1, 2, 3.
Speaker AWelcome to the Rap Report with your.
Speaker BHost, Andrew Rapaport, where we provide biblical interpretation and application.
Speaker AThis is a ministry of Striving for Eternity and the Christian podcast community.
Speaker BFor more contest or to request a.
Speaker ASpeaker for your church, go to Striving.
Speaker CFor eternity dot org.
Speaker AWelcome to another edition of the Rappaport.
Speaker AI'm your host, Andrew Rapaport, here to give you biblical interpretations and applications for the Christian life.
Speaker AWe, we are part of the Christian podcast community and hope that you will check out the different podcasts there.
Speaker ANow, this episode, as I'm just getting back from travel, I wanted to put up one more backlog episode where I was on someone else's podcast.
Speaker AAnd this is the Bold Apologia podcast with my friend Adam.
Speaker AThere is a lot of discussion in here because if you do any kind of apologetics, you see all these professing atheists that all they want to do is talk about Christianity.
Speaker AThey don't actually talk that much about atheism.
Speaker AAnd so Adam and I had a discussion on why do atheists spend the time talking so much about God?
Speaker AIt's an interesting phenomenon.
Speaker AIf they really believe he doesn't exist, you'd think they wouldn't waste their time.
Speaker AHmm.
Speaker ASo coming to you right now is the episode on Bold Apologia where we were discussing why do atheists spend so much time talking about God.
Speaker AGod.
Speaker CYou're listening to the Bold Apologia podcast.
Speaker CHere you can expect to find real conversation and dialogue centralized around the purpose for sharing the hope of Jesus Christ in light of theology, apologetics, and culture.
Speaker CWe hope and believe this episode will add confidence to your faith by equipping you with boldness to share the good news of the gospel.
Speaker CAnd now your host, Adam Parker.
Speaker BWell, hello there, Bold Apologia podcast listeners.
Speaker BIt is great to be back on the Bold Apologia podcast, and I am excited about the general theme of what this podcast will be on.
Speaker BIt's kind of a mystery to many of us who are Christians.
Speaker BWhy do atheists spend so much time refuting a God they don't believe in?
Speaker BI tell you what, I've had a lot of interesting conversations over the years with people who identify as atheists, and again, maybe tongue in cheek with the title and things like that, just that they just, they seem to spend so much time trying to refute God despite not even believing.
Speaker BAnd it kind of comes off as a little bit of a paradox or a mystery to me as well as many others.
Speaker BAnd so I have invited Andrew Rapoport, who is the founder of Striving for Eternity and who also is one of the founders for the Christian podcast community of which this podcast is part of.
Speaker BAnd so with that said, I would like to just go ahead and add him to the stage.
Speaker BHey there Andrew.
Speaker BReally nice to have you on the podcast and anything you want to say before we move forward?
Speaker AYeah, well, thanks for having me.
Speaker AAnd yes, you are.
Speaker AYou are a member of the Christian podcast community and I know you waited for your very first episode with us to talk and tackle the topic of addressing cessationism.
Speaker AYou know, you just figured right out of that.
Speaker ATake the one thing that you and I disagree on.
Speaker ALet's.
Speaker ALet's hit it.
Speaker AHit it head on.
Speaker AI love it.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, just figured I'd stir the pot a little bit.
Speaker BActually.
Speaker BSpeaking of which, before we go any further, I do want to add to the stage this, for those of you who are.
Speaker AWho's that good looking guy there?
Speaker BThat.
Speaker BThat's me.
Speaker BBut I think it's highly edited.
Speaker BHighly edited.
Speaker BBut I just wanted to share with those of you who are listening, I do have a blog and it's bold.
Speaker BApologia.com and I shared a a new post and essentially it is centered around the idea of being slain in the Spirit.
Speaker BIs it biblical?
Speaker BAnd I have subtitled it as a defense of God's power and presence.
Speaker BAnd so as you can see, I'll kind of scroll through.
Speaker BIt's pretty in depth.
Speaker BI go through quite a few different instances in scripture where I think we can see people impacted or encumbered by the presence of God.
Speaker BAnd you'll find in the article itself, I don't like the term slain in the spirit.
Speaker BI think it is unhelpful.
Speaker BBut I take a look at some of just the revivals in the past.
Speaker BI take a look at some of those.
Speaker BJohn Wesley, Jonathan Edwards, pull some from the Azusa street revival.
Speaker BI take a look at some of the thoughts of the early church fathers, Martin Luther, Augustine, got Tertullian there, John Calvin even.
Speaker BAnd what's really important is drawing it back to what the Scriptures teach.
Speaker BSo it's pretty in depth.
Speaker BI would not say this is a scholarly article by any means.
Speaker BI'm not claiming to be a scholar.
Speaker BThis is more from kind of a pastoral tone, you know, just giving an explanation of what you may see if you run into people being slain in the spirit.
Speaker BAnd actually what's an important part of this article is toward the end, I have some cautions and some tips for pastors who are shepherding people through these kind of things, tying it all together and then concluding.
Speaker BSo I think that this is a good article for anybody who particularly is not hostile to the charismatic perspective on being slain in the spirit.
Speaker BAnd actually I try to be a little more charitable.
Speaker BI say continuationists people seem really thrown off by Pentecostal.
Speaker BThen there's charismatic.
Speaker BBut continuationist seems to be the politically correct way of throwing it out there for our cessationist brothers.
Speaker BAnd so anyway, sorry about that, Andrew.
Speaker BGot more.
Speaker ASo where can people find this article?
Speaker BYou can find this article on BoldApologia.com it's where my blog post is.
Speaker BAnd it's like I said, not seen as this is a scholarly article.
Speaker BIt's just me sharing my thoughts and just giving some explanations, giving a defense of it.
Speaker BSo don't try to, you know, use this as a source in like a college paper or something.
Speaker BThis is just.
Speaker AI mean, that's right.
Speaker AIt was a really long article for what would take me just one word to answer.
Speaker BYeah, no, yeah, of course, of course.
Speaker BWell, it's.
Speaker BIt, yeah, it, it's about a 45 minute read.
Speaker BIf you want to sit and read it in the full sitting, go ahead.
Speaker BOtherwise you can take your time or you can, you could just say.
Speaker ANo.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker BSo Andrew and I were on kind of the different side of the spiritual gifts debate.
Speaker BI'm on the theist side and Andrew's on the atheist side.
Speaker ANo, no, no.
Speaker AI'm on the biblical side and you're on the continuation side.
Speaker ABut you know, I'm on the biblical.
Speaker BSide and he's on the cessationist side.
Speaker AYeah, so.
Speaker BSo I'm on the sola scriptura side.
Speaker ABut yeah, except for the fact that.
Speaker BIt says those things.
Speaker BIs the issue of is there a God?
Speaker BWe both believe in Jesus.
Speaker BHe is the way, the truth and the life.
Speaker BNo one comes to the Father except through him.
Speaker BAnd what I love about Andrew is he's a perfect guest to have on for us show such as this.
Speaker BBecause what this comes down to and what I really like about what Jay Seeger said on my last podcast, not this previous one where it was just me sharing a sermon I did, but my podcast before that, that specifically looked at the issue of faith and science and are they really incompatible?
Speaker BWhat he said was that at the core of all of this is a heart issue.
Speaker BAnd immediately that brought me back to some past conversations I've had with Andrew here regarding presuppositional apologetics.
Speaker BThis is a question that is perfect for a presuppositional apologist to really weigh in on.
Speaker BAnd I've had Andrew on in the past.
Speaker BHe was, was part of a podcast.
Speaker BWe did on this, just the different methodology, methodologies of Christian apologetics.
Speaker BSo we had classical apologetics, we had presuppositional, which Andrew represented.
Speaker BWe had evidential, and we had cumulative case for apologetics.
Speaker BAnd so with that said, I would like to, Andrew, open it up for you to speak exactly to what we're talking about here.
Speaker BAnd I may interject, I actually have some fun comments I want to read to you that you can react to.
Speaker BJust, I, I like to stir the pot a little bit.
Speaker AYeah, well.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, let's go.
Speaker ALet me start just by saying what we were joking about earlier, folks that, you know, continuationist cessationists, there are people who get very emotional about these things, as if you're questioning someone's salvation if you disagree with them.
Speaker AAnd I think that's why people have such hard views over them.
Speaker AAnd I would hope that folks would see between Adam and I that though we disagree and I think we disagree strongly, that'd probably be a fair statement.
Speaker AAnd yet we can be of good spirit.
Speaker AWe can have a good relationship.
Speaker AWe could joke around, you know, so we can have our differences.
Speaker AYou know, one of us is going to be wrong, both of us could be wrong.
Speaker AWe'll know when we get to heaven, but we both can't be right.
Speaker AAnd so, you know, but we try to do what we think is faithful to our study of the word of God.
Speaker AYou know, Adam will realize he was wrong for his time on Earth.
Speaker ABut that's fine.
Speaker AThat's fine.
Speaker ABut, but yeah, we ended up doing the, what you just referred to with the episode that we did on the different views of, of how to do apologetics.
Speaker AI actually jumped off of that and had you on my show, my apologe live show, and we, we spent two hours on each one to get.
Speaker ABecause it really.
Speaker AWhen you, we did two hours with you and it just, we could, it was too.
Speaker ACould not get in depth enough.
Speaker ANo, couldn't because of the fact that we had four different views represented.
Speaker AAnd so I just thought we need more time with each one.
Speaker AAnd I thought that was really good and healthy.
Speaker AAnd that again, gets to the fact of we should be able to disagree with our brothers in Christ and know where our disagreements are and still be willing to hear one another out.
