The Joe Rogan Experience - #2252 - Wesley Huff
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Joe Rogan Podcast, check it out!
The Joe Rogan Experience.
Trained by day, Joe Rogan Podcast by night, all day!
Wes, very nice to meet you.
Joe, pleasure.
So I, like many people, was introduced to you because of the debate you had with Billy Carson.
Quote unquote.
You know, it's one of those things where it's very unfortunate
when people get caught with their pants down. And I'm not an expert in many things, but
the things that I am an expert on, you could wake me up at 4 o'clock in the morning and
ask me about those things. And I go, oh yeah, no. Yeah, this is what it is. Yeah. I know,
you know, like martial arts or comedy, I could tell you, I could give you an expert version
of reality.
It seems like he does not have that
and he is a wonderful talker and it's a lot of fun.
I like watching his videos.
I love all that ancient history stuff
and even the most ridiculous tinfoil hat aspects of ancient. It's fun. It's entertainment
But I know that there's a different like Andrew Schultz and I had a discussion about this
Like he said when he had Billy on the podcast, he said we're not gonna fucking research anything. We're not gonna search anything
We're not gonna do anything. Just let him talk cuz it's fun. Yeah Andrew's awesome
But when he was on with you, it was quite apparent that you are an actual expert in
the Bible and in many religious texts and that he didn't necessarily have the facts
straight.
So what was the fallout of all of that?
Well, it's interesting you say the expert thing, because I literally was asked to do
it 24 hours beforehand. So I had like the least amount
of preparation going into it, and I was okay with that because I'd listened to Billy Carson.
Well, and I listened to the stuff he'd said. So I knew enough about the ways that he'd articulated
things about the ancient Near East and the Bible and Christianity to know enough that
East and the Bible and Christianity to know enough that his level is pretty surface, but the fallout was that not only did he not want us to release the conversation, but then he
started throwing out cease and desist letters, and then he started trying to sue people.
So I mean, I was never worried because I'm a Canadian, and anybody who's tried to sue
internationally knows that-
Good luck.
Yeah, right.
Yeah.
As far as I understand it, he would have had to file a claim in a Canadian court that would
have been reviewed to have legal precedence.
He'd have to prove that he could win.
What was his argument? Apart from the fact that he was embarrassed that he'd have to prove that he could win. What was his argument?
Apart from the fact that he was embarrassed that he lost?
Well, yeah, that's, well, that's not really an argument,
right?
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Well, the cease and desist letter, yeah.
The cease and desist letter said,
I don't want you to use my name or my face
in anything going forward,
and anything you've used up until this point,
you need to remove.
And I was given 24 hours notice to do this.
But if you're a public figure,
he's clearly a public figure, is that even, can you actually say, no? No, no, no, you can to do this. But if you're a public figure, he's clearly a public figure.
Is that even, can you actually say?
No, no, no, you can't do it.
So what was the, does he have a lawyer that
wrote this season desist?
Yeah.
Is he a lawyer?
No.
So he actually, it's interesting, because he,
Mark Menard, who was the guy who hosted this interaction,
he sent Mark a handwritten one.
And then he eventually gave Mark an official one from his lawyer.
So I actually was sent one by his lawyer, which I, you know, screen-shotted, posted publicly online,
and said, I'm going to ignore this. And then, but he'd sent Mark, who was the podcast host,
as far as I'm aware, numerous cease and desists, and Anton, who was the media manager,
he'd sent a number of cease and desists.
It's unfortunate.
It is unfortunate.
When you get caught with your pants down,
you're supposed to say, I got caught with my pants down.
Yeah.
That's what you're supposed to do.
Yeah.
Especially if you're public,
it's very clear that you're incorrect.
Well, the irony of this situation
is if he just kind of left it, it probably wouldn't
have made anywhere close to the splash that it's made.
And we told him that.
We said like, hey, Barbra Streisand effect is going to happen.
Like you're a big enough personality that if I make a video and say like, hey, I had
this conversation, didn't go well for Billy and Billy doesn't want it released, that's going to start to gain traction sooner or later.
Yeah.
The problem is to really delve into these subjects.
It takes a tremendous amount of research, years and years and years of research. You really have to know what you're talking about.
Most of us don't.
Well, and especially with languages.
Yes.
Like we didn't get into it.
I hoped to have in our initial conversation, kind of pressed him a little bit more on the
more overt things he'd said about like Greek and Hebrew and Sumerian, because I've studied
a number of ancient languages.
And when you study the languages, you realize the complexities of these things.
And so when someone hasn't and they're making statements that are obviously indicative of
someone who hasn't studied them, it's super apparent.
And so I think it's one thing to be making claims about, say, like Christian history
or the Bible, but when you start to get into like linguistics and philology, it gets messy.
And if you don't know what you're talking about, it gets really apparent really fast.
Pete So, the gentleman who brought the two of you together, what was his goal?
Like, what was he trying to do?
And how did he approach you?
John Yeah.
So, he's friends, or I should say was friends.
He was friends with Billy.
They live in the same neighborhood.
Pete Oh boy.
John So, it's actually become really, it's become pretty rough for him. So he released a video yesterday, which
I think people should go and check out where he kind of gives his perspective. He's been
friends with Billy for years. He was at Billy's wedding. Billy had 15 people at his wedding.
Mark was one of them. And they live in this community in Florida.
Their sons are friends, their wives would hang out.
And Mark told me, he's like,
I've been hearing Billy say,
he wants to debate, nobody will debate him for years.
And so as far as I think Mark was concerned,
he was giving Billy the opportunity that Billy
had told a lot of people he wanted.
And so this was set up in that Mark and Billy have been talking, they've been on each other's
podcasts in the past, and they've been friends, but more like business colleagues.
Like Mark has come out and said, I hadn't really gone into the stuff he'd said about Christianity or ancient religions or whatever that much.
Mark is a, he's a Christian.
He has like a public profession of faith and he, him and Billy had talked about the fact
that they wanted to talk about like faith stuff and some of their differences and that
that Mark was kind of prepping for this and his media manager, Anton,
had sent him some of my stuff and said like,
Wes has done some stuff on some things
that Billy has talked about,
and maybe you should look up some of this stuff,
read into it, and Mark, very last minute,
was like, well, I feel inadequate.
Do you think I could just ask Wes?
And so he DMed me on Instagram and just kind of laid this out,
like, hey, I'm going to have Billy in my studio in 24 hours.
I can tell him you're coming.
I can tell him who you are.
I can give him your background.
But would you be willing to come?
And so that's what I did.
And so that's how it got set up.
So correct me if I'm wrong, but was Billy aware that this was going to be a debate or
did he think it was going to be just a discussion?
Like what did he think it was gonna be?
No, he'd been given all of the prerequisites.
Like he knew we're gonna go over some of his stuff that he'd said about Christianity, that
I was gonna come in, who I was, what my name was, some
of my background, and that part of the conversation was going to be me kind of asking him some
clarifying questions and rebutting some of the things that he said.
So he, you didn't watch the three hour live stream that he did, did you?
I watched chunks of it.
Okay.
I watched a little bit of like, oof, and then I shut it off, then I watched a little bit
more, oof. Yeah. So unfortunately, Billy there says he had no idea going in. And I mean,
as Mark said in his video that he released yesterday, I mean, that's
apparently false. He knew what it was going to be, who was going to be involved, and even some of
the things that we would be talking about.
Mm. Okay. And he also was claiming that it wasn't a debate, that he had been involved
in debates before and that he would prepare for debates, but this is something he didn't
prepare. But again, it's like if you ask me about things that I know about, you can wake
me up out of a full sleep and give me a couple seconds. I'll go, okay
This is what it is. Yeah, if you know, you know, and it wasn't a debate in one sense
Like it wasn't like we didn't do, you know opening statements and cross-examination and rebuttal, right?
it really was a conversation right and
It only kind of turned into a debate in the sense that
Billy I think got caught out and so the things that were talked about kind of showed that he needed to go on the offense.
Yes.
Yeah.
Well, again, it's all very unfortunate.
But the good part of it is I was introduced to you and your work.
And there you go.
Very, very extensive and very fascinating.
And the videos that you sent me on Instagram,
I watched both of those today as well.
Awesome.
So really, really interesting stuff.
And your knowledge of the history of the biblical texts
and codex, Sinaiticus, and all these different things,
very, very fascinating stuff.
So let's just get into your background.
How did you get started in your research and how did you get into this?
Yeah, so I grew up in a Christian home.
My parents were missionaries.
So I was born in Pakistan and spent a portion of my childhood in the Middle East with my
parents working in Amman, Jordan.
And then we came back from the Middle East
when I was pretty young.
And so I grew up in this very like diverse home
in the sense that my mom was a missionary kid
who grew up in India.
And so we had a lot of like worldview kind of perspectives
represented in our home.
Like I often say, we had the Bhagavad Gita
and the Book of Mormon and the Quran on the shelf.
Yeah.
Yeah, and I think, you know, that always,
although my parents were never overt
with this kind of stuff,
they always had the perspective that, you know,
we're Christians, we believe that
this worldly perspective is true,
but hey, this stuff isn't scary.
This stuff isn't, you know, off limits.
You know, we can investigate these things.
And they never
said that outright, but I always felt this kind of attitude of that kind of perspective.
And having been exposed in majority Muslim contexts and seeing that kind of stuff, and
my mom having a pretty good knowledge growing up in India of things like Hinduism and Sikhism
and that.
And I don't know how much of the kind of testimony stuff you watched of mine, but just before
my 12th birthday, I actually was diagnosed with a neurological condition that left me
paralyzed from the waist down.
Yeah, I did see all that.
Yeah.
So that's a condition that's called acute transverse myelitis, which I often say
is a word you can forget as soon as you hear it, because it's a complicated one.
But what happened was that I had the flu and my body's immune system attacked the nerve
endings at the base of my spinal cord and caused swelling and cut off the communication
between my brain and my legs.
Instantaneously, right?
Yeah, basically.
I'd gone down for a nap.
I was camping out in the bathroom floor for flu reasons.
And when I woke up, about 30 minutes later, I couldn't feel my legs.
And so, yeah, that's the acute part of the acute transverse myelitis was that it was
basically instantaneous.
And that's what made the diagnosis as severe as it was.
Like they said there's a 30% chance.
It was like a small percentage of probability that I would recover, but a much higher percentage
that there would be a lot of either complete paralysis for the rest of my life or some
kind of issues with walking.
It's related to diseases like multiple sclerosis,
in that it's neurological,
and it affects that kind of thing.
And one month from the day that I woke up
and couldn't feel my legs,
I woke up on a Saturday morning,
got out of bed, walked over to my wheelchair,
and sat down.
One month.
One month, yeah.
January 8th to February 8th, exactly.
Very fortunate.
You're telling me.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What treatment did they give you?
So they're, initially they gave me steroids to reduce the swelling, but so I spent 11 days in the hospital being overseen by pediatric neurologists and specialists
in this because it's a very rare condition.
And so they were studying me and they gave me steroids and they did some other tests,
but really there was no true kind of treatment in that.
And so I was doing physiotherapy.
I would be pulled out of gym class and school.
But there's a little bit of a joke.
Like, can you move your legs?
You know, can you?
Can you?
It was-
Could you move anything?
No, nothing.
Could you feel anything?
No.
No, in fact, when I was in the hospital,
I'd wake up and there'd be pinpricks in my legs
because they'd be testing where the reactions were and they'd have used a syringe.
So I'd wake up and there'd be these tiny little pinpricks in my legs because they'd
been testing while I was asleep to see whether it was registering neurologically with anything.
But I couldn't feel anything.
I was fully a paraplegic.
Yeah.
But going back to that, like, so I experienced this, what I consider to be a true supernatural
experience in that I walked into the hospital to the doctors that had overseen me, and they
were the first ones that used the word miracle.
They said, we really don't have any type of medical explanation.
And mainly because there was no atrophy.
Because of the cutoff of the communication, my muscles in those 30 days were fine.
And just a short amount of time, but they said there should be something and we're picking
up nothing.
That's crazy because I've broken limbs before and had them in casts and just in the six
weeks that you have a cast on, you have massive atrophy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So that was the kind of predication for them using the word miracle.
And so that's kind of, it marks this, what I do consider to be like this supernatural
something happened and but.
Did you feel like that was like a calling
that like led you to a very specific mindset after that?
It's an interesting way of putting it.
I mean, as much as you could at 12 years old.
12, right.
But it must have had a significant impact
on your psyche and your perceptions.
Yeah.
Well, it definitely led to things like later in life, I got very involved in athletics
and in track and field.
And part of that was feeling a conviction that I knew what it was like to not be able
to wake up and walk out of the room.
And so taking that pretty seriously and competing competitively well into university,
because even though I wasn't the most naturally talented
individual on the team, I felt like a motivation
to be able to, okay, I don't want to waste this.
Yeah.
And then later on, in terms of your original question,
the difference in that was that
I realized, okay, there's something out there, something happened that I can't totally explain
on naturalistic terms. But how do we go from that to saying, okay, well then, this worldview is
correct? And so despite being raised in a Christian home,
I felt like my parents telling me what was true
is not the worst reason to believe it,
but it's also not the best.
And so as a teenager, I did a lot of kind of soul searching.
And like I said, I was able to do that
to a certain level of degree because of the openness within my household, where I did, I pulled the Quran off the shelf and I read it, you
know, front to back, just trying to figure out, okay, what's going on here? What's all
this about?
Right.
And it was through that period of like searching and it wasn't a crisis of faith. That would
be an over-exaggerated term. But it was kind of...
An inspiration of faith, perhaps.
Maybe, yeah.
Digging through, okay, well, what do these guys believe?
What is this perspective for?
And that was about a period of about a year and a half.
And at the end of that, I did truly feel that, okay, well, I think in the ways that I, in my limited ability
as a teenager to investigate these things, I think that Christianity is true.
But it wasn't until I went to university where I was engaging with people of other faith
perspectives in Toronto at York University where I was talking to Muslims and Mormons, Jehovah's
Witnesses and atheists, you know, from the gamut. And I was having these conversations
and I was expressing kind of my perspective on what I believed. And they would say things
like, well, that sounds great, Wes, but, you know, that's all the Bible. You can't trust
that. And so that's where I started to take the... Did Mormon say that to you? Well, yes. Because that's kind the Bible. You can't trust that. And so that's where I started to take the... Pete Slauson The Mormon say that to you?
Jared Slauson Well, yes.
Pete Slauson Because that's kind of crazy.
Jared Slauson Yeah, yeah. Well, in the sense that so...
Pete Slauson The Mormon was the craziest one.
Jared Slauson Yeah.
Pete Slauson Because we know who wrote it.
Jared Slauson Yeah.
Pete Slauson And he's a shady dude.
Jared Slauson He is a shady dude. Well, no, they did in the sense that the Book of Mormon
trumps the Bible. So, they would believe, I think it's the 10th
article of the Mormon Church is that they believe the Bible insofar as it is translated.
And so they have this perspective that there's been things that have been affected. I mean,
Joseph Smith made his own translation of the Bible and it's rough.
And when he was 14.
Well, I think it was later on that he made the Joseph Smith translation. But I don't
even know if the official like LDS Church ascribes to the Joseph Smith translation
because I think they even see like, ugh, like this is...
We know what the Greek and the Hebrew looks like and this is not even...
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, he was a, you know, legitimate con man.
Yeah, which is fascinating.
People have such a deep search for meaning and truth that if you are confident and if you which is what a con man is
You know confidence man if you are
Really good at expressing yourself and really like you show confidence in your convictions
You can yeah, you could persuade a lot of people. Yeah, confidence is not competency.
And unfortunately, those things get confused a lot.
It covers up for competency sometimes.
Yeah, in religion, in politics, and all sorts of things,
right?
In everything, yeah, in everything.
I think because people want to, it's
very difficult to be an expert in a subject.
And I think people want to believe that they are and they don't want to do the work.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, I think that's why, you know, experts themselves feel a lot of inadequacy
is because they study a subject and realize like, I'm never going to get to the bottom
of this hole. Right, right.
So, unfortunately.
Most subjects are very, very nuanced and very deep.
Yeah.
Especially when you're talking about ancient religion.
Yeah.
I mean, you're talking about things
that were a oral tradition for a long time
before they're even written down.
So it's a long, long trudge to get to the bottom of things.
Yeah.
And part of the whole, like, what I was trying to get Billy in that conversation that I had
with him to get to the bottom of partly was a question of methodology.
Like I think he got frustrated at me at one point because I kept asking, you know, what
are the criteria that you're using when you're looking at one source versus another source
and coming up with a conclusion?
Because in historiography, it's the inference to the best explanation.
And so there are different ways that you go about that, different methodologies.
And historians very rarely disagree on the data and evidence.
It's the conclusions that you draw from that.
But then there are some things that are just out and out false.
And I don't think Billy totally knew what I was talking about, but it's those criteria
that we look at when we look at something that does come from an oral tradition and eventually
gets written down and becomes a literary text.
And then you analyze that on the basis of it being a literary text.
This is sort of the problem with being self-taught rather than conventionally, academically trained.
Where you're trained in very specific disciplines and you're taught to understand the foundation
before you understand how to put a window in.
There's a lot of things that you have to know from the base, from the beginning.
Do you have a water line?
Do you have power?
There's a lot of stuff. There's a lot of things going on when you're trying to construct an expertise
in something, especially something that is so complicated. And one of the things that
I've gotten out of, I've probably watched probably 20 hours of your stuff over the last couple weeks. And you've spent a lot of time on this.
This is not a casual cursory examination
of these texts and of religion.
This is a long, long journey.
And that's what's particularly exceptional
and really interesting to me.
Because I'm always fascinated by people
that have really gone down the road like really really really
Gone down the road because you don't meet a whole lot of them
You know, I know a lot of Christians that can quote you some
You know some versions of the New Testament, you know some psalms some they but but the real the
Go all the way to the back way way way way way and that's that's what you've done
That's very interesting. So this is like how old are you? I'm 33
Which is very young for someone who has chicken the depth of knowledge that you have, you know
So you've been doing this essentially from that
Miraculous moment you've that ignited this spark even though
you came from a missionary background and then from then on.
So for the past 11 years, 12 years or 20 years, 30 years, your whole life essentially, it's
all been this.
Yeah, to a certain degree.
I went to university with full intention of going into the police force.
I did my undergraduate studies
and then I kind of mapped out this plan
that I was going to become a police detective.
And that was my goal.
And I think I realized-
Why not?
Why not?
Cause you like getting to the bottom of things?
It could be.
Cause you do.
Yeah, well.
