Hello you savages. Get $350 off the Pod 4 Ultra at eightsleep.com/modernwisdom (use code MODERNWISDOM) Get up to 20% discount on the best supplements from Momentous at livemomentous.com/modernwisdom Get up to 40% off Mando’s Starter Pack at ShopMando.com (use code MODERNWISDOM) Get 50% off your first Factor Meals box at factormeals.com/MW50 Here's the timestamps: <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="0">0:00</a> Are We Seeing a Christian Revival? <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="473">07:53</a> What’s Causing the Rise of Cultural Christianity? <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="1126">18:46</a> Is it Possible to Choose to Believe in God? <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="1428">23:48</a> Has Christianity Gone Too Soft? <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="2329">38:49</a> Experience of Visiting the Vatican <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="2629">43:49</a> Is the Rise in Religion Just a Conservative Movement? <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="3479">57:59</a> Christianity as a Prophylactic Against Woke <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="65">1:05</a>:33 Why Isn’t There an Islamic Revival? <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="75">1:15</a>:31 The Gnostic Gospels <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="87">1:27</a>:28 The Gnostic Version of Genesis <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="95">1:35</a>:47 Why the Bible is Compiled As it is <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="102">1:42</a>:13 Christianity’s Antidote to the Meaning Crisis <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="112">1:52</a>:40 Ayaan Hirsi Ali’s Debate With Dawkins <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="119">1:59</a>:59 The Figureheads of the Christian Revival <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="126">2:06</a>:44 Important Things Ignored by the Media <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="131">2:11</a>:24 Where to Find Alex
@Raverraver99994 ай бұрын
God : "This last sin of despair is graver to me than all the other sins. Souls guilty of despair judge their misery greater than my mercy. (they are assuming Gods unforgiveness) The despair of Judas displeased me more and was more grave to my Son than was his betrayal of Him." Evil spirits of despair and infirmity want to inflict souls & trick them into believing in an unforgiving God. No repentant person will be turned away from God Dialogue of St. Catherine of Siena - catholic mystic. Last segment of clip - as per timestamp 16:34 from KZbin video “What the Exorcists shared: Demons Masking as gods." From the channel Armor of God: Spiritual Warfare
@Raverraver99994 ай бұрын
A Devout Client of Mary Shall Never Suffer the Loss of His Soul There was a certain man who was religious in name only, but, wherever true religion was concerned, hard-hearted and careless. He was, however, in the habit of praying to the Blessed Virgin and saying once everyday a hundred “Hail, Mary’s.” Coming near his end, he was caught away in an ecstasy, and devils charged him before the Great Judge seeking a sentence that would adjudge him to be theirs. God, therefore, knowing his manifold sins, said that he must be condemned. Meantime the Blessed Virgin came offering schedules in which were contained all the “Hail Mary’s,” and begging her Son to allow him to receive a milder sentence. But the devils brought many books full of his sins. ‘The books on both sides were put into the scales, but the sins weighed most. Then the Blessed Virgin, seeing She was doing no good, earnestly besought her Son, saying: “Remember, Beloved, that Thou didst receive of my substance, visible, tangible and sensible substance; give to me one drop of Thy blood shed for sinners in Thy passion.” And he replied: “It is impossible to deny thee anything. Yet know that one drop of my blood weighs heavier than all the sins of the whole world. Receive therefore thy request.” Receiving it, She placed it in the scales, and all those sins of the religious weighed against it as light as ashes.‘Then the devils departed in confusion, crying out and saying: “The Lady is too merciful to Christians; we fail as often as She comes to contend with us.” And so the man’s spirit returned to his body, and on recovery he related the whole tale and became a true monk. Taken From The Glories of Mary By Saint Alphonsus Liguori ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Our Lady explains the Hail Mary to Saint Mechtilde of Helfta (1241-1298): “My daughter, I want you to know that no one can please me more than by saying Rosary. The salutation which the Most Adorable Trinity sent to me, and by which He raised me to the dignity of Mother of God. By the word 'Ave' (which is the name Eve, Eva), I learned that in His infinite power God had preserved me from all sin and its misery, which the first woman had brought upon herself. The name ‘Mary’ which means ‘Lady of Light’ shows that God has filled me with wisdom and light, like a shining star, to light up Heaven and Earth. The words ‘full of grace’ remind me that the Holy Spirit has showered so many graces upon me that I am able to give these graces in abundance to those who ask for them through me as Mediatrix. When people say the ‘Lord is with thee,’ they give to me again the indescribable joy that I received when the Eternal Word became incarnate in my womb. When you say to me ‘blessed art thou among women,’ I praise Almighty God’s Divine mercy which raised me to this exalted level of happiness. And at the words, ‘blessed is the Fruit of thy womb, Jesus,’ the whole of Heaven rejoices with me to see my Son Jesus Christ adored and glorified for having saved mankind.”
@rawan34354 ай бұрын
Just like Alex too he likes the fruits but hates the tree.
@rawan34354 ай бұрын
7:15 This guy alex is acting like an extraordinary smart person ever born on this planet... Alex were you there that time when that happen?? Can you tell me then what made these people to go away after Jesus had said something??? Dear alex the smartest guy please tell me what did Jesus said then that caused all these angry croud to turn away one by one????? His confidence of something not seen not heard by himself shames himself. Do you think alex these people carried a high-tech recorder to record everything????? Don't you know Alex that these are also humen beings?? Don't you know they started writing the Bible after a long time? Don't you know devine intervention was also there as well as human???
@rawan34354 ай бұрын
26:45 Alex you can't interpret or fram a religion based on what people do. That is silly to even think about. Do you depict and potray parents by what children are doing??? 😂😂😂😂😂
@Wade_Adakai4 ай бұрын
Two possibilities exist: either Alex becomes the greatest atheist of all time or the greatest Christian convert of all time. Both are equally terrifying.
@Janus100014 ай бұрын
Long money's on convert.