Speaker AYeah, that's different than when we have an atheist just saying.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker ASo, yeah, you raised a really good and interesting question.
Speaker AAtheists spend so much of their time studying a God they don't believe in.
Speaker AAnd it's very.
Speaker AJust very interesting because I was on a show two days ago, an atheist, two atheists, they wanted to talk Christianity.
Speaker AAnd it's interesting because at least these guys were kind of honest, because I always ask people what's their best argument for atheism?
Speaker AAnd all they do is attack Christianity.
Speaker AAnd, you know, that's not actually an argument for atheism.
Speaker AThat's an argument against Christianity.
Speaker AAnd these guys were like, well, yeah.
Speaker AAnd they tried to explain it away, going, well, you can't really prove you're, you know, you can't give an argument for something you're against.
Speaker AI'm like, yeah, I can.
Speaker AYou know, I'm against abortion.
Speaker AI can give an argument for it, you know.
Speaker AYou know, I can give an argument why leprechauns don't exist.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker AI can do that.
Speaker AI don't believe they exist.
Speaker AI can give an argument.
Speaker ABut for some reason, they can't give an argument for what they believe.
Speaker AAnd though these guys didn't fall into my trap that I laid for so many, they were the first ones to ever have this.
Speaker ABut I always like to ask atheists if they study atheism.
Speaker ALike, do you watch YouTube channels about atheism?
Speaker ADo you read books about atheism?
Speaker AAnd mostly what it is, it's not about atheism.
Speaker AIt's against Christianity, and it's not against, like, religion.
Speaker AThey say they're against religion, but the religion they talk about is Christianity.
Speaker ASam Harris had a book where he.
Speaker AIt was just really interesting because his examples of why religion was bad was all examples from.
Speaker AFrom Mormonism.
Speaker ASorry, from Muslims.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AExtreme Islam is what he.
Speaker AYou know, so.
Speaker ASo there he's saying all religion is bad, but there he's defining it as extreme Islam.
Speaker ASo it's by.
Speaker AIn his own words, it wasn't what he would call normal Islam.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ABut then he's taking that and saying, well, Christians are bad.
Speaker AAnd it's like, but Christians aren't the ones doing these things you're criticizing, right?
Speaker ASo, but usually what I'll do is I'll ask them, do they read books on atheism?
Speaker ADo they watch YouTube videos and things on atheism?
Speaker AThey'll say yes, hours and hours.
Speaker AAnd I'll ask, why?
Speaker AI mean, if you don't believe God exists, why would you study it?
Speaker AAnd they always say, so that I have an answer, because you people are brainwashing, trying to brainwash people into believing someone That a God that doesn't exist?
Speaker ATo which I always ask them, do you believe Santa Claus is real?
Speaker AAnd they'll say, no.
Speaker AAnd I go, well, do you go to the mall every December and yell out loud, you know, Santa isn't real.
Speaker ASanta isn't real.
Speaker AWhy don't you do that?
Speaker AAnd the answer I almost always get is, because everyone knows he isn't real.
Speaker AAnd I just paused for silence, let that sink in, and go correct.
Speaker AYou know God exists.
Speaker AWhat?
Speaker ARomans 1 says, you suppress that in unrighteousness.
Speaker AThat's why you're sitting here trying to convince everybody, no, no, no.
Speaker AGod really doesn't exist.
Speaker AHe doesn't exist.
Speaker AYou're trying to convince yourself because you know he does.
Speaker AAnd you're trying to suppress that truth and unrighteousness.
Speaker ARomans chapter one.
Speaker AYou don't do that with Santa because, as you said, everybody knows he doesn't exist.
Speaker ABut those kids believe he's real, and the parents are trying to brainwash him into believing he's real.
Speaker AThey even have him put cookies out.
Speaker AHave the kids put cookies out and the parents eat them.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ASo, yeah, sorry, there is brainwashing going on.
Speaker AThey are lying to the children.
Speaker AAnd yet you say that's the reason you're doing it.
Speaker AHmm.
Speaker ASomething doesn't seem consistent here.
Speaker BNo, not at all.
Speaker BNot at all.
Speaker BSpeaking of what you're talking about here, it's interesting to see some of the behavior online.
Speaker BAnd sometimes what I'll do is I'll stir the pot a little bit.
Speaker BNo and no.
Speaker AReally?
Speaker BYou.
Speaker BYou know where I see atheists the most?
Speaker BI don't see atheists the most on, you know, like, atheist pages or atheist groups, mostly because I'm not in them.
Speaker BBut it's okay.
Speaker BI don't need to go far because I can just go and in a Christian apologetics Facebook group, and I can share a post that will stir the pot because I know that atheists will be there.
Speaker BAnd so I shared a promotion of our podcast together to a massive group called Christian Apologetics.
Speaker BAnd I shared it, and the atheists all came out of the woodworks, and they have all.
Speaker BThey just have had all kinds of things to say with regard to really the title.
Speaker BWhy do atheists spend so much time refuting a God they don't believe in?
Speaker BAnd what really gets my attention is, is they've got quite a few different excuses.
Speaker BOne atheist says here that Christians are the ones influencing legislation in trying to enforce their beliefs on our nation.
Speaker BDo you buy that?
Speaker BFor a.
Speaker ASo let's See, who is it that's trying to legalize abortion?
Speaker AIs that the Christians?
Speaker AIf Christians had control, as they claim, we're having this influence over the government, wouldn't that be illegal everywhere?
Speaker AI don't know.
Speaker AAnd I had a woman on, she goes by Godless Grandma.
Speaker AShe came on to my apologetics live and it was, it was really interesting because this is before the election and she's like big time liberal and she, she actually argues.
Speaker AWell, actually, I could, I could play the clip.
Speaker AIf you want to hear her in her own voice.
Speaker BPlay the clip.
Speaker BI'd love to hear.
Speaker ABecause she.
Speaker ASo, so this is, this was her, like, you know, they, they used the idea of Project 2025 as just this, you know, here's proof that, you know this is wrong.
Speaker AAnd so I was asking her, is there like, where in Christianity, where do we force you to go to church?
Speaker AI mean, she was saying, we're forcing it, we're legislating it.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker ASo here's, here's a short clip of it.
Speaker AIt's the fact of.
Speaker AI'm sharing with you what I would see as good news.
Speaker AYou wouldn't.
Speaker AI get it.
Speaker ABut the thing is, there's a difference between saying, this is the freedom of speech to say, this is what the Bible says.
Speaker AI'm not telling you.
Speaker AYou have to believe it.
Speaker ASee, I'm not forcing you to be a Christian.
Speaker AI'm not.
Speaker AAnd there's no, no Christians are trying to legislate to force you to be a Christian or go to go to church.
Speaker BHave you seen Project 2025?
Speaker ADid you see Act Blue 2025?
Speaker ANo, I have not.
Speaker AWhere does that, does that legislate that people have to be in church?
Speaker BI don't know.
Speaker AIt does that.
Speaker AI don't know if it does that because she didn't read it.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd so, but do you see how they do she.
Speaker AThe, the question is, where are we forcing people to be?
Speaker AWhere are we legislating that you have to be a Christian?
Speaker AAnd her answer is project 2025.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AWhere does it do that?
Speaker AI don't know.
Speaker AI didn't read it.
Speaker AOh, okay, right.
Speaker AThis is the.
Speaker AAnd, and this is how to deal with their arguments.
Speaker AIs don't.
Speaker AI mean, I think so often the response Christians have is to try to say, oh, we're not trying to do that.
Speaker AWe're, you know, no, just call them out on the carpet.
Speaker AThey're the ones doing it.
Speaker AWho, who is it that is suing Christians, forcing them to make a cake for their, their, you Know, same sex weddings.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AIs that, is that the Christians?
Speaker ABecause the interesting thing.
Speaker AAnd a guy went in that same town where, where Master's Bakery is, Master Cakes I think is the name of it.
Speaker AYou know, that went up to Supreme Court and they.
Speaker AAnd the.
Speaker AWhen the supreme deal, it was a big deal.
Speaker AAnd when the Supreme Court ruled that this guy didn't violate the law, you know what happened?
Speaker AThe very next day, someone, someone called in specifically wanting a transgender cake.
Speaker AAnd when he said no, they started up a second lawsuit.
Speaker AAnd so he had to go to the Supreme Court a second time.
Speaker ASo, I mean, it's like just destroying his business.
Speaker ANow, what's interesting is after that first one, there was a guy that went to 13 different Muslim place, Muslim bakeries and asked them to make a same sex wedding cake.
Speaker AAnd they were chased.
Speaker ALiterally.
Speaker AOne guy grabbed a broom and chased the guy out of the store trying to smack him with a broom for suggesting it.
Speaker AWhy are none of those 13 bakeries being charged?
Speaker AWhy are the homosexuals not going to any of those places?
Speaker BThey're under the influence of the same God.
Speaker ACorrect.
Speaker BWhich is not the God of the Bible.
Speaker BIt is the devil himself.
Speaker AYeah, they're on the same side.
Speaker AAnd so what you see is that when they make the argument, the reality is they're the ones trying to change the Christian values this country was founded on.
Speaker AWe're trying to conserve.
Speaker AThat's what conservative means.
Speaker AWe want to conserve the original views of this country.
Speaker AThey're the ones that want to have a liberal view of it and make changes.
Speaker AThey're the ones trying to legislate law that affects us.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo an example of this, I, New Jersey was voting on same sex marriage.
Speaker AI went before the, you know, before the legislature when, you know, they'd have this open thing.
Speaker AAnd they give you 30 seconds.
Speaker AYou know, we really want to hear what you say as you, you know, we want to hear from the people.