Well, if someone who spends 21 years
like getting to the bottom of a religion,
you know, you'd probably be pretty good at cracking cases. I hope so. Um, I think that might have been part of it
I also there was an aspect of when I was in high school where they were like you got to figure out what you're doing
We're gonna be homeless and you're gonna die. Yeah, like I do that part. I felt that like
In life man, I always tell people when they're in high school, like you can chill out. Like it's gonna be okay.
I don't think so.
You don't think so?
I wonder if it's different now because-
I think you should have a certain amount of desperation.
Cause I think that it ignites the fire within you
to do something.
There's probably something to that.
Yeah. Yeah.
The people that I know that have been too pampered
and taken care of and didn't have a fear
of everything going completely sideways
They never really get the momentum that's necessary to accomplish things in life. Yeah, there's probably something to that I mean desperation little desperation fear. I think is good for you. Yeah. Yeah, everybody wants to be comfortable
I don't think I don't think that's necessarily a good path
I mean
I think you should have perspective and you should enjoy your life as a young person and have those, but you should also realize you got work to
do.
Well, stress is good, right? Stress creates perseverance and creates patterns that allow
you to succeed. I mean, this is like athletics 101, right?
I think that's very important.
You got to push yourself. And I think actually part of that also led in, like I'm a big believer in athletic discipline,
needs to go hand in hand.
I mean, I know you are too.
Needs to go hand in hand with any other type of,
like whether it's an intellectual endeavor or like,
because it trains you to be able to go
into places that are uncomfortable.
Yes.
And that uncomfortability allows you to then
become stronger, you know,
realize where your inadequacies are.
And especially when you're with people
who are better than you.
I mean, when I was running at York University,
there were two guys on our team who,
cause I was okay individually,
but I ran for the relay team.
I was a sprinter.
And one of the guys was part of the,
he, they medaled, when Canada medaled at Worlds,
he was part of that relay team.
And then my other training partner, Bizzy,
who he ended up competing in Tokyo for Canada.
And when you're beside someone who is like
just a genetic freak
You're like, okay, like that's different. Yeah, right and and it both pushes you but it also reveals your limitations
Where that doesn't inhibit you like you shouldn't that shouldn't discourage you to go up to that line of being able to push yourself
But at the exact same time it it creates a realism
being able to push yourself, but at the exact same time, it creates a realism that like, I'm never gonna,
I can train as much as I want to,
I'm not gonna run like that, right?
And so, yeah, but going back to what you were asking,
like, I think there was part of that
in wanting to go into the police force,
but then realizing like around my third year of university
But then realizing, like around my third year of university, that my passions and motivations were very, very different, and that I didn't know how to go about that or where the proper
place to do that was, but I knew that I needed to lean into that to some degree, particularly
with the Bible, because I was claiming that this Bible talks about this guy Jesus,
and I'm a Christian. So I have a friend, Andy Bannister, he's out in the UK, and he says,
if you take Christ out of Christian, all you're left with is Ian. And Ian's a great guy,
who's not going to save you from your sins. And so, like, if I'm wrong about the Bible those people who push back on me, right those skeptics of various worldviews
If the things they were saying about the Bible were true, then it did actually legitimately
undermine
What I believed and so I needed to take that seriously
I had an obligation to actually investigate those things as far as I could
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What is the oldest version of the Bible or the stories in the Bible? Is it the Dead Sea
Scrolls or are there older versions? The Dead Sea Scrolls are the oldest version of the Bible or the stories in the Bible? Is it the Dead Sea Scrolls or are there older versions?
The Dead Sea Scrolls are the oldest of the Old Testament. So when they were discovered, I mean,
so they were discovered 1946 to 1957 and at that point during their discovery they pushed back a lot of our previous
oldest manuscripts a thousand years, which was a big deal.
How old are they?
They're anywhere between the third century BC and the first century BC.
So it's kind of tricky because the Dead Sea Scrolls are, they're like a library that we
refer to.
So it's approximately 970 documents, but it's distributed out between 10,000 and 11,000 fragments.
So there's a lot going on there, right?
So, and some of these, I mean, are so fragmentary
that you look at them and it's like confetti.
Cause they're, I mean, 3000 years old, but not quite that.
They're like 2000 plus years old, right?
Animal skins too, right? Well, all sorts of things, animal skins, 3000 years old, but not quite that. They're like 2000 plus years old. Animal skins too, right?
Well, all sorts of things, animal skins, papyri,
and then some of them are actually done on copper.
Really?
They're like inscribed in copper.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, one of the coolest ones, actually this relates
because I know you're a Marco Allegro guy.
The first time I was introduced to Marco Allegro
was not his Sacred Mushroom and the Cross stuff,
but he published a book on what's called the copper
scroll because part of the Dead Sea Scroll fragments is this inscribed document on copper,
which is an ancient treasure map.
Can you see it?
Yeah.
Yeah, Jamie, pull up the...
Hey.
There it is.
Wow.
Yeah.
So it's in Hebrew and it is wild.
So it has these sites where it says buried treasure is found.
Whoa. There have been a number of guys
who have tried to, like, look for it.
And, um, so...
Does it say what the treasure is?
Uh, you know what? Off the top of my head, I don't know.
Um, but...
Look how crazy that language is.
I know, right?
Um, and so, but the Dead Sea Scrolls,
so it's like stuff like this. It's papyri.
It's animal skins. And it's like stuff like this, it's papyri, it's animal
skins, and it's a number of different languages.
So the vast majority of it is in Hebrew, but there's also a lot in Aramaic and then Greek
and in Nabatean.
So it's like an umbrella term to just describe a whole bunch of literature.
So a lot of it is biblical because it was written by this group out in the desert called the Essenes who lived at Qumran. And that's a very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very,
very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very,
very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very,
very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very,
very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very,
very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very,
very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very,
very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very,
very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very,
very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very,, so the scrolls, as it were, aren't all biblical.
Some of them is just a counting of the times.
Yeah.
Oh, Jamie, look at that.
65 tons of gold and 26 tons of silver.
65 tons?
That's a lot.
That's a lot.
How many Cuban links can you make out of that?
You can see why someone would try to track that down.
Boy.
Yeah.
Wow.
And you know, when we're talking about the Dead Sea Scrolls, like, you have ones like
the Great Isaiah Scroll, which is fully complete. Like, it's a copy of the Book of Isaiah,
and it's a full, complete scroll. But then other ones are so fragmentary that we think they're
written in Hebrew, but we can't actually tell. Because no one's willing to like piece these.
And this is true for a lot of stuff.
So like the largest grouping of papyri literature in the world is the Oxyrhynchus collection,
which we get a good portion of our oldest manuscripts of the New Testament from.
But if you go to Oxford and you look at the Oxyrhynchus collection and you look at the Ox, or the Oxyrhynchus collection,
and you pull out that drawer, it just,
it's like a jigsaw puzzle.
And you're like, like most of it is untranslated,
untranscribed, because the amount of man hours
that it would just take to even put it together,
nevermind, then go to the effort of transcribing
and translating it, most people are then go to the effort of transcribing and translating it.
Most people are not willing to do that.
And if you're missing chunks, how do you even make that puzzle connect?
Well that's part of, so part of my area of speciality in research is in regards to that.
So I study paratextual features.
We're really going to get nerdy today.
Let's get nerdy.
So you look at the features of the manuscripts, not necessarily the words, but things like
the spaces between the words, the development of punctuation, indentation or out-dentation.
And I look at the margins, and I try to, based on the average size of manuscripts in and around that time, and also the average
spacing of words and the margins on top, bottom, and the side, recreate what the manuscript
could have possibly looked like.
Wow.
Yeah.
So when you say the Book of Isaiah is intact, how similar is it to the Book of Isaiah that's
in the Bible?
So that one is fascinating.
So this isn't true for all of the Dead Sea Scrolls, but when we discovered the Great
Isaiah Scroll, previous to that, the earliest copy of Isaiah that we had was in the Masoretic
text, which is in the Middle Ages.
Whoa.
Yeah, so it was literally a thousand years.
We literally pushed back our understanding of Isaiah a thousand years.
And the thing that really shocked scholars, like I said, this isn't true for all the Dead Sea Scrolls, but
one of the things that shocked them about Isaiah was that it was word for word identical
to the Masoretic text.
Word for word.
Word for word.
Wow.
Yeah. So this is the Great Isaiah Scroll. So if you go to Israel and you go-
Is that papyrus?
Yes. No, I think that one is vellum.
What is vellum? So, uh, so I should be more specific.
So parchment is animal skin.
Vellum can be used, uh, synonymously with the term parchment.
Technically parchment is, is like baby animal skin, like calves or lambs.
Um, but this is the, the great scroll, and you can see like they stitch together
the parchment because it's so long.
God, it's so beautiful. The way they wrote back then was so beautiful. I mean, maybe it's because
I can't read it. Maybe if I saw English, I would think that's beautiful too, especially script,
like cursive. Cursive is very beautiful. But that is so fascinating because the, I mean, obviously coming from a point of ignorance,
the letters look so similar.
Like so many of, this is what I always got about cuneiform.
When I look at that, I'm like,
it's just one particular sort of character
that's this way and that way and up and down and-
Oh, cuneiform is wild.
Weird.
It's really, really tricky.
And that's the thing when, like,
if you're studying ancient languages
and you start to study Greek,
like Greek, the Greek alphabet is similar enough
that you're like, okay, alpha looks like an A, right?
Delta looks like a D.
So you can figure it out.
And so it tricks you because you start off and you're like,
oh, this is phobias, fear.
I know what a phobia is.
And you get this false sense of encouragement.
And then the further you go down the rabbit hole, you're like, oh, I'm screwed.
But Hebrew is completely the opposite because the writing system is so different.
The learning curve is hard at the beginning, and then you're like, everything is just three letters with a suffix added to it. And so it feels like whereas the opposite
is true with Greek. Greek, you're like, I get this. And then when you really go down
the rabbit hole, you're like, oh crap, none of the things that I learned about that are
supposed to be standard, all of them have exceptions. But yeah, cuneiform is a wild one.
Do you know who Rick Strassman is?
No.
He's a scholar and he did a lot of work, early work, FDA approved work on psychedelics.
And he spent 16 years teaching himself to read ancient Hebrew.
Nice.
Yeah, so because he wanted to really understand the Bible from the original source of ancient
Hebrew and to understand it in context.
Ancient Hebrew, the way the words are structured is so different than English and that something
must be lost in translation.
So he spent 16 years teaching himself how to read ancient Hebrew.
That is so, that is such dedication.
16 years.
It's a long time.
That seems too long. Well, you're self-taught. 16 years. It's a long time. That seems too long.
Well, you're self-taught.
I mean, he's doing it himself.
Yeah, self-teaching.
Yeah, I self-taught myself Greek at first.
And then when I started learning it formally,
I realized how much you miss when you self-teach yourself.
Oh, I'm sure.
Well, how many people can teach you ancient Hebrew?
How many courses are available?
Oh, you can take it at any graduate college.
Yeah.
And is it, it's not something that we know what it sounded like, correct? to ancient Hebrew, how many courses are available? Oh, you can take it at any graduate college. Yeah? Yeah, yeah.
And is it, it's not something that we know
what it sounded like, correct?
Yeah, I mean, this is the big debate with ancient languages.
Like same thing with, yeah, arguably we don't know
how any of this was pronounced.
I mean, modern Greek speakers get really mad at me
when I say that because they're like,
of course we know how it's pronounced,
pronounced like we pronounce it, right?
And on all my videos where I'm like site translating
Greek manuscripts, there's so many comments
of modern Greek speakers getting mad
at how I'm pronouncing things.
But realistically, yeah, we don't really know
how most of the things are pronounced with anything.
But isn't that very bizarre when you're translating,
like if you go back to like say the Epic of
Gilgamesh.
We don't even know what the word sounded like.
We kind of know what they represent and then we do a literal translation of what they represent.
But if you've never heard, no one can speak ancient Sumerian.
Yeah.
Well, Sumerian is a wild one because it's a language isolate.
What does that mean?
So Hebrew is an Afro-Semitic language.
So Hebrew is related to all of these other languages like Aramaic and Akkadian, but language
isolates have no adjacent comparisons. So, because I tried to teach myself Sumerian and I failed and I just gave up because I
couldn't do it because I had nothing to really compare it to.
So Sumerianologists are very like, they're a field of their own because I learned a little
bit of Akkadian because I had studied Semitic languages and there's enough crossover between things like Hebrew and Aramaic and Akkadian,
but Sumerian you have nothing to compare it to.
Pete Slauson What did it eventually become?
Jared Slauson It just died.
Pete Slauson It just died.
Jared Slauson It just died.
Pete Slauson How? Do we know?
Jared Slauson I mean, the Sumerians lost to the Assyrians and the Assyrians got taken over by the Babylonians.
I mean, it's just the, you know,
the course of history where things happen.
But there are a number of ancient languages
that are language isolates, like linear Elamite.
We had no idea what linear Elamite even said until 2021.
Well, I never even heard it until five seconds ago.
I know, there you go.
Jamie, if you pull up, if you look up, I never even heard it until five seconds ago. I know. There you go.
Jamie, if you pull up, if you look up, what's it called?
There's a cup, a silver cup.
It'll come up if you Google image linear elamite, because you think cuneiform looks wild.
Linear elamite is completely different than that too.
And there's a silver cup, which we had no idea what it said.
And then a bunch of researchers, ancient Near Eastern
researchers developed.
So in the corner there, that one on-
Far left corner?
Oh, no, no, here.
Now it's moved because it clicked it.
That one, yeah, yeah, click that.
So that's linear Elamite.
And so that's in and around the same time
that language is like Sumerian.
So there's this very interesting kind of, if we're talking about a story in the Bible
like the Tarababel, where it says that God confused their languages and everybody started
speaking different languages, you have these languages that just pop up and out of nowhere
and have no relation to one another.
So Acadian starts to adopt certain words in Sumerian,
but they're still Sumerian words.
It's like pizza is Italian, right?
Or like kayak is Inuit.
But when you're looking at the words that carry over,
it's not because there's a relationship between Akkadian and
Sumerian, it's because you have these cultures that live side by side. And eventually Akkadian
starts to adopt these things. But Sumerian is, so that's why when I see people like Billy
Carson talk about being able to read Sumerian, I'm like, dude, I read ancient languages and
I can't, I've tried and I can't make heads or tails of Sumerian. So that's a tell. Unfortunately, it kind of
gives away.
Listen, I like Billy. He was a nice guy. I really enjoyed talking to him. I really do.
I think his videos are fun, but I also think truth is important.
I have no problem with him as an individual.
He just needs to course correct. Yeah.
Yeah, course correct and recognize what you know
and what you don't know.
And that you're not doing people a service,
especially people like myself that aren't educated in this.
Like we return to others who claim
to have a vast knowledge of this to help me out.
Tell me what's going on.
When I sit down and talk to you, tell me what's going on.
And if you don't really know,
you're kinda, you're fuckin' over a lot of people,
unfortunately, for yourself.
This, how do you say it again, lineal?
Linear?
Linear.
Elamite.
Elamite.
Can you put that back up again, Jamie?
So this was, can you show me that image
that you showed me before?
Actually see if you can find the cup.
That's pretty dope right there.
If you scroll, there should be a cup,
I think it's called the dashed.
Is that it in the lower corner?
No.
It's not the cup?
No, if you go, it's got, yeah, if you look up cup,
yeah, that guy.
Oh.
So see that inscription of the top beside the face?
Yeah.
So that's the one, so it goes around the top of the cup
and they crack that.
Look at that dude's honker.
That's a big nose, isn't it?
That's a hell of a nose.
Yeah, he can smell that linear elamite.
And so when, so actually, interestingly enough,
if you pull back, Jamie, that's my,
so there's an infographic that I made that just popped up.
So if you click that guy, that's the one I made.
Why is it coming up like that?
Someone else reposted it.
Oh, okay.
So is it just bad resolution, is what you're saying?
Oh, there it is.
Oh, no, that is mine.
So actually, here, I'll be self-serving.
If you go to wesleyhough.com.
Can we just look at that for a second?
That is so cool.
And how old is this?
Four, I mean, 20th century BC.
Wow. Yeah.
So 4,000 plus years ago.
Yeah, so if you go, Jamie, to WesleyHuff.com
and then click my infographics tab at the top.
So I started making these things
for the graduate students I was teaching.
And yeah, so if you go down,
there should be an archeology section.
And in the archeology section, I have that one on... I'm blanking on what it's called. I make ones for manuscripts too.
What a great website you've got.
Oh, thank you. I appreciate that.
This is awesome. It's so detailed.
Yeah, so there's the linear Elamite one.
What a fucking phenomenal resource this is.
Right there.
Oh, there it is.
Yeah, Mark Dash. That's what it's called. So yeah, you see this. So I have Sumerian,
linear Elamite, Akkadian, and Palaeo-Hebrew there at the bottom, the
comparisons.
And these are languages that operated like alongside one another, but are almost completely
foreign to one another.
So there is crossover between Akkadian and Palaeo-Hebrew.
So that's interesting. Sumerian, when I'm thinking of cuneiform,
I'm not thinking of that, right?
That looks different than some of the clay scrolls,
the imprintations that they make with a clay wheel.
Yeah, well, it's all done with the stylus.
So it's like a little wedge stylus.
So there are different variations of it. But ultimately, it's done with the stylus. So it's like a little wedge stylus. So there are different variations of it,
but ultimately it's done with the stylus.
The thing that's interesting,
like you're probably thinking more
of what that later Akkadian looks like, right?
Where it's like the wedges.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So Akkadian basically borrowed the writing system
and it had development over time, but it was very close. So when they conquered them, did they have their own writing system. And it had development over time, but it was very close.
So when they conquered them, did they have their own writing system initially and just
incorporated Sumerian writing to theirs?
That's a good question.
I don't know the answer to that one.
God, I'd like to know.
I know, right?
I mean, it's so long ago, but not.
Yeah.
I mean, it's so long ago in terms of a human life.
But it's not that long when you think like we went from 4,000 years ago to that, to large
language models.
Yeah, that's pretty crazy.
Yeah, quantum computing.
Yeah.
Well, even if you look at the... I mean, language systems develop.
Palaeo Hebrew turns into what we saw in the Dead Sea Scrolls, whereas Palaeo Hebrew is
a little bit different than what we eventually see in the Dead Sea Scrolls because there's
like a development within
the language.
And then modern Hebrew adopts the Hebrew in the Dead Sea Scrolls, but modern Hebrew has
vowels that were developed in the Middle Ages to figure out how to pronounce it.
Because basically, ancient Hebrew doesn't have a vowel system in its writing
that's overly comprehensive.
