PBD Podcast - "Billy Carson COULDN’T Fight Back" – Wesley Huff DESTROYS Fake Bible Lies & Debate Drama MELTDOWN
Episode Date: January 13, 2025Wesley Huff joins Patrick Bet-David on the PBD Podcast to discuss his explosive debate with Billy Carson, diving into faith, historical accuracy, and cultural shifts. They explore the growth of Islam,... the challenges facing Christianity, and the impact of theological debates on modern society. --- 👕 GET THE LATEST VT MERCH: https://bit.ly/3BZbD6l 📕 PBD'S BOOK "THE ACADEMY": https://bit.ly/41rtEV4 📰 VTNEWS.AI: https://bit.ly/3OExClZ 🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON SPOTIFY: https://bit.ly/4g57zR2 🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON ITUNES: https://bit.ly/4g1bXAh 🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON ALL PLATFORMS: https://bit.ly/4eXQl6A 📱 CONNECT ON MINNECT: https://bit.ly/4ikyEkC 👔 BET-DAVID CONSULTING: https://bit.ly/3ZjWhB7 🎓 VALUETAINMENT UNIVERSITY: https://bit.ly/3BfA5Qw 📺 JOIN THE CHANNEL: https://bit.ly/4g5C6Or 💬 TEXT US: Text “PODCAST” to 310-340-1132 to get the latest updates in real-time! ABOUT US: Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal Bestseller “Your Next Five Moves” (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
People like Billy are very confident in the way that they say things,
but that confidence isn't always backed up with the reality of the evidence.
The sources you use were not primary.
We're still talking about it over and over again.
There's so much more we can talk about here.
We're wasting a lot of time.
Confidence and competence are not the same thing.
And I thought what was surprising to me about my interaction with Billy was that
I was expecting some sort of rebuttal.
Billy went to Mark's house
with a handwritten cease and desist letter.
People would never expect to go there.
What happened after you guys were done with the podcast?
Well, we did the podcast and then it was very clear that Billy did not want the
podcast to air. Why? Because a genius solves problems before they have it and I'm
gonna drop the mic on that. Some weird people are gonna become Christians next
two years.
And if you watch the interaction I had with them, it's on my youtube channel. There was no robot. So yeah. Yeah. Yeah
Yeah, go on. Well, we do a follow. I really appreciate it Billy. Thanks so much for interacting Marcus here
I didn't even know mark was gonna be here. Right Marcus
Yeah fellow that you did a podcast for Billy would you have done it if you knew what it was gonna turn into would you have?
Done it now? Look him back.
I found out about my guest today, Wes Huff,
by a debate that he did with Billy Carson.
And Billy Carson, who's been on our podcast before,
they had a sit down together,
which afterwards it was a bunch of commotion
and, you know, don't release it.
He contacts the host, Mark Minard, which by the don't release it he contacts the host Mark Minard which by the way
Today was the first day that Mark Minard the host of I think it's called
Elevating Beyond or some name like that of a podcast
It was the first time he and Wes met each other and I even brought Mark at the end of the podcast to speak for a
Few minutes about his experience with Billy and it was very interesting watching.
But Wes, what an interesting guy, young guy who we talked about the difference between
how many times you read the book of Koran, he's read I think three times, and the difference
between the book of Koran and Christianity.
He broke down his views on Mormonism and then I asked the question, I said, so if Koran
is what you say it is, why is the religion
of Islam growing at the pace that it is, faceting Christian church and why is attendance in
Christian church declining?
And he gave his argument that it's grown in different places.
I said, why is it not growing in America?
And we talked about a handful of different things that I wrote down here, which why are
people, you know, it was very interesting conversation.
We talked about Andrew Tate, his conversion to Islam and Justin Trudeau, Canada, his discomfort on talking about politics which we got into
a little bit at the end with what's going on. I asked him a technical question. I said,
hey, you yourself, you know, a Christian man, his struggles as a young bandit, you
know, what did you deal with, right? We talked about biblical times when Jesus came
and what was the only fans of that time
with the amount of sins that we have today,
only fans, porn, all this other stuff.
Are we at a point where he's making a return?
It was just an incredible conversation
with somebody who is very qualified to speak on this topic
and I really enjoyed it and I think you will as well
with Wes Huff. My handshake is better than anything I ever saw. It's right here. You are a 101?
My son's right.
I think I've already said this before.
Okay, so we've got a special guest in the house.
This guy decides to sit down and do a podcast with Billy Carson.
And two hours later, it's explosive.
Everybody in the Christian community, in the community that's had Billy Carson on,
whether it's us, whether it's Rogan,
whether it's Andrew Schultz, oh my God,
who is this West guy?
You know, and he was just recently on Rogan,
and I don't know if that's been released yet or not.
I'm sure it's gonna be fantastic.
So the timing is great.
And then I reached that idea and then I said,
listen, great work, good for you.
I enjoyed the conversation, would love to have you on
and boom, now he's here with us.
So it's great to have you on.
Yeah, it's a pleasure.
And so when you went in,
and obviously today I wanna kinda get to know
your background a little bit because it's very interesting.
You just told me your grandfather
used to sell Bibles in Iran.
Well, he worked for the Iranian Bible Society.
Iranian Bible Society in 1979, you said? Yeah, 1979 to 1980. Okay, so that's post-revolution. Yeah, immediately. Then
you used to live in Pakistan, and you went to school in Pakistan. Well, I was born in Pakistan.
So did you go to school there? No, I was, we left during the Gulf War. Okay. My parents were accused
of the crime of proselytizing, giving a Bible to a Muslim.
And then we came back from overseas to Toronto,
where my parents lived.
And then a year after that went out
and for a very short stint of my childhood,
we were in Jordan in the Middle East.
How long was that?
Between, like in the 90s for a few years. Between, like in the 90s for a few years.
You're young, so how old were you at that time?
Oh, I was quite young.
We came back when I was like six or seven.
Do you have any memories?
Yeah, yeah, definitely.
And I went back after I graduated high school.
I went back and worked more rurally.
I worked with Bedouin.
Whereas when I was really young,
we were in Amman,
which was much more of the city.
But when I went back after I graduated high school,
I did some work with a Bedouin
in an area just north of Aqaba.
So tell me about your family lineage.
Like, you know, your father, who's a,
is it everybody was a, my pastor Dudley Rutherford,
his father was a pastor,
his uncles were all pastors, his brothers were all pastors,
like everybody was a, and Biola University or APU
or Ozark or all this other stuff.
What, I mean, the way you were breaking things down
with Billy was very obvious.
You've been, you know, taught the right way.
You went to the school,
but tell me about the family lineage.
Yeah, so my dad is a pastor, you know,
he was a missionary, was a pastor, he's retired now.
Not a long lineage necessarily of pastors,
but my middle name is Livingston,
and my dad's name is Livingston,
and that's the family name going back
to a guy named David Livingston,
who was a missionary, who was the first,
I believe, European to go into Central Africa.
And we're related to him. So, since there was like the, because I believe it was his niece married outside of the family,
the firstborn male since then has been named Livingston.
So my father, my grandfather, my great grandfather, but it's my middle name
and it's my son's middle name as well.
Very cool.
Yeah. So there's a lineage going back into like the heritage of Christian ministry grandfather, but it's my middle name and it's my son's middle name as well. Very cool.
Yeah, so there's a lineage going back into like
the heritage of Christian ministry and missionaries
going back that far and then, yeah.
How did you go on a mission ever yourself or now?
By myself?
Yeah, I've done some trips.
When I was in Jordan, I was working doing that kind of stuff.
I've done some short-term mission trips to-
As an adult?
Yeah, yeah.
Just after I graduated high school,
like between high school and going to university.
I had a couple, yeah, a couple trips.
Was in Rwanda, was in Mexico, and I was quite a bit younger.
But yeah.
Yeah, I mean, I watched the interview with you
and the podcast that the fellow who was on there,
his name is Mark, I wanna say his last name correctly, and the podcast that the fellow who was on there his name is mark
I want to say his last name correctly Menard right if I'm not mistaken and his podcast is called elevation
Beyond I think it's called elevating beyond elevating beyond right with mark a minute
And so walk me through how this whole thing happened with you and Billy Carson because when you watch Billy Billy's been out of for 14 15
years, I think the first time if you search up his
material you will hear he started in 2010.
And he's gotten tens, if not hundreds of millions of views
on many different interviews.
I think even if you include TikTok, Instagram,
and everything combined, it's probably in the billions
of views that he's gotten.
Until he sat down with you, but walked me through
the invitation, did Mark invite you?
Did Billy invite you?
How did that happen?
Yeah, so Mark invited me.
He sent me a DM on Instagram the day before.
So as far as I understand it,
the plan was actually for Mark and Billy to interact.
Mark's a Christian, so he has Christian faith and conviction
and had talked to Billy because they had been friends, you know,
talked a lot about business together
and different things like that.
And so they were setting up, which
had sort of been in the ether for a while,
to have a conversation about some of the disagreements
that they had about what Billy said about Christianity,
how Mark feels about Christianity.
And Anton, who is Mark's media manager,
had compiled a bunch of different sources
that Mark could look at and kind of review
and plan for this.
And I'd done, in some of my social media videos,
just some short response videos to some things
that Billy had said on your podcast,
when you had him in, when Andrew Schultz had him on,
when Joe Rogan had him on.
Just quick, you know, two-minute things,
just kind of correcting some of those errors.
And so Anton put together a Google Doc
of some of this stuff, me, a few other people,
and how I understand it is that Mark just kind of said
to Anton
right before, what happens if we just reach out to Wes?
Like what happens if we just see if he can come
and interact?
So he reached out to me the day before.
I saw, I was out at a lunch meeting with a friend
and saw the message and, you know, couldn't get down
to Florida to actually do it in person,
but said, I'll jump on a call and I'm more than willing to do that and interact with Billy and couldn't get down to Florida to actually do it in person,
but said, I'll jump on a call,
and I'm more than willing to do that
and interact with Billy and kind of go back and forth
with some of the claims that he's made about Christianity.
And what was your biggest takeaway
when you sat down with him?
What did you see that was maybe different
than you had seen him on different podcasts
when he's speaking?
What did you sense?
I think people like Billy are very confident
in the way that they say things,
but that confidence isn't always backed up
with the reality of the evidence.
And so confidence and competence are not the same thing.
And I thought what was surprising to me
about my interaction with Billy was that
I was expecting some sort of rebuttal.
And if you watch the interaction I had with him,
it's on my YouTube channel, there was no rebuttal.
So we get into the topics.
He claims that Jesus wasn't crucified.
He kind of has these sources that he uses.
Uh, he brought those up, um, predictably,
as I thought he might.
And I addressed why those sources don't work
for his claim, and then he collapsed.
He just said, you know, well, the first claim was that
it was from the Sinai Bible, which is Codex Sinaiticus,
and I happened to have a facsimile,
a photocopy of Codex Sinaiticus on my shelf,
and so I simply pulled it off my shelf and said,
well,
do you mind telling me where?
You think it denies the crucifixion
or that the crucifixion isn't there?
Because this is a fourth century Greek Bible.
It has the crucifixion.
And so he kind of pivoted to saying, well, no, that's,
I misspoke.
I actually meant the Gospel of Barnabas,
which is a known forgery.
And so I think that my
surprise was that he didn't try to double down, he just completely
capitulated and then tried to move the topics onward.
So you're asking him questions because I'm watching the back and forth.
You're not being aggressive and disrespectful.
You keep posing questions.
So may I ask where you got this source from?
You know, if you don't mind me asking,
can you break this thing down for me?
And he's giving his rebuttal.
And what do you know about this, this, this, and that?
And he would pause and you would go and say,
well, actually I wrote a thesis on this.
And do you approach that you're going back and forth
with him.
What happened after you guys were done with the podcast?
Well, we did the podcast and then it was very clear
that Billy did not want the podcast to air.
So he got in contact with Mark and he said,
this thing can't go out.
And he had a couple of different reasons,
which he verbalized, but the reasons did kind of shift.
There was some talk of a debate.
Well, at first he said, you know,
I didn't really understand that this
was going to be as of a debate as it turned out to be.
And I typically ask a fee.
So he says he, you know, asked $50,000 for a debate.
That was never put forth.
And so it was unfair, because this
is his kind of standard
practice, is that it costs $50,000 to debate Billy Carson.
And then he brought forward that there was some sort
of interaction, formal debate that was being set up
with another Christian that this was interfering with.
Now, I doubt that that was the case.
I've been part of events where debates have taken place,
and why this conversation would have truly impinged on a later debate
is unclear to me.
But that was what he said.
And so, at this point, Mark and Billy are friends.
They've known each other for years.
They live in the same neighborhood.
And so, for the good faith of their friendship,
Mark decides to do Billy a solid and holds onto the footage.
But Mark contacted me only a couple of days later
and said, here's the situation, Wes.
It's not going to go out.
Billy doesn't want me to put it out.
And I think Mark was a little bit uncomfortable with the fact that Billy didn't want it put out.
And so I simply said, you know, that's fine.
It's your podcast.
But I'm going to make a video
and simply say that this event happened.
And so that's what I did.
And as things transpired, it was clear that
not everything was adding up on Billy's side,
but then also a lot of people were accusing me
of actually making up the interaction.
And so as that kind of took place.
What percentage, your own audience?
No, just people online.
Okay, got it.
So go ahead.
So you're saying, here's what happened.
Some people are saying,
I don't know, you're just making things up.
That would have never happened.
Billy's strong.
He would never be able to, you know,
you would never be able to hang with somebody like Billy.
Yeah, and then I just kind of say to Mark
as we're talking back and forth,
because we're communicating throughout
the course of the aftermath of this.
And I said, hey, people are accusing me of lying,
of making this up.
And Mark was quite uncomfortable with that.
Mark was quite uncomfortable with the fact
that people were accusing me of dishonesty.
And so then he made a video where he said that it did happen.
And in that video, he included a number of clips
of the actual interaction.
But not the whole podcast.
No, he held onto the podcast for over a month.
Oh, so let me get this straight.
So when, so this thing, when was the actual interview?
October 18th.
On my birthday, October 18th, and he released it when?
Because on your channel it says December 9th.
Yes.
And I don't see it on his channel anymore.
No, so what transpired was that Mark released it
in November, and he released it,
and it was up for less than 24 hours.
In fact, I don't even think it was up
for more than six hours. Okay., I don't even think it was up for more than six hours.
Okay.
Because Billy showed up to Mark's house
with a cease and desist letter at 2.30 in the morning.
Okay, so is this the part where there's a video of it
with the ring camera?
Yeah, yeah.
So if people are interested in this,
I would recommend two sources.
Anton put out a video where he kind of,
he chronologically lays out some of the things
that led up to it.
And then Mark himself, just a couple of weeks ago,
put out a video where he, from his side, put out,
you know, here's my side of the story of the things happened
that happened because Billy went to Mark's house
with a handwritten cease and desist letter.
A handwritten?
A 230 in the morning.
Yeah.
And then what does Mark do?
Mark takes it down.
So Mark took the video down.
It was less, I think, in regards to Billy,
more that this was just turning into something
that was because of the complexity of Mark's situation.
You know, he lives in the same neighborhood.
Billy's wife is friends with Mark's wife.
Their boys play basketball together.
Like, this is messy. This is messy for Mark.