Speaker AYou got 30 seconds.
Speaker AGo.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd I just asked every one of them, do you believe in a separation of church and state?
Speaker AEvery one of them said they believe in a separation of church and state.
Speaker AI thought that very interesting.
Speaker AAnd I said to him, I said, well, then every one of you must vote no on this bill because marriage is a church issue and not a state issue.
Speaker ASo based upon your conviction, you must vote no and allow.
Speaker AAllow the church to have its say.
Speaker AAnd if you vote yes, it means you do not believe in a separation in church and state.
Speaker AYou believe the state should tell the church how to act.
Speaker AAnd that's what it is.
Speaker AYou know, if they really believed that Christians are legislating, then, you know, why are they trying to change the definition of marriage?
Speaker AThey could call it anything, they could call it a union.
Speaker AThey can create a brand new term for it.
Speaker AThey could, but they want to do marriage because that is something based upon the, the God of the Bible.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BYou know, I'm kind of scrolling down through this, this thread that I shared to this supposed to be Christian apologetics group.
Speaker BThere's quite a few atheist apologists in it though.
Speaker AWell, they're always.
Speaker AWell, I mean, that's the whole thing is why, if you did not believe God exists, why would you spend your time in a Christian apologetics group?
Speaker AAnd I run several Christian apologetics groups on Facebook and they are filled with atheists.
Speaker AAnd we usually in some of the groups, we just remove them.
Speaker AI have one group where we allow it because the whole purpose of it is practice your, your apologetics.
Speaker AYou know, I used to be a moderator for Ray Comfort.
Speaker AUsed to have these, these forums where they opened it up to the atheists and a bunch of us were, were moderators.
Speaker ASo we would, you know, deal with all, you know, answering the atheist arguments.
Speaker AAnd it's a great place to practice your apologetics.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo I'm not against it.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI mean, it, I'm not opposed to having dialogue with atheists online.
Speaker BIn fact, I think it can be really good if the particular atheists you're dealing with isn't going to, you know, how does it go if you're playing chess with a pigeon and the pigeon knocks all, all the pieces on the board and craps all over the board?
Speaker BWell, that's not really much of a chess game, is it?
Speaker BAnd, and sometimes when you run into these online atheists, they can be just like that pigeon.
Speaker BAnd I, I just, like I said, scrolling through this thread, I believe this person is a Christian.
Speaker BI could be wrong, but this person, his name is Nestor and he says, I think this has become a more recent phenomena due to the rise of Internet atheism.
Speaker BWrongfully convinced that erasing a real era, erasing religion, more specifically Christianity, would result in a utopia.
Speaker BBut I disagree with that.
Speaker BI disagree with that because this goes well before the Internet came around, doesn't it?
Speaker AWell, it does, but I think what you see is the Internet made some of the popular atheists popular.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AYou have the, what's referred to as the Four Horsemen that, you know, Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, Stephen Christopher Hitchens, and I forget who the, the fourth One was, but they, I mean, their rise was, was due to the Internet, Right.
Speaker AYou know, social media specifically.
Speaker BAnd YouTube used to be an atheist monopoly.
Speaker AOh, yeah.
Speaker BStarted making Christian channels.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AWell, even, even when you had a Christian channel, the atheists used to constantly, especially if you had a show like mine, like My Apologetics Live, they used to come in all the time.
Speaker AAnd, and I would, I would ask.
Speaker AI mean, I got to know some of them.
Speaker AWell, I, I even, I remember one atheist that lived in Jersey where I lived, and we, you know, we got together and did a recording at his house, and my wife was real nervous with that.
Speaker AYou're going to his house?
Speaker ABecause, I mean, and I said no.
Speaker AI mean, I've spoken to the guy for years.
Speaker AHe's come on the show and it was, it was something where they would come in all the time.
Speaker AAnd I go, I asked him, I'm like, why do you spend so much of your time, I mean, hours and hours and hours you're on Christian programs trying to make arguments against Christianity.
Speaker AWhy do that if you don't believe God exists?
Speaker AIt makes no sense.
Speaker AI mean, you got what, 70, 80 years of life and you're going to spend it arguing for something you don't believe in.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AYou know, like, especially when they get really emotional, I go, like, why are you so angry with the God you say doesn't exist?
Speaker AThat's not rational.
Speaker BRight, right.
Speaker BAnd in this, in this thread, I see one person saying, because they don't want you to believe in him either.
Speaker BAnd I think that answer kind of misses the mark because I think this goes back to what you're saying.
Speaker BDeep down they really do believe that God exists.
Speaker BAnd so this person, her name is Ayala, she says because deep down they really know he exists.
Speaker BThey're just upset at the religious hypocrites that they grew up around and let the stupidity of religious hypocrites spoil their relationship with God.
Speaker BNow, I have a number of issues with that answer, but I think they started out right, but then they got a little derailed.
Speaker BThere is this common conception that atheists view Christians as a social harm to them.
Speaker BYou want to speak to that?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AWell, okay, so a couple points of that.
Speaker AFirst, a good presuppositional argument, right?
Speaker APoint out what scripture says.
Speaker AThe reason they're spending the time and doing it is partially what the person said was true.
Speaker AIt's because they wanted dead in their own conscience.
Speaker AWhy does the alcoholic like to have others drink with him?
Speaker ABecause his conscience is screaming that he's doing something wrong.
Speaker AAnd what he thinks is if there's more people agreeing with me, I could feel better about myself.
Speaker AThis is no different than, you know, those.
Speaker AThat the whole woke agenda.
Speaker AWhy do they.
Speaker AThey want to force everyone to agree with them is because they know they're being racist and they want others to agree with them so they can feel better about their racism.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker ASo this is common behavior.
Speaker ASo the fact that they're trying to convince everyone is the proof that a.
Speaker AThey.
Speaker AThey know their conscience is screaming out that they're wrong.
Speaker AThe.
Speaker ANow.
Speaker ASo that.
Speaker ASo that was.
Speaker AWas a good argument.
Speaker ANow when it got into.
Speaker AI forget how her.
Speaker AHer neck.
Speaker AHow she.
Speaker AShe worded that there.
Speaker ARead that again.
Speaker BSo the way Ayala words that she says.
Speaker BBecause deep down they really know he exists because they're just upset with religious hypocrites.
Speaker AReligious hypocrites.
Speaker AThat was.
Speaker AYeah, that was the part.
Speaker ASo I want.
Speaker AI forgot how she worded it.
Speaker AAnd I knew some.
Speaker ASomething other than just hypocrites.
Speaker ASo the reality is, is.
Speaker AAnd a point you made is they're.
Speaker AThey're really upset with the.
Speaker AThe what they see as religious hypocrites of who they grew up with.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BWell, yeah, that was actually the second part of her.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AOf hers.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BThe.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd with that, I'll just say I used to thousands of people I.
Speaker AProfessing atheists that I talked to, and I would ask them.
Speaker AThem when they were like these hardcore atheists.
Speaker AI just would always go, tell me about the church you grew up with in.
Speaker AAnd do you know that there's probably only one or two in.
Speaker AIn like a thousand that didn't grow up in church?
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd they were very quick to have some issue.
Speaker AYou know, a deacon raped his sister.
Speaker AYou know, it was legalism.
Speaker AIt was.
Speaker AYou know, a lot of it comes down to I wasn't.
Speaker AI.
Speaker AI was told I couldn't do what I wanted to do.
Speaker AIn other words, I wanted to.
Speaker ATo sin.
Speaker AAnd, you know, the church wouldn't let me.
Speaker AYou know, yeah.
Speaker AGuys that wanted to look at porn, people who wanted to have, you know, men and women that wanted to have sex.
Speaker AAnd so it's.
Speaker AIt was.
Speaker AIt was really a rebellion against upbringing.
Speaker ANowadays, it's not the hardcore atheists.
Speaker AIt's the practicing homosexuals and transgenders.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd what you see there is that what they're doing is they're rebelling against as far as they can against what they hate.
Speaker AThey were told the truth.
Speaker AThey hate the truth.
Speaker AAnd they want to try to go as Far as they can.
Speaker AI know one person, his daughter actually went into.
Speaker AVery, very smart person, but she went into pornography.
Speaker AAnd, you know, she probably knows more theology than most Christians.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd my point to her is.
Speaker ASo let me get this straight.
Speaker AYou hate your father so much that you decided to define your life by him.
Speaker AYour whole life is trying to get him, to get back at him.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ADoes that real.
Speaker AIs that really rational that you were gonna.
Speaker AYou.
Speaker AYou say you don't like your dad so much that you're gonna redefine your entire life by him.
Speaker AAnd what you don't like is that he said you couldn't do things because God said so.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd so where are the hypocrites?
Speaker AI mean, that argument, when it says religious hypocrites.
Speaker AThe reality is, Christians, the entrance into Christianity is to recognize that you are a sinner.
Speaker AYou are saved by grace.
Speaker ATherefore, Christians don't claim to be perfect, they claim to be sinners.
Speaker AYou want the hypocrites?
Speaker AThe hypocrites are the professing atheists that say they're a good person.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AThe hypocrites are those that say that they don't need God, they're good without God.
Speaker AThey can think without God.
Speaker ABut no, you can't, because you can't explain that ability to reason.
Speaker AThat's an immaterial thing.
Speaker AIt needs an immaterial source.
Speaker AAnd so what you have is the case that they are not the hypocrites.
Speaker AWhat it is is that you have people that grew up in a church or in a religious family, and they were hypocrites pretending to be a Christian.
Speaker AThey stopped pretending, and they think, oh, well, the rest of them are the hypocrites because they want to blame them for why they leave.