And so in the Middle Ages, when you have these groups of Jews
who are copying these Hebrew scriptures, who aren't speaking
it as much as they're reading it,
you've got to figure out how to pronounce it as...
Because vowels make a difference.
But if you took all the vowels out of English,
if you were a natural English reader,
you could probably figure out what was what
if you're looking at the page.
And so in the middle ages, the Masoretic scribes
come up with these vowel pointing systems.
And that's what you see when you like look
at a Hebrew Bible today, is you see these, these vowels.
And sometimes like the introduction or removal of the vowel is significant in the changing
of the words.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
It's, it's also interesting and you know, we're kind of seeing language change, written
language while right now in this current era because of the, because of the, we've kind of abandoned cursive.
So if people in the future go to read ancient scripts
of human beings that lived in the 20th century,
they'll be like, what is this shit?
And then there wasn't a lot of it.
There's no cursive on the internet.
I mean, there's cursive on the internet,
but I mean, no websites are written in cursive,
or very few at least.
It's all printed.
And so they've essentially, in school,
stopped teaching most classes don't teach cursive.
We all learned cursive as children.
It was the way you could write things quicker.
And then once printing and typewriters and computers
became ubiquitous, it's gone.
And everybody's just texting.
Well, let's hope people in the future
are still able to read the Declaration of Independence.
Right.
Like, cause that's what it was written in, right?
Right, yeah.
Stuff like that.
That's really interesting, right?
Because if you were not taught that
and then you went to read that and you said,
this is English, like what are you talking about?
Like I recognize a few of these letters,
but it's so vastly different than the printed text.
Yeah, language models are wild.
Wild. Yeah.
The whole thing is wild, that people figured out
how to associate sounds with little symbols,
and then they did completely different shit in Korea,
with completely different shit in Russia.
Yeah.
It's so fascinating, and then you have to have
these experts who can translate these
things and you're dependent upon them forever which that was what Lutheranism
was all about right like Martin Luther wanted to have phonetic translations of
the Bible and there was a lot of resistance to that because the people
that knew how to read Latin were like hey hey slow down yeah partly I mean there
were proto reformers before Luther where I there really? Were there guys like Wycliffe? So John Wycliffe and William Tyndale both translated the Bible, parts of the Bible into
English and they predated.
I mean, and they weren't very popular for it either.
I mean, Wycliffe was declared a heretic and then his body was exhumed and burned because
of the work that he did.
But yeah.
Burned him after he was already dead.
Yeah, well, Tyndale's line was that he wanted, I believe it was Tyndale, it was either Wycliffe
or Tyndale.
My friends who are specialists in this are gonna get mad at me for this.
But one of those two guys said that they wanted the Plowboy to be able to read the Bible and
know it as well as the priests. And so that was their
motivation is that they're like, you know, public education for literacy in these areas was largely
because they just wanted people to read the Bible. But that was a big motivation behind Luther was
he's like, I'm going to translate this thing to German. Because part of his kind of kicking off
of the, what we call the Protestant Reformation was that he read
the Bible in Greek, because there was a guy named Desiderius Erasmus who was a...
They called him humanists, but it means something different than now.
Humanists were like scholars who were trying to figure out the entirety of human knowledge
up until that point.
Like Renaissance men, kind of, right?
So Desiderius Erasmus is like one of the last Renaissance men.
But he was compiling, and he produced the first printed edition of the Greek New Testament.
And so he comes out with this printed edition of the Greek New Testament, and Luther gets
his hands on it.
And so he's reading that, and he notices that in Matthew's gospel, the word
that's in the Latin is penitentium agate, do penance, in Greek is metanoite, which is
repentance. And the church was using this as like, you need to do penance. You need
to do all of this stuff to show that you're sorry. And part of that was paying the church.
And Luther reads this and he goes, hey, guys, this means something different.
This means repentance. It means changing your mind. It doesn't mean, like, to actually do things.
And so part of his motivation is, like, the Latin isn't reflecting, at least at the point
that Latin had developed in that day.
Maybe when Jerome translates the Latin Vulgate back in the fourth century, and it's called
the Vulgate because vulgata means regular.
You think of vulgar, right?
It's just the regular people language.
Part of the reason was that in the fourth century, very few people were reading Greek.
They were reading Greek. They were reading
Latin. And so they're like, hey, Jerome, you need to produce a Bible in Latin because nobody can
read the Bible anymore. And so he produces the Latin Vulgate. And ironically, by the time you
get to Luther, a thousand years later, no one can read Latin and they're all using the Vulgate. Wow, that is fascinating.
Wow.
And even Erasmus was, so he dedicates his first few additions
to the pope because he knows that the pope is going
to get wind that he's producing Greek New Testament,
New Testaments and the church is using the Latin.
And he's risking his life.
So if he dedicates it to the pope,
maybe the pope will take it easy on him.
Did it work?
Yeah, yeah it did.
Nice, a little flattery.
Yeah, see it goes a long way.
Well that's part of the problem, right,
is that you're dealing with these priests,
you're dealing with human beings.
And when human beings are the sole purveyors of truth,
they're the, that becomes a problem.
It's power, it's too much power.
Most people suck at power.
They're just, it just makes them drunk with it
and they abuse it and you see that in many, many religions.
You see that in cults, you know, for instance,
is the best example of it.
Because, you know, like when you know the person
who created this thing and you know this person
is fucking insane and you have a bunch of people that follow them.
They're just looking out for your best interest.
Yeah.
Right.
They just they just want to make sure you're doing the right thing.
Did you see why a wild country?
Oh, yes.
It's fucking awesome.
Unfortunately.
So good.
So crazy.
I mean, I'm so glad I wasn't there and a part of it.
But it they all look good in the beginning.
That's what's really wild.
All these cult documentaries, all these exposés
in the beginning, like these people haven't made.
They're all eating together and they have community
and they're praying together and they seem
wonderfully happy.
They're just seeking enlightenment.
Yeah.
One of the ways my wife and I bond,
we have very different tastes in movies,
but there's enough crossover that our guilty pleasure
is cult documentaries.
I love them.
They're so interesting.
I love them.
I love them because there's something about people absolutely believing things that's
so appealing to me.
Don't know why that is.
I like watching Islamic scholars speak with full confidence that their version of truth
is truth.
I'm just interested in that mindset
I just I think it's a like a very
deeply cut groove in the human psyche that people can fall into and
When something but when there's a cult it's like god, it's so obvious like there's the guy
That's the guy like here's a good example. There's a documentary called. Holy hell
Oh, yeah, of course, and you know that yeah
Yeah, I bought the building that holy hell was like the the actual theater that this guy
Had built it's a beautiful theater that he had his followers built so he can dance in front of them
That was gonna be the comedy mothership the first version of it. So I was under contract for that building.
It fell apart, thank the baby Jesus,
thank Allah, thank somebody.
And then we found this new place on Sixth Street,
but that documentary is so fascinating
because you can see this guy who is a gay porn star
and a hypnotist.
So wild.
Take a bunch of really lost people
and send them down this crazy road
and then eventually it all falls apart.
You know what's interesting about that is
I have less of a problem with the objective truth claims
and more of a problem with them saying,
but don't look into it.
Like don't test it.
Like what I say goes and you're not allowed to explore it. Like, don't test it. Like, what I say goes, and you're not allowed to explore
it. Like, talking about the Mormon church, they recently did this thing where they're
like, you don't need to go on the internet, and you don't need to...
Don't watch the Book of Mormon.
Yeah, guys, I don't think you realize what you're sounding like when you come across
in that way.
Mormons are the nicest cult members. They're the nicest people. They really are so nice.
I love them.
I mean, the Mormons that I've met have been so friendly.
They're so family oriented.
That's true.
There's something, I mean, it's like really easy
to like think these are great people.
I'll join them.
We know why they're family oriented, right?
Why?
Is because in what Joseph Smith wrote,
there's an idea that everybody's soul pre-exists,
and you were born as a spirit child in a previous life,
and the reason you need to have children
is you need to bring those people's souls into existence.
And so there's like,
because you have a heavenly father and heavenly mother,
and you're all children of God
in the actual like physical sense, And that the pursuit is exaltation where you will be a God on your own planet,
if you've done everything right.
You get your own planet, which is pretty dope.
You get your own planet.
And this is so Joseph Smith in the King's funeral discourse, this is what he wrote.
This is where he like formulated this idea where God, the Father,
has a body as tangible as ours, of flesh and blood, and that he lived on another planet,
and he was, you know, circled around the star called Kolob, and that if you do everything right,
you will also be the God on your own planet. And so you gotta encourage people to have kids
because you're pulling those spirit babies
out of the spiritual realm.
But you're right, they are incredibly nice people.
The nicest.
The nicest.
Yeah, it's a really great cult.
You know, I mean, or religion, whatever.
I mean, I used to have a joke in my act
that a cult is fake
and it's made by one guy, that guy invented it,
in a religion, that guy's dead.
Hmm.
There might be something to that.
Yeah, and some for sure, but the question to me is always
what were they originally trying to do? What was it based on? What in the beginning
there was light? What is all of that? What are those stories? And when you take these
stories and you are telling them for so long, that's why the Book of Isaiah, what you were
telling me is so fascinating, that a thousand years later, you have the exact translation
of this at a time
where most people were illiterate.
Oh yeah, definitely.
Yeah, I mean it's only really been recently that we have the levels of literacy that we
have today.
I mean this is part of the reason why you have these long spans of time between like
when people live and then the ancient biographies that start to pop up about them is because
most people are just illiterate. But to imagine how crazy that is,
that something in a time where there's no printed press
and something that had been passed on for so long as an oral tradition
is exact word for word written, you find in a cave in Qumran.
And then the same thing you get in the English translation of the
Bible today. That's nuts.
Yeah. I mean, up until the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls, the New Testament manuscripts
predated the Old Testament manuscripts by a long shot.
Really?
Yeah. Because the Christians were less discerning in their proliferation of written documents.
So the Jews had this whole system where you had to be a trained scribe and they were very,
very careful with the procedures that you went through.
Whereas the Christians were like, we want to get this thing out as fast as we can, as
often as we can, which had a lot of benefits in that like their goal was a proselytization and evangelism and that worked.
But the downside of it was that you get really messy copies where you have copies all over
the place.
But human error gets involved with like spelling differences and additions, deletions, mostly
for completely like understandable reasons.
But we actually have manuscripts where we know the person copied it and they didn't
know how to read it because they make mistakes that you wouldn't make if you knew how to
copy.
There's this really great example of a guy who copies, I believe it's the genealogy of
Matthew and he's looking at a manuscript that has two columns, and he's copying it from left to right, and
he's copying it like this, whereas it's like the column you go down and then the next column.
So in the genealogy of Jesus, he's got all the wrong people begetting all the wrong people,
and you're like, you wouldn't do this if you knew how to read, because God is in the middle
of the genealogy. So like that kind of thing.
That is a real problem.
That is a real problem.
But ironically, with the Christian manuscripts, because we have so many, it's actually because
of the mistakes that we're able to trace the text back with a high degree of confidence.
Because if you have copies that are floating around North Africa and places like Egypt
and then you have copies in Syria and you have copies out into floating around North Africa and places like Egypt, and then you
have copies in Syria, and you have copies out into Asia and into Europe and the British
Isles.
When mistakes pop up, they're geographically located, and because you have so many, you
can compare and contrast them and figure out, okay, well, this obviously happened here at
this time, and you can pinpoint those things.
So this is a field called textual criticism, where you, and we do this with all ancient
documents.
Like the Bible is a more kind of fleshed out field of textual criticism because we have
so many manuscripts, but we do it with, you know, Marcus Aurelius.
We even do it with Shakespeare with the different copies, because if you only have one copy,
you have to trust that the person who copied that got it right.
Right.
Yeah.
Which is the issue that we have for Beowulf.
We only have one copy of Beowulf.
And so we don't know what it looked like prior to that.
So we just kind of accept that okay
This is Bayou off like there's no way to compare and contrast
The tradition of the manuscripts of Bayou off God when you're saying this about taking
Copied versions of it and comparing errors and going back and like you're talking about so much time
Yeah, so much research. It's legwork.
So much legwork.
Yeah.
And fortunately, in the modern era,
we get computers involved.
And that cuts out a lot of the just manpower.
I would like to see AI get to the bottom of all this.
Well, there's an interesting.
So in Germany, at the Center for the Study of New Testament
Research in Münster, there actually is called
CBGM, the Coherence-Based Genealogical Method.
And it's tracing not manuscripts, but readings within manuscripts and finding the relationships
between the different ones by like computer models.
And so they are actually getting, so this is actually the way that like modern era textual
criticism is being done is with these language models that operate on tracing readings and
how certain readings are related to one another, which has allowed us to do things like look
at fourth century manuscripts and actually see that their readings come hundreds of years earlier in other manuscripts
that we have in collections.
So one of the clearest examples of this is there's a manuscript in the fourth century
called Codex Vaticanus, because it happens to be in the Vatican right now.
And there is a manuscript from the second century which has the exact same scribal conventions that Codex
Vaticanus does in particular readings.
And so we know for a fact that the scribes who created
Vaticanus did not have, I think it's P75, which is a Papyrus
75, but they had some sort of collection of manuscripts
that were similar.
And so we can have confidence that the readings,
although they're fourth century in particular
areas of Codex Vaticanus, are actually second century in their origination.
And a large part of this is because of these like models that the computers got involved
in.
Wow.
That is so fascinating.
Now when they're going over things like ancient Sumerian and they're reading things like the Epic of Gilgamesh. Like if we can't say, we don't know how to make those words, we don't know what
they sounded like. How are they translating it into an English version?
Like when you, like one of the things that's been compared quite a bit is the
Epic of Gilgamesh and the
story of Noah and the Ark, the great flood.
There seems to be some parallels.
Like how close is it?
In some ways it's very close and in other ways it's not.
So that's the story of Upnupishtim, which is kind of a side story in the epic of Gilgamesh
where Gilgamesh is, he realizes his mortality and he's trying to find eternal life.
And there's this guy, Upanupishtham, who he runs into who tells him this story of the gods gifted him with eternal life because he saved all the animals on a boat.
And so there are actually parallels between that and say the Genesis 6 Noah arc story in like making a big boat,
putting all the animals on it and then they get off and they make a sacrifice to, in his
case, the gods in the Bible God.
And I think what you're looking at there is probably a cultural remembrance of something
that did take place.
And so you have these adjacent cultures who they're existing within this framework of
the Ancient Near East and you're seeing these kind of parallel echoes of things that actually did happen.
So there are definite parallels, but I think sometimes people look at those and they overplay
that.
So one of the examples I often give is Advil and arsenic both come in pill form and have
an A on the bottle.
But it's not the similarities that matter in that case, it's the differences.
And so if you look at the differences, there are significant differences in the Epic of
Gilgamesh and the Upnupishtim story and the Genesis 6 story.
If for another reason then the Noah arc story is a very small part of the book of Genesis.
And the story of Upnupishtum in the Epic of Gilgamesh
is a little bit more stretched out.
It has more to do with the theme
of what Gilgamesh is doing in his epic.
But there are obviously parallels between that
because these are both ancient Near Eastern stories
and they're products of their day.
In the same way that I think you see parallels
between some of the New
Testament gospels and other ancient Greco-Roman biography in that these are products of ancient
history and so they're going to look like other ancient historical writings that kind
of parallel around that.
Does that make sense?
No, it That makes sense. No, it doesn't make sense. It's just
When you're talking about the oldest of old stories, it's always so interesting to wonder like when
What was?
When they're taking these oral traditions like
Like Socrates is famous for saying that he didn't believe that you should write things. Yeah, make people lazy. Right, it makes you lazy.
You need to learn how to remember things.
You need to exercise your memory,
which is so fascinating when you think that
there must have been people that were in charge
of memorizing these oral traditions.
And when you're talking about,
particularly if you're talking about the Old Testament,
the series of writings, like these are long stories
that someone had to remember and pass on to generations.
So the thing with me was always like,
well, what was the origin of all this?
Like, what was the first version of it
and where the hell did it come from and what was it?
What was going on where these people felt like
in this time of incredibly difficult
survival, right?
You're essentially, you're hunter gatherers, right?
We're talking about thousands of years ago.
And these people took great time and made great effort to preserve these stories.
And then there's always human error, right?
There's human error, as you
were saying, with transcription and trying to decipher things and writing things down
where you don't really speak the language. You got to wonder, like, how much did we lose
in this oral tradition? Like, what was the original story and what were they trying to
convey?
Yeah. And I think that there's an aspect aspect of a message that's trying to be communicated.
We are modern people of the Enlightenment.
We almost have a perspective where we want something to be very exhaustive, that ancient
writers didn't have those same sort of conventions. So they're going to capitalize on certain ideas and concepts for the purpose of when
someone tells you a story, you don't memorize everything.
You go to university, you write notes.
The people who are writing everything the professor is saying word for word, probably
not the people who are going to remember what the professor says as well as the people who write down the main things and
When you write down the main things the main points without all of the other stuff that kind of is is just
It's icing then you get the main idea more ancient writers talk about this. So there's a guy named
quintillion who exists in the first century BC, and there's this
series of writings that we call Progymnasmata, which are basically like, how do you do good
writing?
So he's training people, maybe even individuals like Plutarch, who is one of the best known
ancient biographers, and saying like, it's
just as important what you don't say as to what you do say.
Because you don't want to, A, writing in the ancient world is expensive, really expensive.
And B, you want to make sure that your audience is actually getting the message that you want
to convey.
And so this is something that when you read like German scholars,
biblical scholars of the 19th and 20th century, or even prior to that, like 18th, 19th century,
they look at the Gospels and they're like, this isn't biography because it's not capitalizing on
Jesus' childhood. And we all know that good biographies tell about your childhood and
psychologize and these sorts of things. Whereas if you look at some of these ancient writers
who are talking about how you should write biography, they say if there's nothing in
their childhood that's that significant, don't write it. It's going to distract from, like if there is something, say like Jesus' birth, or Luke
tells a story when he's 12 of Jesus, when he goes with Mary and Joseph, and Mary and
Joseph lose the son of God, and they start going home without him, and they're like,
where's Jesus?
And they got to go back to Jerusalem.
That's a significant story.
And so it appears that Luke includes it because there's a significant
reason to include that.
But they wouldn't have had any problem with leaving out large portions of someone's life
if it didn't contribute to what the ultimate goal of telling that person's life was.
Pete I think what's also important is we have to have to try as difficult as it might be to
put our minds in the context of people who lived in a time where most people were illiterate
and you're telling these parables, you're telling these stories as an oral tradition
and that they have a different mindset in terms of the distribution of information. Totally.
And what the significance of these things are.