On a different level than it's messy for me.
For sure. Yeah, that's tough,
because you're going to practice.
I can't believe you did this.
Kids are not having conflicts. Yeah. Yeah, especially if you're you're going to practice. I can't believe you did this.
Kids are not having conflicts.
Yeah.
Yeah, especially if you're, that doesn't help.
So during this time when it's up six hours,
I'm assuming you get the file and you say,
I'm gonna put it on my channel.
Well, so I had the file.
One of the things that I did do when Mark said,
hey, you know, I'm just gonna hold onto this.
Billy's asked me to, and so I'm gonna do this for the moment, is I said, you know, two things just going to hold on to this. Billy's asked me to, and so I'm going
to do this for the moment.
As I said, you know, two things.
I'm going to put out a video.
I'm going to say that this happened.
And I would like you to send me a copy of it.
So Mark actually did send me a copy of it, which I said,
I will not put out without your permission.
Now certain things transpired where, you know,
it kind of came to light that Mark,
because of the complexities of his situation,
wasn't going to repost the video,
but I decided to repost the video on my end,
on early December.
And you guys spoke and he said,
I'm gonna go live with it.
I said, I'm gonna go live with it.
And what was his reaction when he said that?
He was fine with it.
Mark has been pretty behind the scenes,
I think on purpose and for good reasons.
He's gotten a lot of flack because of, um,
some of the way that the conversation
transpired with Billy.
But if you ask Mark, he will say,
and I think he says in his video,
he was so surprised during the interaction.
He's in the room with Billy, and he's just,
he's very surprised that Billy, who is Mr. Confidence,
Mr. you know, ancient evidence, uh, is, is completely collapsing.
So for Billy, who usually always has the monologue,
to say, well, okay, well, that's fair,
let's move on to the next topic.
I think Mark was not to speak for him,
but I think he was genuinely a little bit confused.
And so felt like he, to a certain degree,
needed to come to Billy's aid.
In the course of this conversation,
because he just felt the kind of secondhand embarrassment
that was going on in the room,
because Billy was really not acting
in the way that Billy usually does.
Now let me ask you,
in 14 years since he's been creating
content, or he's been out there, Billy, and he's been
sharing his stories that he has, why do you think this
hasn't happened for 14 years?
I mean, I think you can strategically put yourself
in positions where you're not going to be put on the
defense.
The thing is with the internet, and I'm
sure you know this as well as anybody, Patrick, that like,
people love sensationalism.
And we live in a world where we know a little about a lot,
but we don't know a lot about a little.
And so we live in this Wikipedia world, right?
You can just hop online.
You don't really need to know information.
You can kind of shed that out to someone else.
Right?
You can, and someone else being basically the supercomputer in your pocket.
And so, and people love sensationalism.
People like to hear the crazy story, the conspiracy theory.
For you know, sometimes I think genuine reasons,
some conspiracy theories are true sometimes.
But I think when you have people
who are saying pretty outrageous things,
people like to be entertained
and people like the more sensationalistic theory
than the mundane one.
So, I mean, in one sense, it is sensationalistic
that you have this first century itinerant Jewish preacher
in the backwaters of Roman-occupied Judea
who predicts his own death and resurrection
and then pulls it off.
But I think people are so used to the biblical narrative
about the historical Jesus that
they want something else.
It's the same reason the Da Vinci Code got so popular, even though there really wasn't
anything historical behind the Da Vinci Code.
But people like these kind of under the table conversations that are sensationalistic and
make you feel like you know something special now.
And so I think exposing somebody, oh my God, Christianity's finally being exposed,
that there was another guy in the past,
that Jesus replicated his story because there was this person that in India,
and exact same story that did this, so finally Christians are being exposed.
Is that kind of what you're referring to?
Or I mean, every Christmas and Easter,
it seems that there's some news article about this lost or missing gospel that has this story about Jesus.
Well, I remember Da Vinci Code was massive,
even the movie with,
was Tom Hanks in Da Vinci Code?
Yeah, there was a one and a two from Namaste.
There was a couple of them.
And for a person that's not in that world,
you can really get caught up in it.
Now, have you had a follow-up with Billy?
Like, did you guys speak?
Has he reached out to you directly?
No, not to me, other than his lawyer sending me
a cease and desist letter, but.
Was that handwritten or was that typed out?
No, that was an actual.
Well, at least he paid you respect.
Oh, no, I guess so, yeah.
That's a level of respect.
You're not getting handwritten one.
I mean, I think he eventually did send
actual cease and desist letters to Mark.
So that's fair.
He has to pay respect to both people.
So now, if there was a possibility of a part two, right, with the two of you guys, maybe
he had a bad day.
Maybe he was sick that day.
Maybe he had a lot on his mind.
Maybe he had challenges with family, siblings, kids,
other things that's going on.
Sometimes people have a bad day.
Would you be open to the idea of another one,
the two of you guys together, long form,
and maybe he brings somebody with him?
Yeah, I would be open to it.
I mean, that was the original plan was that
this interaction that we had online would be kind of a precursor to,
ideally, an in-person thing with Billy.
And I actually said when Billy sent me the cease
and desist letter, I made a video where I said,
I will actually adhere to all of the terms and conditions
of this letter if you decide to run it back with me,
and we do it in person.
Because I think Billy has a lot of claims about the Bible,
and I hope that our conversation kind of made him think twice
about a lot of the claims he's made about the Bible,
especially the ones that are patently false
and can be verified even with just a quick Google search.
But I think there are still things that Billy has said
about the history of Christianity,
about biblical languages that do need to be corrected,
not because I have some sort of vendetta against Billy,
but because I want people to know
what is true.
And as someone who has studied this stuff formally
and does read Hebrew and Greek, I
want people to actually know what
the reality of what these things concerning
the historical reliability and the truthfulness
and the verisimilitude of the Bible actually are.
Wes, let me ask you. I'm on your channel right now. I'm just kind of wondering who else you
react to, right? Who else would be somebody where you would say is like a Billy Carson that,
you know, share certain stories that, you know, has caught some traction? Who else would you say?
Yeah, I mean, it's an interesting question. I'm actually scheduled to do an online
event with a guy named Aaron Abkay, who is a growing individual within.
I think Aaron has more kind of...
His repertoire is a little bit more than Billy's.
But my friend, Steven Boyce, who has a PhD
and is brilliant on church history,
and I think his PhD research was actually on Gnostic gospels.
Him and I are going to do an interaction with Aaron
and another individual as well.
But I mean, off the top of my head,
no one necessarily comes to mind.
But there are, I mean, the internet
is kind of a wild, wild west with this stuff and just claims
that are made.
I mean, I think it's emblematic in this conversation.
We live in this world, but we live in a world
where social media has kind of designed it
where we're so used to claims being thrown out,
but claims are not actual evidence.
And so you can make a claim where you say something, and because it's in 140 characters,
and we're so used to that,
we think that that's actually rationale.
But that's not rationale, that's an assertion.
An assertion is kind of like the roof of the building.
You don't start building the building by the roof.
That's the last thing to go on top.
The foundation, the walls, everything internal,
that's the rationale and the evidence,
and then you put the assertion on top.
But we live in this world where everybody's
throwing out assertions, and we've actually
forgotten how to articulate what evidence and reasons
and rationale actually are.
So that's what we see online.
A question about, like, you know,
I remember back in the days when a friend of mine
who we went to high school with,
I go to the Army, I come out,
this is a guy that was a PCP guy, troublemaker,
all of a sudden he's no longer cursing,
he's not drinking, he's not going to the clubs, I said,
what's going on with you?
And him and I both had a 1.8 GPA in high school.
Both of us were troubled teenagers.
We were just, you couldn't, we had a hard time
and I went to the military, he went a different route.
And he says, Pat, I found Jesus.
I said, you found who?
He says, I found Jesus.
I said, there's no way you found Jesus.
He said, I found Jesus.
I'm laughing at him. Thinking like, what do you mean you You found Jesus? He said well, what are you doing next Friday? I says I'm at the club
What are you doing next? So you want to go to the club? Let's go see some I want to take you a different club
what's that Church of the
Paznas of Pasadena
California I'm like
Give me a break dude. I'm not in. I'm busy. And he keeps trying.
Finally, I go on a Friday night.
And it's a Bible study with five of us
from six to two o'clock in the morning, Friday night.
And we start kinda going through this process.
And the teacher was a guy that knew a lot about philosophy,
so he can go philosophy,
he can talk maybe on the philosophy side,
on the business side, and he can talk on the spiritual side.
So different religions, denominations,
what questions you got, what are you struggling,
what are you battling with?
And it was very interesting to see,
you got the FAQs that you go through,
typical objections that have come up about,
you know, well, if God is real, you know,
how can he have something like this happen?
How can he let so many innocent,
you know, the most innocent objections,
like in every business there is.
Innocent objections that comes up.
And then eventually it gets deeper and deeper
and deeper and deeper.
And only somebody that went to school
and maybe has studied this like a,
for many, many years then realizes,
okay, now you're asking some real heavy questions
that we gotta sit and process process with how many people you think?
of somebody that went to school and got their you know
degree from certain universities that we have in America could have sat down with Billy and
Not exposed but revealed the number of
Leaks in his arguments how many people would be able to do something like that?
Somebody that studied theology.
Oh, I think quite a few.
And what's that number like?
Is it in the tens of thousands?
I mean, was it things that was not level of depth
that anybody could have overcame that's?
100%.
Yeah, yeah, I don't think that the accusations
that Billy was making,
they're not unusual in the sense of,
and I'm not really sure where Billy got a lot of
the arguments that he actually articulates from,
because like I said, Wikipedia articles could debunk him.
Like you look on, he uses something like
the Gospel of the Holy Twelve for his evidence.
Well, the Gospel of the Holy Twelve, on the Wikipedia article,
will tell you this is a 20th century forgery.
Like, we don't have any evidence.
Before the 20th century, it was designed
by a group that was trying to prove that Jesus
was a vegetarian.
But it's not a historical document.
And so if we're going off of something
like the Gospel of the Holy Twelve
or the Gospel of Barnabas, which is the one he uses for the denial of crucifixion.
Let's go through one of them. Let's start with the first one, Rob, if you want to go to that. So the Gospel of the Holy Twelve.
Yeah, so there you go. So the Gospel of the Holy Twelve, first serialized in the Lindsay and Lincolnshire Star newspaper between July 30th, 1898 and and March 10, 1901.
Presents vegetarian versions of traditional teachings
and events described in the canonical New Testament.
So this isn't something that has historical provenance.
So it's not something that has kind of a paper trail
going back into the ancient world.
There are ancient apocryphal documents
that you could capitalize on.
Gospel of Thomas, Gospel of Peter.
But this is not one of them.
So to choose this as your document to prove something,
I'm just not entirely sure why you would go
about that particular route.
Or the other one is the Gospel of Barnabas,
which is the one that Billy brought up with me,
which is a clear middle-aged forgery.
It's not... and that's not a contested fact.
It paraphrases Dante's Inferno.
It has glaring historical inaccuracies.
It has geographical mistakes.
It says that Jesus is the Messiah,
but he's not the Christ, indicating that the author
had no idea what those two words meant and that they were the same words in different
languages.
So these are-
Did you actually, did you yourself, do you actually try to go, when you hear him say
these things, let me see where he got these things from.
Is that where you go?
Are you going to saying, I don't know how he came up to the conclusion of this.
Is it this book?
Is it this fiction book?
Did you go that route yourself?
Or how do you try to break down his arguments?
Yeah, I think it's a both-and situation.
I think Billy's unusual in that he has brought forward arguments that I've never seen before.
So usually you get kind of the typical arguments that are repeated.
And sometimes it's repeated ad nauseam.
Accusations of the Council of Nicaea in 325
inventing the books of the Bible as the canon of scripture.
That's the sort of Da Vinci Code-esque argument.
And you can trace where the paper trail of that goes to,
because you can see that Dan Brown in the Da Vinci Code
got it from a previous book called
Holy Blood and Holy Grail.
And Holy Blood and Holy Grail appears
to have got it from Voltaire, who used a document called the Synodicum Vetis. So there's actual, like,
links to where, okay, this is a false statement, where's the false statement coming from? And you can see the dots and connect them. With something like using the Gospel of the Holy Twelve
or the accusation that Billy uses for the Sinai Bible, Codex Sinaticus, denying the crucifixion.
I think I can come up with a theory as to how
he developed that, which is based
on a misunderstanding of a textual variant
at the end of the Gospel of Mark that is in Codex Vaticanus.
Or sorry, not Codex Vaticanus, Codex Sinaticus.
But to then repeat this constantly and say that the crucifixion isn't in the Codex Synatechus entirely,
I'm not sure why he would go about that
or where kind of the reasoning came from.
As far as I can tell, a lot of these are original to Billy,
and they sound sensationalistic.
And a lot of people don't have the repertoire or the background are original to Billy, and they sound sensationalistic.
And a lot of people don't have the repertoire
or the background to know what something
like Codex Synodicus is.
And so when he's throwing that out to you,
or he's throwing that out to Anders Schultz,
or he's throwing that out to Joe Rogan,
it's not in your categories of information
that you just kind of have off the top of your head.
So you just kind of take it at face value, right?
But if you take a seminary Greek class,
it wouldn't be unusual to even open up Codex Sinaticus,
because it's all digitized.
You can go to codexsinaticus.org and see the document
and actually practice translating
some Greek from Codex Anatacus
because it is a prominent Greek manuscript.
So it's a combination of a few things where you have certain arguments that are repeated
you know often enough and loud enough online that they kind of, people in their minds, it becomes true.
And then you have other arguments that are more novel.
And I find Billy's arguments are more novel
than they're not.
He does kind of throw in the, you know,
Vatican is behind everything and the Council of Nicaea
and the books of the Bible and you know, Constantine is another one
that kind of gets everything,
gets pegged on Constantine for some reason.
But there are other things,
like a lot of what he talked about with you
that I think are, as far as I can tell, Billy originals.
Billy originals.
I think so, in as far as I can.
Meaning nobody else talked about it, it's just his own assumption that I think
this is what's going on?
Or the way that they're formulated.
So I think, like, Muslims have capitalized
on the Gospel of Barnabas because the Gospel of Barnabas
appears to actually have been influenced by Islam
in the Middle Ages and uses some sort of typical
later Islamic arguments from the Middle Ages and does deny the crucifixion.
So it has been capitalized on that way.
But the way that it's been used by someone like Billy,
I think, at minimum, it's novel,
because I haven't seen it in the same way
that Billy has articulated it.
And did you, you know how sometimes you see someone
and they, look, in football.
This guy was an assistant coach under this coach.
Anyway, I don't know if you're a sports guy,
this guy was an assistant coach under the other coach.
So he's come through these two lineage
and that guy's a runoff and this guy's a defense.
So I kind of know what his schemes are gonna be
when he's gonna be playing against me.
Cause that's who taught him, right?
Okay, I'm playing against these two coaches.
So when you're prepping for it, you're watching tape,
this is kind of how you do it.
Were you able to find out who was his teacher
that gave him this?
Were you able to figure that part out
when you were speaking with him?
No, not necessarily.
Okay, got it.
Yeah, I wonder because when you and I were talking offline,
a part of my, when I interviewed him,
and we had him on a podcast at one time,
and I asked him the question about
what happened to you as a youth?