@someonesomeone254 ай бұрын
Neither. He'll be another atheist YTer. A good one, but that's it.
@jcmorgan264 ай бұрын
@@Janus10001 I agree; I think there's a chance he'll convert at some point. I've seen a few videos like this with him and I do think he's more open to Christianity than he used to be, at least as I see it. I've noticed him almost arguing in favour of Jesus/Christianity and then kind of "correcting" himself with a dismissal of the underlying principles
@JaniceThompson2284 ай бұрын
Atheist is the default position. As comprehension grows, the likelihood of converting grows. Christ already lives rent free in his head. He’s close.
@randomcharachter4 ай бұрын
He’s just a poser. I found him quite interesting in the past but now I find him utterly tiring. Just another boring vaccous engagement farmer.
@chitlinjuice4 ай бұрын
I think people are just getting tired with how degenerate society has become. From music, media, life, everything is over seggualized, people are cold blooded, selfish, and glorify manipulating and treating people like trash, etc. People get tired of that and end up craving stability, safety, and morals.
@lmr10494 ай бұрын
Was about to write a comment to this effect but you put it perfectly.
@matjaz56844 ай бұрын
Too scared of words to write sexualized correctly
@chitlinjuice4 ай бұрын
@@matjaz5684 it's because of YT censoring, and out of respect for his channel.
@kookiecrumble79704 ай бұрын
Yes we have lost our compass
@tone35604 ай бұрын
stability, safety and morals....religion isn't necessary to satiate these needs.
@christianbaxter_yt4 ай бұрын
The fact that two atheists are having this much charity and nuance about religion answers the original question Chris posed.
@Bornstella4 ай бұрын
You're spot on, I think. This is a very recent attitude towards Christianity among secularists.
@christianbaxter_yt4 ай бұрын
@@Bornstella 🙏🏼
@kevintyrrell95594 ай бұрын
I bet that the Viking wannabe that is Rationality Rules is silently fuming at the "soft touch" his atheist bestie is giving to Christianity. Alex isnt too far off heretic status among the anti-theists. 😜 Yeah...he gives it loads in debates, I feel to try to stick it to the fundamentalist in the US but he rather cosys up to his Catholic and Anglican brothers on this side of the pond. 😎
@chrissavage14494 ай бұрын
@@Bornstella when trump has us in his evangelical theocracy, they’ll swing the other way. Just watch.
@diegocaleiro4 ай бұрын
Lol good point
@ricasso7774 ай бұрын
As a Christian I really enjoy listening to Alex articulate his views regarding religion & Christianity in particular. Gives me great insight on how to approach non believers and atheists.
@patrick94454 ай бұрын
Agreed. He is a respectful, articulate and intelligent non believer. He gets the value of the Good News, even if he lacks faith in it. That's how we draw them in. Come for the cultural Christianity, stay for the salvation.
@Twittchyy4 ай бұрын
Please don’t approach us we aren’t interested
@ricasso7774 ай бұрын
@@Twittchyy Peace be with you
@patrick94454 ай бұрын
@@Twittchyy I will and you can't stop me. Lol
@GrandmasterFerg4 ай бұрын
@@Twittchyy You approached
@sungod97974 ай бұрын
Your bromance with Alex is pretty entertaining to watch lol
@MightyWeeks4 ай бұрын
I watch every podcast lol
@beansdestroyer4 ай бұрын
It’s cringe and gay tbh
@hishamshakdam87184 ай бұрын
@@beansdestroyerhaving friends is cringe and gay what 💀
@AkosLestar4 ай бұрын
The whole interview should have ended with a kiss.
@joshuamccarty81734 ай бұрын
Fellas, is it gay to have friends?
@TheMoffwicket4 ай бұрын
I never would have predicted that I'd be watching two atheist Brits talk about American Christianity on a Friday night, but here I am.
@ACloudWithoutAir4 ай бұрын
It's sad cuz most brits know next to nothing about what it's like living as an American. Let alone a Christian.
@jonas61204 ай бұрын
@@ACloudWithoutAirYeah, an Oxford theology-graduate knows next to nothing about Christianity
@The_Legend_Himself4 ай бұрын
Is Chris specifically an atheist? I don’t remember him saying I know he isn’t religious
@Loveablerebel493 ай бұрын
He said he was agnostic.
@I_am_that_one_guy2 ай бұрын
Now how do you feel that I am one of these people who were driven to question our current reality and by simple observation have come to fully believe in a guiding God hand, and that Jesus was correct. You too can just observe who is happy. Who is. Ot, who is prospering who is not. All lies are being shown to be false, all narratives of man are falling apart.
@stevesmith49014 ай бұрын
In my opinion, Alex's understanding of Jesus in Christianity as the Word becoming flesh and the Quran in Islam as the Word becoming a book is profoundly perceptive. I have never heard anyone make this kind of comparison before.
@chellya20044 ай бұрын
It is, but he took that from other scholars. It's a pretty common way to compare the two.
@stevesmith49014 ай бұрын
@@chellya2004 Wanting to be sure if you were right, I looked it up. Apparently, Kenneth Cragg, an Anglican bishop and scholar, in his 1956 book, "The Call of the Minaret," made this description of the two. Now I know.
@johnofroncesvalles42554 ай бұрын
@@stevesmith4901 Theodore Noldeke pointed to this distinction between the two religions 150 years ago. Scholastic philosopher Thomas Aquinas comes pretty close too,almost 800 years ago.
@wessjr084 ай бұрын
That’s not a point against Alex though, it just means he is well read and agrees with key thinkers throughout history. So he’s probably right on the point.
@stevesmith49014 ай бұрын
@@wessjr08 True, but if this had been an original observation by Alex, it would have been phenomenal. I was under the impression that it was. So, I'm just slightly disappointed, that's all. Regardless, Alex is still pretty insightful on religion.
@lukeball85004 ай бұрын
Alex is so good at analyzing different phenonomens objectivly whitout giving his own view of it.