Yeah. Yeah, these are documents, well, in terms of the Bible, like as someone who
identifies as a Christian, I would say that these are, the Bible is written for you,
but it wasn't written to you. It had a completely different original audience.
But you should do your best at figuring out
who it was written to and how that made a difference to them
because then the application is gonna come out
even clearer for you.
And that should be ultimately, you know,
the goal of everyone who's looking at ancient documents.
Who was the original audience?
How would they have understood it?
Because you can read all sorts of things
because of your modern conventions into what someone
is talking about in the ancient world and completely bypass what they're actually trying
to convey in their intention.
Yeah.
And again, it's almost impossible to put your mind completely into the context of these
people that were living then.
It's almost impossible to imagine the way they viewed the world
and the way they communicated.
And when you're dealing with really old stuff
like the Sumerian text,
and then people have translations of it
which can be fantastical,
like the Zechariah, Sitchin stuff,
it's like you have to be a scholar in ancient Sumerian and understand the origins of language
and you have to...
And then still, there's massive debate.
There's a whole website called sitchinswrong.com.
But he's the most fun.
He's fun.
I'm not convinced he could read Sumerian either.
Really?
Yeah.
I think he was bullshitting.
I'd like to give him read Sumerian either. Really? I think he was bullshitting.
I'd like to give him the benefit of the doubt.
He takes so many liberties with the stuff he's commenting on
that I have a hard time getting my head around.
So if he couldn't read it, where would he
be getting his translations?
From actual translations.
OK, so he would take these translations
and then make his own assumptions and his own his own interpretation. Is that what it is? Yeah,
I think to a certain degree. I mean, even something like Nibiru is not a Sumerian word.
It's an Akkadian word, but he makes a big deal about it being related to Sumerian. And
it's, it is a word that appears within Akkadian. And Akkadian is what time period?
Akkadian is just after.
So it exists kind of in a crossover,
where Sumerian predates Akkadian,
but Akkadian develops alongside.
And then as cultures like the Assyrians come into power
and subvert the Sumerians.
So oldest Sumerian writing is what?
What's the oldest timeline?
5,000?
6,000?
Yeah, around that.
I think like 4,000 to 5,000 years ago.
Okay.
And then Akkadian is when?
There's some overlap, but it develops into a language like just after like the rise.
And Akkadian develops into like it has stages
and then you have like Babylonian, proto Babylonian, Persian, old Persian, Elamite as we look at.
We don't have, there's no writing at all at Gobekli Tepe, correct?
It's all just iconography.
Yeah, or at least that we've figured out that looks like writing.
Yeah, I'm really hoping to go back to Leytepe.
What's your take on this whole reluctance
to further excavate and how they have such a small amount
of the site?
It's only 5% that's been uncovered.
But through LIDAR, they're aware there's a bunch more.
Yeah, I mean, I'm not an archaeologist.
I have friends who are archaeologists, and I think it's...
Archaeology is tricky because so much of archaeology is dependent on governments and institutions
and funding that getting mad at archaeologists for not excavating is kind of like getting
mad at construction workers for not fixing your potholes. Where it's like, yeah, they're kind of doing the last stage.
So yeah, I mean, I think there's certainly incentive
by the Turkish government to want to capitalize
on that being a tourist destination.
And you really need to safeguard archeological excavations
because otherwise it's being compromised. you really need to safeguard archeological excavations
because otherwise it's being compromised and like pillaging and stuff like that.
It happens.
I mean, when I was in Egypt two summers ago
and you go to the Valley of the Kings,
they've got security cameras up everywhere
because there are tombs there
that we still haven't discovered.
And so they're like, we don't want people digging around in here looking for...
Of course.
Well, they've lost so much over the history.
Oh, we've only discovered 1% of ancient Egypt.
That's so nuts.
1%.
Isn't that crazy?
That is the nuttiest part of all of history is Egypt to me.
I still have not been.
You gotta go.
I know. You gotta go. I almost went not been. I know I almost went in December.
I just couldn't find the time.
I'm just too damn busy.
I will though.
I will, I definitely will.
But it is the, to me the nuttiest time in history
because good luck explaining the great pyramid.
Good luck.
And it's such a big timeframe.
Like there's a thousand years
between the pyramids being built
and Tutankhamun in the
Valley of the Kings.
Yeah.
A thousand years.
Yeah.
Nuts.
It's so crazy.
Egypt is one of the wildest places you'll ever go.
Well, it just doesn't make sense.
It's like, how?
What were you guys using?
What were you doing?
How'd you do it?
How'd you measure it?
How'd you figure it out?
Yeah.
You've been to Greece, right?
Yes.
Have you been to Jordan? No. Oh, you got to go see Petra. Yeah. Petra's phenomenal.
Jordan was, I mean, Greece, rather, was fantastic.
They're all crazy.
God, it's just like when you're just
there in the presence of these things
and just trying to put your brain back thousands of years.
And imagine what society was like back then.
It's crazy.
It's crazy.
Egypt was crazy because Egypt is like Greece
in that you have like, you can go to the Pantheon
and you see that kind of stuff, right?
But you go to Egypt and there's 4,000 year old paint
on the walls.
And you're like, what?
I can't get paint to stay on my wall for 10 years.
And it's almost exclusively because of the climate.
And it got buried in sand.
But it's so wild.
So wild.
When you say that 1% of ancient Egypt has been discovered,
what do you really mean by that?
Of the percentage of what we know
that happened in Egyptian history,
1% has been excavated in terms of what we can actually pull out
of the ground and look at artifacts.
So there's whole eras of pharaohs that we just, we don't know where they're buried.
We like even when Tun Coman was discovered, he was kind of a footnote in the pharaohs
that we knew about at that time.
And we didn't know he was as extravagant, as rich, until we discovered
his actual tomb. A lot of people at that time didn't even think it was, he was worth looking
into because we have these lists of pharaohs. And the thing with the pharaohs is that they're
always trying to, the next pharaoh is always trying to prove that he's the better one.
And this is why you go to Egypt and you find statues of Ramses everywhere.
And part of it was because Ramses, I think it was Ramses II, was he commissioned so many
statues of himself, because he's like, oh, I'm the best, I'm the greatest.
And what they actually, they couldn't keep up with the commissioning and they started
actually rubbing off the names of previous Pharaohs on statues and just putting Ramses on it.
Really? Wow.
Because he was just, so you go like,
from the top of Egypt to the bottom of Egypt,
and you're gonna find statues of Ramses.
He wanted to leave his mark.
He wanted to leave, and he did, right?
Like it worked.
We're talking about it now in 2024.
I know.
Yeah, that is nuts.
So when you go there and you're in the presence
of these things and you try to put yourself back into that time
Period like what do you have you ever tried to think like what what was the motivation to make something as great as the?
the pyramid of Giza the Great Pyramid
People definitely want to make their mark right? Oh, but that's a mark that just doesn't even make sense
There's something to that.
I mean, if you think you're a god and you have this whole kind of worldview perspective
and theology that you need to make something that... and bear yourself with all this crap
because that's gonna make a difference in your afterlife, then you're gonna go big rather
than going home, right?
So, um, the perceptions of people in the ancient world are just so different.
We got it so good right now.
Oh yeah.
Like longevity, health, food is just on a completely different scale. And so the conventions of needing to make sure that,
especially if you're like the richest guy around,
that you tick off all the boxes,
because you know you're gonna die,
and you're probably gonna die sooner than you want to,
sooner rather than later,
and you have this whole perception of,
well, if I bury myself with all this stuff
and maybe even some of the people,
we're just gonna kill them and include them too,
because they're gonna help me out,
that's gonna help me out in the afterlife.
You need slaves in the afterlife if you're a Pharaoh.
Yeah, of course you do.
Yeah, you can't just go by yourself.
Why not, right? Yeah.
That's ridiculous.
Yeah.
So, Khufu's pyramid, what's the timeline that he was even in power?
Um, I don't know. I'm, I'm not an Egyptologist or an archaeologist necessarily, but he was,
I think that was a what, like 4,000 years ago. We only really have a tiny little statue of him.
That's not. We don't actually have that much about him.
I guess he was busy making a pyramid.
So they say, right?
So they say.
I bet he thinks different, but-
A lot of people think different.
That's what's interesting about it is the archaeological argument that Dr. Robert Schoch
makes about the water erosion in the temple of the Sphinx.
That's a fascinating argument because it does appear like that's water erosion in the temple of the Sphinx. That's a fascinating argument because it does appear
like that's water erosion.
And that would put the timeline way, way back.
Yeah, I think even just looking at the Sphinx,
you can tell that no matter what your perspective is,
you should entertain the idea at minimum
that the head was built later.
Yeah, for sure.
Because it doesn't fit the body.
It has much less erosion.
But you could also attribute that to the different densities of the stone.
Like that's one of the things about these layers of limestone.
It's like some of them are much more porous and some they erode easier.
You do see that.
And I think they're doing a terrible disservice by covering the sphinx with like new stones.
And they redid the paws and they're doing all that.
Like, my God, people like leave it alone.
Like leave it the way it is.
Yeah, it's this tricky balance between.
Restoration and recreation.
Yeah.
Because they're in a recreation stage.
Yeah.
And it was obviously, they're doing it with smaller stones
and it like looks different.
It's not the same thing.
It's not what it initially was.
It was carved from one piece of stone.
Have you seen some of the restoration stuff that Saddam Hussein did in Iraq?
No.
Jamie, you got to pull up the ziggurat at Err.
Oh no.
So Saddam Hussein was a bit of a nut job, but he believed, as far as I understand it,
that he was the recreation of Nebuchadnezzar. So he did all of this restorative work in Iraq on things like the walls of Babylon.
And in Ur, he rebuilt the ziggurat.
So if you look at that picture over there, this is 1932 and 2022, that's what he did,
is he basically tried to rebuild this entire thing.
And it's amazing.
I am trying hard to get to Iraq
because I wanna see this thing.
Interestingly enough- Don't die.
Yeah. Don't die, dude.
Don't go over there.
So that's actually-
That's, so, I'm sorry, but that,
so this is the modern version with the small bricks.
The original version, was it all carved from one piece?
No, it would have been clay bricks.
So these were clay bricks. So what do we, Jamie, can you go back to the 1930 image please
so we could see what it looked like? God, I would rather just have that. You know? I
mean, I want to see what it looked like and what it looks like all these years later.
I don't want to see a recreation, which is very similar to what they've done to the Sphinx.
Yeah, the Sphinx.
Even when I was in Egypt, they were doing some work in like...
Jamie, can you go to the rehabilitation of the Sphinx
or whatever they would call it?
Yeah, I just clicked on the ruins of it.
I was gonna go back to the 30s or 40s or something.
Well, the restoration part is the interesting part.
Like you can see the restoration.
If you go to just Google restoration of the Sphinx pause.
Well, they're talking about putting in casing stones
on the pyramid.
Yeah, I've heard that too.
God, don't do that.
I don't think they should do that either.
No, you shouldn't do anything.
I mean, obviously they took the original casing stones off,
but that's also history. So now you can see like the new paws.
Well, that seems like the difference between buried and unburied.
So like even when Napoleon came upon, like right there, like isn't that restored?
Yeah, because there was much more erosion then.
Napoleon came upon it, it was buried, right?
I think so.
Yeah.
I think that was the case.
Like over time, because you're dealing
with these crazy sand storms,
over time everything gets kind of buried.
Oh, so much of it is under sand for so long.
Like the temple of, the mortuary temple of Hatshepsut
was mostly under sand for a long, long time.
Wow.
Before they like uncovered it.
And fortunately, like the aridness of Egypt
preserves things like crazy.
Yeah, see, that's what the paws look like.
That's a disaster.
That's so gross.
If you do take that timeline, the Robert Shock timeline,
and you say, OK, so you're talking about thousands
of years of rainfall, you have to go back to when there was rainfall in the
Nile Valley, so now you're back like 9,000 years.
One of the more interesting things about hieroglyphs and the interpretations of it is that the
ancient hieroglyphs, well, the ancient versions of pharaohs, rather. Like when they go back past the established dates of 2500
BC and before that, you get to like 30,000 years ago and then they say that these are
myth. This is not representative of an actual history. This is some sort of a mythical history.
Soterios Johnson Yeah. Numbers are tricky in ancient languages
because it's not entirely clear whether numbers are meant
to be representational.
Trevor Burrus Is that like why they said that Noah lives
600 years old?
Aaron Powell Yeah, that's part of it.
I mean you have that and you have the Sumerian king lists which have people living hundreds
and thousands of years too.
And I mean there are some interesting academic academic articles on the probability of the numbers
that come up in those, because we have a base 10 counting system because we count our fingers.
Ancient Near Eastern cultures like the Babylonians, the Akkadians, the Assyrians, they had a base
12 counting system because they would count each hinge, or whatever you call these, like
spaces one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, eleven, twelve.
There's different joints of the thing.
Yeah, the joints.
That's what I was looking for.
And so that's why we have 360 degrees in a circle, 365 days in a year.
Like this comes from the Mesopotamian counting conventions.
And you look at some of these lists and they're operational and all divisible by like 12 and 60.
And you're like, what's going on here?
So not all of them, but enough of them where it's statistically impossible.
And I don't totally know what to make of those things because you do have the genealogies,
I believe it's Genesis chapter four and Genesis chapter 11, where they're all divisible by these types of numbers that were
very common in the ancient Near East.
They're not random.
Whereas if we look at the genealogies later in like Chronicles and Kings of the ages of
the Israelite kings, they're random.
And so it's just like, what do we do with that?
Because numbers are also far more representational, which is why we see numbers like 12 and 40
and 7 come up in the Bible, but also other ancient Near Eastern literature.
There are certain numbers in Egyptian society that also were seen as like perfect numbers
or like numbers that you wanted to incorporate.
So what is what's the earliest interpretation of calendars?
Like what is what is the earliest where they did decide what a year was?
I have no idea.
Because you got to imagine if you're you know the average lifespan wasn't so good back then.
A lot of people got infected,
died of war, famine, all these things.
It would take quite a long time
for people to figure out what a year was.
Right.
You know, we're going thousands and thousands of years ago.
We have to establish like, okay,
a day is, let's put this stick in the ground.
When the shadow is here, this is where we start. Yeah. When the shadow goes all the way around like that, okay, a day is, let's put this stick in the ground. When the shadow is here, this is where we start.
When the shadow goes all the way around like that, okay, maybe we can mark these off.
Okay, now we've got a sundial.
And there are different timekeeping conventions, depending on society.
Ancient Jews had a different timekeeping convention than ancient Romans.
And so that's why you see, in Genesis chapter one, it talks about there being evening and
there being morning
Is because well Jews today right you start the Sabbath on sundown the day before right?
so that's why it's because there's there's different cycles and
So we go on a 24-hour time system
But ancient Jews had a different convention of that ancient Romans had a different convention of that ancient You know Mesopotamian cultures had their own kind of conventions about these things and calendars were all over the place
in in
You know when you get to the Julian calendar and they're like we got we got to standardize this thing because everybody's
Operating on a different, you know, the Julian calendar and then a Gregorian calendar
Ancient timekeeping is very inexact and very messy.
And so you kind of got to take certain things with a grain of salt in terms of that.
But yeah, ancient calendars, I don't even know.
I know that actually talking about the Dead Sea Scrolls, the group in Qumran, they were
a sectarian group of Jews who believed that the Jews in Jerusalem had basically
capitulated and were not holy enough.
And part of their reasoning is that they believe they have a perfect calendar.
And so they use a different calendar that doesn't have to do things like incorporate
an extra month every certain number of years because, you know, their thing is not perfect.
And part of their reasoning as to why they're like the chosen is that they have a timekeeping
system that they say is perfect.
Many cultures used a 13-month calendar, right?
Like what was the logic behind that?
Does that work?
I don't know.
The idea was 13 months, 28 days each month and you wouldn't have to have leap years and all that shit
Yeah, yeah
Archaeologists, okay. There it is world oldest calendar 12,000 years old. Yeah, that's wild
Oh, so it is on go back Lee Tappee
Oh the ancient carvings of the Sun moon and various constellations sits on a pillar go back Lee Tappee
12,000 years old researchers believe the ancient people used a so-called
lunisolar calendar to mark the changing of the seasons.
Interesting.
So it was at least representative of the fact that we know when the days start getting shorter,
it starts getting colder, and then it warms up again, the days start getting longer.
This is why solstices are so key in most of human history.
It's because you gotta figure out what's a marker point.
Right, which is one of the things that's so fascinating
about some of the constructions of the pyramid
where on the summer solstice,
these pillars line up so perfectly
that the light shines straight down these hallways and illuminates everything.
So how did you guys nail that?
Yeah, I mean, just because they're ancient
doesn't mean they're stupid.
Well, they're just brilliant.
They weren't just stupid, they were fucking brilliant.
That's what's, I mean, we're just ancient.
It's just so weird that people were so vastly
more intelligent, at least in terms of their ability to build things
than anyone else, anywhere around there.
That's what's so weird about Egypt to me.
It's like there's amazing pieces of,
even ancient Greece is incredible,
but I can kind of believe you did it.
When you deal with 2,300,000 stones in the Great Pyramid
and some of them like fifty tons sixty tons
That's pretty pretty crazy five hundred miles away. Like yeah, what did you do? How the hell did you do it?
I mean there have been a lot of things that have been lost
We still as far as I'm aware don't know how the Romans made their concrete
That Roman concrete is like this thing that survives. They were able to make domes out of it
Well, you know about terra preta in the Amazon.
Do you know about that?
No.
Oh, terra preta is their particular rich soil
that is manmade soil.
Oh, yes, I did know.
I do know about that.
That's a combination of charcoal and bacteria.
It's incredible.
And it's unbelievably fertile
in terms of your ability
to grow food on it.
And they made it and we don't know how they did it.
And it's manmade stuff, which is so bananas.
It's like a giant chunk of this stuff
that is all over the Amazon,
was made by people specifically
to encourage the growth of plants.
I mean, this is why history gets me so excited Oh, it's so amazing and it's so
It's so interesting too. I was watching something on YouTube yesterday about the mine culture and the aztecs
It was I went on a deep dive when I started getting into like getting ready for this
but
When you think about how many people existed back then, and then Europeans come and everybody
dies. Everybody dies of disease. And it's like, how many people died? Like millions,
millions of people died here, millions of people died there, like, holy shit. And you
go through like the story of the collapse of the Mayan civilization, the collapse of the Aztec civilization. It counts that these priests had
of visiting these Aztec markets
and how incredible they were.
These people from Rome who'd come to visit the Mayans,
they're like, this is unbelievable, or the Aztecs rather.