What happened, did you have a bad experience
for you to kind of get to this point,
does somebody disappoint you, does somebody hurt you,
does something happen here where
you automatically became super skeptical
about all the stuff that's going on?
Because what causes someone to get here?
Is it just success, money?
Is it just eyeballs?
Is it just accolades and recognition?
Or is it I'm gonna get even to a person like this?
That's what I was wondering.
I wanna know, when he made the claims
and he said, well, he said Jesus is an alien.
How was that for you when you heard that?
I mean, that's a non-falsifiable claim.
You can't prove or disprove that Jesus was an alien.
I can prove a lot of things I think about the historical Jesus, but claims about aliens
are claims that have no falsification.
So they're kind of perfect for conspiratorial arguments because they have no ability to
be debunked,
or to be proven or disproven.
So, we...
I mean, in terms of what do I think of that?
I mean, I don't know. Jesus wasn't an alien.
So, I mean, I...
Of what we know about what Jesus was.
And I think this gets to the heart of the issue in terms of,
I can't speak to trying to get into Billy's head
or psychologizing why he does something,
but at the end of the day, I am two things, right?
I am an aspiring biblical scholar and historian,
and I am a Christian.
And so I'm very concerned with a good history
and articulating and using proper methodologies
to derive good history.
And I believe that Jesus was who he actually claimed to be.
That when he predicted his own death and resurrection
and then pulled it off,
that people who rise from the dead
have more credibility and authority
than people who don't rise from the dead.
And so I think that should be taken seriously.
And I think the claims that Billy articulates,
they lead people astray to doubt that in a way
that I don't think is credible, philosophically
or historically, and are easily debunked.
And so my first priority is, OK, I want people,
when I make a video, any video, you know, a response video,
or, you know, when I'm talking about manuscripts
on my Instagram page, or whatever it is,
different levels of kind of nerdy on that scale.
It's because I want people to, A, get interested
in doing good history and how that's actually performed,
and, B, I want to show them that the truth claims
of Christianity are actually not just defensible,
but are backed up by evidence
in what we can look at in the timeframe of history.
Wes, let me ask you, you know,
again, some of this stuff is conviction, faith,
some of it is thousands of hours of studying,
writing papers and research and all this stuff.
How many total hours would you say you've put in this,
in learning this?
I mean, I don't know the hours, years. I mean, there's the whole thousand hours thing, right? How many total hours would you say you've put in this, in learning this?
I mean, I don't know the hours, years.
I mean, there's a whole thousand hours thing, right?
The 10,000 hours.
10,000 hours, yeah, yeah.
So I mean, at minimum, I've definitely done that in terms of my original motivation.
And I work for an organization called Apologetics Canada, which is a national not-for-profit
organization in Canada.
And our goal is that we want to pursue and communicate
a biblically sound and intellectually robust
and a culturally engaged faith.
We want to come alongside Christians
and help them know what it is they believe
and why they should believe it.
And so alongside that, I put in the time,
not just because I'm interested in becoming an expert,
not because I want to kind of gain
some sort of credibility intellectually,
although I do want to derive a level of expertise
where I can speak knowledgeably on a topic,
but ultimately because I think these topics are important,
and I think that they have
ramifications that go beyond simply historical inferences, that Jesus is no less than a historical
character, but he's also so much more than a historical character. And so my motivation
and my interest is ultimately because I think that these things are true, and I adhere to a scripture, a set of scriptures
that calls me to love the Lord my God with all my heart, soul, mind, and strength. And part of that
is loving God with my mind. And so, I'm going to try to do to the best of my ability, dive into that
in order to be able to communicate what I believe is ultimately the truthfulness of the Christian worldview.
While you're going through your faith, did you ever hit a wall?
And if you did, what was a topic you hit a wall?
Because you know how you study Billy Graham when Billy, before, went on his crusade, he went and met with,
I think it's Henrietta Mears, if I'm not mistaken, I don't know if you know the story or not. Yeah, he goes, Rob, can you type in Henrietta Mears,
M-E-A-R-S, and Billy Graham.
I think I'm getting the name right.
Women's History of Henrietta Mears,
can you zoom in a little bit for me to read on?
Zoom in, okay, let's meet the women
who inspired Billy Graham, Bill Bright and more.
I'm assuming that Motivational Whisperer
allowed me to introduce Henrietta Mears,
who blessed countless people, young and old, who
crossed her path and she was the most intentional spiritual perpetual
disciple that I've ever read about. She was also never met a stranger, never
judged her students, even when they misbehaved. She loved on them just as
Jesus would. Do I learn about her? Thanks to a friend. This is the book that was her
story, Dream Big. What's the quote at the top? Rob, top of the book. She is
certainly one of the greatest Christians
I have ever known, Billy Graham.
Meet the woman who shaped the lives
of some of the most influential Christians of our lifetime.
Go little Ror Rapp.
Henrietta was born in 1890 to 1963.
You cannot fathom all she did in her lifetime.
On Palm Hill, she had last spread.
You'll get a first-hand glimpse as you read this book.
Go little Ror Rapp. First of Generations of the Christian. on Paul Nolte's Last Bread, you'll get a first-hand glimpse as you read this book called Little Lord,
First of Generations of the Christian.
So there's a story about her,
I read this 20 years ago, a while back,
where he hit a wall,
where it's kinda like you're questioning certain things.
You know, what about this?
I hit a wall with my faith at one point,
and I was going through it and there was multiple people
that played a very important role for me.
And there's different levels of wall.
The first one was when I'm living in Iran,
I'm getting kicked out of Bible study
in this Assyrian church that my dad used to take me on Sundays.
And I'm like, you want to tell me about,
there's a Jesus and a God,
look at all the bombs that we got from Iraq.
You want me to believe this? No.
And then the pastor eventually has a conversation with my parents,
and they kick me out, and then later on you're going through the next one,
and the next one. I'm like, ah, you know,
the Bible, it's a lot of...
This was written at a time that you have to find a way to control the populace.
And people's level of naivete was so...
They were so naive that it was easier to control people back then.
Most people were not educated,
most people didn't know how to read,
so they wanted to kind of believe in something
that made their lives easier.
Somebody else was doing the thinking for me.
I'm gonna be protected.
But for you, did you ever have a moment
where you hit a wall where you had to go to somebody
to help you out with your faith?
Oh, definitely.
I mean, there have been lots of people
who have been mentors in my life.
Not necessarily mentors.
What I'm looking at is like you,
a breaking point for you.
This is tough for Billy Carson,
but this could also be good for Billy Carson.
I actually think Billy Carson's are net positive
for the world, and let me explain why.
Because I think eventually they're gonna run
into somebody like you, who is gentle,
you were very respectful, you were not condescending,
you didn't use that opportunity to embarrass him,
you didn't use that opportunity to undermine him,
and I think you showed grace,
versus nowadays there's a lot of people that are debating
that wanna make the other person look like they're dumb.
You didn't do that.
I think that's a great example.
That shows, wow, you can win an argument.
And I looked at your YouTube channel,
what it did after your podcast with Mark,
when it was released, 22,000 subs, 20,000.
You got 100,000 subs within the next week
after that podcast was released. And then now you're at 252,000 subs 20,000 you got a hundred thousand subs within a next week after That podcast was released and now you're at 252,000 subs and you went on the biggest podcast on the world
And this is not even close to what's about to happen to you today
I mean the number one podcast that beat Joe Rogan's podcast
Became number one because Joe Rogan told the world to go watch your podcast
Do you understand like Joe beat himself right because Joe told everybody to go, what was his podcast, Telepathy Tapes?
Yeah, Telepathy Tapes.
Telepathy Tapes.
So Joe Rogan says, guys, I just watch his podcast.
Everyone goes watch the podcast.
It's beating Joe Rogan.
Oh my God, Joe Rogan's losing to this podcast.
No, he's not.
He promoted that podcast, right?
But you know, these moments of a fighter,
George Foreman loses,
steps away for three years, comes back stronger.
Michael Jordan takes a hit, comes back.
Billy Graham had to step away.
Breaking point, comes back, baptizes 210 million people.
Then he's on Johnny Carson, baptizing other people.
Woody Allen, all these other things that's happening.
What were some of those moments for you,
for someone that's putting thousands of hours
of setting this topic?
Yeah, yeah, I think that's a good way of putting it.
I mean, so when I was young, just before my 11th birthday,
I was diagnosed with, or my 12th birthday,
I was 11, just before my 12th birthday,
I was diagnosed with a rare neurological condition
that left me paralyzed from the waist down.
So it was, it's called acute transverse myelitis.
And what basically happened was that I had the flu
in my body's immune system.
Instead of attacking the flu,
attack the nerve endings of the base of my spinal cord,
the myelin sheath causing inflammation
and cutting off the communication
between my brain and my legs.
And so that was a condition which the prognosis
was that I was almost certainly most likely
going to be paralyzed for the rest of my life.
And I experienced what I believe is a supernatural healing
in that one month from the day, January 8th,
when I woke up and I couldn't feel my legs,
I woke up on February 8th,
walked, woke up, got out of bed,
walked over to my wheelchair and sat down.
And that it was the doctors who first used the word miracle,
because they couldn't explain ultimately the factors
that were going on in terms of there being no evidence
of the swelling on the base of my spinal cord,
and also the fact that there was just no muscle atrophy
in those 90 days.
And so that marked a powerful supernatural experience
in my life in that something happened
that was non-explainable, unexplainable
from a natural materialistic sense
of kind of looking at the world.
And so, although that marked that powerful supernatural experience,
later in my teen years, I still really,
and maybe this is what you're referring to
in terms of hitting a wall, is I was really wrestling
with other questions in that, okay, something happened
when I was a kid, I'm not sure really how to get around that,
but I have these intellectual questions.
Questions about whether what I believe,
or what I've been taught to believe, is actually true.
And so that started a period of time.
And that's exactly where I'm going. This is great.
Yeah, yeah. Where I investigated. And you know, I lived in a home where we had the Quran
on the shelf. And so I pulled it off and I read it at that point in time. Now I've read
it multiple times since then, but the first time reading it through and thinking, okay,
could this actually answer the ultimate question?
How old were you the first time you read it?
I was 16.
And at that time, how many times had you read the Bible?
Oh, at that point, I probably read the Bible about two or three times.
Okay.
So I read the Quran cover to cover. I've read it multiple times since,
but I also read the Bhagavad Gita. I think it was a, at the time, it was a shorter version.
It was the entire Bhagavad Gita that, think it was a, at the time it was a shorter version, it was the entire Bhagavad Gita,
that, and I read the Book of Mormon.
And digging into some of these pieces
of worldview literature to try to figure out,
okay, I know what my parents raised me to believe,
but is believing it because they raised me to it
the best reason to believe it?
It's not a bad reason, I don't think it is.
But is it the best reason?
And so exploring some of these questions
as much as I could at that age
in looking at these sources, going online,
trying to interact with people who held these worldview perspectives.
And that was really the process that I think God used
that set the foundation for what I do now
in terms of actually wrestling with...
Because I think there are good objections to the Christian worldview.
I don't think they're true, but that doesn't mean that they aren't good ones.
And so I think we have a duty if we are pursuing the truth, and ultimately I think that Jesus
is the truth, or the capital T, that we have a duty to pursue what is true even above,
say in allegiance to Jesus.
Now I don't think that that is in competition to each other because I think that Jesus is the truth,
but we should ultimately be asking the question,
what if this could be false?
And looking at the objections from the other side
and saying, well, are there any actual reasonable objections
that invalidate what I believe to the point
that I need to rethink this?
When this happened at 11 years old,
to 12 years old, January, eight to February,
when you got up and walked up to your wheelchair,
were you still an old soul prior to that?
Were you always a pretty old soul,
you know, like a 10 year old, 11 year old
walking around like you're 25, 30 years old?
Were you that person?
Oh, I don't think so.
I was a bit of a slacker. Okay so. I was a bit of a slacker.
Okay, so you were a bit of a slacker. So, but were you still interested? Were you personally
reading? Were you personally curious in the Bible? And were your parents like, you got
to read every morning, you got to wake up, read in the Bible, we got to start off with
prayer, end the days with prayer every day, read this book. Was it something in the family
tradition that you're reading no matter what every day?
No, not necessarily. not regimental like that.
Like, it wasn't.
Meaning at 12 years old,
had you already finished the Bible once?
I think, yeah, most likely.
Most people have not finished it first, you know.
Yeah, I mean, we would read every evening,
we would read the Bible together as a family,
we would pray for the people in our church.
So there were kind of those disciplines
that were put in place, but I don't think
that they were like militaristic in the sense
that I had to read my devotions.
My parents were checking up on me
on how much I was actually getting
through anything like that.
I think that it was much more of an organic
kind of just attitude.
Just three siblings of yours,
have they all read the Bible pre-12 years old?
I don't know.
Was it something where you guys collectively
would sit down? Was it something where you guys collectively
would sit down, was it a family tradition Bible?
So that was a-
Yeah, yeah, we would do evening devotions kind of thing.
So after 12, after that event that happened to you,
were you a different person afterwards
and people could tell?
Was there a certain level of urgency
where you felt like you owe it to God,
that I'm gonna commit my life to you? Was there that kind of of urgency where you felt like you owe it to God that I'm going to commit my life to you?
Was there that kind of a moment for you?
In some ways, but maybe not in overt ways in other areas.
I was very invested in athletics as a kid because of that, because I felt like I had
experienced something where God had given me this exposure to understanding what it
was like to take advantage of walking
in and out of a room.
You have something in your Twitter profile
that says something athlete, right?
Athlete wannabe?
Athlete wannabe, yeah, that's what you got, yeah.
So I was really involved in track and field as a kid,
and then I ended up competing all throughout high school
and went to university and competed vars um, varsity track and field.
And I felt very passionately that that was...
And probably to what you're saying,
there being a conviction,
like, this is something that I need to take seriously,
because, A, it gives me a structure for my life,
but also, I needed to constantly be reminded
that I had been in a situation
where this was just
a complete impossibility.
Okay, so let me get into maybe some of the issues here with you.
Since you read the Quran, you said two or three times at this point, right?
And you read the Book of Mormon, and we'll get to that because I'm curious to know where
you're going to go with that.
The Quran, after you read the book the first time,
what was your impression? Did you say, oh wow, complete different understanding than
what I thought was gonna be in a book of Quran. This is actually a great book. I
actually enjoyed this. I actually learned this. What was your impression at the end?
I mean, have you ever read the Quran? I've never read the book. Okay, so the Quran is
interesting in that when you come to it, especially if you're a Christian and you're expecting things to be chronological and when you open up a Bible,
Genesis...
Structured.
Right, Genesis says, in the beginning, and that's in the beginning.
And by the time you get to the end, Revelation is the end, right?
The Quran is structured differently in that the biggest chapters are at the beginning
and the smallest chapters are at the end.
So there's 114 surahs, or chapters in the Quran.
And the way that it's been put together and structured is very, very different than something
like the Bible, in that it's not in a narrative theme or a chronological theme, but it's on
the basis of the chapters.
And there are various reasons for that in terms of the overall way that the Quran eventually
got codified?
Because during Muhammad's lifetime,
the Quran was oral.
And actually, there was a hesitancy
after Muhammad died in 632, I believe it was.