@LeahKeen3 ай бұрын
In his conversations I usually come away being more empathetic to both sides of the issue. (: I like it.
@WeakeyedominantАй бұрын
I don't think he has an opinion on a lot of it. Anytime he does give an opinion he is probably playing devils advocate. His position on God is he doesn't believe their is a God and he doesn't believe there is not a God and he doesn't believe there is any evidence (even hypothetical ) that could convince him either way. But he has fun analysis a lot of the theories behind them and poking holes in them, even though his theory that free will is not real some amount of logic twisting to make remotely plausible.
@Chronically_ChiII24 күн бұрын
@@WeakeyedominantIt's very reasonable to assume that we do not have free will from the lens of determinism, which suggests that our thoughts and actions are influenced by a chain of prior causes-everything from our genetics to our environment shapes our decisions. If we think about how many factors are beyond our control, it raises the question of how "free" our choices truly are. Additionally, cognitive science has shown that many of our decisions are made subconsciously before we become aware of them. This doesn't negate our experiences or feelings of agency; rather, it offers a different perspective on how our minds operate. In this sense, questioning free will isn't about denying human experience, but rather seeking a deeper understanding of how our brains function within a larger framework of cause and effect.
@amospan144 ай бұрын
These two gentlemen are having a cordial conversation about Cultural Christianity, and I'm here for it! Love it!
@FindingTheNarrative4 ай бұрын
I'm a Christian, and these are two of the most interesting people on the planet. I love both Chris and Alex's approach to these ideas. I hope they are a bridge for my generation for a higher value of ethics.
@CartoonistDave4 ай бұрын
Check out Jay Dyer
@CMA4184 ай бұрын
I'd love that but I think fear still rules the decisions of most people and, even worse perhaps, people who are in denial that they are ruled by fear. Basically animals with weapons of mass destruction. But did Jesus not say, "Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness..." He did NOT say, "Blessed are those *who persecute others* because of righteousness..."
@louisdeniau85714 ай бұрын
@@CartoonistDaveso you believe in a guy that is against the rights and freedoms you have today?
@CartoonistDave4 ай бұрын
@@louisdeniau8571 dont believe in him, i believe in Jesus Christ. But Jay makes great content that defends and explains orthodoxy. What rights does he want to take away again?
@Tomonaroma12214 ай бұрын
Chris and Alex the most interesting people on the planet? You have my sympathies, sir 😂
@markland10004 ай бұрын
Alex is brilliant. I am a Christian and like listening to him.
@ericb98044 ай бұрын
Because its a shorthand way of saying, "I'm atheist for all practical purposes, but I still acknowledge that as a society we have to work together on solving our communal problems, and as a general rule, I tend to rely on what might broadly be called 'christian' values."
@mayflowerlash114 ай бұрын
Alex and Christ are a great double act. Sniping at each other and smiling as they enjoy the joust. Both are genuine people striving to gain the truth. Their discussion is both edifying and entertaining.
@coreyjury65874 ай бұрын
Did you mean Chris or Christ? 😂
@fronemawoj4 ай бұрын
@@coreyjury6587😅
@CMA4184 ай бұрын
They do seem interested in truth, such a rare quality these days. What if Jesus was right, "The truth will set you free", but so many of us would much rather be comfortable, and some even love the comfort so much they willing to kill for it. Maybe, truly "narrow is the path…"?
@mayflowerlash114 ай бұрын
@@coreyjury6587 I missed that. The spell corrector in YT is appalling. Thanks.
@LeahKeen3 ай бұрын
You mean Chris not Christ right? Though both might be true… 😮
@the_0ther_0ne_593 ай бұрын
The most relevant "Will of the Father" is for us to return to Him. While returning to Him, we are embodying Him, and we resemble as much as possible with Him in mercy, in kindness, in forgiveness, in divine love, in the self sacrifice for the lost ones to return as the sons and daughters to their Maker.
@Dad_readsbooks4 ай бұрын
Please have Alex on quarterly AT LEAST. I love all your conversations with him!
@smarsville4 ай бұрын
Alex O'Connor, already one of the greats.
@CriticalDispatches4 ай бұрын
Lol, no.
@AjaxDGonzo4 ай бұрын
Yeah I think he’s well read but doesn’t have a lot to add to anything.
@cp373733 ай бұрын
@@CriticalDispatches you’re just mad because you are make-believe friends don’t exist 😂
@Xman_Hz3 ай бұрын
🤡🤡🤡
@JohnGeometresMaximos3 ай бұрын
🤣
@trainwrecked11144 ай бұрын
Although I was baptized Catholic, my family was atheistic during my youth. I've recently returned to the church last year and I can honestly say it's made me a better husband, father, and person. For me, the transformative moment was actually reading the bible and listening to homilies on the internet. At point I realized that I had trusted what my society pushed upon me, that religion was for 'naive people' or 'idiots'. It was after starting to delve into the material myself and experience it's teachings that I realized the truth; I was listening to other people's 'truths' rather than finding my own. I wasted decades of my life with meaninglessness because the mentors around me convinced me i didn't need religious meaning in my life, and I should absorb their ethics, or their meaning instead. I forgive them, but I won't make the same mistakes again. Form your own opinions, read the words yourselves. Don't trust society to make the decisions for you. Even the educated may fall short in virtues.