Like this is unbelievable how sophisticated they are.
And then,
cough, cough, cough.
Gone.
Everybody's dead. Dunzo.
You just gotta go, wow.
How many times has this happened in history?
Where people have visited places and brought their cooties
and killed off a giant swath of the population.
And one of the things that they're discovering now
in the Amazon, which is so fascinating,
is through use of LIDAR.
Discovering, like, oh my God, this is all populated.
This whole thing was populated.
Yeah, that's crazy.
The ground penetrating radar stuff.
And the trees and all the rainforest
is mostly from manmade agriculture.
Yeah, that's wild.
Nuts.
Wild.
And this is all recent that they're figuring this out,
which is also so fascinating about history,
is that it is a constant and never-ending search.
And that even in today with as much
information as we have you can pick up your phone and ask them you know when was Nero
born it'll tell you like instantaneously we still don't have answers to a lot of really
fascinating questions like the Olmecs or all these other civilizations like who where where
they come from why they look like this? Why do they make these big stone heads?
Stone heads, you know, or Stonehenge, it's another one.
Like Jesus, what is this?
There's so many versions of that all over the world
and it just, the search for our origins
is one of the most human endeavors.
One of the most, because to know that we are particularly unique. We're so different
We stand out from every other animal on this planet and there's this crazy wild
war of
Biology where life is just eating life all around us and we just got to some crazy place
That far beyond any other creature that's on this planet.
And we did it in a bunch of different ways.
We did it in a bunch of different ways all over the place with different scribbles and
different icons and different gods and different things.
And we're all wondering like, which one, where did it start?
What was the origin of all this?
Like what was the origin of all this?
What was the need to write these things down?
What purpose did it serve to have these myths and legends and stories?
Was it just to keep society together or was it to retell a very important story that was
a very unique thing that happened at the dawn of time. Matthew 14 And that's why you see, I mean, the literary comparison of ancient Near Eastern
origin stories is like a really interesting thing to do because when you look at something
like the Enuma leash, which was the Babylonian creation story, and then you look at something
like Genesis chapter one, there are obvious crossovers with, like I said before, these
ancient Near Eastern conventions.
But then you can see that the author of Genesis is making these points that are actually rebutting
something like the origin stories of the surrounding cultures that largely believe that matter
is eternal and the gods come out of the created world and that there's this narrative of the battle that takes place where
some gods fight against other gods and the world around us that we see and like human
beings are the end result of this battle.
And so they would read this on every Babylonian New Year.
And one of the main themes was basically that like it's all chance.
It's all a random mistake. You were created without purpose and intention
because Tiamat gets destroyed,
and she's the god that you come from.
And then you read Genesis chapter one, and it says,
"'In the beginning, God creates the heavens and the earth,
"'and he makes it good.'"
And there's this idea that that's countercultural
in the idea that the Babylonians did not think that the world was good. And there's this idea that like that's countercultural in the idea that the Babylonians
did not think that the world was good. And that like at the end of every refrain, it's
good, it's good, it's good, it's good, and then it's very good at the end. And that humanity
in particular is created in the image of God. Like that's a very, not just like kings, which
a lot of ancient Near Eastern cultures believe that
kings were created in the image of God, but that humanity in general is created in the
image of God. And this idea of the Imago Dei, that you're, that's why you're different.
Like why are you different from all the animals? Because you're given something that exemplifies
of a unique quality. And then the ancient Near Eastern cultures that believe that the planets are gods and
that the sea is a god.
And Genesis chapter one looks at that and it kind of subverts the expectations of the
day in getting to this ultimate question of why are we here?
What are we supposed to do while we're here? And how do we get out of here?
And it says that, no, there's purpose, there's meaning, there's intention.
And actually, a lot of the things that you worship, it's pretty stupid because God created
them.
Pete Slauson What is the original origin story or the earliest,
I should say, origin story?
Jared Larkin Of?
Pete Slauson Of humanity.
Jared Larkin I don't know.
Pete Slauson Would it be the Mesopotamians?
Would it be the Sumerians?
Like who had the one that's the oldest?
I mean the New Melis is pretty old.
There are a number of different variations.
The problem is that we're largely relying on like our complete copies are coming in
languages like Akkadian where the ones in Sumerian are very fragmentary.
So like even the Epic of Gilgamesh, the copy that we have that kind of is the final, if
you go and you read a translation of the Epic of Gilgamesh, it's going to be the one from
in Akkadian from the library of Ashurbanipal.
But the earlier versions in Sumerian don't even have the flood story in them.
And yeah, so and they're more pieced together.
And we actually do have another flood story in the Atracis, which appears to have been
influenced, the Epic of Gilgamesh stories influenced by the Atracis.
But in terms of like written language, I guess it's the Enuma leash.
I wouldn't actually, I don't actually actually know what the oldest, oldest one is.
But you get a lot of these origin stories and they have these themes.
We see it in the Bible too.
The ancient Near Eastern cultures were very preoccupied with chaos and order.
And so it's all about kind of creating order out of the chaos of the world.
And that's where I think you do see the parallels between...
Well, that's the establishment of society, right?
Yeah, yeah.
And establishing chaos and certain things being representational of chaos within the
created order, like the Bible included, but a lot of other ancient cultures saw things
like the ocean as the embodiment of unpredictability and
chaos.
And so that's why you have sea monsters are this very common depiction.
The Leviathan in Job, which is this sea monster.
And it's representational in a way of, because it appears actually in Babylonian
literature too, the Leviathan.
Really?
Yeah, and it's encompassing chaos in the world.
And the point of God bringing it up to Job in the book of Job is like, God has the ability
to tame this thing.
And even in the book of Revelation at the end of the Bible, it says that in the new
heavens and new earth, there will be no sea. And it's not because,
you know, I had a friend who is Australian and we're kind of working through translating sections
of Revelation and he's like, hold on, there will be no sea. He's like, I'm Australian, I love the sea.
But the point of that though is not necessarily that like the body of water is not going to exist.
It's that the ocean, the sea is so unpredictable.
You go out there and storms can come out of nowhere and you die.
And so there are these like motifs that are representational in the ancient world.
And we see a lot of those in these creation stories.
So would it be that the dangers of the sea would no longer exist?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
So the sea kind of working as an analogy of that which is unpredictable.
And actually, there's a lot of concepts of the realm of the dead being in the sea that
we see throughout this literature.
If you read the book of Jonah, there's this kind of stylistic, which you miss when you
read it in the English, but it's very apparent in the Hebrew, where Noah keeps going down.
He goes down from his town to the dock, and then he goes down into the boat, and then
he goes down into the inside of the boat, and then the storm happens, and then they
throw him overboard down into the sea and down into the fish, and then the storm happens, and then they throw him overboard
down into the sea and down into the fish, and he eventually, the fish takes him down
into the depths of the sea, and when Jonah prays, he says, I cry out from the depths
of Sheol, which is the realm of the dead.
So there is actually a form of Jewish interpretation where it argues that Jonah actually died and
was resurrected when he was spit up by the fish.
And it could be, because in the Gospels, Jesus says, all the people are following him and
they keep asking him for miracles, because they're like, we saw you do miracles, do more
miracles for us.
You know, come on, do a trick, do a trick, Jesus.
And Jesus says, the only miracle you're gonna get is the sign of Jonah.
That just as Jonah was in the belly of the fish three days and three nights, I will be
in the belly of the earth three days and three nights.
You know, prediction of his own death and resurrection.
But there is an argument within rabbinical literature that when Jonah says that he's
crying out from the depths of Sheol, it's because he's actually dead.
And that's one interpretation. But another interpretation could just
be that he saw and understood, as a person of his day,
the depths of the ocean as where the dead people ended up
anyways.
Your soul goes down into the chaos and the disorder
of Sheol, which is the realm of the dead.
Is that where they disposed of bodies?
In the ocean?
Yeah.
No. No? No. Vikings did, bodies? In the ocean? Yeah. No.
No? No.
Vikings did, right?
Didn't they like light boats on fire
and push them out there?
Yeah.
Yeah.
But it wasn't a common practice amongst other civilizations.
Not that I know of.
I mean, Jews would definitely,
I mean, really ancient Jewish conventions of burial,
you would just bury someone in the earth.
And then by the time you got to Jesus'
day, you had like family tombs and stuff.
Well, there was an ancient hominid that's not human, and one of the things that they
were so fascinated about was that they buried their dead, and that they did so in a cave.
Do you remember that, Jamie?
Do you remember who was discussing that with us? It was, they did not think that this version of ancient primate was capable of these things.
And then they seemed to have confirmation through these very extensive cave systems
that there was at least one area where they would put their dead. Hmm
Yeah, and it was a difficult path to get to this too. Hmm. This is a very small hominid
I think people have tried to make their way through it and it's really hard like some of these caves
You're like basically crawling on your stomach, which is fucking terrifying because people have died that way you claustrophobic. No, I'm not claustrophobic
It's just normal. You just don't want to crawl in a cave crawl in the middle of the earth into something
That's like 11 inches high. Yeah
Squirming slowly that's what they're doing. Yeah body barely fits in there and a guy died recently primer rescue. I think oh
Was Brian? Yes, that's right
Yeah, so they've founded this ancient hominid,
which didn't really look like us.
Yeah.
Was burying their dead.
Yeah, I mean, burial conventions change over time.
The ways that they're burying, like,
in the ancient Israelite days are very different in the conventions
than when you get to Jesus.
Pete Slauson Carpenter Karen, as archaeologists uncover evidence
of intentional burial cave engravings by early human ancestor, what did that sucker look
like? So, the Denaldi chamber, what is the type of homo naledidae, right? Homo nalidae.
Google that, see what they look like.
Homo nalidae.
What we think they look like, right?
Whoa, that's crazy.
That's crazy.
So as a Christian, what do you think about all this stuff?
Like what do you think about ancient hominids, Australiopithecus, Neanderthals, like what was God up to with all this stuff? Like, what do you think about ancient hominids, Australopithecus, Neanderthals?
Like, what was God up to with all this?
Yeah, I mean, I'm not a scientist,
so I gotta stay in my lane.
I ultimately would be an advocate for intelligent design,
where I would say that God purposefully created humanity
in a way...
You had Stephen Meyer on, right? Yes.
Yeah, so I mean, he's one of those guys
who talks about kind of the issues
that he sees with evolution.
And I think I have some of those issues too.
My friend Jonathan McClatchy is a biologist
and he does some really great presentations on the ways that he sees kind of the intricacies of Neodoranian evolution
as not quite explaining some of what's going on with things like the fossil record and
some of the gaps that we have in there. When you talk about early hominids, I mean ultimately
I think that there are aspects of the fact that there are ancient cultures which I mean, ultimately, I think that there are aspects of the fact that there are ancient cultures which, I mean, humanity obviously looks very different today than it did, you
know, if we're going tens of thousands of years ago.
And so I think that there's a different kind of convention and understanding.
But ultimately, I would ascribe to there being an original Adam and Eve and that those are
like, if you want to call them like our
first parents kind of thing.
But there are other Christians who I would disagree with, but I think have interesting
articulations of that in terms of theistic evolution.
I disagree with them, but it's certainly not out of the realm of possibility to find
explanations.
I don't think the Bible is trying to explain how people came into
existence in the same way that maybe we want it to.
And a lot of people read the origin stories in Genesis as a scientific textbook, and I
think ultimately that misses the point of what Genesis is trying to say.
This goes back to what we were talking about with like, how did the original audience understood this? When they read Genesis chapter one,
are they looking at that as an exact prescription of what God did? I mean, in some ways, maybe,
but in other ways, they could see that as this like counter apologetic to the other
ancient Near Eastern stories, like I explained.
So I just think we need to be careful when we're looking at, or even like counting up
the genealogies and coming up with a, you know, how old the earth is.
I think that might be missing the force for the trees in what we're actually looking at
when we look at ancient documents and how we're trying to interpret them. But it is a big question, right?
Well, the question of evolution is a fascinating one, right?
Because there's obviously something happening,
particularly with us, if we really are related
to Homo nalida, or there's something clearly is happening.
This is like process of change.
And if we don't completely understand all the factors
in that process of change, we might miss out,
the equation might be incomplete.
It's like we're, I mean, we know a lot now
about evolution that we did not know before,
but like all sciences, new data comes in
and you have to recalibrate things.
Like have you been paying attention to this,
there's a new discussion about dark matter and dark energy.
No.
The new discussion is that it might not be a correct theory
and that what it might be is that time moves differently
in the voids between galaxies.
And this is a new theory.
Like new enough and disgust enough among people
that really understand it that it's getting to me.
So I'm reading it.
So see if you can find that.
It's, yeah, it's a very complex and nuanced conversation, but most of the universe is dark energy, right?
It's a giant percentage of the universe is dark energy and dark matter, and we don't
really know what that stuff is.
And so this is proposing that there's an additional possible theory that might explain it better.
I mean, that area of science is crazy.
Nuts. Nuts. Crazy. theory that might explain it better. I mean that area of science is crazy.
Nuts.
Nuts.
Crazy.
And then you have the James Webb telescope that's giving us even more data than ever
before and it's a, and you have to look at all of it and go, wait, why are those things
here?
How are they there so long ago?
Like what are these red things at the beginning of time?
Like what the fuck is all this?
The universe is bonkers.
Nuts.
Yeah.
And I mean, I think we get that in history too, whereas we have these kind of what we
think are established conventions and then all of a sudden we discover something and
it like completely overthrows the ideas that we have.
Like Clovis first.
Yeah, or go back to Playtepe.
Yeah.
Or actually good segue.
That's the best one, right?
Yeah, I made one.
I made something for you.
So I make papyri facsimiles.
Oh, my description is a little bit wonky here.
I'm going to fix that.
So, you were talking about like what is our oldest manuscript evidence.
So, this guy is P52, John Rylands 457.
So that's a genuine Egyptian papyri that I made.
I cut it out for you and then I transcribed the text on that manuscript.
So when we're talking about what is potentially our oldest evidence for the New Testament,
this manuscript that most likely comes from Oxyrhynchus Egypt is the one that usually
is universally accepted as our oldest one, and that contains John 18, where Jesus is
on trial before Pilate.
And yeah, so that's the one. It's in the John Rylands Library in Manchester, England.
So this is a copy of that exactly? This is exactly what it looks like?
Yeah. So I cut that out on the papyri with a scalpel, and then I transcribed the text on.
You did a great job, dude.
And...
This is... You nerded out.
I know.
For real nerded out. This is a real nerding out of-
So that's actually, yeah, so that's someone else's facsimile, which is not as good as
the one I made you.
It's not as good.
Yours is better.
And where Jesus is on trial before Pilate, and Jesus says, everyone who follows the truth,
who is following the truth follows me, and on the back has the words of Pilate saying,
what is truth?
But so part of my research, so the reason I bring this up is because before this was
discovered by C.H. Roberts in the 1940s, the convention was because of a guy named C.H.
Bauer that the Gospel of John was second century.
And so he had this, he was a student of Hegel.
Have you ever heard of Hegelian dialectic? So you have like a thesis, synthesis, and antithesis?
Yes.
So Hegel had this philosophical theory and his student Bauer takes that and he incorporates this
into history and he says, you know, the earliest gospel, Mark, has this very Jewish Jesus,
and then the later gospels have a very, like, the last of what are called the synoptic gospels,
Matthew, Mark, and Luke.
Luke has a very kind of more divine Jesus, and so he says, based on this, John is the
last last written one, and it combines these two where you get a very human and a very divine Jesus together.
And so based on this, he says that John has to be second century.
Well, we discover this guy, C.H. Roberts is literally going through these piles of manuscripts
in these drawers that are being stashed away, and he finds this guy and he sees that it's
written on both sides, which is almost exclusively a Christian convention.
Because in the ancient world world they used scrolls,
and the Christians, for reasons we're not entirely clear on,
they start to make codices, books.
And so they write on both sides.
And so he says, okay, this is written on both sides,
it's probably a Christian manuscript.
So he sends it off to the leading paleographers,
or guys who date manuscripts,
and they all say, this is the beginning of
the second century.
And so there's still debate about the dating of this, but the unanimous consensus is that
it's comfortably second century, potentially the beginning of the second century, which
means that this is found in Egypt.
John is probably writing his gospel in Ephesus.
So it has to be written by John,
spread around, find its way to Egypt,
be copied, and then end up in this manuscript.
Which means that at minimum,
you've already pushed the gospel of John
back into the first century comfortably.
And potentially even like most likely into the lifetime
of the eyewitnesses of these events.
And so all of the literature up until that point from the scholarly consensus about the
dating of the Gospel of John gets totally rewritten.
Wow.
And it's because of that guy.
And because of my academic work where I was telling you like, in paratextual features,
when we look at these tiny manuscripts and you figure out, okay, well, what does that
look like on the page?
I also made you...
So this is, I used two different variations of papyri.
So you have there, where P52 would have been on the page
and based on the, it's called codecological conventions,
the spacings of the words and
the way that the size of the margin that we can see, where it would have been on the page
and how big the page would have actually been.
So this is like a reconstruction and then I filled in the rest of the text in the same
sort of style, stylistic hand of the scribes at that time, what that page would have looked like.
So this would have come from, would have been essentially like a pocket copy of the Gospel
of John.
Wow.
That's unbelievable.
Wow.
That's so fascinating.
So this is the kind of work that I do in terms of trying to figure out, okay, you have these
fragments, how big would this codex actually been?
How big would the document been?
And then you compare and you contrast them to say like non-Christian literature, like
Thucydides or Tacitus or Pliny or Cicero or Cassio Dio, those kind of guys. And look at the differences between how these documents would have been put together and
written in their day.
God, it's so beautiful.
It's just so bizarre to imagine these people writing this stuff down so, so long ago.
You know what's wild is when you actually get the chance, which I have a number of times
to actually handle the original documents.
Oh my God.
Do you wear rubber gloves?
No.
You know why is that we used to do that, but actually the oils in your hands are more abrasive
than latex or even cloth.
So the oils are more.
No, no, sorry.
I said that wrong.
They're less abrasive.
So it used to be that you always had to handle things with gloves, and nowadays we don't do that anymore.
Ooh, that's wild. So you're touching it with your actual fingers. That's gotta feel bizarre.
I was at the, two summers ago, I was at the University of Pennsylvania, and I was looking
at a manuscript called P1, or P-Oxy- 2, 1.2, and it's a beginning of the
third century copy of the first page of Matthew's Gospel.
And when I requested access to it, they told me that the last person to request it was
when Pope John Paul II came and visited the states and they pulled it out for him.
So on the like, you know, the library when you
stood like, have to punch her name, write your name on the cards. If there was a card, yeah, that guy.