Speaker ANo, you left because you loved your sin.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BIn fact, I think a man by the name of Aldous Huxley puts it very well, and I'm sure you've heard of Aldous Huxley.
Speaker BAnd he says, in Ends and Means, I believe that's a writing that he did.
Speaker BHe said, I had motives for not wanting the world to have a meaning and consequently assumed that it had none, and was able, without any difficulty, to find satisfying reasons for this assumption.
Speaker BThe philosopher who finds no meaning in the world is not concerned exclusively with a problem in pure metaphysics.
Speaker BHe is also concerned to prove that there is no valid reason for why he personally should not do as he wants to do.
Speaker BFor myself, as no doubt for most of my friends, the philosophy of meaninglessness was essentially an instrument of liberation.
Speaker BFrom a certain system of morality.
Speaker BAnd we know that that system in particular is Christianity.
Speaker BBut he says we object to the more we object to the morality because it interfered with our sexual freedom.
Speaker BThe supporters of this system claimed that it embodied the meaning, the Christian meaning, they insisted, of the world.
Speaker BThere was one admirably simple method of confuting these people and justifying ourselves in our erotic revolt.
Speaker BWe would deny that the world had any meaning whatever.
Speaker BThat just screams of everything you're talking about.
Speaker BYeah, and it's quite bold and honest, honestly, like quite shocked at his honesty in that quote there.
Speaker BBut that's what, what you're saying reminds me of all the Stuxley has to say.
Speaker AI did a debate many years ago and I was actually kind of surprised the guy wanted to debate the topic and he chose the topic.
Speaker ASecular humanism is superior to Christianity.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AAnd I, I, it was, it was really a bad debate debate because the guy, I mean the guy just did not.
Speaker AWell, it was a bad debate because the guy wasn't really there to debate.
Speaker AIt was, it became this thing where what he did was, you know, you, you know how debates work.
Speaker AThe most, the most important part of debates, the cross examination.
Speaker AWell, instead of cross examining me, he just did a monologue.
Speaker AHe just tried to do a rebuttal, a second rebuttal and then a third rebuttal.
Speaker AHe didn't, he didn't want questions.
Speaker AIt was like, that's what you're supposed to do in a debate.
Speaker ABut hey, okay.
Speaker AAnd so, you know, it was, it was really bad, weird.
Speaker ABut there was an article in the Atlantic and I'm trying to, to search for it now so I can give you the, the title.
Speaker AThe Atlantic is a very, very leftist newspaper or a magazine per se or, you know, group.
Speaker AAnd so they had an article that I used where they basically said in the, in the debate, I read from it and it basically laid out that the conclusion was though, though they know that, you know, God doesn't exist.
Speaker AThey said it's, it's important that we pretend that it does because basically what they, what they ended up realizing was that, you know, if we don't believe in God, people are, you know, just, they're, they, they mistreat one another.
Speaker AThey, you know, don't do well with one another.
Speaker ASo it was kind of interesting that they, they recognized that in, in all the, the studies that they did, they had realized that people with, with, if they don't feel that they're going to be accountable to God, they will mistreat one Another and, and do whatever is best in their own eyes.
Speaker AAKA judges.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd the, their studies showed that people were more likely to lie, to cheat, to kill, to steal if they didn't believe they were going to be held accountable in an afterlife.
Speaker AAnd so the conclusion of the article was that it's better to believe in God even though we know he doesn't exist, because that's better for the culture and for society.
Speaker BInteresting.
Speaker BThey come to that conclusion.
Speaker BAnd it's so true because if you remove the moral law giver, the moral law loses its potency because there's no one to keep you accountable to that moral law.
Speaker BAnd so, yeah, it just that it's interesting that the leftists and secular secularists are coming to that conclusion.
Speaker BThat's pretty fascinating, actually.
Speaker BAnd what an honest.
Speaker AAnd if I, if I could find the article.
Speaker BHonest finally.
Speaker BThat's.
Speaker BThat's crazy.
Speaker AIf I can find the article, I'll send it to you.
Speaker BYeah, send it to me.
Speaker BI'd love to read it.
Speaker BHere's something I want to ask your question on.
Speaker BBecause there are atheists, I guess, who through their life.
Speaker BAnd they don't.
Speaker AHold on, let me correct that.
Speaker AThere's those who profess to be atheists.
Speaker BThank you.
Speaker BYes, yes.
Speaker BSorry.
Speaker BSorry.
Speaker BYeah, don't want to, don't want to make that mistake in front of a presuppositionalist.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker AWell, no, it's an important thing because, you know, we don't want to give it, we don't want to give in on the language.
Speaker BTrue.
Speaker AWe.
Speaker AThis is the, this is a mistake often that people make is they, they give in and, and give up the, the discussion, the debate when they accept the atheists.
Speaker AThe professing atheist language.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BTheir terminology.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd, and even their thing like the, the term homosexual.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker ASee, I, you know, I will often.
Speaker AI don't use that term, though I did earlier in this episode.
Speaker AI'll usually say those who practice homosexuality.
Speaker AThat's why.
Speaker ABecause they say they're a homosexual.
Speaker ALike, I can't control this.
Speaker AI was born this way.
Speaker AYou can control it.
Speaker AAnd if you can't, you should be punished the same way.
Speaker AThe person who says, well, he's a serial murderer, he was born this way, he's what?
Speaker ASo should we just let him murder because, hey, it's the way he was born.
Speaker AOr should we curb that type of behavior and say that it's wrong?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd that's, that is actually such an effective way of addressing these issues because you need just on the practical front they need to know that they've run into a worldview that is very different from theirs.
Speaker BYou know, and what you often see with Christians is we try to adopt the world's terminology so that we can get a foot in the door or at least earn their respect or, you know, if you want to.
Speaker BIt's kind of the 11th Commandment, which is be nice.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd now, granted, I'm not saying that we should be free to be mean or cruel or unkind or anything like that, but it becomes this thing where you need to be politically correct, you need to use their language on their terms in order that they will like you.
Speaker BAnd God wants you to be that way.
Speaker BAnd so thank you for bringing that up.
Speaker AAnd, and that article I found, that article I was mentioning before, it's.
Speaker AIt's at the Atlantic, and it's called there's no Such Thing as Free Will, But We're Better Off Believing It Anyway by Stephen Cave.
Speaker BOkay, interesting.
Speaker ASo even their subtitle is telling you.
Speaker BI'm kidding, I'm kidding.
Speaker BI know.
Speaker BCalvinists believe in free will.
Speaker BNo, no, just a different kind of free will.
Speaker ABelieve in will.
Speaker AIn a will.
Speaker BIn a will.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ANo one like.
Speaker AAnd that's the thing, it's the term free that I have the issue with.
Speaker AI think we're enslaved to will.
Speaker ACorrect.
Speaker AWell, I think that.
Speaker AThat we.
Speaker AWe're enslaved to sin, as Romans says.
Speaker ARomans 5, 6, 7.
Speaker AWe're enslaved to sin.
Speaker ASo it's not free until we're saved.
Speaker AAdam and Eve had a free will.
Speaker AWe don't.
Speaker AWe will have.
Speaker AWe do have a free will once we're in Christ, because the Holy Spirit indwells us.
Speaker BYeah, it's hard to disagree with that.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BBecause it's the Bible, so.
Speaker AI bet you are.
Speaker AWe could talk.
Speaker AWe should do a show on that.
Speaker AWe could.
Speaker AI bet you are.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BSo Corinna Fultz, she says this.
Speaker BNot exactly sure how true this is based on personal experience alone.
Speaker BI was an atheist of over 12 years, and I rarely ever contemplated religion until right before my conversion.
Speaker BDuring those 12 years, I simply couldn't care less.
Speaker BThere are a lot of loud atheists on the Internet, but they are only a small percentage of all atheists in the world.
Speaker BSo it seems a bit unfair to compare the vast majority to the loud ones we see online, in my opinion.
Speaker BJust quickly, my takeaway, and if Corinne is listening, I just want you to know I don't know if you actually have hard data to support your claim that the vast majority of Atheists aren't like this.
Speaker BThat's really hard to judge.
Speaker BThat said, most atheists that I run into do have this sort of attitude, but that doesn't negate the idea that an atheist may go so long without even thinking about God.
Speaker BAnd so I want to turn that over to you, Andrew.
Speaker BThere are atheists supposedly who don't think about God and that doesn't come across their mind whatsoever.
Speaker BAnd but do you want to speak to the idea that it's only the loud atheists that we're running into?
Speaker AI think she has a valid point because that's the ones we run into are those that are commenting.
Speaker AAnd you know, there's plenty of people who I have worked with over the years that would claim to be an atheist, but they would never say it unless you start the discussion.
Speaker ALike I would talk to them, I would at some point share the gospel.
Speaker AThey would claim that they're an atheist, we'd talk about it and then they would continue working.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AIt wasn't something that we didn't have to bring up the topic.
Speaker AThey wouldn't bring it up over and over again.
Speaker ASo you have a lot of people like that.
Speaker ABut the ones we often come in contact with or think about are those like you're saying that are in all of our Christian groups and they go in the groups because they want to respond and why do they want to do it?
Speaker AYeah, and the reason is, I think, look, you know who is the biggest, the biggest anti smoker like of cigarette smoking?
Speaker AThe person who comes quit cigarettes right when they quit and they want everyone else to do it also that, that is the professing atheist.
Speaker AThey grew up Christian and they quit it and they want everyone else to be also.
Speaker AAnd you know, let me give for, for you in the audience listening, maybe you've come across these people, I used to be a Christian, they'll make that claim.
Speaker AAnd it's actually what the way they usually do it is.
Speaker AThey say, well, I used to be a Christian.