Muhammad dies.
I could be wrong on that date.
I'm just going off the top of my head.
Muhammad dies, and actually, the Muslims who are following him
have a hesitancy to write it down,
because Muhammad never told them to write it down.
But there's this process that eventually gets put into place,
because Muhammad's successors in the caliphs
realize that people have memorized the Quran differently.
And so there is-
Meaning, what does that mean? Memorize the Quran differently?
Yeah, so you had these individuals
who were following Muhammad around
and they were memorizing everything he was saying.
And so part of this process is that
people were remembering things slightly differently.
And I believe it was when, so Abu Bakr, who I think is the second rightly guided caliph
in the succession after Muhammad,
he's the person who starts the process
of kind of bringing together all of these...
these recitations of the Quran.
And then that's finalized under a later caliph
by the name of Uthman.
And Uthman, I think when they come to Abba Bakr,
the statement literally that they say is,
save us before we differ like the Christians
and the Jews before us.
And that they saw that there were some things
that the Christians and the Jews were disagreeing on
between their written texts,
and they didn't want that to happen with the Quran.
And so there's a period of time under Uthman
where it's called the Uthmanic revision,
where he gathers all of
these documents together, all of these different recitations, and he codifies it into one document
and he destroys all of the differing ones.
So in that sense, you do have a standardized version.
But it's what's in terms of like the history of how texts are produced and disseminated,
it's what's called a controlled transmission. And it's essentially a government oversight of it, right?
So, the great thing about having only one version
is that you don't have any disagreements,
but if you only have one version, you have to trust that the guy
who compiled that one version got it right.
And there were actually companions of Muhammad
within the oral, or within the traditional sources
of Islamic literature called the hadith that talk
about the fact that there were particular individuals who were very close to Muhammad
during his lifetime who did not want to give their Quran kind of versions to Uthman because
they knew that theirs was going to differ with Uthman's and he would probably destroy it.
And so you have these, these are not, I mean, controversial in the sense
that these are part of the traditional Islamic sources
in the Hadith.
But I think within the history of how the Quran gets put
together, you see something very different than what
you see in the Bible.
And so when you're reading it, especially what I did,
you know, open up the front and then read all the way through,
there are parts of the Quran that are confusing
because they don't necessarily follow
what would be considered a overly rational order
in terms of the flow of the text.
So I open it up, I read it.
Some things sound familiar in some ways
in that it's talking about Moses and Noah,
and even, you know, Jesus, Mary are in there.
But there are components of it that just...
They're so far from what the biblical narrative is,
that it just seems off.
And I think there's a very...
Often a say... In a sense that it's not chrono...
You know...
Chronological.
Chronological, which is not in... Is is that what you mean that's off or?
Well the stories are very different a lot of the time.
So what I think we can derive from the historical record
is basically that if you take the traditional
Islamic narrative, Muhammad was illiterate.
So he's not said to have been a learned individual.
And so he is, if we take the traditional narrative
once again, he's a caravaner in seventh century Arabia.
And so he is going around Arabia, in the Arabian Peninsula.
You know, he's going up in the countries,
like what are today modern day Jordan.
What is this Rob?
Is this Chad GBT you pulled up or?
No, this was just Google.
Oh, okay, got it.
Yeah.
Yeah, so if we go by that traditional narrative,
he's a caravaner, he's going around,
he's being exposed to Christians and Jews
because they're all over the place in Syria
and in Jordan and in Iraq,
like these were Christian countries a lot of the time.
And he's hearing these stories about who the Christians
and the Jews believe are their prophets
and individuals within that...
are part of the religion.
But he's not able to discern between the difference
between an actual historical source,
like, say, the four Gospels, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,
and, say, apocryphal Christian tales
that are floating around the Arabian Peninsula.
And so, because there is this inability
to actually discern between those sources,
some of those things get incorporated into the Quran.
So, and we can trace this.
A friend of mine, Andy Banister, did his PhD dissertation,
and then he published a book on this.
It's called The Oral-Formulaic Construction of the Quran,
where we can actually tie certain stories in the Quran
to apocryphal sources that were floating around
in the subsequent centuries after Jesus.
So there's a document called the Infancy Gospel of Thomas.
Not to be confused with the Gospel of Thomas,
which is very different, but the Arab Infancy Gospel of Thomas has a story where Jesus, the childhood Jesus,
is making clay birds beside a riverbank.
And the Jewish officials get mad at him because he's doing this on the Sabbath,
he's breaking the Sabbath, they go off to get his parents to get him into trouble,
and Jesus breathes on the birds, they turn into real birds, and they fly away.
So this is an apocryphal story.
It comes centuries after the actual historical Jesus.
It has no historical ties to the historical Jesus,
but it's a popular story that's being incorporated
into this infancy narrative.
In the Koran.
So the Koran adopts it.
So we can trace it to the infancy gospel of Thomas and then later Arab infancy gospel
of Thomas.
The Quran borrows it and incorporates it, but we know that it's not an actual historical
story of Jesus.
So when I say that there were stories that like they're familiar.
So what's your point with that?
What's your point with that?
That there are stories that are familiar and that you're seeing the name Jesus, you're
seeing the name John the Baptist, you're seeing the name Mary.
But when you're reading these stories about them in the Quran, they're not stories that,
they're not echoing biblical stories as much as they're talking about these characters
in very different ways.
That if you don't know about, say, you know, where these sources are coming from, if you're
not looking into the infancy narratives,
then you're like, well, what is this?
Like, this is confusing. Is this more information?
Is this right information?
And so, now later in life, in my formal education,
digging into some of those things and figuring out,
okay, well, here's how we trace those sources.
Here's the paper trail.
Here's how we can connect those dots between where potentially
the author of the Quran was actually getting them from.
That's when I did a lot of that legwork.
But originally, I was reading the Quran, and I just found it unusual.
But I also found it did not accurately reflect things
that I was looking for to answer the ultimate questions.
Questions of like meaning and purpose and morality. While you're going through it the first,
second or third time, are you sitting down with a Muslim scholar to debate and ask questions? Have
you gone through that yourself? And if you did, what did you learn? Did you see contradictions?
Did you see, okay, I understand this part.
Yeah, I would routinely meet with Muslims,
especially in, like, my university years.
There were times where every Ramadan,
my Muslim friends were reading the Quran,
and so I would read the Quran alongside them.
So we would read the entirety of the Quran
during the time of Ramadan.
And I would use that as an opportunity both to learn,
but also to kind of... I wanted to be an example to them.
So when you were talking about my, you know,
my attitude in the way that I approached
my conversation with Billy,
that's been my attitude all along in that
I'm part of an organization that does Christian apologetics.
And apologetics is-
That's the organization in Toronto you were talking about. Yeah, so it's in Canada, Apologetics Canada. I'm part of an organization that does Christian apologetics. And apologetics is...
That's the organization in Toronto you were talking about.
Yeah, so it's in Canada, Apologetics Canada.
But apologetics is just a word that means to give it a reason or to give a defense.
And it comes from a passage in 1 Peter 3.15, which says,
but in your hearts, revere Christ as Lord, always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who
asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have.
But then it's the last part in that verse
that I think is just as important.
Not just be prepared to give an answer, but Peter says,
but in your hearts, revered Christ,
the Lord, always be prepared to give an answer to everyone
who asks for the reason for the hope that you have.
But do so with gentleness and respect,
keeping a clear conscience so that those
who speak maliciously against your good behavior in Christ
will be ashamed of their slander.
And I think when we approach these conversations, whether we're talking to,
you know, agnostics, atheists, Mormons, Muslims, for someone like myself who
claims to be a Christian, if I'm only giving answers, but I'm not revering
Christ as Lord in my heart, and those answers aren't done so with
gentleness and respect, keeping a clear conscience, then I'm not actually obeying
that command in Scripture to give an answer because it needs to be
sandwiched in between those two things.
Yeah, I love that. So, you know, let me go a little bit deeper with this. So question for you.
Somebody may say, okay, so the Quran,
and the illiterate prophet, Mohammed, right?
And inconsistencies in the book that was written,
not like the Bible where you're kind of going through it
and it's a Old Testament, New Testament,
I kind of feel like, okay, when I'm going through letters
or Matthew, Luke, I'm kind of feeling you know
He's given his testimony. He's given it. Maybe there's a little bit of differences
But for the most part I can see how their point of view while they're walking with Jesus they see this. Okay
Why do you think the religion?
You know 610
632 common era Quran is done from 632 to today
Why do you think it's become the fastest
grown religion in the world and now they have, I don't know what the number is,
one and a half billion, maybe I'm sure 1.4 billion, I don't know the exact
number, but it's somewhere around there, 1.9 billion. Why do you think it's grown
exponentially that at this point they're saying in the next 30 years it's gonna
be the biggest religion in the world and some even say where 30% of House or Senate in America
could be run by Muslims.
Why do you think it's grown so big?
Yeah, I mean, I don't know if I have an exact prognosis.
I mean, Islam is a very different religion
than something like Christianity in that it's...
It has a sociopolitical component to it
that Christianity doesn't,
in that it is a political religious system.
And it was designed that way from its beginning,
in that Muhammad, if once again we're assuming
that the traditional Islamic sources are correct,
he was a warlord.
And so, if from its inception there's been a different attitude.
Jesus was the crucified Messiah in that he was, he said,
I've come to not be served, but to serve.
And so when we see the beginnings of Christianity,
we see an attitude where people are motivated by love
your neighbor.
You know, pray for those who persecute you.
Love those who hate you.
You know, if a Roman soldier asks for your tunic,
you give him, you know, your undercoat also.
And so there's a different attitude
when we look at the substance of something like Christianity
in that Christians were willing to be persecuted and die
because they believed that Jesus had already won, that he was sitting
at the right hand of the Father.
And so their battle cries were pray, evangelize, and be willing to lose your life for this
message.
Whereas with Islam, there was much more of a system
where it was designed to subjugate the entire world
under Islam.
So you have the Dar al-Islam, the house of Islam,
and then you have the rest of the world.
And so I think there's a political component to Islam
that is very different than Christianity.
I think there's also, especially in the West,
we're not, we're basically being outbred
in that traditional Muslim homes have more kids.
I mean, there's also the component of having more wives
within majority Muslim countries that's allowed.
But having more kids, and Muslim countries that's allowed, but having more kids. And so, you have more kids,
and you have a system that allows for certain things.
And so, that's going to grow faster
than a society which is dissuading families from growing,
is maybe even demonizing the growth of a household
for various reasons,
whether that be, you know be political or environmental or otherwise.
And so you just have very different worldview foundations
for something like Christianity
than you do for something like Islam.
Do you think the world's a better placed
based on one faith or the other?
Meaning, when you're speaking with Muslims,
there is a pride for them to, you know,
we're gonna outgrow you,
and we're gonna be the dominant religion in the world,
and you know, it's gonna be the way we run things,
cities, like right now with what's going on with UK,
you know, I don't know if you're following the challenges
that UK is going through,
where the most common name given,
30%, I think, I don't know what it was,
the most common name given to kids in 2024 was Mohammed.
And this is UK, right, you're talking about.
Do you think Christians, the goal is to what?
In your mind, is it, if the faith that we have today, it's the same it was yesterday,
it's the same it's going to be 100 years from now, where some criticism may be like,
well, look, the Christianity, the church is beginning smaller, some data that we have
FU Rob, if you want to pull it up, you see this with Pew Research, and they'll show it
and say, well, here's what's going on. And it used to be church attendance used to be
higher. I don't know how many mega churches in America
are empty today and I've gone to many of them
and you name them, I've been to a lot of mega churches
in America today because you're going places,
you're like I wanna see how this guy preaches,
I wanna see how that guy preaches,
I wanna see what this is like.
You're like why is this so empty here?
Why do we build a facility that's a $50 million facility
but 80% of the place is empty?
Why did you build this place?
Why do you think on one side,
one religion has grown and the other one isn't?
This is a number right here if you look at it, right?
From 1940, church memberships amongst US adults,
73, 76, 73, so we're on 70% for about 45 years,
then it drops, still at 70% in 2000,
but in the last 20 years, 70, 64, 61, 57, 55, 50, 47,
and I don't know what that number is today.
Why do you think this is happening?
So I think we do need to be careful with the statistics
because we used to live in a culture
that was much more culturally Christian than it is today.
And sometimes I look at these numbers and I often wonder,
okay, yes, you see this kind of downward trajectory,
but I wonder, I mean, in Canada, in not that long ago,
only a few decades ago, you had something like the Lord's Day Act,
where you were not allowed to have a business open on Sunday,
because it was the Lord's Day.
And there was just more of a cultural zeitgeist
that was not necessarily, I think, Christian in...
It was Christian out of convenience, not Christian out of conviction.
And so I think a lot of people used to go to church,
because maybe they were just following along in the society,
and that that's just part of what you did.
And the culture shifted, and now the culture is not saying
that going to church is necessarily something
that you should do or need to do.
And so I'm always curious as to how many of these people who
used to fill out the little tick box and say,
I'm a Christian, I go to church on Sunday,
how many of them were doing so because it was just
par for the course for their culture?
And the culture shifted, and they
weren't really necessarily convictionally Christian then.
And they were following the stream of the flow of the culture
and the stream of the flow shifted.
And so now it's just more culturally accepted to not go to church.
And so I wonder whether the people who are going to church now
are actually those that choose to go to church convictionally
and are what you would refer to as the actual Christians
that feel that conviction that Jesus is their Lord and Savior.
You know what I would say to that?
So in the insurance company I built,
we're a high volume recruiting insurance agency.
And we grew from 60 agents to 60,000 agents.
And I knew when I went to an office,
they used to have 100 agents come into meetings
on Saturdays, okay, or Tuesday nights.
And then I'd come back a year later,
and they're down to 20.
And I would say, hey, what happened to attendance?
A year ago you guys had 100, it was fired up,
you're down to 20.
And then I would see the broker running the office,
let's just say he's the senior pastor,
he would say, well it's not about quantity, it's about quality. We have quality attendees, where
a year ago we didn't have quality, we had quantity. I'm solving for quality.
And it was always for me a sign of lack of enthusiasm in the leader, lack of
conviction in the leader, lack of conviction in the leader,
lack of aggressiveness and assertiveness
to go out there and baptize,
bring people in and baptize them later.
Bring them in and share the story with them.
Share the testimony of what we've done,
how this business works, why it's effective.
And I'll go to church and I'll see a fired up pastor
at the top and you notice, boom, wall to wall.
Good for you, right?
But, and I hear what you're saying,
I hear what you're saying because I don't think
the same can be said about the Mormon church.
I think Mormonism's growing.
When you look at their data, they're doing,
and by the way, you're talking.
I'm not convinced about that.
Well, you can say that, but data when it's shown to me,
and let me tell you where I'm going with this. You can say that, but data when it's shown to me.
And let me tell you where I'm going with this. You're talking to a guy that's a evangelical,
non-denominational, you're a Baptist, right?
And I think it'd be good one of our guys ask the question,
say hey, can you tell me the difference
between Presbyterian and Orthodox?
And I said, you know, I'm gonna ask Wes,
I think that's a good thing for you to break down,
but I'll go there in a minute, but let's just kinda stay on this topic here.
This is kinda where I'm going to here right now.
Andrew Tata and I are speaking,
and I'm sure you know Andrew Tata.