So I made a facsimile of that one too. And that one is the, that's the genealogy of Jesus from
Matthew's gospel. Actually, you know what, Jamie, if you go up to the search bar and put CSNTM,
Jamie, if you go up to the search bar and put CSNTM, those letters, CSNTM.org.
So this is the Center for the Study
of New Testament Manuscripts.
So if you click Digital Manuscript Collection,
so they go around the world and they try to digitize all the existing
New Testament manuscripts to preserve them. And so you can actually see there on the side,
you can click, well, I want to look at a papyri, and you can go the different conventions of,
you know, the date or the time. And so you could read the translation and then go and look at the original source of
it.
Yeah.
So ideally you always want to go look at the original, but because of organizations like
CSNTM, which is actually in Dallas, people like me don't have to go to Europe where a
lot of these manuscripts are housed.
We can look at them.
And because these are such high grade,
that you can figure these things out.
So actually, a guy I know, Elijah Hickson, he used that,
and he actually figured out that there was a prominent
manuscript, P50, which is a forgery.
And so he used that based on looking at the digital.
Yeah, he filled in the gaps within the reps and saw that the words didn't match up when
you fill in the gaps.
And so when he's transcribing the text, he's like, wait a minute, I don't think that word
fits in there.
And based on that, he's like, yeah, that's a forgery because someone has written the
text in after that piece of papyri, which is, these forgeries
are almost always a genuine piece of ancient papyri.
Someone gets it from like the black market antiquities.
Oh, and then just writes on it afterwards.
Yeah, right there.
So P50, so if you fill in these holes, they're called lacunas.
The words, a lot of the words don't fit.
So someone's come along and they've like written,
done a really good job, because it fooled scholars,
and they've written in the text,
but not quite good enough to figure out that
not all of the words fit in the gaps that you presented.
What is your take on the Voynich manuscript?
I have no idea what to think of the Voynich manuscript.
But it's Middle Ages.
Yeah.
It's just a weird one.
It's a really weird one.
Yeah.
Yeah, because people have been trying to crack that code forever.
And you go, what is this?
Is it just gibberish?
Is it just fake words?
Yeah.
I mean, that's...
And why so much time and effort put into making this fake book?
Yeah.
Was it a crazy schizophrenic person who made their own language?
I don't know.
They must have been a rich schizophrenic person.
Well, didn't JRR Tolkien, didn't he create an entire language for Lord of the Rings?
So a lot of the languages, because he was a linguist, a lot of the languages are based
on existing languages.
Okay, so you just combine them together to form his own version of it?
Yeah, like Elvish and Dwarvish, and they're all based on ancient Norse or Old English,
or so he would take those languages and he'd actually,
he had, I mean, if there's anyone who's the best
at world building, you can learn Elvish.
It's a real language.
Because he developed the language.
That's so crazy.
That is crazy. That is so crazy, the language. That's so crazy. That is crazy.
That is so crazy.
The dedication.
That's so bananas.
I mean, he was a genius.
Guys like him and even Lewis, they were friends.
Oh, really?
CS Lewis and JR Tolkien.
Really?
Yeah, yeah.
Tolkien played a big part in Lewis's conversion because Tolkien was Catholic.
And I think Lewis was Irish and so he couldn't
quite become a Catholic but he became a Protestant Anglican.
But yeah, they were the Inklings Society.
They would meet in Oxford at the... Oh, what's the pub called?
People are going to listen to this and get mad at me because there's something in Childs.
One of those UK pubs that's been around for a thousand years.
Yeah, right.
They have homes.
And they would meet and talk.
They were called the Inkling Society.
Wow.
Yeah.
What is Eagle and Child?
Yeah, yeah.
Wow.
Yeah, it's funny when you read how Tolkien was, Tolkien really didn't like Lewis's stuff
because he said it was way too, way too straightforward. He's like,
you got a Jesus lion? Good one. You're not beating around the bush on anything when you
got a literal Jesus, who's sacrificed? Come on, rises from the dead? What are you doing
here?
That's funny.
Yeah, but they were friends.
That would be an interesting conversation to be a fly on the wall.
Yeah.
Tolkien breaking down Lewis's...
Yeah.
That would be fascinating.
Apparently the guy who wrote Dune sent a copy to Tolkien before he published it.
Really?
And Tolkien didn't like it.
Wow.
He sent it back and said, like, I got nothing good to say, so I'm going to say nothing at
all.
Wow.
Isn't that crazy? That is crazy.
Well, he was wrong.
Even geniuses.
Well, I mean, some geniuses are just like so in their own head.
Different strokes.
Yeah.
And that's part of the problem.
But it's also what makes them so great in the first place that they have this like singular
vision and dedication so much so that they're writing an elvish language and combining words
for it.
Yeah. Jamie, did you find that thing about the dark matter? Did you find what I
was asking about?
I stopped because I found a video and I saw some people explaining it and it didn't...
It started saying that it was almost like they started off with a theory and that's
how they do things and then they start working through the theory until someone has a better theory. There's such a giant problem
today in that if you just post some fantastical claim in a headline, like
that the theory of dark matter has been debunked and then you get clicks. Yeah.
So you can kind of get away with doing that now. I felt like this explained like
I'm five on reddit had a pretty top comment or one percenter.
So dark energy is a problem. Modern cosmology has most problems in science. You start with
a model, you go out and make measurements, you find your measurements don't fit your
model. This is a problem. When this happens, scientists go off and try to come up with
new theories. I think that meant no models. I think they meant new models. New models
which do fit the new data. In the case of things like dark energy we get hundreds if not thousands of new theories
ACDM is the current best model of cosmology the CDM stands for cold dark matter
Some model that includes certain theories to explain dark matter and the lambda
A is a cosmology cosmological constant.
That's the Greek word lambda, or the Greek letter.
Yeah, which is used to model dark energy.
Note this mathematical model doesn't explain
what dark matter or dark energy are.
It just incorporates them to make the maths work.
So this is a long, I don't know if this is exactly
what they were saying about,
it was like a much more
of a
Synopsis, but what they were saying was that it might be that time moves differently in between galaxies
See if you could Google that physics and cosmology are just wild
Oh, well, it's just it's it's so insane because we're so separate from it because of light pollution
That the most majestic
thing that you could ever see, we gave up so that we could drive at night. It's really
weird. It's really weird because when you go to a place, you know, I've talked about
it a bunch of times, but I'll say it again. I went to the Keck Observatory many years
ago and we got there on a perfect time where the moon was not out at all and the sky was insane.
It was like you were in the cockpit of a spaceship.
And it was just like you were in a giant glass cockpit, which
is essentially we are kind of in an organic spaceship
hurling through the universe.
So it should look like that.
But it just doesn't because of the fact
that we're constantly inundated by light pollution.
And I think the ancient societies and ancient cultures
didn't have that.
And because they didn't have that,
I think they had a much more humble view of our place
in the universe.
Because you're just presented with something
that's absolutely impossible, impossible to imagine.
We definitely lose our sense of awe
when we can't see kind of ourselves right in the grand scheme of the universe
Yeah, and you're right when you go somewhere where there's no light pollution you look up at the sky
It's like even not at somewhere like the Keck Observatory where you can like get a crazy view of it
Yeah, when you just go out in the country and yeah up and you're like, that's the Milky Way
You can see the Milky Way dark energy debunked by lumpy universe expansion.
Yeah, this is the one.
Learn how the existence of dark energy is being challenged due to new evidence that
the expanding universe is actually lumpy.
So what they mean by lumpy is this is talking about how time moves differently.
Let's see if it has a synopsis of it.
It's like a rethinking.
Each article I found gets into explaining what dark energy is and then...
Gets into the weeds.
There's probably a paragraph at the bottom that's what you're looking for.
What is the timescape model?
This is it.
So, the timescape model rejects the idea that dark energy is the driving force of universe
expansion.
Improved analysis of type LA, LA supernovae, has suggested that the acceleration based on light curves seen in 1998 was a case
of misidentification. The TimeScape model amends this by considering differences of
time in void and matter dense areas. The model suggests that time moves much slower in matter
dense areas like the Milky Way galaxies than in voids with more time passing in voids increased expansion takes place making it seem like
Expansion is accelerating as the voids increasingly spread through the universe dark energy
Therefore is not needed to explain the expansion of the universe according to the researchers. Hmm, who fucking knows?
It's too much. It's too much. Like what are you even saying?
How crazy is this?
You know, like, one of the more controversial aspects
of the James Webb telescope was this theory
that perhaps the universe was quite a bit older
than 13 point, you know, whatever billion years.
And they were trying to push it back to 22
based on the existence of galaxies.
It put like, and people are pushing back against that,
and there's a lot of debate about that,
but the bottom line is all of it is too many numbers for your brain to even register.
That however many billions of years ago, there was nothing.
And then all of a sudden there was something.
And Terrence McKenna had a great line that said that science requires one miracle.
The big bang. It requires one miracle.
The big bang.
It requires a miracle.
Well, I always say that when people ask me about the miracles in the Bible.
And I say, well, if the first miracle happened, if nothing became everything, then Jesus turning
water into wine.
That's an easy one.
Well, yeah.
That's a party trick.
Yeah, exactly.
It really is nothing compared to the birth of the universe, but we're convinced at the creation of the universe and we're very skeptical
at other miracles. Yeah. It's very odd. Yeah, I mean, I think there's an inconsistency there.
And you do see when the Big Bang is first hypothesized that there are individuals who are
uncomfortable with that sounding like in the beginning.
Because before that, the idea was that the universe was eternal.
And if you propose a point in time where everything starts to exist, well that for... and you
see some of these people are pushing back on it.
They say things like, well, that sounds too religious.
That sounds like a beginning point in time.
And at that point, if there's a big bang, you have to figure out, okay, well, what's
the big ber? Right. And I mean that's ultimately it's
a metaphysical religious question. How did that thing get kicked off?
Brian Cox was explaining to us that there was an actual environment that
existed pre the Big Bang. Don't they call it the environment? Is that what the
term of it is? Is this like Lawrence Krauss having a definition for nothing? I don't know nothing. I don't know
I it was just like what are you even saying?
You know, and then there's sir Roger Penrose who thinks there's a series right things happen and then it's just this constant
Birth of universes and death of universes and birth of New York and it's like big bang
Expansion heat death. Yeah contraction big bang like but we're almost like that's too much
I don't want I can kind of wrap my head around 14 billion years. I can't wrap my head around eternity in in
Theology it's often described as the difference between understanding and comprehension
Which my wife tells me are synonyms and that's nonsense.
But the idea is like, you can understand eternity as a long point in time.
You can comprehend it.
It's like numbers.
You can understand how many zeros are in 14 billion years.
How much water is in the ocean?
I can comprehend, like that's a lot of water.
But when you start talking about like tens of thousands of gallons, I'm like, lost me.
Yeah, I don't really know what that looks like. I kind of do. My brain's not set up
for that. Yeah. Which is part of the weird thing about people, is that our brain is clearly
set up differently than any every other creature that exists. You know, if you have, if evolution is the only thing that created us, it's just
evolution. How the fuck did we get so far ahead of everybody else? I mean, not even
just, and we're the doughiest, like weakest, softest, but also the smartest. Like we gave
up that. That was the trade off. And somehow or another, by evolving into this particular
form, we figured out
a way to uniquely change the environment in ways
that no other creature has even come close to.
It's interesting to me that there are certain things
that we think of in terms of unexplained phenomena that
we'll accept because we have some sort
of a scientific definition of what this unexplained phenomena is
Like the Big Bang mean and you can say that there's theories
It's not it's not completely unexplained that kind of get it
But you kind of don't something that's smaller than the head of a pin that becomes the entire universe that we say is
Pretty fucking crazy. Yeah, you know and just to say that that just happened and you don't you don't really I know you don't want to
Say you don't know but you really don't know, but you really don't know.
There's no way you can know.
It's not really possible to know.
There's no like working theory where you can convince me that the whole universe gets compressed
into something smaller than the head of a pen and then instantaneously becomes everything
that you see.
Well, I think that's why you see natural materialism being willfully inadequate, to really explain
the ultimate worldview questions that we have.
Just the universe itself, right?
Just what, we don't know enough.
Maybe we one day will.
Maybe these, you know, sentient AI systems
that we're gonna create with quantum computers
are gonna be able to figure things out
in a way that we can't.
But at the end of the day, you have one miracle.
You have the Big Bang. All of science agrees this happened. That is so much crazier than
anything that any religion is proposing, that it's so interesting to me that we're, because
well, we say we have echoes of the Big Bang. There's radio echoes. Yeah. Yeah. But also,
if a miracle did take place, like let's assume that there is actually a
higher power that occasionally interacts with human beings.
If a miracle did take place and you were there, you don't have a camera, you don't have a
cell phone, you don't have a pen, you can't write things down, maybe you can't even read,
and you have this thing that happens to you, and this thing changes the course of human history.
This thing changes the direction,
the ideology that these people subscribe to,
and the moral and ethical structure
that they live their life by.
It changes untold billions of human beings
from that point on.
Pretty fascinating.
That in itself, even if this is just a revelation without a divine
interaction, that's a fucking miracle. It's a miracle that it was created at all. Like,
the whole idea that Christianity, when you're saying that the book of, was it the book of Isaiah?
Yeah.
That the same book is exactly the same as, like, that's a miracle. That's pretty fucking crazy.
Yeah, that is crazy.
If you just imagine the sheer number of illiterate people,
the sheer number of days that have to go by
where people are telling the story exactly the same,
and that it's entrusted in the hands
of these very few people that are so dedicated to it
that they get the exact words right a thousand years later,
pretty bananas. Well, I mean, that is kind of the crazy thing about Christianity where you have this Jewish
itinerant guy who's walking around first century Roman occupied Judea.
He's making some pretty audacious claims, claims to be God himself, and then he predicts
his own death and resurrection.
And then his disciples,
they think it's over. Like, they're like, he's dead, we're done. And then they go from
11, you know, scared men, because Judas commits suicide, as scared men in an upper room to
completely overhauling the Roman world in only a couple hundred years because of this claim that they
say they saw Jesus resurrected.
Like there's something different that goes on there that they're like, this is a miracle,
right?
Dead people don't usually rise from the dead.
So what is your personal belief when it comes to the resurrection?
What do you think, do you have a belief or do you just try to
interpret the text and try to see what is the message?
1.5
Well, I think, so as a historian, I do think it is a historical question. You have a guy who
objectively lived, he objectively died, and then individuals close to his inner circle claim that they see him not dead again.
Right.
This is a highly unusual activity.
Highly unusual.
Right.
So, but it's hard when you're dealing with illiterate populations, you're dealing with
thousands of years of time, you're dealing with an oral tradition, and then you have us sitting here talking about
it in 2024, trying to figure it out at the end of 2024, trying to figure this out, literally
the end, last couple days.
It's very difficult for anybody who thinks of themselves as an intelligent person who's
secular to even entertain the possibility
that someone died and come back to life.
And I get that.
But we've already talked about the fact that we don't think that the only thing that exists
is matter in motion.
We as in you and I, right?
Right.
Like we believe that there's something else going on in this world that's a little bit
crazy.
There's something else, yeah.
And that to I think exclude that, I excludes something that you're kind of putting
blinders on for.
And you do have, I mean, you're right in terms of all of these ancient conventions and the
ways that things were spread around.
But the gospels are written in the lifetime of the eyewitnesses.
And they're written in this period of time where you have groups of individuals who could
have fact-checked those things.
So...
How do you fact-check someone coming back from the dead?
Well, if you...
How many people saw his body, right?
Well, Paul says that 400 people saw him all at once.
400 people saw the crucifixion?
No, saw the resurrected Jesus.
Yeah, 1 Corinthians 15, Paul says that Jesus appeared to the disciples and then he appeared
to 400 people all at
once.
I mean, if we read the Gospel of Luke and Acts, so same author wrote these both documents,
he says that Jesus was walking around teaching them for 40 days after he was resurrected
from the dead.
And so these are written within a time period when you have people who would
have seen Jesus' ministry, who were there, say, at something like the feeding of the
5,000, who could have been able to verify or debunk some of these things that are being
said. And you go from a bunch of scared guys who, because Jesus wasn't the only messianic
figure who arose and claimed
to be the Messiah.
There were a number of individuals both prior to and after Jesus, but they die and the movement
dies with them.
Do you think it's possible that he didn't die?
And do you think it's possible that they thought he was dead?
Because that does happen. There was actually a case very recently where a guy was about to be harvested for organs.
They thought he was dead and this guy started moving again and came back to life.
It's very, very bizarre case because his family had been told that he was going to be harvested
for organs.
They were preparing for organs. They were
Preparing for that. Yeah, this guy comes back. Yeah I mean we know a lot about Roman crucifixion and we know that and and we know that they they did their job well
Yeah
and so in fact if you look at say very skeptical biblical scholars like non-believing
atheist agnostic Christian scholars
They will say if we can know anything
about Jesus, like they'll cast a doubt on a lot of the things that we read about in
the gospels in terms of the actual historical Jesus of Nazareth.
They'll say one thing we can be sure of is that he died by crucifixion under Pontius
Pilate.
Because we have not just multiple detested documents that we refer to as the New Testament, but Roman and Greek
and Jewish writers refer to that claim afterwards and talk about the fact that you have this
guy and it's mocked within earliest Christianity.
So one of our earliest, in fact not one of, the earliest depiction of Jesus on the cross
is called the Alexi-Menos Graffito And it's probably from the end of the first century,
and it depicts an individual with their arms raised
in an act of worship, worshiping a man
with a donkey's head who's being crucified.
And right beside it, it says,
Alexi-menos worships his God in Greek.
And it's mocking, right?
Because crucifixion was for the lowest of the low.
It was for like slaves.
In fact, if you were a Roman citizen,
you were banned from being crucified.
Who wasn't they gonna crucify upside down?
Peter.
Why, was it because like regular crucifixion
wasn't good enough for him?
Or what was, he didn't deserve it
because Christ had gone through it?
Well, so the story is that they say,
we're gonna crucify you and he says,
it's like too big of an honor to die like my Lord.
And they say, well, we can fix that.
Oh, Jesus.
Shut your mouth, buddy.
Listen, the Romans were pretty brutal.
But this is why we know.
It's interesting.
We know a lot about crucifixion, but crucifixion
was seen as so disgusting.
I believe it was Cicero who said that the word crucifixion
shouldn't even be on a Roman man's lips.
I mean the word excruciating. X is off of in Latin and cruce off the cross.
So that's where we get that word is because this was designed to
humiliate and it was designed to be as painful as possible.