@TheAmericanAmerican4 ай бұрын
Odd, I had the exact opposite experience: born and raised in a SUPER Catholic family, went faithfully to church every weekend for 27 years, and prayed to God and JC. I left my home town, went to college, moved outta state, started traveling the world, and moved to Europe all the while staying religious. Then came trump. I watched in absolute horror as the VAST majority of my "good Christian" family turned into a pack of hateful monsters who STILL worship the "God chosen" orange sociopath to this day. That cracked my religious foundation. I started to question it all. I started to read more into the history of the church and the very idea of religion itself. I thought logically and used reason to try to make sense of it all. Tried to understand how God could allow such an EVIL man to corrupt and brainwash my loved ones. I prayed A LOT. And at the end of it all, after 3 years of questioning, learning, praying, making the ultimatum to God and Jesus to simply reveal themselves to me as they both did MULTIPLE times in the Old and New Testaments, I finally let it all go. I finally realized that there simply is no god. There is no unseen mystical/magically/spirtiual power controlling the world around me. That was over 6 years ago and I have not had a single sign from God. Nothing. Been atheist ever since. On the bright side of it all, I have never felt more free and happy in my entire life! I am truly my own self. A massive weight has been lifted and I can look confidently at the world around me and truly uderstand how it works. Without any kind of god, everything makes sense. I have become a better man in the sense that I now look at all the problems of the world and instead of just dismissing them as "God's plan", I actually accept them and try to learn how and why they happen so that I can try to do my own personal little part in trying to fix them. I take on full responsibily for my actions in this ONE AND ONLY life without selfishly thinking that I don't need to care about this world because there's a better afterlife waiting for me. Ironically, I have become more "Christ-like" because I actually care and TAKE ACTION to help the poor, the neady, and the sick. People need to realize that they don't need religion to be a good person. We are our own beings.
@trainwrecked11144 ай бұрын
@@TheAmericanAmerican Thanks for replying, I'm glad you've found more happiness in your life. It's definitely an interesting notion, to have the two of us have similar epiphanies with opposing results. For me, I think my advice isn't to be religious, or not- rather it's to make your own decisions rather than relying on the normal people prescribe for you without individual verification. I don't think religion, or a lack of religion, makes any guarantee on people being good. People are inherently flawed, and religion doesn't remove the propensity of people to hate. Lack of religion doesn't either. I certainly didn't read any prescriptions to hate in the new testament, but people can interpret things a variety of ways. The history of the church is rife with the same class of mistakes. If people are imperfect, so are religious institutions (and all institutions for that matter.) My belief is that our past shouldn't necessarily dictate the totality of how our existence is defined. Humans will make mistakes and do evils, so will human institutions, but this doesn't imply an incapability to do good, or more good than evil. It does imply that humans and organizations need to continually analyze what they're doing from external perspectives in order to minimize the evil they commit. I don't believe people require religion to be good. My wife, for example, is agnostic; but I believe her to be a very good person. My hope isn't that all become religious, but I also hope people don't purposefully devalue religion and hope for others to lose that value set in their life, when it's done them good. Not everyone has the same value sets, not everyone has the same perspective. There is a set of people for which religion has done harm to their life, and there is a set of people for which the absence of religion has done harm in their life. It's hard to find universal outcomes with regard to humans. My hope is people make their own decisions, rather than trust the opinions already formed by those around them. In my case, the opinion pushed on me was that religious people are dumb and naive. I never read anything since my return to the church that gave me any sense of causality between stupidity and faith. In your case it sounds like the opinion was that religion is required to be good and things were the result of gods plan and may not merit an attempt at comprehension or action. You've come to your own conclusions about the truth of that opinion, rather than trust it, and it's led to your happiness. Even if our outcomes are the same, I think the values ascribed to our happiness are the same; form your own opinions and find your own happiness.
@MultipleGrievance4 ай бұрын
It's a if the bible's accurate and the great tribulation, is coming, even naturalists, like Alex will likely soon be on board with christian morality. That's how stark the difference between good and bad is going to become.
@buzzingels68224 ай бұрын
You have seemed to conflate faith and politics in much the same way that you accuse your family of. If Trump is uniquely evil in your mind (the Devil if you will) and a messianic figure to your family, you are both making the same mistake. Voting for Trump doesn’t make you evil, irreligious or an heretic any more than voting Biden does. Politics isn’t God.
@Tara-zq3il4 ай бұрын
@@TheAmericanAmerican, I am just interested to know what terrible beliefs your family had that drove you away from the Catholic faith?
@logicisbest71864 ай бұрын
Thanks Chris. Now the image of you being the “middle of the human centipede” between Alex and Sam is forever burned into my memory.
@CSUnger4 ай бұрын
After speaking to numerous people over the years about Christ, I’m coming around to the fact that, while the mind has to be engaged, it’s really the state of the heart that I now look for. I think that’s the fundamental lesson of the parable of the Sower and the Seed.
@Fernando-ek8jp4 ай бұрын
The lesson right after the parable is that Jesus speaks in parables for the explicit purpose of people having a hard time understanding him my dude.
@newme15892 ай бұрын
The idea of parables is to make the words palatable. If yoi say to a person "go to the gym", they will tell you to go take a walk. If you take 5 minutes to beautifully engage with them about health and whatnot, way bigger chance of getting them into a gym
@Fernando-ek8jp2 ай бұрын
@@newme1589 Not according yo Jesus.
@CSUnger2 ай бұрын
@newme1589, Only to those who understand the “language” of the Scriptures. Once you do understand it, it opens up worlds of depth of meaning. “But to those outside, everything else is in parables” Mark 4:11.
@SophieHamilton-d3e3 ай бұрын
I’m just a common cleaner and shop worker but I’ve definately felt a revival of REAL Christianity in the UK. I’m a catechumen in the Eastern Orthodox Church and looking forward to being baptised.
@machinotaur2 ай бұрын
Glory to God ☦️
@stefan_soare2 ай бұрын
Glory to God!
@stefan_soare2 ай бұрын
These guys should also try Eastern Orthodoxy. The shock about "all this Jesus thing is just a spectacle" would probably vanish, if they witnessed a vigil in a monastery.
@angelicentity14012 ай бұрын
God bless you brother
@HarrisonGLong4 ай бұрын
I was raised very Christian but it has lapsed in adulthood, and I have found a more religious experience in the study of history, philosophy, and literature. I have a soft spot for religions in that I find them to be fascinating, and part of the reason I enjoy conversations featuring Alex O'Connor is because I can relate to one being compelled to study religion without accepting them as fact. I don't wish to be governed by religious law, and just the same as I would be against any form of legislating religion for the masses, I will also always be in favor of the freedom to worship and believe as one sees fit. Thanks for the great conversation, Chris.