Speaker AAs if, well, since I used to be a Christian, I'm now speaking as an authority because you know me growing up as a child, I know everything there is to know.
Speaker ANo, no, like that's a bad argument.
Speaker AYou know, I grew up Jewish, but I don't, I didn't really understand Judaism until I started studying the Talmud as an adult.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd so just because you grew up that way doesn't mean you have a mastery on it.
Speaker ABut I will often bring up first John 2:19 and the way I will do it As I did on the show that I was on two days ago.
Speaker AI asked the guys because both these people, both these guys claim I used to be a Christian.
Speaker AThey were Calvinist Christians even.
Speaker AAnd I ended up finding out part of their issue is the one guy said, well, he was a determinist.
Speaker AI'm like, well, that's not Calvinist.
Speaker AThat's like what we call hyper Calvinist.
Speaker AAnd, and so it explained a lot.
Speaker AHe, he grew up in a church where they're, they're.
Speaker AIf he, if that's what they actually believed.
Speaker AI often hear people say that, you know, well, this is what I was taught.
Speaker AAnd it's really.
Speaker ANo, that's what you heard because you didn't want to hear what was actually taught.
Speaker ABut, but I don't know the church he grew up in.
Speaker ABut I said, okay, you guys both claim to be a Christian.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo you believe, you believe your ultimate authority was God and his Word.
Speaker AAnd they're like, yeah.
Speaker ASo you believe what God said in First John 2:19 when it says they went out from us but were not really of us, for if they had been of us, they would have remained with us, but they went out so that it would be shown that they were not of us.
Speaker ASo you guys were not Christians according to the Bible, were you?
Speaker AAnd these two actually said, you're right.
Speaker AMost will say, no.
Speaker AThey get into this thing, well, I believed.
Speaker AI believe.
Speaker ABut this verse, if you believed the Bible, then you believe this verse.
Speaker AAnd if you believe this verse, then this verse says the reason you left is because you were never a Christian, so you were a hypocrite.
Speaker AThat's.
Speaker AStop pretending.
Speaker AAnd now you want to try to claim some, you know, authority of knowledge because you used to be something that you are pretending to be.
Speaker AI don't take my, I'm not going to take my position on what Islam believes from a bunch of Christians.
Speaker AI'm going to take it from what the Quran teaches.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd so, and I'm not going to take it from a bunch of people that used to be Muslim because they were hypocrites, they didn't believe it.
Speaker AI want people that actually believe it if I'm going to study something.
Speaker ASo why should I believe you?
Speaker AA guy who claims to be an atheist who says, well, I grew up Christian, I used to be a Christian.
Speaker AWhen the Bible is very clear.
Speaker AYou never were.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd so I think this is a verse.
Speaker AAnytime you're going to deal with these type of people professing atheists who claim they used to be Christians, you.
Speaker AYou need to either know where to find it or memorize First John 2:19.
Speaker AIt's an important one to have in your back pocket.
Speaker BYeah, And I know that the general thing with this overall topic is, is it seems like we're painting with a broad brush over all atheists.
Speaker BAnd I can appreciate Corinna's comment in that way, but I don't think it is unfair to, to say that especially, you know, when we run into the amount of traffic that we get and we get these atheists like what you're talking about here, who, oh, I used to be a Christian and now I'm not, and I'm trying to save you from wasting your life on Christianity, you know, that kind of stuff.
Speaker BAnd, and so in that sense, it's not our job to be a, to be politically correct in the sense that we acknowledge that there are some atheists who aren't out there trying to do this.
Speaker BBut the fact of the matter is, is that there are atheists that do this, and they do it a lot, and they spend a lot of time online.
Speaker BI had a student just the other day who was going back and forth with some guy who claimed.
Speaker BAnd when I say I had a student, I am a youth pastor, so I had a student just the other day who was going back and forth with someone.
Speaker BHe's like, oh, I used to believe all this stuff like you did.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd then I left it because I realized it was wrong.
Speaker BAnd again, another example of someone, if this guy's even telling the truth, mind you, because he claims some pretty interesting stuff, that he read the whole Bible, you know, front to back, several times, and he's looked at all the arguments for everything, and he just couldn't believe in Christianity.
Speaker BSo for me, right off the bat, when someone who says they're an atheist says they've read the Bible front to back, that immediately strikes me as this guy's probably lying because most Christians haven't read the Bible front to back, which is not a good thing either, but correct.
Speaker BBut anyway, just, just to throw that out there.
Speaker BSo that immediately strikes me as, okay, this guy's probably lying.
Speaker BAll that to say it still happens.
Speaker BIt still happens.
Speaker BYou've got the, you know, atheist missionaries on the Internet doing their thing.
Speaker BYou know, you've got these YouTube channels like cosmic Skeptic, and you've got all these debates that Richard Dawkins does and Sam Harris has his YouTube channel, and they spend all this time and they specifically go after Christianity.
Speaker BNow, I do have some Props for Rick.
Speaker BRichard Dawkins in the sense that he does go after Islam and he seems to have changed his tune about Christianity recently.
Speaker BNot saying that he's converted or anything.
Speaker ANo, no, he's changed, but he's.
Speaker AWhy has he changed it?
Speaker AHe changed it because after all these years of attacking Christianity, he has seen in his own country the rise of.
Speaker AOf Islam, and he suddenly realized Christianity versus Islam, Islam's a greater problem.
Speaker AHe's seeing that he is starting to recognize.
Speaker ASame as Bill Maher, who did a whole documentary against Christianity.
Speaker AAnd he, you know, if you ever watched his documentary, religiosity, I think is what it's called.
Speaker AAnd it was, you know, he just.
Speaker AHe found the worst example he could to make his point.
Speaker AAnd so in doing that, what you end up seeing is these guys are recognizing that, you know, Christianity is actually the things, you know, keeping back the Christian values keeps back the ideas that of that Islam is promoting.
Speaker AAnd they're bemoaning the culture that they have created.
Speaker AThey've argued for a culture where there is no God.
Speaker AAnd in that vacuum, Islam has filled it.
Speaker AAnd as that is starting to take hold, they're going, wait a minute.
Speaker AThis is.
Speaker AThis is even worse than what we had before.
Speaker ABecause where they're sitting there saying, well, Christians are trying to force their beliefs on people.
Speaker AIslam actually does do that.
Speaker AIslam actually is to.
Speaker ATo.
Speaker ASo the idea of Islam.
Speaker AAnd for folks that don't know, if you get my book, what do they believe?
Speaker AI talk about this in the chapter on Islam.
Speaker AIt's to be a Muslim.
Speaker ASo Islam means to submit.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker ASo a Muslim is one who submits.
Speaker ASo everything in Islam is about submitting to Allah.
Speaker ANot having your own will, it is the suppression of your will to.
Speaker ATo follow the will of Allah.
Speaker AAnd that requires them to try to bring about Islam across the world by force, if need be.
Speaker BJihad?
Speaker AWell, if it needs to come to that, yes.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd so you got guys like this.
Speaker AThey're starting to wake up and go, wait a minute.
Speaker ALike we said, Christians were forcing their beliefs on us, but the Muslims actually are.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd we don't like those.
Speaker AWe want Christianity back.
Speaker AAnd, you know, and it was like Richard Dawkins, like, he wants it back, but not in a religious way, just in a societal way.
Speaker AHe wants the benefits of what Christianity brings, but he doesn't want the restrictions he sees of them.
Speaker AAnd you can't separate those.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BIt just makes me think even more of what Aldous Huxley.
Speaker BHuxley said in that quote I shared with you just that in order to break free and to be able to do what he wanted, he took on this philosophy of meaninglessness, which is what atheism is.
Speaker BAnd, you know, I think with Richard Dawkins, we're seeing the flip side of all of that hard work of liberating the themselves from the sexual ethic of Christianity.
Speaker BAnd not just the sexual ethic, the general ethics that comes with Christianity.
Speaker BThey're realizing that they actually like some of those ethics.
Speaker BThey just want to do what they want to do.
Speaker BAnd here Richard Dawkins is, he's in this society now that has given Christianity, largely given Christianity the boot.
Speaker BAnd now Islam, as you said, is filling that vacuum.
Speaker BAnd he's like, oh man, did we make a mistake.
Speaker BAnd boy, have they.
Speaker AYep.
Speaker BAnd they will face that for generations to come.
Speaker BAnd it's like it basically, they, hey.
Speaker AYou wanted Christianity as society.
Speaker AWell, okay, you got it.
Speaker AHow does it look?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd I find myself wondering, will we get a new wave of atheists who are trying to bring it back?
Speaker BYou know, we have all these atheists trying to refute this God that they don't believe in specifically seems to almost always be Christianity.
Speaker BExcept now we're seeing this rise of the Richard Dawkins, I don't know view.
Speaker BOkay, maybe Christianity wasn't so bad.
Speaker BI kind of miss it.
Speaker BIslam is pretty scary.
Speaker BAnd so I'm wondering, will we see a flip from our atheist friends on the other side of the aisle of this debate?
Speaker AWell, kind of curious.
Speaker ASo the answer to that specifically with who we're talking about?
Speaker AThe answer is yes.
Speaker ASo let me let you in on a little secret, a little behind the scenes.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker ARichard Dawkins had a guy who worked for him.
Speaker AHe was young when he started, like in his early 20s, but he was Richard Dawkins right hand man.
Speaker AHe did everything.
Speaker AAnd so turns out that for all the years that he was working with Richard Dawkins and you know, dressing Christianity well, he converted to Christianity.
Speaker AHe actually reached out to Ray Comfort.
Speaker AAnd so, you know, this is how I know the story is from Ray.