There was actually a really a good article done by JAMA, the Journal of the American Medical
Association, which was done by a number of... I think it was in the 70s or the early
80s.
It was done by a group of biblical scholars and then medical professionals.
They looked at the conventions of what we do know about Roman crucifixion, and then
they looked at the descriptions in the gospel to try to figure out, okay, if we could diagnose how Jesus died, how would
he have died?
And so they basically came up with this idea that he probably asphyxiated to death.
You kind of drown in your own blood.
But the chances of Jesus surviving the crucifixion, I think, are narrow to none.
And the chance of Him appearing three days later, completely fine.
I mean, you don't...
If the first thing you do, if you survive a crucifixion and then you go and you find
your disciples, the first thing you say is not, you know, peace be with you.
It's, get me to a hospital.
Right? Do they have them back then? No, not really. is not, you know, peace be with you. It's get me to a hospital, right?
Pete Slauson Do they have them back then?
John Sussman No, not really.
Pete Slauson Are we entirely certain of their measurement of days?
John Sussman So, this is an interesting question because of the differences between when
the Gospel of John says Jesus died compared to the synoptics, because John appears to be using the Roman convention of counting time, and the other gospels, when they describe the timing, appear to be using
the Jewish ones.
And actually, if you correlate between the two, they match up pretty well.
So the thing is, with Jews, any part of a day was considered a day.
So three days and three nights becomes almost an idiom for any part of that day is the day.
So if on, if Jesus, and because they count evening and morning, evening to morning is
the day, it's very possible that it wasn't like how we would think of three 24-hour days,
especially if he dies on Friday and wakes up on Sunday.
So that would actually make it less time than more time.
Yeah.
So it's not like he had recovery time.
Oh, no, he did not have recovery time.
That's what I'm saying.
Yeah.
It's not like it was three days, it was actually three months.
Oh, no, no, no.
Yeah.
So then 400 people saw him afterwards.
That's the claim that Paul makes.
Paul makes his claim.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And how many different people have some sort
of a recollection or a writing
or something that's a tribute to them
of being witness to his resurrection?
We have Peter, Paul, Jude, James, and Matthew, Mark, and Luke.
The thing with Matthew, Mark, and Luke is that Matthew and Luke, or Matthew and John
are attributed to direct disciples of Jesus.
Luke and Mark are not, so they are not eyewitnesses within the Jesus community.
In fact, Luke prefaces his gospel by saying that.
He's right up front about this.
He's like, hey, I'm not an eyewitness, don't confuse me with an eyewitness.
But he actually uses conventional writing.
What's the term I'm looking for?
He uses writing conventions of the day that would fit within regular biography that was
written within the Roman world. So you have a guy
named Quintilian who is basically, I mentioned it before, with the, he's
teaching people how to write and he says that if you're gonna write biography
you need to be interviewing eyewitnesses and you can't be too far away from the
event to be able to write these things. And Quintilian, Lucian, and Josephus,
who are all these very prominent ancient biographers
and writers of history, have a lot of crossover
in the way they describe how you should write history
with the words that Luke uses at the beginning
of his gospel, where he says,
"'I'm interviewing eyewitnesses,
"'and I'm writing up an orderly account.'"
And so he's saying, you know,
I'm gonna use these methods that are expected as good
history of my day.
I'm not an eyewitness, so I'm going to try to find the people who are eyewitnesses, and
I'm going to try to encapsulate this within a document that communicates what is being
written.
05.
So we have an account of the resurrection.
Do we have an account of the denial of the resurrection?
Is there an historical record of him just dying and this like a refutile or rebuttal
rather to what they're saying?
06 No, the only ones from the ancient world that deny his resurrection are groups that
come on afterwards that sometimes are sometimes are described as Gnostics, and they're not
necessarily denying it for the reasons we might think they were.
They're denying it because they have incorporated ideas of pagan philosophy, where they believe
that the spiritual is good and the physical is bad.
So if Jesus was crucified, so let me back up, if Jesus is God, He cannot have
a physical body. So, they deny that He actually had a physicality to Him. This is sometimes
called docetism, because docane in Greek means to seem. So, these groups that we describe
as the docetics, they are denying that Jesus had a physical body, He only seemed to have
a physical body. And they wrote documents later on.
So the Gospel of Peter, which comes around in,
you know, second, third, fourth centuries,
is being written and it has Jesus kind of chilling
on the cross because he's not really physical
because he's divine and physical entities
don't have physical bodies.
So we don't actually get like a concrete denial
of his resurrection in that way until you get things
like the Gospel of Barnabas in the Middle Ages,
which is actually the document that Billy brought up to me
in the conversation we had is the evidence
that Jesus was never crucified, the Gospel of Barnabas.
Well, Gospel of Barnabas is 15th century.
It paraphrases Dante's Inferno.
It's not an ancient document.
So, but in the ancient world,
nobody really had that big of a problem
with these kind of supernatural claims.
The more of the kind of skepticism
was why you would worship a crucified individual
to begin with.
Wow.
So they were less surprised that he was resurrected.
Or that you would worship a crucified teacher was just seen as silly.
Because it's so humiliating to be crucified.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that a God would let himself go through this.
Right. What are you talking about?
In fact, the ancient world didn't really have a problem
with supernatural events.
There is an ancient writer who mocks Christianity,
and he particularly mocks Christianity in saying that,
of course Jesus did miracles,
because Jesus had a childhood in Egypt.
And he goes, all those Egyptians are magicians anyways.
So he just learned the magic when he was a child.
So he actually confirms, incidentally, two things, that the narrative in the Gospels
where it says that the Holy Family fled to Egypt during the reign of Herod, he corroborates
that he actually thinks that happened and that Jesus did miracles.
He just attributes the miracles to Jesus being a traveling magician anyways.
And anybody who lived in Egypt knows some magic.
That is what's really fascinating that the mindset of the people that lived back then
was that whatever was going on in Egypt was so crazy that they had to be magicians.
Yeah.
Yeah, but everybody believed in supernatural events.
There's no such thing as like a secular work in the ancient world.
Even Plutarch, who's one of the most famous biographers in the ancient world, he wrote
90 biographies, of which 60 still survive today.
He was a priest of Apollo.
So he's already assuming that the gods exist, that crazy things are gonna happen in the
world.
And so they didn't have a problem with people doing miracles or crazy things happening or...
Well, that's also why it's so interesting trying to put your mind into the context of
people that live back then when you try to interpret what these stories were all about,
because they did believe in things that weren't real.
So when they talk about this thing
that we're supposed to believe is real,
when you have all this evidence
that they believe things that aren't true,
it's interesting, right?
Because you're now saying,
yeah, but this one really was true.
Well, there's so many different things
that they thought of and believe that weren't true.
Yeah.
So this historiographically is... So when we do history, it's an inference to the best
explanation.
And so there are probabilities of things that have happened in history where we can say,
okay, there's a higher probability of event A happening and a lower probability of event
B happening.
So the example I often give is like Jonah being swallowed
by the fish.
Like that's low probabilistically,
not that it didn't happen, but that like as a historian,
we gotta like say, well,
there's no independent cross-reference sources.
You don't have multiple attestation
for this particular event.
The interesting thing about Jesus is that we have more evidence from different
writings in the ancient world than we probably should have for someone of his stature. Because
we have Matthew, Mark, and Luke, and John, these four biographies. There's really only
one other person in and around that time that can claim to have that
much kind of independent testimony of their life, and it's the Roman Emperor Tiberius.
So he also has four biographers.
He has Cassio Dio, Suetonius Tacitus, and Velius Paterculus.
And so the Roman Emperor, who's the most famous, most powerful person at the time, has a similar
amount of historiographical evidence biographically for the events of his lifetime that Jesus
does.
Pete Slauson What is the interpretation of Jesus from non-Jesus followers at the time? Like, what did they think he was or who he
was?
Aaron Powell He was a crucified traveling rabbi.
Pete Slauson That's it.
Aaron Powell Yeah. I mean, you have, so you have individuals
like Josephus mentions him, end of first century, beginning of second century. He was a Jewish
Roman writer. Tacitus mentions him who also wrote about the emperor. And you know, you have a
number of these individuals, Cassius or Suetonius, but what they're doing mostly is describing what
the followers of Christianity are saying about him. So you do have to take it with a little bit
of a grain of salt in that they're not saying things that they believe happened. They're
talking about things that Christians believe happened. They're talking about things that Christians believe
happened. And Christians are this very unusual group because they're monotheistic in a world
that does not believe in monotheism. And Jews are monotheistic in that time as well, but
there was this idea that your religion could be tied to your ethnicity and that was okay.
Like the Jews believe in one God and that's weird, but they're Jews.
Whereas the Christians start to convert people who are of all different ethnic backgrounds.
And so they're like, well, what the heck is going on here?
Because why are you saying?
So the earliest criticisms of Christianity were actually that it was atheistic.
Ah, being the negative participle and theos, meaning God. So the earliest criticisms of Christianity were actually that it was atheistic, ah being
the negative participle and theos meaning God, right?
Because the ancient world was polytheistic, but more than that, it was what's sometimes
referred to as henotheism in that it's not that they believe in many gods, it's that
they believe in many gods and your gods could be my gods, right?
Jupiter could be Zeus, just same God by a different name, and your gods could be my gods, right? Jupiter could be Zeus, just same god by a different name.
And your cities could have gods, right?
Osiris and Ra can live in Egypt,
and Zeus and Athena can live here.
And that doesn't compromise anything.
But then the Christians are coming around,
and they're saying, actually, no, none of those gods exist.
If they exist, then they're demons, but they don't actually exist.
And this was a big point of persecution within early Christianity, is that a lot of physical
events were tied to supernatural events.
So there's an ancient historian who has this line where he says, if the Nile River is too
high in Egypt, or the Tiber River is too high in Egypt or the Tiber River is
too low in Rome, the cry will ring out the Christians to the lions. Because if you have,
say, a famine in Athens and they're going, okay, what's the reason for the famine? Well,
Athena's mad because there's a bunch of people running around saying she doesn't exist. Okay,
well, let's deal with them.
Mm.
Let's...
To the lions.
Yeah, let's get rid of them and that'll solve our issue.
Wow.
So, Christians were this very oddball group.
Kind of crazy that it wound up taking over the area.
Well, that's part of, I think, the argument of, well, how do you explain that? How do you explain
How do you explain it going from 11 scared disciples in an upper room to being willing to go out and die for the proclamation that you believe that Jesus rose from the dead
and you saw him and you touched him and you ate with him and, you know, he wasn't a ghost,
you actually ate fish with the resurrected Jesus.
How does Constantine fit into this?
Like what is Constantine's education in Christianity?
Jared Slauson Yeah, so Constantine is a pagan up until
a point in time when he converts. So –
Pete Slauson Who educates him?
Jared Slauson Good question. I don't know in terms of his
education. I know he does have some like crossover with some prominent Christians later on. He's a sun
worshiper, but right before, right before Constantine, you had a guy named Diocletian,
who is the emperor, who basically had the goal of wiping out Christianity entirely.
And so he, the worst point of persecution was under the Diocletian rule.
He actually made it so that if you had to go into like the equivalent of your town hall,
then you had to take a pinch of incense and offer it onto the altar of Caesar, him, right,
the king, and say, Caesar is Lord. And part of this was that they knew that Christians
say, Jesus is Lord, Jesus is Lord, and Christians wouldn't do that. So here's how you outed them.
And if you didn't do this, so if you did do it, you were given this piece of paper,
it's called a libelous, and a libelous allowed you to buy and sell. If you didn't do it, you didn't get a libelous, which meant a Libulus allowed you to buy and sell.
If you didn't do it, you didn't get a Libulus, which meant that you were not allowed to buy
and sell.
Wow.
And so you have this incredible air of persecution where Christians are being killed and Christian
literature in particular is being destroyed because they're hunting it out.
So Constantine comes after this and he knows that this is bad for Roman society.
And so him and Licinius get together.
They're both ruling the Roman Empire at the time.
And in 313, they put out this edict of tolerance, which includes Christianity.
So it's called the Edict of Milan and it decriminalizes Christianity. So it's called the Edict of Milan, and it decriminalizes Christianity,
so it's no longer illegal to be a Christian. What was their motivation?
I think they just felt like in order to establish peace within the empire, you need to make sure that
people aren't fearing you constantly to that degree. And so it wasn't just Christianity
that benefited from the Edict of Milan.
A number of religious minority groups
were benefited from this particular event.
But this happens.
Between 313 and 325, Constantine converts.
And so he becomes friendly to Christians.
He also, he commissions books of the Bible to be written.
And so this is where we first get our understanding.
Like when we think of a Bible, we think of it as like in a single bound volume, like
because we have the 66 books of the Bible and, you know and it has a nice cover on the page or on the front.
But in the ancient world, those existed independently.
So like P52, like that would be a separate copy of the Gospel of John, and that's what
would have been understood as scripture.
While Constantine, as like a peace offering, commissions all of these documents to be brought together
and published in one book.
And so we actually have what we think are some of these documents.
So when I was talking with Billy Carson, he brought up the Sinai Bible, Codex Sinaticus.
Codex Sinaticus is probably one of these documents that Constantine commissioned, because it's
one of our earliest examples of a cover-to-cover Genesis to Revelation copy of the Bible.
And it comes from the fourth century, and based on both its dating and based on the
fact that this would have been incredibly expensive to make.
Like it took 360 sheep just to put together, which would have been the equivalent of, I don't
know, tens of thousands if not hundreds of thousands of dollars today.
The reason why we're pretty sure that documents like Codex Anatechis, Codex Vaticanus, potentially
even Codex Alexandrinus or Codex Washingtonianus are documents that could have been part of this commissioning is just because they're such giant, giant projects in, you know, very few
people would have had the ability to produce something like this other than an emperor.
And so we actually have some of these documents that survived today.
Are there any books that were... And how did they pick the order that these stories are
in the Bible? And are there any books that were excluded? Were there's debate on it?
Yeah, great question. So this is the issue of what's sometimes called the canon of Scripture. So very early on when you
have Christians having these conversations, the four gospels, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,
there's unanimous agreement about those. Particularly, and that's not to say that
there aren't other gospels that pop up, it's that you have this chain of custody that goes back to
the earliest Jesus community.
Jesus has disciples, and there's a group of individuals who we call the apostolic fathers,
who are the disciples of Jesus' disciples.
And so they comment on the books that the disciples of Jesus or that people within the
community of the disciples of Jesus wrote.
And so we actually have a very close connection to the time. And we see early on that you have guys like Ignatius of Antioch arguing that there are
only four gospels, he's in the second century, and there couldn't be any more than four.
Or Theophilus of Antioch makes the similar argument and they name Matthew, Mark, Luke,
and John.
Now, Ignatius of Antioch also talks about other gospels, but he specifically
highlights the fact that the Gospel of Thomas, Gospel of Truth, Gospel of the Hebrews, Gospel
of, you know, these ones that we kind of hear about, Mary, Judas, that the reason we know
that they're not associated with the names that are attached to them is because they're
being written in times when those people were dead, and
they have these rings of pagan philosophy that are incorporated into them, which is
completely foreign to first century Judaism.
So Jesus would not have, so in the Gospel of James, Jesus is worshiping a goddess named
Sophia.
It's like, okay, well, no first century Jews can do that.
That's obviously paganism.
And so we have these early conversations.
But when Christians are thinking about, well, what is and isn't scripture, the earliest
Christians are Jews who believe in Jesus as the Messiah.
And the Jews had this idea that the promises of God are followed up by the writings, the documents
that established those.
So the word this often used is covenant, right?
God makes a covenant with people and that's always followed up by written text.
So this is why sometimes, well, in the case of Moses, it's literally inscribed on a tablet,
right?
And in the prophets sometimes you get this command, write this on a scroll, and inscribe this on a tablet, right? And in the prophets sometimes you get this command, write this on a scroll
and scribe this on a tablet. And that the Jewish scriptures in Jesus' day were seen
as a story in search of a conclusion because they were looking for this figure, this Messiah,
the Messiah, who would come and fulfill things like the reign of
David.
So they're talking about these things.
They're actually expecting them to happen.
And so the story in search of a conclusion in the Christian understanding is that Jesus
is that individual.
He comes and he does things like he says at the Last Supper right before his crucifixion that he's establishing a new covenant in his blood.
And so the earliest Christians, mostly who are Jews who believe in Jesus as the Messiah,
they see, okay, there's a new covenant, which is actually promised in Jeremiah 31, 31 when
God says that he's going to make a new covenant and inscribe the law in people's hearts. That covenant has come, okay, the promises have come. So the earliest Christians very organically
say, okay, where's the writing? Because we expect this to happen. Promises are followed up by
writings. And so they start to have these conversations of what are the writings and
where can we find them? And so very early on,
because the New Testament has 27 books in it,
very early on, 24 of the 27 are unanimously accepted.
So by the time you get to the middle of the second century,
we have lists in documents like,
there's a document called the Miratorium Fragment,
which there's debate on its dating,
but it's probably like mid to late second
century and it includes 24 of the 27.
And it gives reasoning why.
Now the other books that are in our New Testament that aren't in that 24 are ones that were
discussed because the earliest Christians were trying to figure out, okay, can we tie
this to either
an apostle or someone who knew an apostle?
Because we have a lot of books flying around with the names of John and Peter on them.
So you have the Acts of Peter, and you have the Revelation of Peter, and you have the
Gospels of Peter, and you have... So how do we do our due diligence to try to tie this
back?
So there's two letters of Peter, first and second Peter in the New Testament.
And the early Christians are like, we got to make sure we can tie these to Peter.
Or the book of Jude and the book of James, which are ascribed to the brothers of Jesus.
They were like, can we really say that those are written by those people?
And so there are some books that the dust kind of takes time to settle on within the
whole 27 canon because these groups are debating and discussing, you know, well, why do we
have these ones and not other ones?
And so there are various canon lists that come up throughout the ancient world where
some people are hypothesizing, well, maybe this book is part of it or maybe this book
is part of it.
But it's this ongoing conversation of people and by basically the end of the second century,
we have more or less unanimous agreement of
the 27 books being those that encapsulate scripture that can be tied to either someone
who knew Jesus or someone who knew someone who knew Jesus.
And so these books that were not included, are any of them interesting?
I mean are...
They're all interesting.
But does any of it seem like it belongs in the New Testament?
Well, so part of the problem with some of these other books is they appear to be almost
completely reliant on the other books.
So you do have, and some of them have an agenda to them.
So like the docetic gospel of Peter seems to be uncomfortable with the fact that the
biblical gospels, Matthew, Mark, and Luke, have women being the first witnesses to the empty tomb.
Because in the ancient world, women were not seen as good eyewitnesses.