@BroJo6764 ай бұрын
I’m talking as a Christian and Christianity was never meant to be a governing rule or law. Jesus even said that: “Render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s and render unto God what is God’s” or when He said: “My sovereignty is not of this world.”
@guywilletts28044 ай бұрын
@@BroJo676of course it was. That's the sole point of religion. Especially monotheistic ones. From your own version of the supernatural, tell me about the doctrine of 2 swords in the garden of Gethsemane.
@dahliaherrod43014 ай бұрын
You've used the term religion and religious multiple times and I get the impression they have slightly different meanings depending on the context. What do YOU mean by religion and religious?
@BroJo6764 ай бұрын
@@guywilletts2804 History also shows quite the contrary to what you’re saying. Christianity became a major religion from the moment on which it became the state religion of the Roman Empire back in 380 through the Edict of Thessaloniki. Before that, even when Christianity no longer was forbidden in the Roman Empire, all the Roman rulers, from the very first August to the very last in 376, were required to also act as the Roman religious leader aka Pontifex Maximus (the Greatest Priest in Latin). The Christianity adoption put an end to that because it’s legitimately understood that Jesus was not searching for and uninterested in gaining some form of political power. Now, I’m not denying there could be some influence from religious institutions but the absolute power never belonged to the Church and history clearly shows it.
@kaykay8654 ай бұрын
I need it but I don't believe it.. I'm in denial lol
@mitchbrook41124 ай бұрын
god i love alex i could listen to him to talk all day
@jimluebke38694 ай бұрын
I suspect that even when the pews were full, there was a significant percentage of Cultural Christians in them.
@360.Tapestry25 күн бұрын
the folks who enjoy the benefits of the fruit, but do little to nothing to appreciate the plant. thankfully, our offer of service is to a higher power and not only them
@DANJEDI4 ай бұрын
Alex's portrait of Christianity is refreshing! Knowledgeable & Historically employable 🙏Good show Chris 👍
@mickwillson32394 ай бұрын
Christian revival is somewhat to do with a fight back against Islam, or taking a cultural side.
@abdiahmed13714 ай бұрын
It’s atheists realizing Islam has a huge growth and wanting to make Christianity rival Islam. Choosing teams basically. But how would that help Christian’s when fake Christian’s join while Islam requires actual thought and dedication to chose Islam. Islam will continue to grow the more people open their eyes
@three_owl_night4 ай бұрын
@@abdiahmed1371 The thing is that cultural Christianity cannot help actual believers regardless of how much they engage in wishful thinking. The moment the trans-ideology and wokism go down (assuming they will, which I am not sure about) the old things that drove people away from Christianity in the first place (the stance on homosexuality & abortion, purity culture, mental gymnastics to justify biblical claims etc.,) will cause all those self-proclaimed cultural Christians to move away as quickly as they joined. And yes, Islam will continue to grow as long as countries don't change their immigration policies and don't adopt integration-first approach. I doubt that this will happen as such stance requires the acknowledgment that cultures are not equal.
@abdiahmed13714 ай бұрын
@@three_owl_night I agree with all that u said except Islam will continue to grow whether immigration/integration is managed or not. The reason why is because Islam teaches that devotion and morals is for God and from God. Everything a Muslim does is with the belief that God will judge them on it and will either reward them or punish them and that this life that last less than a 100 years is not greater than the next life that last forever. Paradise is worth the struggle and is motivation to do good in this life so that you live there best life in the next
@vercingetorix57084 ай бұрын
Not in the US. In the US, immigration makes us more Christian, not less.
@judegrindvoll84673 ай бұрын
You seem to be ignoring the quiet irreligiosity growing amongst muslims, particularly younger muslims.
@Daniel_McGarry_Paolini4 ай бұрын
It would be interesting to see Chris Williamson talk to someone like Father Mike Schmitz.
@paisios44934 ай бұрын
Definitely
@kevinmurphy58784 ай бұрын
That would be almost uncomfortably based in the best way possible
@lloydritchey4 ай бұрын
💯
@lorieflanders4 ай бұрын
Bishop Barron would be amazing.
@danmartin98504 ай бұрын
Solid idea! Mike Schmitz is BASED
@stephenphillips38834 ай бұрын
What an unbelievably interesting conversation. Edit; will have to revisit this, so much value and I've found myself with a great admiration of Alex and will be exploring his thoughts more, thanks again.
@rocklerock4954 ай бұрын
I do agree that many of these so called "Christians" do not walk like one. Always lean to their own understanding and never open their mind and/or ears to others because they think what they think it is true and absolute. Not only what they think, but their knowledge is that of a child; Surface level understanding, and they take these surface level understanding as absolute truth without exploring.
@Fernando-ek8jp4 ай бұрын
It's more because they don't care nor find the need to. They just like to play pretend to be part of the group.
@Chronically_ChiII24 күн бұрын
@@Fernando-ek8jp Because it helps them personally or socially.
@orangemanbadАй бұрын
Christopher hitchens converted me into the new atheist movement back when I was in college. And never looked back. Until I had an encounter with Christ. It completely changed my whole worldview. I know the skeptics will reject this, as I did back then, but I can only say it’s true.
@DDogg4377723 күн бұрын
I was the same but it was with Allah (glory be to Him) and the prophet Mohammed (peace be upon him). Very powerful experience.
@johnrockyryan23 күн бұрын
Again cool but that is not i repeat IS NOT evidence for anything, I could also say I didn't believe in the force until I had an encounter with ghost Obi Wan Kenobi.
@orangemanbad23 күн бұрын
@ that literally makes no sense.
