where you get up and you pray and you read the Bible,
which I was okay at.
There were some good runs in there.
Right.
It's pretty much a struggle for most Christians.
But I always loved the day with the Lord.
You did?
Yeah, oh yeah, I loved it.
And what I would do is I would take my Bible and my journal
and I would go to some spot in nature
and I would just sit there and I would just pray.
And basically, the funny thing is,
is I still do this pretty regularly.
I just don't call it a day with the Lord.
I just go out into a spot in nature.
I don't have the Bible.
I've got my journal.
I might have a book or something
that I'm reading at the time.
But I just sort through things, right?
And it's just like now, and I talk out loud to myself,
whereas I used to just talk out loud to God,
but tangibly, practically, the experience is no different.
I'm not trying to, that may sound like sad or crass
or whatever, but I'm just saying that,
not trying to be dismissive, I'm just saying,
when I think back on what I was interpreting
as a two-way relationship with the Lord was,
and again,
I don't know the nature of the universe
and maybe that I was tapping into some sort
of spiritual plane that exists that I don't fully grasp
and understand and I'm still open to that.
I hope so.
Yeah, but I tend to think that what was happening,
especially during those times, is I was just getting away,
I was extracting myself from my day-to-day life
and all the distractions there,
and I was just getting some time to just be still.
Be still and be in a meditative state
and kind of just things come to the surface
and you kind of work through things.
It's like if you go to the gravesite
of someone that you love and you talk to them,
and some people carry on that kind of relationship
for a very, very long time, that person never speaks back to them and some people carry on that kind of relationship for a very, very long time,
that person never speaks back to them
but there are tangible experiences
and they remember what they look like
and they remember that, you know,
in the same way that your memories of a loved one
are sort of the, it's the raw material
by which you have an ongoing conversation with them
after they die, I kind of feel like the Bible and church tradition
and what you're being taught is the raw material
for carrying on a relationship with Jesus
that might just be a conversation with yourself.
That's my best guess as to what's happening there.
As I always like to say, I could be wrong.
You probably are.
Right, I'm sure I am in some way.
Yeah.
Hashtag Ear Biscuits.
At this point, are we gonna talk about this anymore directly?
I don't know.
I don't, I predict not.
But again, as we've said before,
I think that these things will percolate through
and as we continue to reminisce,
and every single Ear Biscuit or every couple,
I mean, we're always pulling from our past
and now we're able to talk about it
in a way that we haven't been able to.
Yeah, certain aspects of that.
I gotta say it's.
So it will come up.
It's been really liberating personally.
I think about just being able to talk about it
on Phil's podcast and there was a lot of shame
and also just fear around just being honest
about our pasts
and be able to just be like, this is who we were,
this is who we are.
I don't know, it's just, it's a healthier way to live.
I've experienced a lot of peace.
And we can move forward.
That's so important.
I feel like, and I'm glad that in this venue,
you can come along for the ride.
That's what's gonna happen.
I do have a wreck.
I have a wreck in effect.
Hit us with it.
I wanted to do this last week, but it was your wreck,
so it's a little bit late, but I just wanted to shout out
Dear Hank and John, which is Hank and John Green's podcast.
Good friends of ours, and John shouted us out.
I'm not just doing this to return the favor,
I mean, that's part of this,
but John has been listening to the podcast.
I'm not saying Hank hasn't, but John specifically said
that he had been listening to our stories
and our deconstruction.
And you know, just the way that he described it
on their podcast was, it just meant a lot to us.
And they're also, they're just super thoughtful guys
who, you know, basically as close to us as you can be
in terms of, well, the two guys that have known each other
for most of their lives, probably theirs
or like all their lives, who do a business like this
and are just trying to be husbands and fathers
and live life and figure it out.
And they're just incredibly smart, thoughtful, funny guys
who have a very smart, thoughtful, funny podcast.
But they've got this thing where you can only listen to it
after you've listened to Ear Biscuits.
That's how their podcast works.
Right.
So don't even try to listen to it
before you've listened to,
until you're fully caught up with us,
but then go on over there
and they'll welcome you with open arms.
All right, we'll speak at you next week.
Love ya.