Speaker AAnd Ray told me that this guy not only.
Speaker AAnd I think Ray's done some videos either with the guy or about the guy, but basically this, this guy actually said that one of the things like Ray, and this is a good thing for all of us who are listening who, you know, you want do bold apologia.
Speaker AYou want to do bold apologics.
Speaker AWell, you look at a guy like Ray Comfort.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BInspiration.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AI mean, so Richard Dawkins was merciless to Ray.
Speaker AMerciless.
Speaker AAnd I mean, Ray's come out now publicly, but many, many people privately who know Ray knew, you know, it bothered him.
Speaker AI mean, this guy would really make fun of Ray, and Ray is just a super sweet guy.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd so it turns out that this guy that got saved, Ray, you know, Richard Dawkins, secondhand guy, said that he.
Speaker AOne of the things he had told Ray was that because, you know, Dawkins makes fun of Ray.
Speaker ASo you know what Ray's reaction is?
Speaker ARay, you know, he'd make fun of Ray by calling him banana man.
Speaker AInsulting about a banana thing.
Speaker AAnd so basically what happened was Ray would find out where Richard Dawkins was speaking next and send a fruit basket to every hotel for every event.
Speaker AAnd he would make sure to include a banana.
Speaker AAnd he would just, he would just sign it like, you know, your loving friend Ray Comfort, the banana man.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd Richard Dawkins had said to his assistant, ray Comfort is a very difficult man to hate because the more Richard Dawkins would do against Ray, the more Ray would try to show love to him.
Speaker BThat is awesome.
Speaker AAnd that had an impact, maybe not on Dawkins, but on his assistant for sure.
Speaker BThat is awesome.
Speaker BYou know, actually a little bit of history on why this is called the Bold Apology, a podcast.
Speaker BSo that blog I shared with you, Andrew, that came before the podcast, and I started this blog a long time ago.
Speaker BI was think just graduated high school or something.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker ATwo years ago.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYes, something like that.
Speaker BAnd at the time, I was inspired by Ray Comfort and the way he did evangelism from that kind of apologetic perspective.
Speaker BAnd so that's kind of where that came from.
Speaker BAnd he is bold.
Speaker BI've got his school of evangelism that he does with.
Speaker BWhat's the guy's name?
Speaker BKirk Cameron.
Speaker AOkay, so I'll give you a little secret there.
Speaker AYou know who actually wrote that?
Speaker AHis name is Mark Spence.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AYeah, Mark wrote it.
Speaker AAnd they put, and they, they put Ray and Kurt's name on it because they're the more well known guys.
Speaker AWhich tells you a little bit about Mark, you know, in his humility that he, he, he'd rather they get credit for his work.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ABut yeah.
Speaker BWow, that's pretty awesome of him.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BThat he's a pretty awesome guy.
Speaker BPretty godly man in that sense.
Speaker BJust.
Speaker BHuh.
Speaker BWell, I'm gonna look, look him up and see if he's got any other material then too.
Speaker AOh, he's got a.
Speaker AHe's got a bunch.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BYeah, that is awesome.
Speaker BThat is really cool.
Speaker BAnyway.
Speaker BBut yeah, that is pretty incredible what you, what you shared there.
Speaker BYeah, I don't know if I would have the guts to spend that much money on fruit baskets for Richard Dawkins.
Speaker AYou know, people.
Speaker APeople are in.
Speaker AIn the past, the atheists used to be critical about how much, you know, the ministry would pay Ray.
Speaker AAnd it wasn't a huge amount, but they, they were like, trying to say, oh, look, he's, he's, you know, you know, they want to make it look like he was, you know, like, doing it for the money.
Speaker AAnd what they don't know is Ray gives away most of his money.
Speaker AHe does not live.
Speaker AI mean, I've been to his house.
Speaker AHe doesn't have some luxury house.
Speaker AIt's very low income, you know, but, you know, he gives away his money.
Speaker ASo, yeah, they.
Speaker AThey may pay him pretty good, but he would give it all away.
Speaker AAnd, and so he uses money as a way of showing love and kindness to others.
Speaker AJust a little bit of conviction.
Speaker AFor many of us, would we be willing to part with our money to share the gospel?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AThink about that, folks.
Speaker AI mean, yeah, I do mean to cause conviction, maybe, but I mean, as Adam would say, let's stir that pot, right?
Speaker BI mean, yes, stir the pot.
Speaker AWhat's more important to you?
Speaker ASharing the gospel with someone or buying a meal?
Speaker AI mean, I had to have a habit.
Speaker AWhen I used to.
Speaker AWhen I used to work at a secular job and I'd have to drive in the office every day.
Speaker AI used to stop at a Wawa, that's like a, you know, convenience store out here, and I would go get my coffee and I'd go every day.
Speaker ASo they knew who I was, and they all knew what I was going to do.
Speaker AI would go in and I would let the cashier know, hey, I.
Speaker AI'm gonna pay for the person behind me.
Speaker AAnd, like, it boggles my mind that no one ever figured out.
Speaker AThey ring me up, they.
Speaker AI never paid yet.
Speaker AAnd they grab who's ever behind me and start ringing them up.
Speaker AAnd they would ring them up and put it.
Speaker AAnd then charge me.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd people never noticed.
Speaker AIt's amazing because the first thing in, pouring in the morning, people are just completely, you know, asleep, I guess.
Speaker ABut they would see them, ringing them up, and then I would pay, and I would just leave a gospel tract there.
Speaker AAnd I would walk out and the cashier would tell the person behind me, the man in front of you is a Christian.
Speaker AHe just bought your breakfast.
Speaker AHe just Would like you to read this.
Speaker AAnd they would give them the gospel tract.
Speaker AAnd because I would go every day, I ended up meeting some people who were like, you know, I had one person come up and she was like, sir, you know, you were informed of me in line a couple of months ago, and you gave me that little paper to read, and I just want to thank you for that.
Speaker ANow it's interesting.
Speaker AShe didn't thank me for breakfast.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd that's what, that's, that's what struck me.
Speaker AShe thanked me for the gospel tract.
Speaker AShe didn't know what to call it.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo, like, are you willing to do that?
Speaker AYeah, is, you know, my wife was like, can you write that off on taxes?
Speaker ALike it's kind of ministry.
Speaker AI'm like, yeah, no, I doubt it.
Speaker BWell, in, in a really good way to tie what you're saying into what's to this broader topic is just the simple fact that why do atheists spend so much time doing this?
Speaker BWell, probably because deep down they need what we have to offer.
Speaker BThey think that they're refuting God, but perhaps they're being tugged on and they're being pulled in so that someone like us can share the gospel of Jesus Christ with them and that hopefully they'll be saved.
Speaker BThat's kind of a different way of looking at it, but I think it's, it's an important way of looking at it.
Speaker BOften we view these people as agitators and they're just out to start trouble and all of this stuff.
Speaker BAnd you know what?
Speaker BIt's true.
Speaker BYou know, a lot of these people online, they're.
Speaker BThey're looking for a fight.
Speaker BThey want to fight, you know, they want to treat you like Ray, you know, like Richard Dawkins treated Ray Comfort and calling him Banana Man.
Speaker BI've been called way worse than Banana man, so.
Speaker BBy some of these atheists.
Speaker BBut.
Speaker BBut then again, at the same time, I don't have the high profile that Ray Comfor had in, in Richard Dawkins, so.
Speaker BSo, whereas maybe, you know, a few people are going to see that an atheist called me some vulgar thing.
Speaker BWe don't have thousands of people seeing them say that.
Speaker BWhereas with Ray Comfort, gosh, a lot of people probably know him as Banana man now.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, you know, it is.
Speaker AIt can bother you.
Speaker ALook, I have, I have.
Speaker AThere's been YouTube channels that were created dedicated to mocking me even when I'm doing something that, like doing the Christian apologetics.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AI could see the atheists come in, but we have a striving fraternity academy, where I teach how to interpret the Bible, systematic theology, introduction, world religions instruction, discipleship.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AThings like this.
Speaker AIt's not about atheism, but every Monday we would.
Speaker AWe would do a show.
Speaker AThere was a guy.
Speaker AEvery Tuesday morning, he had a video out mocking whatever the course, whatever the class was I taught the night before.
Speaker AAnd it's just.
Speaker AIt's amazing.
Speaker ALike, okay.
Speaker AHuh.
Speaker BDid he get a lot of views?
Speaker BNo, but I'm sorry.
Speaker ABut yeah, I mean, it's like.
Speaker AAnd he would send it to me, like, to see.
Speaker ABecause what I'm sure what he wanted was he wanted to build a platform off of.
Speaker AOf me.
Speaker ASo his mockery, me, if I would respond, he could get people, you know, checking it out.
Speaker AAnd I just laughed at.
Speaker AI said, you know, he'd make comments and I'd go, oh, that's kind of funny, you know, Or I would.
Speaker AI literally would respond and go, oh, you missed.
Speaker AYou could have given this joke, you know, and so he actually ended up stopping because it didn't bother me.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AYou know, and.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd I use wasting his time, too.
Speaker AWell, it's not just wasting his time.
Speaker AI.
Speaker AI said something sort of what you said earlier.
Speaker AI said, you know, I really appreciate you spending so much time reviewing our classes, and your mockery shows that, you know, the God that exists is.
Speaker AIs convicting you of your sin.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd he really hated.
Speaker ABecause that was usually my response to him, and he hated it because God doesn't exist.
Speaker AI don't believe God exists.
Speaker AIn fact, I had.
Speaker ASo I went to New York City at Union Square for, you know, a decade or two, like about 15 to 20 years.
Speaker AFifteen, 18 years.
Speaker AI would go every.