@Kai_Theos_en_ho_Logos2 ай бұрын
Alex knows (and understands!) the Scriptures better than > 99% of all Christians. As I listened more and more, this verse (and we know you this verse, Alex 😊) kept coming to mind: "And when Jesus saw that he answered wisely, he said to him, 'You are not far from the kingdom of God.' " (Mark <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="754">12:34</a>) 🙏
@Kai_Theos_en_ho_Logos2 ай бұрын
1:57:23 "Now I've got to overcome some of the objections to the Resurrection [before I can believe]." I'm sure others have likely already steered you (Alex) towards the works of Dr. Gary Habermas (likely the best Christian authority on the Resurrection)-- but if you were to read his massive two-volume work: • 'On the Resurrection, Vol. I: Evidences' (1,072 pgs) • 'On the Resurrection, Vol. II: Refutations' (896 pgs) ...Many of us would be thrilled to see you engage and discuss the subject with Dr. Habermas. Just a thought...
@JPN-k6cАй бұрын
he knows and understands the scriptures better than > 99% of all christians, yet he isn't one. in fact it's worse than that, he was a christian initially, left the religion and then studied philosophy and theology, looking for any evidence or proof of god's existence but still to this day remains an atheist. this should be telling you something mate.
@justinbrierley4 ай бұрын
Happy to come on any time Chris!
@Bibleteacher4 ай бұрын
That would be an epic interview. I hope it happens.
@jackiem94604 ай бұрын
Just because someone says they are a Christian doesn't mean they are one. That is why Jesus said 'you will know them by their fruit'. As a Christian, I should not act, look, or talk like the rest of the world. If I do, follow brethren should be concerned for me.
@Runpulator4 ай бұрын
We no longer buy that excuse. Just admit what we already know about such an aweful self-righteous people.
@petretepner80274 ай бұрын
In your photo, you look pretty much like the rest of us. I can't imagine how you can hope to spread your "message" if you doggedly refuse to "act, look, or talk like the rest of the world".
@Shawn-nq7du4 ай бұрын
Amen! My grandson, at age 13, claimed to be an atheist. His father is a professor at an Ivy League where quite a few of the students are atheists, and they live on campus. I think he thought it was cool and made him look smarter. Now, at 15, he has softened a bit. When they visited me at Christmas, he offered to go to Church with me, which was a surprise. When he came home, he told his parents that Christians are nicer people than his atheist friends, and then he told them I think I want to marry a Christian girl. What a delight to hear. One of the top scientists in the U.S., Dr. Francis Collins, was an atheist. He has a PhD in chemistry from Yale and then decided to get an M.D. He was the director of NIH and worked under three presidents. He was the lead scientist of the Human Genome Project, which saved millions of people. After noticing his religious patients lived better, were healthier, and handled serious illness better, he looked into Christianity at the advice of his patient. He became a Christian and has written several books on God. I love his book, "A Scientist Presents Evidence for Belief, The Language of God." He takes it from a scientific viewpoint why belief in God is reasonable and why the Christian God makes sense.
@thomabow89494 ай бұрын
@@tomcoop9750 Christians are often on the deserving end of criticism
@jackiem94604 ай бұрын
@@petretepner8027 If I'm kind while others are rude, loving to those with hate, longsuffering in times of trial..all because I have HIS love. This speaks volumes.
@biancahumble7064 ай бұрын
I love the chemistry between these two - it’s easy to see they’re good friends.
@Surreal6164 ай бұрын
Good stuff Chris. In the last three you went from AI to Chaos theory, to a conversation about Christianity. Always surprised by the your breadth of topics. Keep it coming.
@semperfidelis69434 ай бұрын
Such diversity!
@BoneJoe6954 ай бұрын
Chris, I watched a Christian testimony from Isaiah Saldivar yesterday that was very impactful, and I think it would be so cool to listen to you interview him (a fully convinced Christian). Also John Burke who wrote a book about near death experiences and people who’ve encountered Jesus through that (even atheists and followers of other religions). Thanks for the great conversations!
@chriswillis97754 ай бұрын
Isaiah teaches a false gospel. All the deliverance ministries are deceiving people. Revealing Truth youtube channel shows many examples of Isaiah's false teachings.
@undiscoveredstars10024 ай бұрын
No such thing as a convinced Christian
@BoneJoe6954 ай бұрын
@@undiscoveredstars1002 okay then a real Christian
@DavidBennett-ij5oy4 ай бұрын
There is something refreshing about Alex's approach.
@thechurchnetwork244 ай бұрын
Also in Deuteronomy <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="1274">21:14</a> "But if you no longer delight in her, you shall let her go where she wants. But you shall not sell her for money, nor shall treat her as a slave, since you have humiliated her." Around time stamp <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="62">1:02</a>:00 Alex mentions the Captures of war.
@Liam-t5u4 ай бұрын
Thankfully Christians believe in the new covenant and would consider the Old Testament non moral laws as for a specific time in the past, given in a corrupt culture. One can be a follower of Jesus and yet not affirm that all the Old Testament laws came from God word for word. Much of it reflects the authors of that time’s views. The likes of Pete Enns and Gregory Boyd are good writers to go to on the trouble of the Old Testament. Also, you can read Origen of Alexandria in the early church work’s who said that Christians should take a deeper, spiritual understanding of all scripture and where possible a literal understanding.
@mmoreno71374 ай бұрын
What point are you trying to make? He was talking about you enslaving her and your point is that you wouldn't be allowed to resell her? Your bored with her so let her go is a good moral thing?
@drparadox78334 ай бұрын
@@mmoreno7137 Full quote: "When you go to war against your enemies and the Lord your God delivers them into your hands and you take captives, if you notice among the captives a beautiful woman and are attracted to her, you may take her as your wife. Bring her into your home and have her shave her head, trim her nails and put aside the clothes she was wearing when captured. After she has lived in your house and mourned her father and mother for a full month, then you may go to her and be her husband and she shall be your wife. If you are not pleased with her, let her go wherever she wishes. You must not sell her or treat her as a slave, since you have dishonored her." This passage talks about a situation when you found a woman who you like and how to properly treat her.