Year and a half ago, he gets out of jail.
I'm there, the first person to interview.
He had an issue with BBC.
We're sitting there talking and he
says when I was in jail I decided to convert to being a Muslim, religion of
Islam. Okay, tell me why. I don't know if you know his reason or not. Have you
heard his reason? I have heard him articulate it. And he says you know when I was there how many
Christian friends of mine and fans wrote me a letter none
Do you know how many Muslims wrote me a letter? I can't even tell you and
To me when I saw that bone, okay, so while we're talking I'm writing this thing down
And I'm writing why people convert cuz I'm actually curious so this wasn't prepared
I'm literally when you're talking I'm writing this stuff down to while we're having a conversation why do people convert to Christianity or Muslim or
Jehovah or seven-day or Mormonism or
Scientology or whatever maybe right and I've been through all of these guys
I used to go debate Scientologists all the time to know what they're thinking about right in LA at their main Scientology Center
so one is
Through your example, testimony,
the way you live.
Like you showed grace with Billy Carson.
I walked away and I said, my son should watch this guy
because men would benefit from having grace,
especially when you can be a bully and you show grace,
that's even more honorable.
Right?
When somebody knows how to fight and beat you up
and they don't, and they say, look,
it's just not a good idea, can we not fight?
And walks away, you know this guy can whoop this guy's tail
but he doesn't, that's grace, good for you, right?
Versus, let me go beat him up, show him the fact
that I know Taekwondo or whatever.
So to me, one is example testimony, okay?
Was that set there for Andrew?
I don't know.
Two, the actual content, what's in the book of Koran?
What's in the book of, you know, what's in the Bible?
What's in the book of Moroni?
You know, what's in L. Ron Hubbard's,
what's the book called, Dianetics, right?
I've found, in my experience,
less than 10% of the time is the content
because most people don't read the Bible.
Most people don't read the whole book.
It's the example, somebody in their lives.
Third one I wrote down is disappointment,
heartbreak, hurt.
Hey, you hurt me, you weren't there.
You're a Christian, and because of that,
for the rest of my life, I'm gonna be against you.
Maybe Billy Carson, I don't know.
I'm not trying to psychoanalyze.
I'm just kinda watching maybe for myself,
for yourself, for everybody. You had a great example. Your family, your background, you're not trying to psychoanalyze. I'm just kind of watching maybe for myself, for yourself, for everybody.
You had a great example.
You know, your family, your background,
you're coming from a place, organized structure.
A lot of people don't have that.
They're coming from a different background.
And the next one I wrote down is they were there for you.
Hey, you have nobody for Thanksgiving, come over.
Hey, what are you doing this Sunday?
You got nobody?
Come spend some time with us.
We'll go to church together.
Come with me to go to Mecca.
Come with me to go to this. Come with me to go to Mecca. Come with me to go to this.
Come with me to go with that, right?
So for somebody like Andrew Tate today,
whose brother's still a Christian, by the way, Tristan is,
and he's been going through, Andrew's been going through
some challenging times right now
because he announced he wants to run
for prime minister of UK and all this other stuff,
and he's saying, if you're not for the British way get out if you're not for this and indirectly is calling out though
You know many of the things that's going on with the you know Muslims in UK the criticism isn't towards
Christians or Jews or Scientology or Catholics? That's a lot of criticism towards Muslims that they're getting going back to it. Okay
Why isn't?
the church the Christian church, the non-denominational church, even some of the other sects you put in it, why isn't it growing at the pace that Islam is?
Yeah, I mean, I think what we see globally is that we're seeing a shift in the demographics
in that for a long time the Western world was Christianized.
Maybe it wasn't necessarily Christian,
but it was Christianized.
And I actually think we're seeing a shift statistically
in that's moving to the global South.
That if you look at the continents of Africa and Asia,
that the church is growing at a rapid rate
in those countries.
And I think there are various reasons for that, but I think we are genuinely seeing that.
Can I give a rebuttal to that?
Sure.
Okay, so again, I'm gonna take you back to my example
of running an insurance company.
Somebody could say, well look, yes, we're not growing
in California, but I can tell you, we're growing in Florida,
and we're growing in Texas, and we're growing in Tennessee.
That's because we were never in Texas, Florida, and Tennessee.
We just moved into that market, right?
So somebody may say, well, that's because
we're just breaking into that market in Asia
or in South, whatever, Africa or some of these places
or even the Middle East.
By the way, Christianity's grown in Iran
in ways that most people don't know.
The percentage is exponential in Iran that's growing.
The stories I get and the testimonies,
it's unbelievable when I see some of this data
that comes back.
And I'm glad you're saying that
because my main focus is really the West.
Because West is the one that's got a black eye.
UK is West, us, you know, West.
You know, Canada, West.
Why do you think the west has taken a hit
when it comes on to attendance, the church?
What do you think?
Yeah, I'm gonna back up, I'm gonna answer that question,
but I'm gonna back up and say that
to the kind of rebuttal of,
well, we're introducing Christianity into those places.
I would actually say that Christianity was there
long before it was ever in the west,
in that North Africa was where a lot of the major church historians come from.
Apart from the apostle Paul, you have individuals like Athanasius of Alexandria.
These are people who are Augustine.
St. Augustine was a North African.
Some of the most prominent individuals within early church history were from the Middle East,
were from Africa, and Christianity was in Asia and Africa
long before it was anywhere,
remotely close to places like North America.
And so I think what we're seeing actually
is not an introduction,
but the revival of a lot of those countries.
So that's a fair, and I think it would be both, right?
Because some places, it is a revival.
Hey, let's revive, right?
Let's get the attendance going again.
Let's get excitement there again.
But some of it is also because it was a smaller percentage
of it there, right?
Sure.
In Iran, if you look at what percentage is Muslim,
you will see a 98% number all over the place, right?
If you go in Asia, you will see some high numbers as well.
So I can see that part.
Like if you're gonna go into Indonesia,
I think Indonesia is 99%, if I'm not mistaken.
It's some big number.
Yeah, the biggest Muslim country in the world.
Right, exactly, that's what I'm saying.
It's the biggest Muslim country in the world.
But the West, the West, you have no idea how excited I get
when I see people like you. I can't tell you how much get when I get when I see people like you
I can't tell you how much it excites me when I see guys like you when I saw that I'm like, you know
What I think you were good for Billy because Billy can't hate you walk away from you Billy has to walk away and like you
Hmm. We need that. We need those eggs. I have a theory
I'm trying to see from you that this is your world. What theories do you have?
Because you're doing your part.
It's not like you're not doing it.
This isn't criticism towards you.
You understand what I'm saying?
You're doing your part.
You're going out there.
You're sharing your testimony.
You're doing it in a graceful way.
You're setting the right example.
You're growing your family.
You have three kids.
You're trying to set the example.
But again, responsibility of everybody else.
One side, 1.9 billion, growing faster than us.
The other side, flat-lined with churches declining.
Yeah. I think there have been a number of things that have happened in the West.
In the last few decades, I think we want to hold on to the fruit
of our Judeo-Christian values,
but we want to ignore the roots that actually grew that fruit.
And so I think you can look at individuals like there's a historian
named Tom Holland. He's not the Spider-Man actor.
That guy's also named Tom Holland.
Not this Tom Holland. He wrote a book called Dominion.
He's out in the UK. Now, he's an agnostic,
but he has this giant, like, brick of a book, Dominion,
and talks about the fact that a lot of the things
that we assume within our society that we consider good, even things like just the idea that humans have intrinsic worth by nature of being
human, that that is fundamentally a Christian value, because it comes from the biblical
testimony of humans being created in the image of God.
Now, a friend of mine, Glenn Scrivener out in the UK, he runs an organization called
Speak Life, wrote an excellent book that you, Patrick,
need to make sure that you get your hands on,
called The Air We Breathe.
And in The Air We Breathe,
he takes a lot of this stuff that Tom Holland
kind of encapsulates,
and he synthesizes it into a more bite-size
kind of portion.
And in The Air We Breathe, he goes through these qualities synthesizes it into a more bite-size kind of portion.
And in the air we breathe,
he goes through these qualities that we look at
in the West in particular, things like if you,
yeah, so the subheading is how we all came to believe
in freedom, kindness, progress, and equality.
And that he traces those roots directly back to Christianity.
And I think one thing that's happened in the West,
in particular, is we want to hold onto these values that
are inherent to building the West that are fundamentally
Christian values.
But we want to then also strip God from them.
And what we're seeing, I think, in a lot of the confusion
in the West is that that doesn't work.
In that the ability to-
What doesn't work in the West?
To stripping the actual foundations
of where those things came from.
So you can say, okay, humans have value,
and we should take care of people who are weaker than.
So where does that come from?
Because if all you are is matter and motion,
if you're just the product of time plus matter plus chance,
then survival of the fittest actually
should mandate that not all people have intrinsic value.
In fact, some people have extrinsic value
in that what they can contribute to society
is actually how we should ascribe their worth.
And so, say if they're, and we're seeing this in Canada
with Maid, medical assistance and dying,
if they're elderly and they can no longer contribute,
if they're sick, then the best option for them
is actually to be eliminated.
Because although we're gonna dress this up
in language like care and dignity,
ultimately what it's saying is that this person no longer has
enough to contribute to society, so we should remove them
from society.
And so I think our world wants to hold
two things at the exact same time, which are fundamentally
contradictory, in that it wants to say values, freedom,
unity, purpose, kindness, progress, equality.
These are things that built the West.
But we also want to say,
well, no, all that God stuff, we want to get rid of that.
And once you start to do that, you run into issues with foundation.
Where are you getting your actual reasoning to say?
So Glenn Scrivener, my friend who I mentioned,
who wrote the book The Air We Breathe,
he always says.
I just ordered a book.
Great, I'll make sure I let him know.
You got him a sale.
I did, I might even get him to sign it for you.
One of the things he says is when people say that morality,
like where you get your morality from,
and I've done this with atheists who want to ascribe,
say that rape is wrong.
Now rape is wrong, rape is objectively wrong.
And I say, okay, why is rape wrong?
Where do you get the objective morality
to say that something like rape is wrong?
And they say, how dare you say I don't have any morality?
I'm saying, no, no, no.
I'm not saying you don't have morality.
I'm saying, where do you get that from?
And Glenn has this analogy where he says,
it's like saying, where did you get your pants from?
Where did you buy them?
And you say, how dare you say I don't have any pants on?
Like, no, no, I'm not saying you don't have any pants.
Where's the source that your pants came from, Patrick?
Where did you purchase them from?
And so I think when we look at something like equality or morality or freedom and we say, okay, where is the standard by which we can actually ground these things in order to
use them as the objective goods that they are for our society? Where's that coming from?
Now, I can ground that as a Christian in
the objectivity of Scripture and in a God who does not change. And that's, you know, where a lot of
the founders of Western civilization got it from. Even if they weren't necessarily sold on Christianity
wholesale, they're borrowing that from Christianity. It's the infrastructure that builds these things.
from Christianity. It's the infrastructure that builds these things.
And so I think we...
I get that, and okay, so I understand where,
you know, there's a book out there called
How to Start a Country, okay?
And we'll play a game.
And I'll say, okay, if you start a country,
what religion is gonna attract the types of people you want
where they wanna raise their kids there
Yeah, you have the most opportunity to
Build as big of a business that you choose to have
Safety security, what would it be and we'll have that debate back and forth
Well, you know what I would want it to be Christian. Okay, great
Why is that and then you'll kind of go through the values and principles and grace, you know, that we're talking about.
Okay, great. I understand that.
Meaning, even a Bill Maher says the values and principles,
America was found on a Judeo-Christian,
oh, stop saying that Judeo-Christian,
I'm so sick and tired of hearing the fact that it was not really true.
Thomas Jefferson, when you think about that whole debate that takes place.
But the reality of it is, you're right, where did those values come from?
So now, I'm going gonna keep going back to it
because this is your world.
I agree.
It has been proven that a country based on Christian values
can have Muslims living there and feel safe,
can have Jews living there feeling safe,
can have Scientologists living there feel safe,
and produce a good environment
that produces results and allow us to coexist
340 million of us in one place, fair.
Why isn't it doing better?
Why isn't it growing?
Why has it flatlined?
What has caused that?
I think that should be a conviction to us
who are Christians to say, well, maybe we
have done a complacent job in our actually communicating to people why they should be,
you know, submitting their lives to Jesus as their Lord and Savior.
I think a number of things are going on at the same time. I think, I agree with you 100%, people need to be convictionally motivated to be examples.
Right? I've said in a number of my presentations that there are five Gospels, you know, we've
talked about the first four, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. But the fifth is actually the life of
the believer, in that if you are a Christian,
you are claiming your identity in Christ,
and that is good news.
Eugenio, it's the gospel.
And if people are seeing you,
they should be encouraged to then go back
and read the other four gospels.
Because that's where that source is gonna come from.
And so I think that we as Christians
need to be doing a better job,
and so many people are.
And I'm actually, I'm optimistic about the church in the West.
I'm optimistic about the churches I see that are doing good things.
Now, that's aside from maybe the mainstream church
or like larger denominational churches
that are capitulating on certain
issues that have been true within historical Christianity.
But at the exact same time, Patrick, I think one of the other factors that needs to be
incorporated in this conversation is that a worldview can be true even if all of its
adherents are terrible examples of it.
In that, I don't think they should be terrible examples, but if you brought in a cello into this room and told me to play Beethoven and I start, you know, squeaking
away on it, your conclusion shouldn't be, wow, Beethoven, man, that's, that music is
terrible.
I understand what you're saying. I mean, I understand that analogy. You know, there's
plenty of other examples for me to see it, to say, okay, well, that guy can play.
You know, like I listen to this guy's YouTube channel,
Jacob's Piano, I love the way he plays piano.
I don't know how many millions of subscribers he's got.
He doesn't know me, I don't know him,
but I love listening to the way he go to videos
and go to most viewed, and I can tell, go to popular.
That right there, that first one,
that's got 141 million views, I've probably,
don't play it because it will,
I've probably listened to this.
Yeah.
I don't know how many hundreds of hours
I've just put it on repeat and he plays.
Right.
And it's just, it's four songs and it's so phenomenal.
So there's examples for me to be able to go to somebody
and say, great, just like we have it right now,
we got plenty of great examples of guys like you.
We got it. We got plenty of great examples of guys like you. We got it.
We got plenty of examples.
All I'm sitting there while I'm going through this
is which one of these areas is our leak?
Right.
Are Muslims beating us
in a better example testimony, Christians?
Is that why they got Tate?
And a lot of young people nowadays
are converting because of that.
Is it because of our content?
Is it because of structure that? Is it because of the structure
that Quran is written better than the Bible?
Is it because of, you see where I'm going with this,
is it because of their disappointed, heartbreak, hurt,
too many letdowns?
Is it because of they're there for them more than we are?
Or maybe it's because somebody's stepping up
that's vocal, that's got conviction,
that's willing to be a little bit
out there and when I'm sitting there the other day
watching Billy Graham on Johnny Carson,
I don't know if you've seen Billy Graham
on Johnny Carson or not.
If you haven't, I think it's worth you watching
to see what he does.
This guy goes on his mission and he does what he does.
Sometimes Christians right now, walking on eggshells,
you see the Muslim religion,
I'm just right while we're talking,
and you know this better than I do, this is your world,
is what happens if I choose to leave the Christian church?