Speaker AEvery summer up until Covid.
Speaker AThat's when we stopped.
Speaker AAnd so I'd have some of the same hecklers for years.
Speaker AI had one heckler.
Speaker AHis name is Jason Cross.
Speaker AJason, I believe, was homeless.
Speaker AHe wouldn't admit to it, but he had such a pride issue.
Speaker AEvery.
Speaker AWhat I had a habit of doing is every time I got to Union Square, I went to the regulars, Jason and Solomon, and there's a bunch of other guys, and I would make sure to walk up to them, and just for the example of Jason, I would say, jason, man, you know, I was praying for you this week.
Speaker AYou'd be like, man, don't be wasting your time that God doesn't exist.
Speaker AI said, you may believe.
Speaker AWant to say you believe that, but I.
Speaker AI know he exists, and I was lifting you up before the throne of glory.
Speaker AAnd when I would Leave.
Speaker AI would go to each one of the regulars and say, hey, Jason, just want you to know I'm going to be praying for you this week.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ASo I did that for six years.
Speaker ANow, I want you to understand, son, in six years.
Speaker AAnd he heckled me longer.
Speaker ABut in six years, Jason would never shake my hand.
Speaker AEvery time I went to to leave, I'd offer to shake his hand.
Speaker AWouldn't do it.
Speaker AWhen I got to park, I'd try to shake his hand.
Speaker AHe wouldn't do it.
Speaker ASo after six years of this, of me having the same thing, saying I'm praying for him when I get there, saying I'm praying one day, he turns when I got there and he goes, man, you ain't really praying for me.
Speaker AAnd I said, really?
Speaker AI opened my phone, I opened my prayer app, and I showed him.
Speaker AAnd what he didn't realize is not the.
Speaker ANot only was I praying for him, but I knew a family member of his who was imprisoned, and he didn't know I knew about that.
Speaker AI had his cousins, that I had been praying just because he would talk to his friends and I would hear it.
Speaker AAnd I put that in my prayer list.
Speaker AWhen I left that Saturday, it was the first time when I offered a handshake to him.
Speaker AJason shook my hand.
Speaker AAnd I knew it's because he realized I really was praying for him.
Speaker AI wasn't just saying it.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BThe real deal.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd that's the thing.
Speaker ASometimes they, they.
Speaker AThey want to believe you're just being a hypocrite.
Speaker AYou're just saying it.
Speaker AAnd when they realize you actually mean it, you're actually doing it, you're actually living out what you say.
Speaker AThey will.
Speaker AThey respect that and recognize it.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AYou know, and that's the kind of the advantage of doing the open air that I do and having regular hecklers.
Speaker AI mean, Solomon is a guy, he's an Israeli, probably one of the most vile hecklers I've ever had.
Speaker AJust really mockery.
Speaker AJust complete, utter mockery.
Speaker ABut because of the respectful way that I treated him for years, he had a respect for me.
Speaker AIt.
Speaker AIt also had to do with one time where he got sucker punched.
Speaker AAnd I literally jumped off my box and jumped in between him and his attacker, and his attacker actually fell backwards because he was trying to get out of my way so fast.
Speaker AAnd Solomon told one of his friends that he never saw anyone move that quickly.
Speaker AAnd I think it shocked him that with all the times he's mocked me, I went and defended him when he got suckers Punched.
Speaker AAnd so because it happened like, right, right to my left side and that I would defend him and the police had seen it and I, you know, and there was an ambulance just happened to be there.
Speaker AAnd so, you know, I took him and got care for him.
Speaker AAnd it was really kind of funny because they asked for his name and he had to give his full name.
Speaker AHe was really worried about.
Speaker AThey wanted to see his id.
Speaker AHe was worried showing that with me.
Speaker AAnd I said to him, I said, solomon, you do what you need to do.
Speaker AI don't care what your real name is.
Speaker ALike, it's fine.
Speaker AYou know, this, it's.
Speaker AWhat's more important right now is you getting the medical care.
Speaker AI said, if you want, I'll walk away.
Speaker AYou give all the information.
Speaker AAnd he just looked at me and says, no, it's okay.
Speaker ANow, to be honest, I forgot his real name.
Speaker AOkay?
Speaker ABut I say this to say that.
Speaker AAll that to say this.
Speaker AYou know when Harold Camping predicted the end of the world, right.
Speaker AIf you remember that for his third time or fourth time, whatever, you know, whatever it was, Solomon went to Union Square.
Speaker AI wasn't there that weekend.
Speaker AHe got a big cross and he hung himself on the cross, mocking Christ.
Speaker AAnd the next time I went to the park, I.
Speaker AI went to him.
Speaker AI said, solomon, I don't ever want to hear that you did anything like that ever again.
Speaker AHe's like, why?
Speaker AYour God doesn't exist.
Speaker AIt doesn't matter.
Speaker AYou know?
Speaker AAnd he was big on the free hugs movement.
Speaker AAnd there was a.
Speaker AAnother atheist that mocked the free hugs guys.
Speaker AAnd I said, look, did you get upset when, you know, so and so mocked the free hug guys?
Speaker AIt's like, yeah.
Speaker AI said, okay, you're upset because these are people you love, right?
Speaker AHe goes, yeah.
Speaker AI said, when you mock Christ, you're mocking someone that I love dearly.
Speaker AI said, I don't take that lightly.
Speaker ASo I am, I am grievously offended by your behavior.
Speaker AI don't care if you thought it was funny.
Speaker AAnd he looked at me and said, you know, Andrew, I will never do that again, please.
Speaker AYou know, I'm sorry that that bothered you.
Speaker ANow, that doesn't come about without years and years and years of being mocked, being ridiculed, having him literally stripped down to his underwear and parade in front of me.
Speaker AHe did that.
Speaker AAnd he would try to get a rise out of people.
Speaker AIt didn't work with me.
Speaker AAll I did when he did that, this is just my behavior.
Speaker AHe did that.
Speaker AYou know what I did, Adam?
Speaker AI Just quit, folks.
Speaker AQuick, get some money.
Speaker AThis guy can't even afford clothes and he got so embarrassed by that, he ran off, put his clothes back on and came back.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AIt's like, I'll just, I'll just go with it.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker AIt's, but, you know, how do we do that?
Speaker AHow do we get that respect with those who profess to be atheists?
Speaker AWell, it's not just by sharing the gospel, but it is also by how we conduct ourselves.
Speaker AThat's why at Striving Fraternity we teach, we call ambassador evangelism.
Speaker ABecause it's not just about what you say, but it's about how you conduct yourself.
Speaker ABecause the reality is, as we've been talking, these professing atheists are not reacting to what they were taught.
Speaker AThey were reacting to what they saw.
Speaker AThey saw people that in their minds were not living up to what they expected them to do.
Speaker AAnd so when I'm out on the streets of sharing the gospel, I am never pretending to be perfect.
Speaker AIn fact, when I talk about someone and I go through the law with them, I will say, you are probably or you could be.
Speaker AI say it different ways, but you could be or probably are far more moral person than me.
Speaker ASo I'm giving the credit, I'm saying, hey, we're both sinners here, but you could be more moral than me.
Speaker ABut your morality is not going to lead you to heaven.
Speaker AIt's not going to get you right with God.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo I will always give them the benefit of the doubt when it comes to the moral issue because I know me, I don't know them.
Speaker ABut you see, that ends up being something where it's our character that people are watching.
Speaker AThey're watching that more than what we say.
Speaker ASo if you're, you're, you, you have these professing atheists that they're, you know, they spend so much time reading about God, you know what they're really looking for?
Speaker AThey're looking, looking for someone who's sincere.
Speaker AThey're not going to listen to the person who's looking to debate with them and prove, you know, let's fight it out.
Speaker AAnd you're, I'll argue my view.
Speaker AYour argue your view.
Speaker AAnd you know, I'm going to feel better about my delusion in the end because I think that I, I, I explained away all your arguments.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd yet the real thing that they can't deal with and they, they have a trouble with is sincerity.
Speaker AYou know, the show I was on two days ago, we get, we go off the Air.
Speaker AAnd the first thing that the co host or the host says to me with his co host is he goes, man, you, you are the best guest I think we've ever had on.
Speaker AThey've been doing it for four years and they're both like, yeah, we want to have you back.
Speaker AYou're just.
Speaker AIt was such a good discussion because they wanted this fight.
Speaker AI mean, there's a debate show.
Speaker AIt's, it's called now that's Debatable is the name of the show.
Speaker AAnd they wanted a big debate where you're, you know, and they didn't get that other's throat.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd, and I mean, I, I test.
Speaker AOkay, granted, Adam, you, you like to stir the, the pot.
Speaker AOkay, I stirred the pot a little.
Speaker AI start, I started the show.
Speaker AIt was April 1 that they had me on, okay, Atheist Day.
Speaker AAnd I said, I said, I want, I just want to thank you guys for having me on your show on National Atheist Day.
Speaker AAnd they both looked at me kind of puzzled and I went, well, the Bible says the, that the fool says in his heart there is no God.
Speaker AAnd they, they laughed.
Speaker AWell, the one guy laughed, the other guy chuckled that.
Speaker AI went, okay, I just wanted to see if you guys, whether we're gonna get along or not.
Speaker AWe're gonna get along fine.
Speaker AYou guys can take a joke, you know, and that kind of set the, the tone because they really were trying, they were trying to egg me on, egg me on.
Speaker AAnd I mean to the point where they over talk each other.
Speaker AAnd like a couple times I said, hey, listen, hey guys, for the audience sake, like, let's not talk over each other because like, I can't even hear you guys to know what you're saying, so the audience can't.