@aguspuig66153 ай бұрын
Its aparent to me that while this isnt good for our modern day morals its incredibly progressive for the time, you can say that christianity isnt essentially moral and good because it allows bad things, but it seems to me it always allows a less bad flavour of bad. If the only times slavery is brought up the prhasing is ''you can own people, but dont mistreat them'' its clear that the underlying message is morally good, its just constrained by its time
@oliverthomas97723 ай бұрын
I was surprised he brought this up to be honest given how good he'd been elsewhere in this conversation. Deuteronomy is a book from the Old Testament, while all of the universalising tendencies Tom Holland brings up are really located in the New Testament. There are tons of things in the OT that are considered obsolete or no longer binding. Christians eat pork!
@danielsheykhsofla56314 ай бұрын
folks are converting from shia islam to Christianity in iran and as a newly converted christian i enjoyed this massively and i gotta say both of you are close 😄
@hovno244 ай бұрын
Why does shia does not cut the mustard seeds anymore for them?
@aks15214 ай бұрын
Honestly , Shia are not Muslim. There is no following one the Quran. So I would not consider them Muslim I would rather refer to them as Christianity 2.0. As they worship religious figures which are not god.
@goarmysleepinthemud.4 ай бұрын
@@aks1521 Can you prove that God exists by chance?
@aks15214 ай бұрын
@@goarmysleepinthemud. I don’t understand the question. I can only share what I believe. My belief in a creator is due to the beautiful designs of animals and different/distinct beautiful designs of humans and many things that suggests to me that we are designed but not by chance. I believe life is a test so that is why there is evil and good. These are some verses from the Quran about the tests of life and the purpose of creation. 1. **Surah Al-Baqarah (2:155-157)**: - "And We will surely test you with something of fear and hunger and a loss of wealth and lives and fruits, but give good tidings to the patient, who, when disaster strikes them, say, 'Indeed we belong to Allah, and indeed to Him we will return.' Those are the ones upon whom are blessings from their Lord and mercy. And it is those who are the [rightly] guided." 2. **Surah Al-Imran (3:186)**: - "You will surely be tested in your possessions and in yourselves. And you will surely hear from those who were given the Scripture before you and from those who associate others with Allah much abuse. But if you are patient and fear Allah - indeed, that is of the matters [worthy] of determination." 3. **Surah Al-Ankabut (29:2-3)**: - "Do the people think that they will be left to say, 'We believe' and they will not be tried? But We have certainly tried those before them, and Allah will surely make evident those who are truthful, and He will surely make evident the liars." 4. **Surah Al-Mulk (67:2)**: - "[He] who created death and life to test you [as to] which of you is best in deed - and He is the Exalted in Might, the Forgiving." 5. **Surah Al-Insan (76:2-3)**: - "Indeed, We created man from a sperm-drop mixture that We may try him; and We made him hearing and seeing. Indeed, We guided him to the way, be he grateful or be he ungrateful."
@aks15214 ай бұрын
These are some verses from the Quran about the tests of life and the purpose of creation. 1. **Surah Al-Baqarah (2:155-157)**: - "And We will surely test you with something of fear and hunger and a loss of wealth and lives and fruits, but give good tidings to the patient, who, when disaster strikes them, say, 'Indeed we belong to Allah, and indeed to Him we will return.' Those are the ones upon whom are blessings from their Lord and mercy. And it is those who are the [rightly] guided." 2. **Surah Al-Imran (3:186)**: - "You will surely be tested in your possessions and in yourselves. And you will surely hear from those who were given the Scripture before you and from those who associate others with Allah much abuse. But if you are patient and fear Allah - indeed, that is of the matters [worthy] of determination." 3. **Surah Al-Ankabut (29:2-3)**: - "Do the people think that they will be left to say, 'We believe' and they will not be tried? But We have certainly tried those before them, and Allah will surely make evident those who are truthful, and He will surely make evident the liars." 4. **Surah Al-Mulk (67:2)**: - "[He] who created death and life to test you [as to] which of you is best in deed - and He is the Exalted in Might, the Forgiving." 5. **Surah Al-Insan (76:2-3)**: - "Indeed, We created man from a sperm-drop mixture that We may try him; and We made him hearing and seeing. Indeed, We guided him to the way, be he grateful or be he ungrateful."
@dougjones9625Ай бұрын
Great call Chris. Love your style and choice of guests. I have been watching Alex since he was a young person. He is a gifted speaker and a wise and gentle conversationalist who seems to leave his ego at home every time he comes out to play. This may be my favourite of all of his conversations. And we have you to thank. Cheers.
@Steve-Cross4 ай бұрын
I would describe myself as a cultural Christian. Being bought up in a Christian society, with its culture and values, obviously leaves an imprint on you. It is very familiar and comforting, not necessarily in any spiritual way though. My brain cannot except, anything that is not grounded in reality. It’s just the way it works. It doesn’t stop me appreciating Christian values and its long cultural history. The beautiful churches and cathedrals and amazing coral music. It is all part of my heritage. I believe it’s definitely worth fighting for.
@patrick94454 ай бұрын
God is as real as it gets, my bro. Do you think atoms spontaneously appeared and randomly collided till we have humans with eyes and brains with consciousness? Intelligent design is obvious.
@Maxfox114 ай бұрын
@@patrick9445 If God has the power to create the universe and all life, why children with cancer my bro?
@calebsmith71794 ай бұрын
@@patrick9445 that's a nice straw man of naturalism.
@patrick94454 ай бұрын
@@Maxfox11 Search 'Apologetics' on KZbin. There are many eloquent answers to that question. A common view is that life is a very short test and suffering is part of existence for all people before we spend eternity in bliss. That is an excellent deal on balance. During our time on Earth, man has free will and he is free to make life awful for other people. Additionally, as mortal beings, we will all get sick, suffer and die. This will happen at different times for different people for different reasons. Cancer as a child. Parkinson's at 80. Christians don't pretend to know why people die. We just try to accept it and appreciate the time we have. Having gratitude for life and stoic acceptance of suffering are just some of the gifts that come from Christianity.