So you almost have this apologetic trying to solve that problem by having all the right
people be witness to the resurrection.
So you have all the Roman and Jewish officials camping out in front of the tomb, which also gives away the fact that no Jewish priest on the eve of Passover is gonna be camping out in front of a dead
body.
Like they just didn't do that.
So it betrays that the author of the Gospel of Peter has no understanding of purity ritual
rights within first century, second temple Judaism, but is also clearly
trying to remedy this embarrassing fact.
Wow.
That's what's so interesting about trying to interpret this stuff.
You have to think about it in the terms of the culture of the times.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And one of the most interesting ways that we figure out, okay, how can we tie, say,
the Gospel of Matthew to the first century in Judea is studies that have been done on
name frequency.
So this is called onomastic congruence, where we look at the most popular names within a
particular geographical area and we compare it to how names are differentiated.
So the name Joe is pretty common.
So when you have a room and there's more than one Joe, you differentiate.
That's Joe Rogan, or that's MMA Joe.
We figured out a way to do it.
And that's called a disambiguator.
And we see this in the New Testament.
I mean, you have lots of Peters, right?
You have Simon Peter, you have Peter the Canaanian, you have, you know, or James the son of Zebedee,
or you have lots of Marys.
So you have these disambiguators.
You even have lots of Jesuses, which is why Jesus is often described as the Lord Jesus
or Jesus of Nazareth, because Yehoshua is a common Jewish name.
And so we can look at the popularity of names written in documents and actually pinpoint
some of these documents to particular times and particular places.
In fact, Jamie, are you able to, if you go on Apologetics Canada,
our YouTube page, so the first episode of the Can I Trust the Bible series we did, we
made an animation about this where we looked at the data and then we actually compared
it to one of these other gospels, the Gospel of Judas. And so in the first episode of Can I Trust the Bible in the right books, partway through
is near the end, the last animation, if you can find it, we had a guy put this together
for us where we looked at the studies and there have been some really recent ones by
a guy named Luke VanderWey who published this in, I believe it was at Cambridge. No,
no, no. Birmingham University, he did his PhD on it and he narrowed the gap within all
of these literary bodies that talk about names and were able to pinpoint and actually show.
Yeah, so if you go to, yeah, right here.
This particular decades that they're writing.
A series of scholarly studies has shown that,
though Jews were located in many places
across the Roman Empire,
people's names often tended to be geographically located.
By observing literary and archeological artifacts,
a list of common names can be clearly identified.
By narrowing down the most popular names in places that Jesus lived, travelled, and ministered,
and by comparing these to the list from the studies, an interesting correlation can be
seen.
Just as we see today with popular names, a qualifier or nickname is often used.
For example, notice that when Matthew lists the disciples in his Gospel, certain names
have a qualifier or nickname and others do not.
Simon called Peter, and Andrew his brother, and James the son of Zebedee and John his
brother, Philip and Bartholomew, Thomas and Matthew the tax collector, James the son of
Alphaeus, and Thaddeus, Simon the Zealot, and Judas Iscariot who also betrayed him. As we would expect, the most popular names are those that have an added description.
When we compare the most popular names in Judea and Galilee during the first century
with names we see listed in key places in the biblical gospels, we find that all the
names with qualifiers match with what we'd assume if they were actually written in the
time and place they claim to be narrating.
In contrast, the Gospel of Judas only has two names that would fit, Jesus and Judas,
but contains a host of other characters whose names match not with 1st century Judea or
Galilee, like the biblical gospels, but with names that were popular in Egypt during the
2nd and and third centuries.
Consider how difficult it would be for someone living outside of the locations and times
that these events took place to get the right names with the right qualifiers.
We have four biblical gospels with four different authors,
and yet each gets this test of naming, frequency, and attribution right every time.
A test in standard that the non-biblical gospels simply do not pass.
That's interesting.
So we can use so...
That is so interesting.
Isn't it?
God, that's so interesting.
This is so...it totally makes sense too.
Yeah, so it's the levels of methodology that we can use to find internal accuracy.
If we really want to figure out, okay, where was this written and is it coming from early
eyewitness testimony, we look at something like the biblical gospels and they fit the
bill for something that's written in first century Judea.
But if we look at something like the other gospels, they're doing things like the gospel
of Judas does, where other characters are coming up with names that are almost either non-existent or come
Like very unpopular in places like Judea and Galilee, but are popular in third and fourth century Egypt
So what do we what can we then conclude from that? Well, this is being written in third or fourth century Egypt
Yeah
That's that's really amazing
It's such a complex and fascinating subject.
It really is.
And I think it's because of the barrier to entry is so high.
There's so much to learn.
There's so much to dig in.
Most people barely scratch the surface of this stuff.
And it takes someone like you to really kind of,
because it's like real easy to lean into the fun stuff.
It's real easy to lean into the Anunnaki stuff,
but the actual real shit that we know is 100%
the accounts of people that lived back then,
that to me is as fascinating, if not more,
than even We Are Made by Aliens.
Like all of it is bizarre.
And the fact that we're still going over these texts thousands of years later is also fascinating.
Yeah.
And a lot of this stuff, like the unamassed congruence is something that has really only
been studied to the level that it has within the last like 50 years.
So we're constantly discovering ways that we can use different types of methodological
analysis to figure out the historical validity of something.
So this is, we call it verisimilitude, which is historians are looking for what can show
us the appearance, likelihood and probability of something being true. And so, sometimes documents out themselves as being unreliable and not true because they
inadvertently include these clues.
So the Gospel of Barnabas, which I mentioned before, which Billy Carson has brought up
as an evidence that he sees as denying the crucifixion, it talks about Jesus getting
in a boat and traveling to Nazareth, but Nazareth
is landlocked. So that person clearly did not know anything about the geography of like
first century Israel because you're not getting in a boat to go to Nazareth, right? So, but
if you're writing, you know, I mean, in the case of the Gospel of Barnabas, you're talking about like a thousand plus years later. But if you've never been there and you don't
understand, it's like, have you ever seen middle-aged paintings of lions?
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They had no idea what they were.
Well, we brought that up the other day because I was in Ravello.
Okay.
There's a church, an ancient church in Ravello, and it has a depiction
of the whale. And the whale doesn't look anything like a whale. Like it has wings, it looks
like a lion's head. It's so weird.
Yeah. Well, a lot of the Middle Ages throughout the Middle Ages...
There it is. Look at that.
Yeah, that's crazy.
I mean, it looks like a dragon.
Yeah, yeah.
Crazy.
And lions look a lot like dogs because they're like, what's your frame of reference?
Right, right, right.
And also you're getting someone describing it to an artist.
You probably can't paint it.
So you have to describe it.
Yeah, it's like, yeah, yeah, that's what it looks like.
Yeah, yeah, tertiary, secondary.
So, and a lot of these writings kind of out themselves
as that, literarily, within the things
that they choose to include. Names
are a small example, but geography or distances between places, you know, the biblical gospels
describe going up to Jerusalem. And we can kind of read that and not think anything about
it, but Jerusalem on the elevation of sea level, you do go up to it. And so it's like
these small clues that we
as historians are looking for, or on the parable of the Good Samaritan, it's going down from
Jerusalem to Jericho. And you literally, you go down like an elevation in sea level to
go to Jericho. Or the story of Zacchaeus, who's the guy who climbs a tree to see Jesus. He's
a wee little man, he's
short and he can't see over the crowd, and here's this miracle worker, Jesus is coming,
so he climbs a sycamore tree.
And the Gospels specifically say he climbs a sycamore tree.
Well, this can be like a detail we can pass over, but we know based on kind of the acidity of the soils that sycamore trees only grow in those
areas in that time frame.
So we can look and see, okay, well, whoever Luke is getting this from, he's adding this
detail.
Maybe he's not even aware of the significance of it, but whoever he's getting this from
has been there because they actually know what tree
would have been growing there and tell him
that Zacchaeus climbs a sycamore tree.
And so it's like fauna and flora
and distance between locations,
things that actually other ancient writers
get wrong sometimes.
Have you ever had a debate with a snarky atheist?
Yeah. I think that would be fun.
Like a formal debate? No, not even a formal debate. I think it would be a fascinating
conversation because I'm sure, well, atheists, they vary just like Christians vary, but the worst
versions of them are essentially believers in the religion of atheism. Right. They worship the concept of there being no God,
this is it, when you die nothing happens.
Yeah.
And that to me is always so arrogant.
I just, just the fact that you exist at all
is so bizarre and so spectacular.
The idea that you know for sure
that when the lights shut out, that that's a wrap,
like, because there's no evidence of the contrary,
well, okay. I no evidence of the contrary.
Well, okay.
Kind of assuming your conclusion there.
Absence of evidence is not evidence.
It's especially when you're talking about something that's as bizarre as death.
And especially when you have people that have near-death experiences that are radically
similar.
Yeah.
Those are really weird.
They're really weird how many similarities people have in these near-death
experiences from accidents and all sorts of things that people come back from where their
heart stops beating, they see themselves above their body. There's a lot of weirdness to
it that makes you, I just think it's a little silly because how could you know what you
don't know? You cannot know what you don't know. And the problem is that there's a cache, that there's a social credit amongst academics
in particular that's ascribed to a person who is atheist, a person who is, he's brilliant,
he's not silly, he doesn't believe in myths, he doesn't...
I get it, I get why there's social pressure in that regard,
I get it, but to not look at the universe itself,
just this creation engine of planets and stellar nurseries,
just the bizarreness of the epicness of it all,
and to not wonder if maybe you have a very narrow perception
of what this whole thing is all about.
Yeah, deny the virgin birth,
but not the virgin birth of the universe.
Yeah, well, all of it, like everything.
There's so many more impressive miracles
than any of the things that people think of in the body.
It's just they're so weird in our day and age
that we're not willing to like,
we wanna think that things are very clean
and easy to measure and they often are not.
And I think most of what it means to be a human being
in a meaningful way is not measurable.
Most of it.
Love and friendship and community,
these things are not very measurable.
They're very strange.
The bond that people have with their family
and their loved ones, it's very strange.
That love connection, whatever love is,
whatever good is, it's a very real thing,
and it seems to not exist, certainly not in the volume
in other animals that exist in us.
There's obviously nurturing in other animals,
they nurture their loved ones, but their perception
of life and death and all of it is very different than ours.
So it leads me to why?
Why is our version of life so much more rich and complicated than any other being that
exists and why do we have this insatiable desire to learn and know more?
What is it?
Why does this, however many three pounds of gray matter
in my brain, why is that able to plummet
the intricacies of the universe?
Right.
Right?
And I think that that's ultimately the questions
that we should be asking in terms of you matter
more than you are matter.
There's something going on there.
There's something going on with all of us.
Yeah.
We kind of know it and we don't know it We don't know it, you know
But it's just you can't measure it and you can't put it on a scale and so people don't like that
Yeah, they don't like that. It makes them feel dumb to believe in that it makes them feel dumb to even speculate
You know to even just say what do you think happens when you die? Like that conversation?
It's like people don't like that. Nothing you go. It goes dark and that's it. It's over. Yeah, you die. Like even that conversation is like, people don't like that. Nothing. It goes dark and that's it. It's over. You die. Like, how the fuck do you know? Have
you died? Like, you don't know.
In all of this, what do you think of Jesus? Like in terms of your own like journeying
and trying to find answers to ultimate questions? What do you think of the historical person
of Jesus?
Well, it certainly seems like there's a lot of people
that believe that there was this very exceptional human being
that existed.
So the question is, what does that mean?
Does it mean he was the son of God?
Does it mean he was just some completely unique human being
that had this vision of humanity and this way of educating
people and spreading this ideology that would ultimately change the way human
beings interact with each other forever. So what is, is he the Son of God? Well,
are we all? That's another question.
Do we all have that inside of us?
Do we all have that ability to change everything around us
inside of us?
Do we all have that unique connection to the divine?
And is he a representation of the best version of that?
Or was he an actual person that was the son of God?
And is it important?
I don't know. I mean, what does it mean? It's it's just the fact that it's a question to ponder is
A miracle in itself in a way just the fact that there's this concept of this person that died for our sins
That's the son of God. Hmm, but you have to buy a bunch
You have to believe in a bunch of stuff to go that
way. Like, just the concept of that is interesting to people because what it can do to people
is offer them a very unique way to change the way they feel about the world itself.
And if you do follow that,
I know a lot of Christians, or hardcore Christians,
who are some of the nicest people
you'll ever meet in your life.
So it does work.
Right?
Like if you do live like a Christian,
and you do follow the principles of Christ,
you will have a richer, more love-filled life.
So it is true, right?
But you have to submit to this concept that this
guy was the child of God who came down to earth, let himself be crucified, came back
from the dead, explained a bunch of stuff for people and then said, all right, see you
when I come back.
Soterios Johnson And you don't know how you can wrap your head
around that particular claim.
Adam Foss And if he came back, here's the thing, if
he came back, who the fuck would believe him
today?
With all the fake news and all the CGI and AI, like imagine that would be the most bizarre
thing of all time.
If we get to a point where artificial reality is indiscernible from regular reality and Jesus chooses to come back at that moment. Boy,
that's the ultimate test of faith, right? When it's impossible to discern if we really reach a point
where virtual reality is indistinguishable from regular reality, which we're probably a hundred
years away from that or something. Like how far, maybe not even that.
Yeah, I don't know.
I mean, that's probably why Jesus came in the first century and not the 21st century.
But imagine, imagine if that's the, that's the big catch.
Like Jesus does return, but when he returns, we're just so confused that we, we can't even
tell.
Yeah.
Or maybe that's how he returns in the first place.
Maybe he returns through AI. Yeah. Maybe that's the portal to Jesus.
I don't know anything about that.
That scares the shit out of me.
I really appreciate... I mean, guys that you're friends with, right? Like the Jordan Petersons
and the Douglas Murrays of the world, or the Tom Hollins, not the Spider-Man actor, the
historian, who talk about this stuff. I think I really like the way that Jordan Peterson
articulates it, but I think he misses the forest
for the trees.
How so?
In that he sees Jesus as an archetype,
and I don't think actually even Jesus gives you
the opportunity to see him as the archetype.
Because I both, I have this love hate relationship
with all of Peterson's stuff,
because he seems to get so much right
where he walks up to the line,
but he doesn't want to cross over.
And is the crossover you think connected to a life in academia?
What do you think it is?
I wonder, and I'd love to talk to him about this, like how do you remedy this issue that
... Because he seems to think that the concept of Jesus as an example is more important than
the actual flesh and blood first century itinerant Jewish preacher who was crucified and rose
from the dead physically, which is the claim of the Gospels and the rest of the New Testament.
That's an example for us to look on and live by. But I actually think that Jesus condemns moralism.
And ultimately what I see Peterson doing is looking at Jesus as a moral example.
And if Jesus is nothing but a moral example, then you can save yourself and you don't actually
need a savior.
And so I think actually Jesus would have critiqued that because Jesus was very against moralism.
And how do you define Jesus being against moralism? Like, what do you mean by that exactly?
Well Jesus looks at the religiosity of his day with like particular groups like the Pharisees
and the Sadducees who are these other like, these other groups of Jews during his day.
So we talked about the Essenes, who actually aren't mentioned in the Bible, but there are other groups like the Pharisees
who are like lay scholars and the Sadducees who are professional priest scholars.
And he's constantly critiquing the fact that they have this hypocritical religiosity
to them where they're doing things like tithing their mint leaves, like to make
sure that they get all of...
This is where we get the idea of the letter of the law versus the intention of the law.
Like Jesus critiques them for that because he says, you're trying to do everything right
and you're missing the point.
So one of the things he says is like, if your donkey falls in a ravine on the Sabbath,
do you pull it out or does that work?
Like what's the point of the Sabbath?
Is it to not do any work?
Like is it to make sure that you're not working too hard because you might be breaking the
Sabbath?
Or like what is the point?
He says like the Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath.
And that there's this intention, this is the whole Sermon on the Mount, he says like the Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath. And that there's this intention, this is the whole sermon on the Mount. Matthew chapter five
is he keeps saying, you have heard it said, but I say, and he refers to the Mosaic law.
And it looks like he's critiquing the Mosaic law, but he's not actually, he's getting back
to the intention of the law. So when he says, you know, you have heard it said, do not commit murder, but I say to you, anybody
who harbors a hate for their brother in their heart has already committed murder.
And what he's getting to is like, what's the intention?
What's the meaning of the law that God gives to you?
Because the law is like a mirror.
It shows you how dirty you are. But his critique is he's like,
you guys are trying to clean yourself with a mirror.
That's stupid.
If anything, it's gonna make you more messy.
Get in the shower.
The law is not what cleans you.
The law is what reveals that you're dirty.
And so in that sense, I think,
if Jesus is a moral example,
it actually misses what I think, you know, if Jesus is a moral example, it actually misses what I think Jesus actually
said about what his purpose was in that you can't do enough to actually live up to the
standard that God holds you to.
And so if you keep striving, you're actually going to wear yourself out and be exhausted.
Like atheists.
I didn't say you did, Joe.
A lot of them go crazy.
They go crazy when they get older.
Listen, Wes, this is such an awesome conversation
and I'm sad that it went down the way it went down
with you and Billy, but the good thing out of it
is that a lot of people became aware of your work
and it's such exhaustive work.
It's really amazing what you've done.
Thank you so much for these gifts.
We will find a great place for them on the wall here.
And thanks for, and let's do it again.
And I would love to do it with you
and someone who disagrees too.
I think it would be a fascinating conversation.
Yeah, that'd be great.
Yeah, I think it would be really cool.
This has been a pleasure.
My pleasure, thank you very much.
Oh, tell everybody how to find you, how to find all of the different, you have two different
YouTube channels, you have your own, and you have this new one, Apologetics Canada.
Yeah, so I work for a national not-for-profit in Canada that is an organization, we want
people to have an intellectually robust and a biblically grounded faith.
We want people to know what they believe and why they believe it.
And so we produce materials, like we played that clip from Can I Trust the Bible?
That's a series that's ongoing.
I'm going to be traveling in 2025 to produce more of that content, to try to get this stuff
that's all up here out into people so that they can be able to access it.
Do you have two of them that are on? Well, there's more, but there's the two I trust
to... Can I trust the Bible versions? One and two, I watch both of those.
Yeah, awesome. Yeah, so yeah, WesleyHuff.com is my website. ApologeticsCanada.com is where,
if you wanna see where I'm speaking or what we're up to, I'm part of a team that does
a lot of this stuff. So those are the two places all my social media handles
can be found on WesleyHalp.com.
All right, beautiful.
Awesome.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Thank you everybody, bye.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you everybody, bye.
Thank you.