Speaker AI said, we're talking over each other, you know, and so I kept like, where they kept trying to get themselves riled up.
Speaker AI, I kept just going like, let's have a good conversation here, you know, and.
Speaker ABecause the sincerity is, I think, harder for, for them to deal with.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd I think perhaps some of that ties into what you were saying earlier in the podcast.
Speaker BJust that a lot of the atheists you have run into were previously involved in church in some way and they had walked away from that.
Speaker BIn, in your own words, they had stopped being a hypocrite.
Speaker BThey didn't actually believe, and so they walked away.
Speaker BAnd so when they see Christians, they're looking at the behavior of Christians to see is this person the real deal, Assuming already that they probably aren't.
Speaker BAnd there's contempt for that because it seems like it could be maybe they had a little bit of contempt for who they were when they were being a hypocrite in that way, and now they've just moved on to a different kind of hypocrisy.
Speaker BAnd, and I think a lot of what they're dealing with is, is an inner pride.
Speaker BWell, now I'm more superior because I'm true to myself.
Speaker BBut again, atheists often have that sort of good works mentality that I'm a good person, and as long as I'm a good person, I'm okay completely ignoring what scripture would say, and for good reason.
Speaker BThey're atheists, but still suppressing the truth and unrighteousness.
Speaker AYeah, and you make a really good point that I hadn't thought of before, and that is that they knew they were pretending when they were claiming to be a Christian.
Speaker AThey knew their own hypocrisy.
Speaker ASo I wonder how much of it is when they say, oh, I saw the hypocrisy in the church, this person, that person.
Speaker AI wonder how much of it is really their own hypocrisy that they were struggling with, that they didn't like that guilty conscience.
Speaker AAnd so their way of dealing with it was just to give themselves over to the hypocrisy and claim its reality so that they could feel better about their sin.
Speaker AIt's an interesting thought.
Speaker AWe won't know, but that very well could be.
Speaker BThe human heart is difficult for us to understand, and I think there's peace in knowing that it's God who is the one who truly tries the reins of the human heart.
Speaker BAnd, and so we can only have theories about that, but it seems like one that would make sense.
Speaker AYeah, it does.
Speaker AI think that's a very, very logical, easy to.
Speaker ATo understand position that I'd expect them to have.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BWell, we're getting pretty close to the end of the program.
Speaker BI know that you have Apologetics Live coming up.
Speaker BWould you just take a little bit here just to promote some of your shows, some of the things that you do.
Speaker BThat way I can then close it out after that and.
Speaker BSure.
Speaker BAnd again, thank you for being on the podcast.
Speaker BThis is a good topic to have.
Speaker BI know that this has been more of a conversational one.
Speaker BIt's not as structured as some of my other ones, but I, I kind of trusted that this would go well, and it really has.
Speaker BAnd so a lot of good insights in it, and I'm excited about future collaborations.
Speaker BBut go Ahead, Take.
Speaker BTake it away.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd I can't wait for you to come on to Apologex live so we could talk, you know, continuationism, cessationism.
Speaker AI've been.
Speaker AI got the Charismatic cheetah.
Speaker AI was on his program which I really appreciated and he.
Speaker AI asked him to come on as well.
Speaker AI like.
Speaker ALet's have the discussions.
Speaker AIt's healthy to folks.
Speaker AIt is healthy to talk with those who discover.
Speaker AMost of my friends I don't agree with theologically and we get.
Speaker AHave some of the best discussions because it helps iron sharpening iron.
Speaker ASo yeah, I'm with Striving Fraternity.
Speaker AYou can find everything@restrivingforenerity.org if you'd like to get my books.
Speaker AWhat do they Believe?
Speaker AThat's a book of the basically a systematic theology of the major Western religions.
Speaker AWhat do we Believe is a systematic theology of Christianity?
Speaker AIt's only about 200 pages.
Speaker AVery easy to read.
Speaker AGive you a good basis of understanding theology.
Speaker AThe I mentioned earlier our Striving Fraternity Academy.
Speaker AWe have courses you could take for free.
Speaker AIf you want to buy the syllabuses, those have a cost to them because they're printed.
Speaker AYou can order those.
Speaker ABut as I mentioned, we have ones on how to interpret the Bible.
Speaker ASystematic Theology, Introduction to World Religions, Introduction to Discipleship.
Speaker AWe also do seminars.
Speaker ASo we come to people's churches, do weekend seminars on.
Speaker AOn our ambassador Evangelism.
Speaker ABible Interpretation Made Easy Presuppositional apologetics.
Speaker ABecause it's the best.
Speaker ASorry, Adam, that was a little dig.
Speaker AThat was wrong.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BRemember for the accumulative approach.
Speaker BSo yeah, so I think they're all the best.
Speaker AYeah, that's like.
Speaker AThat's like pan millennialism.
Speaker AYou know, your theology will pan out in the end.
Speaker AOr your.
Speaker AYour apologetics.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BBut at the end of the day I'm using the best one available.
Speaker AYeah, we do.
Speaker AWe do ones on.
Speaker AWe do weekend seminars on social justice.
Speaker AThe one I'd love to come to Adams Church and do is on cessationism.
Speaker AI'd love to.
Speaker AHey, that would be gutsy if your church invited me to do the weekend seminar on cessationism.
Speaker AThat would be.
Speaker AI would give kudos to your church in doing that.
Speaker ABut it would definitely spark some great discussion.
Speaker BI.
Speaker BI don't know about that.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker ABut yeah, we do weekend seminars.
Speaker AWe also.
Speaker AAnd so we're discipling ministry.
Speaker ASo these are all ways we disciple.
Speaker AAnother way we disciple is through podcasting.
Speaker AWas already mentioned.
Speaker AChristian podcast community.
Speaker AYou can go to ChristianPodcastCommunity.org and see the over 50 podcasts that are out there.
Speaker AThere's going to be something, something you will like.
Speaker AAnd if you like this show, well, you already like one of them that's on there.
Speaker ASo you can not only check out Bold Apologia, my podcast, Andrew Rappaport's Rap Report, is a weekly podcast dealing with biblical interpretations and applications for the Christian life.
Speaker AMy Apologetics Live is one that is on Thursday nights, 8 to 10 o' clock Eastern Time.
Speaker AAnd that is one where you can join in.
Speaker AJust go to apologexlive.com you can join the discussion any week that we're not doing a formal debate.
Speaker AAnd you could jump in and ask me anything or challenge me.
Speaker AI have people that come in at an Orthodox rabbi, black, Hebrew, Israelites, all that come in prepared for a debate, and I didn't even know I was debating that night.
Speaker ASo that's kind of fun.
Speaker AI don't know the topic, but here we go.
Speaker AAnd so, yeah, so when Adam comes in and starts, you know, throwing some jabs at me with cessationism versus continuationism, we can, we, you know, I won't be prepared for the debate, but he will.
Speaker AAnd so it'll be good.
Speaker ABut I apologize, Live is a podcast.
Speaker ABut if you want to get like you just say, I really want a lot of great Christian content on my podcasts.
Speaker AYou can actually just go to on your podcast app, search for Christian podcast kids community, and you will get all of those podcasts that are hosted with us.
Speaker ANot all the podcasts that are part of us are hosted with us, but all those that are, you will get in one feed.
Speaker AAnd we produce about 30 to 40 hours of content every week.
Speaker ASo it's, you're gonna have plenty to listen to if you want.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BIt's been an honor being part of that community and again, an honor having you on the podcast.
Speaker BAndrew.
Speaker BThank you so much.
Speaker AWell, thanks for having me.
Speaker BYeah, especially just doubling up the way you are this, this week, just with having this podcast, but then Apologetics Live right after.
Speaker BSo I appreciate you doing that for me.
Speaker AThis is, this is, this is the third, third or fourth podcast I recorded this week, and none of them are for my own show.
Speaker BWell, you're, it's, it's easy to have you on as a guest, so thank you for that.
Speaker BAnd, and I'm sure that you'll be on many more, many more from here.
Speaker BSo, yeah, again, thank you so much.
Speaker BAnd just for those of you who listen to the podcast, I will be having Jay Segert on again.
Speaker BAgain, Jay Segert is a Christian apologist and he travels quite a bit.
Speaker BHe is a phenomenal guest.
Speaker BIf you listened to my podcast from a couple podcasts ago, he was a great guest.
Speaker BWe talked about the tension between faith and science and are they really at odds?
Speaker BAnd he had some so many great answers.
Speaker BAnd I'm going to be having him on at the end of May and he will be going through just the topic of the Genesis flood and a lot of people have different ideas and views on it and Jay Segert is one who is someone who can speak authoritatively on the topic.
Speaker BAnd so I really look forward to going through that particular talk topic with him.
Speaker BI think he's going to share just some pretty awesome information and it'll be a good time of just going through an apologetic argument in defense of that.
Speaker BAnd so anyway, hope you're looking forward to that.
Speaker BAgain, that'll be late May.
Speaker BThere may be a couple more podcasts popping on in between now and then just to keep some engagement going.
Speaker BBut again, thank you so much for listening to the podcast.
Speaker BAndrew, thank you again for being on the podcast.
Speaker AThanks for having me.
Speaker BAbsolutely, absolutely.
Speaker BAnd listeners will see you at the next one.
Speaker BAnd goodbye.
Speaker CThank you for listening to the Bold Apologia Podcast.
Speaker CTo find out more about Adam Parker's projects, writings or guest podcast episod episodes, visit his website at www.boldapologia.com.
Speaker Cthere you can get more information regarding Adam's works, contact him to be a guest on your show, or leave him a comment for Q A.
Speaker CUntil next time, thank you and God bless.
Speaker AIt.