What if I say I'm done, I don't wanna be a Christian anymore?
What does the church do to me?
Well, if they're a good church,
I think they should follow up with you,
they should pursue you.
But will anything happen to me?
Am I in trouble?
Oh no, you're not in danger.
I'm not in danger.
No.
If somebody's sending me a write-up,
as the senior pastor gonna write me up
and I'm gonna have to go see HR department at the church.
No.
Now what happens if I leave the religion of Islam?
Well, the penalty could be death.
The penalty could be death, right?
And we've had that debate here on the podcast ourselves.
So is it the fact that the fear-based
and the tough, intense structure is working,
but then that would not work in a country like US?
Because when you look at the number of people in America
that have converted to Muslim,
I don't know if you've seen the number or not.
You know what the number is?
No.
What do you think, I'm actually curious
because it's your world, what do you think the number is?
That I've converted to Islam?
Not you, like how many Christians in America
converted to Islam in America?
Oh, I have no idea.
What do you think the number is?
I'm terrible at numbers.
I'm a history guy, not a math guy.
Give me a guess, 340 million people live in here. What do you think the numbers? I'm terrible at numbers. I'm a history guy, not a math guy. Give me a guess, 340 million people live in here.
What do you think the number is?
340 million people.
In America, how many do you think have converted?
From Christianity.
To Muslim.
To Islam.
Yeah, Islam.
You're getting deep, so you are a numbers guy.
No, I'm not, I'm not. I'm trying to figure out how to not make a fool out of myself.
Two million.
What's the number, Rob?
Look at that, it's a small number.
Okay.
And by the way, Huffington Post says it's only 20,000, but it's annually.
So 20,000 annually.
Yeah, no, I don't think Islam is necessarily a religion where we're seeing converts. I
think Islam is a religion where we're seeing importation in that we're seeing a lot of
people come from other countries and we're seeing families grow. And so I think that,
I mean, when you mentioned the Mormon church, I think the back door
of the Mormon church is a lot bigger than the front door.
I think a lot more people are leaving the Mormon church
than are actually.
I don't disagree.
I don't disagree.
I can't tell you how many people I meet
where they tell me I used to be,
and they almost apologize.
And I say, you know, I'm from Bountiful,
or I'm from Salt Lake, and I used to be,
I'm no longer right now.
But also I think they're very systematic,
I think they're very structured,
I think they're very systematized,
I think they lift each other up and they support each other.
I don't know how many times I've been told
to go watch Napoleon Dynamite,
one of the worst movies of all time,
but the actor was more.
Well, we need to have a debate on that,
that's the real debate.
Stop it.
Napoleon Dynamite is one of the best pieces
of film of all time.
We're gonna have a problem here right now together
if you go there.
But you see, so for me, think about,
I'll give you another example here,
and then we're gonna change the topic here
to go somewhere else.
And I wanna see if you have a message for Andrew Tate.
So for me, during COVID, COVID happens,
and a lot of big companies, Goldman Sachs,
Merrill Lynch and Chase and all these guys, Morgan Stanley,
we are not gonna go see our investors
in private equity money, you have to only zoom
because we have to be COVID protected.
And David Solomon's going and sitting down with people
on the jet and he's talking to guys.
Jamie Dimon is going out there and talking to guys.
Bunch of other guys are flying
and meeting with the guys, right?
So what happens?
They got the business during those four years.
A lot of people didn't.
What happens four years later?
Some of them grew, some of them went out of business.
Guess what?
You're not going there to them during a time like that.
You know, I think there's gotta be,
you know how the league every 10 or 20 years
needs a new superstar, sometimes baseball
or sports go through a flat time
where they don't have the next Brady,
the next Mahomes, the next whatever
that they're going through.
I think this is a big opportunity for,
like when I watch what Charlie Kirk did
in the last 12 months on TikTok, This is a big opportunity for, like when I watch what Charlie Kirk did
in the last 12 months on TikTok,
it's like, whoa, amazing.
You know, the other day Trump's talking about,
why would I wanna shut down TikTok?
Look at the numbers that we have.
We're doing this, we're doing that, we're doing this,
we're doing that, we're doing this, right?
And so what is that?
What does Charlie Kirk get credit for?
I think one of the things
I give Charlie Kirk a lot of credit for
Charlie Kirk goes on school campuses and sits there and says ask me anything Is this the one Rob zoom in a little bit on the data with this?
Really on off. I have to go find the original
Yeah, but just zoom in on the bottom
I'll show that shows how many views on the bottom 2.4 billion views team Trump Donald Trump 1.4 billion Kamala Harris 1.3
One Charlie Kirk 1.3 billion and you see at the bottom Taylor Swift
251 million, you know Beyonce 131 million Kardashian 121 million. So why would we take down tik-tok? I
Think today believe it or not
I think it's the season where a bigger Billy Graham's gonna come that's using the tools
I'm actually very optimistic about the future. And by the way, here's a crazy prediction I'll make to you
with us being here right now as well.
I think some weird people are gonna become Christians
next two years.
Oh, and I agree with you.
And I think we're already starting to see that
with the Iron Herceales and others
where we're seeing a resurgence.
Oh, I'm talking bigger.
Yeah?
I'm talking bigger.
I'm talking to some guys that people would never expect to go there.
I think that's happened in the next two years.
No, I think you're right, and I think we're in a particularly,
um, interesting age where you had the new atheism
with the Richard Dawkins and the Daniel Dennett's
and the Sam Harris's, and I think we saw those seeds planted
and they grew into dead trees.
And people realize that if you tell individuals
that they're just a product of time plus matter plus chance,
that they have no ultimate meaning,
then they're gonna struggle in finding purpose and drive.
What do you think happened with Sam Harris?
Do you think that's what it is?
No, I think the new atheism,
as it was articulated in the early 2000s,
was a movement that was largely motivated in print and was theoretical,
but actually the practical implications were dangerous,
and that people, even people like Sam Harris,
have realized that they are inefficient
to actually be applied in real life.
And so that's why you see, I think,
people becoming the quote-unquote spiritual but not religious.
And the new age becoming far more popular than...
I don't run into atheists in the like,
Richard Dawkins types anymore. I don't.
I run into a lot of people who are into manifestation
and meditation and Christ consciousness,
and all of this kind of esoteric, very vague, I want the...
I want the things I like about religion,
but I don't actually want to be held accountable to anyone or anything.
I'm finding that more and more, and that's also empty.
And so I think you're 100% right in that we live in a particular age
where the clarity that's going to be spoken into the confusion,
I think, is the truth of the gospel message and Christianity.
Because ultimately, in what you were saying before,
when you're looking at this meta-analysis,
in terms of, okay, well, where are the leaks?
Where are the problems that we're seeing
in terms of why, say, something like Islam is outgrowing us?
Well, I think if you look at the Christian worldview,
it's different than religions like Islam
in that Islam spread largely by occupation, where Christianity was a grassroots movement, because it looked
at Jesus, the crucified Messiah, the Lord of eternity who stepped out of his throne
into humanity in the second person of the Trinity, in Jesus, and then died the death
that we deserve, and then said that your goal
is to stand before the Father and hear good and faith,
well done good and faithful servant.
Faithful, not influential, not world shifting,
not everybody wants to have a presence online.
No, you just need to be faithful
and you need to be a servant in that
faithfulness. And God is going to do great things with that. God's gonna produce the Martin Luthers
and the Billy Grahams and these individuals who change the world fundamentally through faithfulness,
not through occupation, not through militaristic movements,
but if we're faithful to the gospel message,
that's really going to-
Do you think Billy Graham was faithful?
Oh, Billy Graham was definitely faithful.
Yeah, yeah.
When we see these people and, I mean,
I have slight disagreements with some of the things
that Billy Graham believed,
but ultimately you see a testimony of someone.
Like what?
Is it specific? Is it specifics?
Is it like theological?
Very minor theological issues.
I think later in his life he became a lot more soft
to things like universalism
and where he kind of was more open to people
not confessing Jesus Christ,
but there being an aspect of they could be saved.
And I ultimately, I don't think that's compatible
with biblical Christianity.
Uh, but I mean, talk about a guy who was faithful
in his Christian witness, in his proclamation,
was zealous, and I think, you know,
just because I'm saying you need to be a faithful
servant doesn't mean you don't need to be bold. I mean, Paul was bold. Paul was, his life was
threatened, he was beaten, he was shipwrecked, he ultimately died for his profession of faith. So
it's, we don't need to be wallflowers. We need to be bold. We just need to make sure that we're
doing, as I quoted before, that doing so with gentleness and respect keeping a clear conscience. Yeah so today 2025 okay we see some of the stuff that's
happened last five years. Yeah you know LGBTQ totally fine hey school kids transgender totally
fine hey you know it's a totally fine everything like, totally fine. Comparing today to when you read about the city of Corinth
and how immoral it was, and you see many times
a comparison being made of Corinth
with the modern day Las Vegas,
or whatever some of these other cities
that we have in America.
And of course, you don't know the definite question,
you know, when I make this comparison,
I'm just curious to know what you're gonna be saying
about this. What caused Jesus to, you know,
what was the level of immorality where God's saying, hey man, we got to go handle this right now.
And then he comes down and wait a minute, is the world today at that level of immorality where God's sitting up there
saying, I think it's time? So how do you compare today's times to biblical times, current that era?
Oh, I think the time period that we live in is much more emblematic of the early church in those
first few centuries of its existence, in that you have a culture that was very much
accepting of, say, promiscuous sexual ethics and idolatry and was open to things and misrepresented
and misunderstood Christianity fundamentally.
In that, you know, there was a common practice with the ancient Rome called exposure, where
if you had a baby and you didn't want it,
you would put it outside the city gates, you would put it in the garbage dumps.
And Christians were notorious for going and saving these babies.
And so the Christian movement actually grew in part
because they were against this form of abortion in the ancient world.
And so they would collect these babies and they would raise them,
and a lot of these babies were girls,
which actually meant that the early Christian movements became?
Aesthetistically predominantly women because a lot of these women with these little girls were exposed in this now
The society around them heard about these strange Christians who were talking about you know with the Lord's Supper
drinking blood and eating flesh and then they knew that they were going out and they were taking these babies from the garbage
dumps.
And so they started to develop rumors that Christians were cannibals.
And yet despite what is a pretty heinous accusation, complete misunderstanding of what's going
on, Christianity still grew.
And some of the earliest critics of Christianity
referred to Christianity as the religion of slaves and women
because it gave agency to these groups
that were marginalized within society.
So funny, the mob's been around always
and it confuses and gaslights people all the time.
Definitely, and Christianity were accused of,
Christians were accused of being atheists,
A being the negative participle and then theos,
meaning God, because they denied that the godsle, and then theos, meaning God,
because they denied that the gods existed,
and antisocial, because they wouldn't participate
in the goings-on within society that were inherently religious.
And so, it's in this context that Christianity,
grassroots, from the bottom up,
eventually goes from 11 scared disciples
hiding in an upper room when Jesus is crucified
to fundamentally taking over the Roman world
within, you know, half a cent... half a millennium.
And it's because of the faithful witness of the Christians
who were being persecuted,
and yet were still proclaiming Jesus as Lord,
and were fundamentally speaking into the society that they lived in with a message that overturned
the norms because it gave people purpose.
And ultimately it gave them truth,
that the idea of God stepping out of eternity
changes the paradigm.
I mentioned Glenn Scrivner.
He has this really good illustration
where he talks about all worldviews are some version
of survival of the fittest.
I'm paraphrasing him here, but what he says is all worldviews
are some version of survival of the fittest
in that you need to do right, you need to think right,
or you need to feel right.
And Christianity is different in that the fittest steps down and sacrifices himself
for the survival of the weakest.
And that message, you know, we just, we're just over the Christmas season, right?
The Christmas message of God becoming a baby and becoming vulnerable is both an example to us of humility and how
we should live, but ultimately in worlds where might and power in a very abusive way are
often seen as the way to go, Christianity subverts that.
In that Jesus could have taken cues from all the rulers of his day, of Caesar
and of Herod, and later on during his earthly ministry of Pilate, right?
He doesn't do that.
He comes down, he humbles himself, he lives the life of a servant, and he gets murdered. And that changes the narrative.
And then he rises from the dead and conquers sin and death.
And so because of that, those 11 scared disciples
are now willing to go out into the world
and suffer persecution and beating and death
for the sake of this message that ultimately spreads out through all the ancient world
and gets us to where we are today,
where we're talking about things like freedom,
and that's because of the Christian revolution.
Now, if I'm, Tom, Rob, can you Google this?
Did they have OnlyFans back in the days?
You almost Googled it, Rob, just so you know. What are you talking about? Is there OnlyFans back in the days? You almost Googled it, just so you know.
He almost Googled it.
What are you talking about?
Is there OnlyFans back then?
I mean, what was the quality of porn
back in the biblical times?
What was the quality of all the other things that they had?
I guess where I'm going to right now is,
okay, Jesus is coming back to those people.
I'm a Christian, faith, I'm there.
To those that are saying, oh really,
he's gonna come back, he's gonna return.
I mean, how much worse does it need to get
than where we are today,
than what we've seen the last few years?
Is it, are we less immoral, are we less, you know,
than what happened back then that caused, you know, you're telling the story about the infant,
it was a form of abortion where it's kind of like,
hey, here you go, somebody's gonna come and pick him up
and Christians will come and cannibalism,
what a weird thing to accuse Christians of,
that other people started believing that.
Is it worse today or are we not there at the level of sins
that we used to commit 2,000 years ago?
Oh, I mean, I think sin has always been heinous and terrible. And, you know, we're worse than
we assume we are. I mean, the biblical message is that we're always going to overestimate how good
we are and undervalue how truly heinous and terrible sin is. And that sin is always a cosmic rebellion
against our Creator.
So that doesn't mean that some sins aren't worse than others.
Of course, murder is worse than lying.
And Jesus even says this when he gets handed over to Pilate.
He says, you know, the one who handed you over to me
has committed the greater sin.
So all sin is sin in that it is a rebellion
against our Creator and it's that cosmic treason.
But some sins are worse than others.
I mean, I don't know if I can stratify, okay,
this is a period of time when it seems worse than others.
I mean, at the end of the day, I think,
we're always worried with the evil out there,
and we forget about the evil in here.
And the Christian message is that the wages of sin is death,
but the gift of God is eternal life through Christ Jesus.
And so I think it goes, it starts with you and me, Patrick,
submitting our lives to Christ,
and realizing that our hearts are sinful.
John Calvin described our hearts as a factory of idols.
We're always going to look for a way,
because we're stuck in this world
that's beautiful yet broken, to find the loophole.
And this is why rules aren't going to save us.
And this is what I think is interesting about,
I've talked to atheists and Muslims in the same room
about this, like, how do we create a good society?
And my Muslim friends and my atheist friends
and my agnostic friends, a lot of the time,
basically, it devolves down to, well, we need to make better rules.
Like, we need to make sure people are obeying the rules.
Right? That's what Islam is all about.
And I think what Christianity says is,
that doesn't work,
because everybody's always gonna try to find the loophole.
They're either going to obey out of fear and obligation,
or they're gonna try to find the loopholes.
And so the Christian message is not obey the rules,
it's that you can't obey the rules.
You need to submit to Christ because He can do what you can't. And it's not about how much you can do, it's about what Christ has done. And so we don't need to come up with better rules. We need to change people's hearts.
And that's ultimately what God can do.
So was there an ancient version of OnlyFans?
Well, yeah.
I mean, there was this concept within the ancient world that you had 25 different ways
to say prostitute in Latin, but male virgin was, you can't really
in classical Latin write male virgin.
It's an awkward phrase because it was assumed that if you were a male and particularly a
Roman male, you would not be a virgin because you would have had access to sex with anyone at any time, whenever you wanted, with whoever you wanted.
And so when Paul, in particular, but Jesus also kind of hinted this when he talks about marriage as well,
but when Paul says that husbands need to submit to their wives and wives need to submit to their husbands, in that society, that would have been holding the male in the relationship to the standard
that the female was expected to, but the male was never expected to. And that was countercultural.
And that was seen as foolish, in that sexual promiscuity was the norm and was expected. I mean, brothels were everywhere in ancient Rome.
And they weren't considered, you know, seedy.
You could find brothels in, archaeologically,
in relatively high Roman neighborhoods.
And it's because that was what you were owed.
And so when Jesus says,
one man, one woman, for all time, that's it.
And if you don't like that, well, there isn't another option.
You can become a eunuch for the kingdom.
You can submit yourself to celibacy.
Those are the options.
That's countercultural in the day.
In a world that is prolifically sexual and doesn't see sex as something that is sacred.
Whereas Christianity says sex is sacred
because bodies are sacred and image bearers are sacred.
And there's a respect and an accountability.
And so these concepts that we have in modern society
about sex, I think they're confused
because in one sense we wanna say like, you know, OnlyFans,
you can give your body to whoever you want.
It doesn't matter. It's just, it's just, you know,
bodies rubbing together.
And at the exact same time, we also realize that rape
is a terrible violation.
Well, which is it?
Is sex just something you can give away at any time?
Or do you realize that this is something that holds a pretty significant intrinsic value?
That when it's violated, it goes beyond the physical.
I think that's where our society is confused,
and that's where we need to speak into these situations,
and show that some of these things are actually sacred.
Yeah. How old are you, by the way?
Thirty-three. Oh, wow, are you by the way? 33.
Oh wow, what an age.
Really, you're 33.
It's Alexander and Jesus, 33.
Yeah, right, right, right.
Magical age.
I just gotta get over this.
You gotta, what are you,
you got what, six more weeks, right?
Seven more weeks, February 24th,
until you're protected.
So we gotta hurry you up.
February 25th's gotta come around the corner. But okay, so did you go to a private school
where you're homeschooled or did you went to public?
So when we were overseas, I was raised
in the British school system when I was really young.
That's why Canadians think I have an accent
because a lot of people here assume
this is a Canadian accent.
It's not.
It's the leftovers from being like a few years in the British school system overseas.
And then I was in the public school in Canada,
and then, yeah, public, all the way along.
Were you ever exposed to porn?
Oh, of course. Yeah.
I mean, I think fortunately...
I'm not your typical guy in that that is not my struggle
and proclivity.
And I think I'm very blessed.
I have other vices that I need to submit to the to the cross of Christ. But that one in particular
isn't the one that I struggle with but it is prolific in our world today.
Yeah, a lot of people deal with that and you know it's it's it's when I was a
you know again again, military,
we had a guy in the corner that had a thousand VHS tapes of all the different kind of porn in the military.
He was the coolest guy on campus.
Everybody wanted to go find this big sergeant
that we put up and you would hear the craziest noise.
He always knew he had something going on.
And he was a rock star for a lot of guys at that time.
And then I come out and I run an insurance company
and a business nationally, and I hear,
hey man, I'm really dealing with porn.
I'm having a hard time with porn.
I'm having a hard time with porn.
What do I do with this?
What do I do with that?
And it was kind of like weird for you to,
and a lot of people right now,
the level of accessibility, what you're seeing, expectation,
how does somebody that's a young man,
maybe it's the how and maybe it's also the why.
How does somebody fight it and why should somebody fight it?
If you were to talk to a young 16 year old boy,
14 year old boy, or 18 year old man,
what would you say to him on, you know,
the negative effects of porn on them
and why should they do whatever they can to not consume it?
Yeah, I mean, I think there are multiple layers to that
in that the scientific data on porn changing your brain
is hugely problematic in that it changes
your dopamine receptors and that you, It's very easy to become addicted.
I think especially in our day and age.
I think it was a little bit different, you know,
when you were growing up, Patrick,
and then when I was younger,
where before the onslaught of the internet,
porn was something that you kind of had to pursue
in a way that was a little bit shameful.
You know, the magazines or the video shops.
We had LA Express, we had Hustler,
we had Playboy Magazine, I'm trying to see what we had.
That's really, like we had, that's what we had.
Well, and I think the difference between that
and what we're dealing with now is that
there's just so much now, it's so accessible,
and it's designed in a way where it's quick.
So it's designed to, you know, I once heard a porn described
as it's like the highlight reel on ESPN.
You know, you see soccer, for example,
and the crazy moves and the kicks,
and you just watch that and you go, wow, soccer.
Soccer is an exciting sport.
And then you go and you go to a match.
You're like, why isn't anybody scored in two hours?
And so it gives you an unrealistic expectation
of what sex should actually be.
Because sex is something that's good and something
that's beautiful and something that is God ordained.
But when we're given this kind of faulty,
very dramatized perspective on what sex is in pornography,
it changes the way that we understand ourselves and others
in a very dangerous and not just problematic,
but actual, actually harmful way in shaping how you view other people.
You know, I've talked to young men who struggle with porn
and a lot of them struggle with looking at women
as not being objects because of the way it tunes your brain.
That's a terrible thing to look at someone else as an object.
You know, we used to use things and love people,
and now we use people and we love things.
And I think that's a dangerous shift in our society,
in that there are...
Apart from the fact that I think that, you know,
sin is, or sorry, porn is sinful, lust is sinful,
and is going to have implications that are gonna harm you spiritually. Sin is, or sorry, porn is sinful, lust is sinful,
and is going to have implications
that are gonna harm you spiritually,
that are going to have echoes that go into eternity.
I think even if you move that aside,
although I think that that's the most important part
of the conversation, the health aspects
of the way it's going to shape your thinking as a young man,
the way it's going to shape your thinking as a young man, the way it's going to shape your perspectives on discipline
and how you view the people around you,
how you're going to respect them,
I think that that's dangerous.
And we see in our society in that like a lot of,
I mean, I think this is a problem in places like Asia,
a little bit more, I don't know if you've seen
the statistics on places like Korea where like-
Sexless society.
Sexless society, yeah.
And part of that is porn,
is that they're getting this like dopamine hit,
they're getting the highlight reel.
And so they don't feel like they need to get,
they don't need to pursue the actual connection.
And sex is a spiritual thing.
And so it's meant to be created.
Like the first promise, the first covenant that God made
when he created humanity was that he gave woman to man
and man to woman to be unified, to become one,
to reflect that image of God. You know, both to become one, to reflect that image of God.
You know, both men and women are symbols of the image of God, and when they come together
in unity, that's the perfect reflection of what the image of God is.
And so there's a spiritual component that I think we understand in what I was talking
about before with rape.
There's something that's sacred about that, that we know is when you see these OnlyFans models
talk on these podcasts, and they're just talking
about their body count and how many times
they're having sex with different guys, and...
He's that one girl that didn't...
Isn't there a girl that just said a thousand or a hundred?
I don't know what she...
We may have talked about her on the podcast.
Yeah.
Slept with a hundred men.
Lily Phillips.
Yeah, I mean...
In a day. This is... I mean, this is, I mean,
this kind of thing breaks my heart
because this is someone who is an image bearer
and this is defilement, right?
And I think even I saw a clip of afterwards,
they were trying to interview her
and she just breaks down crying.
If sex is just like any other thing you can just give away,
why would it impact her like that?
Do you remember what she cried about?
No.
Yeah, she was crying.
It was such a weird thing on why she was crying.
It was a, Rob, just make sure you're not playing a clip
like last time, you know, we, is this a safe video? Yes, I believe there's no new to this.
Go ahead, Rob.
Oh, oh dear.
I think sometimes I'm feeling so like robotic,
like by the, I think like the 30th, you know,
like when we're getting on a bit,
I've got like a routine of like how we're gonna do this.
And like it just, sometimes you'd like disassociate
and be like, you know, like, it's not like normal. So in my head right now, I can think of like
Five six guys ten guys. I remember it's unbelievable. And that's it
Do you know what he she said? I don't know. It's just weird isn't it?
I did a hundred guys. You can only remember five or six of them. Keep playing it. I wouldn't have known I've done a hundred, you know
But yeah, I think that was kind of the hard part is like conversing with them Keep playing it? I wouldn't have known I've done 100, you know? But, yeah.
I think that was kind of the hard part,
is, like, conversing with them.
And, like...
Like, when they'd kind of be like,
oh, like, we've only had two minutes or three minutes,
and you said five on the message.
Yeah, I mean, you see that.
You see that in her demeanor, in her voice.
Like...
This is a publicity stunt,
but it has ramifications for her as a person,
which are sad, which are a picture of brokenness.
Because you shouldn't... This isn't sex.
This isn't what sex is meant to be.
This is an abuse of what the goodness of something
is meant to be.
And we all understand when something is abused, right?
Like whether it's a worldview system or an idea
or when other people are taking advantage of,
this is not what it's meant to be.
And you can see that very starkly
in the way that she is reacting.
Yeah, I mean, it's tough when you see this.
I think one of the best breakdowns I saw on porn
was from somebody that you least expect me quoting
was Pamela Anderson.
Pamela Anderson explains to her
this interview she's doing and she says look when I talk to my boys I prepared
them about porn. She says because it gives you an expectation says I used to
because she says I'm guilty of it some may say I come from that I maybe even
started that because of my tape or whatever she talks about and then she
says I can't tell you how many times
I was with men, I'm like, why are you doing this?
This is not what I want.
I'm not, and it just gave you a different image of it.
And Pamela Anderson is not a pastor, by the way,
if you're wondering, like she's not preaching out there.
It's a different-
I don't think I was confused on that matter.
No, yeah, I just wanna make sure to qualify for you
so you don't go out there and see what she has to say.
But okay, I wanna bring up up Mark, but before I do,
there's one question I want you to answer,
which is from Humberto, if you remember.
And the question is, what is the difference, okay?
Basic difference, Christians, Catholic, Orthodox,
Presbyterian, Baptist, Mormon, if you could simplify
for the average person to say, oh, okay, I know that.
Oh, okay, I know that.
What's the difference between those different sects under Christianity? You could simplify for the average person to say, oh, okay, I know that. Oh, okay, I know that.
What's the difference between those different sects
under Christianity?
Yeah, so I think you have different categories
and that you have like Christianity broadly
in the statistic sense where you have the major
Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, Protestant,
Toledo, Ethiopic, and then what's the Oriental Orthodox.
So Eastern Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox
are not the same thing, but they're similar.
Oriental just means Eastern,
so that's a little bit confusing.
But those are kind of the overarching umbrellas
in terms of what we're talking about, global Christianity.
I mean, inside, I'm a Protestant,
and I'm a Protestant out of conviction,
not out of convenience or complacency,
in that I truly believe that the tenets
of historical Protestantism coming out
of the Protestant Reformation of individuals
like Martin Luther, John Calvin, Zwingli,
Melanchthon, Knox, these are guys who reformed
the church back to what it was meant to be.
And so in that, there's a smaller conversation under the umbrella in, okay, well, now you
have all these denominations.
Now I actually think denominations are a good thing because humanity is very different,
right? Patrick, you and I don't look like each other.
Right, I can't wear my skin after Labor Day, I'm so white.
There's problems with that, right?
So, we're different in that people think differently,
they look differently.
I live in Toronto, it's a multicultural city.
The amount of different cultures represented in my church
is phenomenal.
And so I think there is something to say of,
if we agree on the centrality of the Gospel
and the message of what, who is Jesus,
and what he came to do to be saved.
Now, there's obviously caveats to that.
If it's just that, then, I mean, it is just that in one sense,
but if it was only that, then you have a lot of people
in the New Testament writing a lot of letters
and wasting their time.
So there's obviously more to that.
But I work for an organization, Apologetics Canada,
where I'm a Baptist, and all the other individuals
who are on my speaking team along with me
are not Baptists.
So my colleague Steve is Anglican,
Andy is, I believe, is Mennonite Brethren.
And then Troy is non-denominational Charismatic.
And we work fine.
In fact, I think we complement each other in a lot of ways
in that we have our disagreements theologically,
but the disagreements are always on secondary issues. And I think
there's room for that. There's room to disagree on secondary issues. As long as when we are coming
down to what matters, when we are going out and we are articulating what is ultimately true with
the capital T in the gospel, we all do agree on that. So I am actually a fan of denominations
because I think it gives an opportunity for people
to be reflective of the diversity within the kingdom of God.
And unity does not always mean uniformity,
and that's a good thing.
Unity doesn't always mean uniformity.
Yes.
Okay, I like that.
I actually, by the way, as a Canadian,
do you have any opinions on Justin Trudeau or no?
No opinions whatsoever on Justin Trudeau.
I mean, I have to be careful what I say politically,
but let's just say I'm not mad that he's resigning.
Okay.
Got it.
Got it, interesting.
Well, actually, we can skip that.
Billy actually, in his response video,
said that I was part of the NDP,
which is the New Democratic Party in Canada,
which is a left-leaning party.
That was one of his accusations against me.
I have had people reach out and say,
Wes, why do you support the NDP?
They're obviously not in favor of lots of things
you adhere to, the Christianity.
And I can say definitively, I'm not part of the NDP.
I don't know where Billy got that.
But.
Would you consider yourself a conservative?
Yes, definitely.
Okay.
So politically you would be.
Oh, politically I would be conservative, yeah.
Whether that means that the Conservative Party of Canada
or there are others, the People's Party of Canada,
like there are, but yes, politically.
What do you think about this Pierre guy?
Pierre Poliev?
Yes. I like him.
Yeah, yeah, I think he's good.
I think he's bright.
I think he's intelligent.
He, I believe, was the finance minister under Stephen Harper.
And so he knows what he's doing.
And Canada is in a very dire situation right now
in terms of its housing market, in terms of its economy.
I think it needs a lot of help.
And if Pierre is going to do the things he says he is,
I'm all for it.
I like it.
You know, his pro-choice and pro LGBTQ marriage,
that's his, I don't know if you knew that or not.
Yeah, I mean, I'm not, I obviously have caveats.
And I'm never gonna find a political party
that's gonna agree with me on everything
because I think, you know, the problem with politics
is it's full of politicians.
And so based on that, you're never gonna find anybody
who agrees with everything you say, but...
I think he's a 10 times better candidate
than who, what Trudeau did the last few years.
I can't say how many people I run into here in school,
kids whose parents escaped Canada
to come down here to Florida,
because they're not comfortable with the politics
that's in Canada.
Maybe that's a different thing for some other people.
I'm encouraged by the things that Polyev says
he's going to incorporate.
I hope that those play out well,
because as a young person living
in one of the most expensive cities,
not just in Canada, but in the world,
and looking at our housing market, looking at our economy,
I want my family to grow.
I don't want to, you know,
I'm only planning on having more kids.
And so there are, there's a trickiness to that right now
in Canada with everything that's going on.
What do you think about Trump?
Any opinions on him?
Once again, need to be careful politically.
Why do you say that?
I work for a national not-for-profit
that has charitable status.
And so within the way that that works in Canada,
advocating overtly for a political candidate
could compromise our charitable status.
Is that a law?
Yes.
You can have your charitable status revoked
if you're advocating for politicians too overtly.
Wow.
And that has happened in Canada.
How do you feel about that?
I don't love it.
Are you going to be in Canada the next 20 years?
Yeah, I mean, I work, I love my country.
Okay.
I'm a Canadian. I'm proud to be a Canadian.
I wish Canada would sort itself out.
Would you wanna be the 51st state?
No, and I don't think Canada, Canadians want that either.
I mean, I think the partnership with the US
should grow more.
We are the biggest trading partners in the world.
We have the, what, is it the longest border?
Is it unmanned border?
That's probably not the right way to describe it.
I don't know about unmanned border,
but it's the largest border.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So yeah, I mean, I think Americans and Canadians
are probably more similar than either of us want to admit.
And I think that's a good thing.
We're a little bit more British
because of our colonial heritage
and the fact that we still have the monarch on our money.
But I think both countries can only benefit
from more open trade, more open border, more open,
in the right ways.
Yeah, it's gonna be so interesting
when he said the tariffs,
and it's like you can't put the tariffs there,
it's really gonna hurt our society and our country,
and boom, and then the other financier,
whatever her name was, and then she stepped down,
and then he's stepping down,
and Trump's gonna do what Trump's gonna do.
By the way, you were right,
it's the world's longest undefended border.
I don't wanna get you in trouble,
I want you to keep your charity status where you're at.
So what I'd wanna do, and we talked about this earlier,
and you seemed like you were open to the idea,
Mark is here, I didn't even know Mark was gonna be here.
Mark is the fellow that you did a podcast with,
Billy Carson Robb, if we can bring him in here.
And by the way, this is gonna be very short,
five, 10 minutes is what it'll be.
And he's got a beautiful white jacket
representing Miami.
Mark, if you wanna grab a seat there.
So Mark, you're the guy that got everybody in trouble, man.
I mean, if you can grab that, if you put it on.
Mark.
While he's doing that, let me just say,
Mark's gotten a lot of flack
online and I think, you know, I have nothing but good things
to say about this guy.
He, his work in his business is so good and noteworthy
and he's a great guy.
We've become good friends over the last,
however many three months.
Mark was saying when he drove me over here,
like it feels like it's longer.
It feels like we've known each other longer
because of what's taken place and transpired.
And so I think it's really good for people to see
that in this whole crazy situation,
Mark and I are, we're not just advocates for one another,
but we're friends.
You know, Rob, can you pull up so everybody knows,
pull up the podcast that took place so everybody knows.
Mark's got his own channel as well.
Mark Minard, actually, yeah, 242,000 subs.
That's not easy to get to 100,000 subs, let alone 242.
So good for him.
If you can go to the podcast to show
Wes Huff and Billy Carson, so Mark's the one that set this up.
So if you go to Wes Huff's right there,
and if you let Neil deGrasse Tyson give us
a wonderful commercial here on his master class,
so that's Mark right there in the middle.
Now Mark, if you guys can fix his audio
because I can't hear him, so if Mark can you speak?
Okay, we got Mark.
Mark is officially live.
Mark, did you know when you set this up
that it was gonna turn into what it turned into?
If I knew it was gonna turn into what it turned into,
you should be hiring me as like
the biggest marketing genius.
I wish I could say I was that smart.
Would you have done it if you knew what it was gonna
turn into, would you have done it now?
Look him back.
So, yes, and I'm gonna tell you why.
Yes, and I'm gonna tell you why.
First of all, going through this whole process,
Billy being a good friend of mine, this whole situation has been just insanity,
but what I didn't realize, like through all the attacks
and everything that was going on,
now that this has gone as viral as it has,
I've started to receive hundreds of messages a day
from people telling me, this like chokes me,
like this podcast has brought them from a dark spot back to
God. And I didn't realize, I didn't have a clue how many people had been so steered away from their beliefs in God and were just falling into darkness from the,
I mean, I've had so many people.
If I ask you this, what's interesting is
it looks like when you're doing it,
you and Billy are friends, like I was saying earlier.
We are.
You are friends.
Well, we were.
Yeah, you were friends.
Maybe give us your version, and again,
I wanna keep this less than five minutes
because we gotta wrap up, maybe give us your version. While, I want to keep this less than five minutes because we got to wrap up
Maybe give us your version
While it's going on after it's done conversation with Billy and what happened with that and you made a video reaction to it
And every time you said the word Billy you
Bleeped yourself out. So maybe chose your perspective
Try to keep it in five minutes so
I've been on Billy's show, he's been on mine, we've known each other for business and we talked for a while about, you know, I'm a Christian, it'd be cool to have you
on and just be able to talk about your beliefs and mine and let people see we can still respect
each other and that we have similar core values.
And then as we got closer to it, I'm like,
I don't know anything about the Emerald Tablets
and all that good stuff, so that led me to Wes.
24 hours notice, had got a hold of Wes to be on.
Then I let Billy know, hey, I gave him his name,
I said he's a historian, a linguist,
gave all his credentials.
I'm like, would that be cool if he joined us?
Because I don't know anything about that stuff.
I can talk about my faith, why I believe in God,
but when it comes to that,
like I'm not shy to say I'm clueless.
And he's like, oh, oh yeah, bro, like it'll be cool.
Like I'm used to doing that.
So I went into this thinking,
we're just gonna have a great
and amazing conversation as usual.
And in all honesty, you came off as very humble,
and honestly, I thought Billy did.
The one that gets the most flack
that looks like an idiot is me,
that's overly interrupting throughout it
and people thought I was a moderator.
And I got thrown off when you started having your responses.
I'm used to talking to my good man Billy as a great friend
and we're sitting in my backyard by my pool
and he's talking about aliens and stuff
and it's just fascinating and he's like,
da da da da, here's where we found it, in the pyramids.
So when you started doing the first rebuttal
and you gave your response, I was sitting back,
and I was totally ready for Billy to be like,
da da da da da da, and have this full,
and when he was just like, fair enough,
I'm sitting there, and it's different when you're in room
when you're online.
And I'm just like, what is happening right now?
Like I was really caught off guard from that.
You seemed very uncomfortable.
That's what I, you seemed very uncomfortable.
Now when you made the reaction video,
why were you, what happened afterwards?
It ends and I think that's the one part
I wanna address like in the next few minutes.
What happened afterwards, you know,
when you guys ended the podcast?
So I got a call from, a message from him and his wife
asking me to call him.
I talked to him and they had asked me not to,
they had requested, I didn't get anything
in writing, they're like, can you not air that right now?
Because his wife said, we're planning on having
another debate set up, and she's like,
I didn't realize you guys were having a debate,
even though we talked about this for some months and I don't want it to interfere with
that is what I was told and Billy chimed in love you to death Billy kind of had a
different version of how he felt it went some Some behind the scenes stuff.
I explained, I thought,
Billy, Wesley was very respectful,
had tons of knowledge, and I said,
and I thought you came out respectful.
But anyway, for now, we won't air it.
Wesley did the response video.
People found out the show was done,
that it wasn't, they requested it to not be aired,
they found out it was on my show.
I continued to get attacked for like a month
on every level about this.
I made time to meet with Billy and try to mediate
about can we do like a follow-up show, like something.
You know, if you wanna even prepare more,
we could do it and have it more structured.
And he's like, I don't know,
I don't want to have anything to do with that Wes guy.
The attacks, everything just continued.
At a certain point, I finally made a decision
a month later.
To go live with it.
To release it.
And I wrote a long
explanation as to why to Billy yep okay and it explained how I was having
attacks defamation of my character and everything anyway we released it I
think it was like at 9 p.m. on Friday and 2 30 in the morning got a knock on the
door I went to bed after we released it.
I guess he started texting me, calling me.
2.30 in the morning, and my teenage daughter wakes me up.
She's 17, turns 18 today, actually.
Happy birthday.
Happy birthday, Nevaeh.
And she's like, dad, dad, someone's at our door.
I'm really scared.
And I'm like, what?
And I look on my phone, we have the video, and I see it's Billy.
And he's dressed up, holding a paper.
And I'm like, then I see my text,
and he's sending me, and I told him,
I'm like, it's gonna be okay,
let's just not answer it right now.
I didn't see anything good out of coming
from answering the door, any type of good conversation.
When you did, so you never open a door at 2.30?
2.30 a.m. I said, honey, it's, let's just show out.
But you took the video down right there.
No.
My wife was out of the country.
They started calling my wife in a different time zone.
My wife calls me not knowing what's going on, and she's like, Mark, I don't know what
this is, you released it.
They're asking to take it down.
She's like, I'm exhausted.
Let's just take it down, honey.
I don't want drama.
I said, okay.
For my wife, I took it down.
And my wife flew back in, I'm trying to sum this up the best I can, Pat.
I mean, people can watch my response video.
I really go through like the whole.
No, we'll give that.
The whole thing, but like.
Have you and Billy spoken since that day?
No, my wife actually flew in after she talked with him.
We thought it would be a mediation to move onward,
and they still had their lawyer write, I think, the following Monday.
We followed up.
I, everything, listen to me, I would just say this very clearly.
Everything I took down, I chose out of good faith
to take it down.
My lawyer made it clear this was a frivolous claim.
I hadn't done anything wrong.
There's First Amendment rights in the state of Florida.
And he willfully came on to be on the show at my house.
But in good conscience, I think she wrote in good faith,
Mark is choosing to take this down.
I took the previous show when he was on my podcast down,
everything they requested because my wife and I
just wanted to make peace and move forward.
Have you guys seen each other yet or no?
Have you guys had, because kids, sports, all that stuff,
have you guys been in the same?
Yeah, we're in a private gated neighborhood.
So you see each other all the time,
you just are not talking. I haven't seen them.
Okay. I see their son,
and of course we're gonna be loving to each other's sons.
Our kids, there's a basketball hoop there, they play.
It got nastier.
Then they did this live stream
that I couldn't even watch
the whole thing.
People shared clips with me.
A lot of terrible things were said.
About you.
Yeah, just about all three of us.
Mark, Anton, and myself.
Anton?
Anton is the social media manager.
Oh, okay.
The media manager who set it up.
It's been crazy, but.
Well, you know what I would say.
Here's what I would say.
I wish the best for him.
Look, you know, we watch, I don't know,
you guys watch UFC, are you a fighting fan at all?
Mm-hmm. Okay.
What's more embarrassing than getting publicly knocked out?
Think about it.
I mean, that's very embarrassing, right?
But what's more respectful than when Kobe
Bryant loses, goes out in the first game, misses all those shots and comes back and
says I'm going to get better and owns it. Right, the point is, but you know for a person
that that happens to that's been winning, winning, winning, the point is, but you know, for a person that that happens to
that's been winning, winning, winning, winning, winning,
and you're not used to it, it's not easy for anybody.
So I understand that part. Fair enough.
And by the way, you seem like a straight up guy
in what you've done.
We don't have a relationship.
You came in and just said, the guy who had them on,
I'm like, no way.
I brought you in to introduce myself,
and maybe at the end we bring you on here.
Fair enough.
But the fact that you did it, I applaud you.
I applaud Billy who did it.
And now that it's up, of course I'm sure
they're not too happy about it.
We learn about Wes.
I love the fact that I learn about Wes.
I'm so happy that he was on Rogan.
I'm so happy that we're having a conversation right now.
And for the people that are gonna see this as well.
And a part of it, you made that happen.
So good for you for doing that.
What I would like to see happen is the following.
I'd like to see a part two with Billy and yourself.
And you've already said you're open to it.
And whether it's gonna be with you,
whether it's gonna be with anybody,
whether it's gonna be anywhere,
that could be another one to be taking place.
And I think at the end of the day,
when I watch discussions,
and we've had a lot of heated debates.
I think you should do it.
You should moderate it.
We would be more than happy to do it.
Read the comments of people thinking I'm a moderator
and that got some heat.
Well, again, I think the audience wins.
That's who's important to win.
And we'll have that conversation with Billy.
We have a good relationship with Billy.
Same, you know, that we're having a conversation
with guest that here.
But having said that, I appreciate you guys for coming.
Obviously, the last few minutes I wanted to bring you here
to kind of give your story.
I appreciate you for doing that.
Wes, you already know how I feel
about the way you handle yourself,
and I think you're a class act.
You're 33 years old, soon to be 34 on February 24th,
so you gotta hurry up, bro,
because this is a tricky age you're at.
But more than anything else,
I love seeing men like you having a lot of kids,
because what does the world look like
if more kids like you are turning into adults
that you are today?
That gives me optimism about the future,
and I applaud you for it,
your family for raising somebody like you.
And, uh, what are you working on?
Where should people go look?
Is there anything you're working on
that maybe you want to share with the audience?
Yeah, you know what? So, at Apologetics Canada,
we've been doing a series, which is kind of my baby,
that is called Can I Trust the Bible? And so there are two episodes out right now on the Apologetics Canada, we've been doing a series, which is kind of my baby, that is called Can I Trust the Bible?
And so there are two episodes out right now
on the Apologetics Canada YouTube channel.
You can also go, Wes Huff on YouTube is mine,
and WesleyHuff.com is mine.
But Can I Trust the Bible is a series that we are doing
where we go to the places.
So two years ago, we flew over to Egypt,
and we went to the places where the majority of
our biblical manuscripts come from.
I explain those discoveries.
We went to Nag Hammadi, we visited the Coptic Museum in Cairo, and we looked at the Gospel
of Thomas.
We went where the Gospel of Thomas was discovered and talked about, you know, okay, we have
these books in our Bible.
Why Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John and not Thomas?. And so this upcoming year, well, it is 2025. This year,
we're going to be producing, I'm heading off to overseas again, we're going to be going to a
number of countries and we're going to be filming more. Why we can have historical solid truth
in terms of the historicity and the content of the Bible.
So historicity.
Historicity.
Historicity. Historicity.
Historicity.
I know, he drops some words, like some orality.
No, listen.
Can I say one thing on that?
I said if Wesley and Billy could join forces,
because I know Billy well, he does work hard, he's always traveling.
They both kind of remind me of Indiana Jones in like two different ways.
If they could collaborate and join forces. You're very interesting, collaborate. I gotta tell you, you're very very interesting. That would be a
beautiful thing. You're very interesting. Wes, we're gonna put the link below to Can I Trust the
Bible for people to find. We'll also put the channel there as well. And Wes, this was a blast.
Yeah, it was great. Thank you so much for having me. I know you got to go on an international flight. So I want to make sure you make your flight as well. So let's get you out there. Wes, this was a blast. Yeah, it was great. Thank you so much for having me. Appreciate you for coming out. And I know you gotta go on an international flight,
so I wanna make sure you make your flight as well.
So let's get you out there, Wes, again.
Yeah, I appreciate it, brother.
Thank you, Gank.
I think the audience won today.
Thanks for tuning in.
We're gonna put the link below.
Go support this man.
God bless, bye-bye.