@WithWingsOfAngel4 ай бұрын
@@Maxfox11 Cancer comes from the toxic environment and stress (food etc.) caused by humans. We have been given a freedom of choice. There are things we can do to help people. Some peopIe choose to not care. Do you, help kids with cancer? l've experienced tumors myseIf, but have aIso heaIed. l came to reaIize that my body did the exact correct thing in moving the toxins into the tumors, when it just couIdn't do aII the work in removing the toxins, because of my own unheaIthy IifestyIes and choices. The stress was a huge part of the cause, but it got greatIy aIIeviated with prayer. Because with faith l dropped the urgent need to stressfully controI everything and everyone around me. And then my tumor started to shrink.
@chefskengko1844 ай бұрын
The respect these 2 have for another is off the charts! ❤
@wanderingsoul118915 күн бұрын
A Muslim watching two atheists talking about 'Christian revivalism'. Loved it.
@GOGOROBOv24 ай бұрын
Man, I love Alex O'connor.
@calqulating99824 ай бұрын
Alex needs to debate John Lennox.
@someonesomeone254 ай бұрын
That would be watchable.
@golddeagle73 ай бұрын
I believe without a doubt Jesus and his story is 100% real. I know it is. His wisdom is eternal and proves itself. I know I fail him everyday yet he allows us to exist so that we may overcome.
@TheArtOfRevolution4 ай бұрын
I never thought Id come back to Christianity, I was convinced it was false. But the gospel's undeniable attachment to caring for the needy and oppressed actually brought me back.
@XinwylFumudaiski3 ай бұрын
But can you not be convinced of their good-heartedness while also demonstrating the same perceived good-heartedness without needing the framework of an organized religion? Cheers
@judegrindvoll84673 ай бұрын
In that case you (and all Christians) would be equally fulfilled spending 4 hours every Sunday serving the needy surely?
@TheArtOfRevolution2 ай бұрын
@@XinwylFumudaiski Oh yes, but it seems we as humans sorta need that extra push. By and large. What I see is in these volunteer spaces, while there are a handful of people who do it without any religious or otherwise compelling motivation, even in the secular organizations with secular money, the people showing up to volunteer are overwhelmingly religiously motivated. A Christian has an extra voice in his head that he believes to be God that an atheist just simply doesn't have.
@TheArtOfRevolution2 ай бұрын
@@judegrindvoll8467 Moreso. I volunteer at my church every Monday night where we house the homeless and feed them and sit and talk with them and help them to feel human again, and the interfaith organization we work with helps them with clothing, transportation and employment. I look forward to the Monday nights more than I do Sundays. There's another church here that pooled all their money together and instead of building a super church, they bought an entire city block and built transitional housing for the homeless and recovering drug addicts. Still the same tiny little church, but they do SO MUCH good.
@johnsterman772 ай бұрын
Alex is only 24. Couple more years, I’d guess.
@Bibleteacher4 ай бұрын
One of your best convos yet, Chris. I am a Christian and a pastor (yep, a megachurch pastor), and I loved this conversation. Great job being charitable with views you don't agree with. Alex, super fair representation of Christianity overall. Thanks for that. Chris, I have great respect that you tried out a church on Easter. Well done! It might help to think of the rock band, pyrotechnics, and LED wall as modern packaging on the ancient message of the Gospel. The Gnostic discussion was super interesting, though Gnosticism, as a philosophy, wasn't really developed till well after the NT era, and it glommed onto everything (Judaism, Christianity, even the Greek/Roman pantheon). Alex, when you say to "flip open the Old Testament" and see what you find (as an illustration of Judeo-Christian values), perhaps what you find is the chaos of a society or people that rejects Judeo-Christian values that the Bible actually endorses. One thing to dig into more would be the meaning of the Cross and Resurrection of Jesus. What does the New Testament (and Old) say about the meaning of those things? It's worth checking into. Keep following after truth... it's the one journey to never give up on. Chris, earlier in the comments, Justin Brierley offered himself to be interviewed by you... look him up. He's very well-known and extremely knowledgeable. That would be top-class interview and would draw one of your largest audiences ever. You'd really like him, too. Thanks again for a fascinating conversation.
@undiscoveredstars10024 ай бұрын
Jesus was gay
@kizza16454 ай бұрын
Mega church’s are money siphons for poor people
@sonofabinch3 ай бұрын
Can you choose to believe? Isn’t that the whole point of faith? Despite having doubts, making the brave decision to believe, and then hoping for the fruits.
@mdhazeldine4 ай бұрын
As a Christian, brought up in a Christion home in the UK, back in the 80's and 90's and being more or less bullied for my beliefs at school, it blows my mind to hear two people who are so well known and who barely believe in God, talk for 2 hours about the rise of Christianity. It's quite heart warming really. I have been a part of a number of different churches through my life, of all different styles and varieties and I have definitely seen a "change in the wind" as it were. I feel like culturally the west went through a phase of turning away from God, thinking that it was just infantile and that science rules the day and we should be able to live how we like and "you do you, man"....but we are now seeing how that has just caused the moral fabric to fall apart and I think people are starting to realise things don't really go very well when we try to do things our own way. It feels like people are starting to think "maybe there is something to this Christianity thing". I know church attendance has been declining in the West for a long time, but I feel like things are bottoming out now and the tide is beginning to turn. My personal experience has been that while the stablished traditional churches have been dying out, a new generation of churches has been growing up in their place, with a fresh take on things stylistically, but still sticking to the core beliefs of the gospel. It will be interesting to see how things pan out.
@mattstakeontheancients75944 ай бұрын
I agree to a point, I was raised Christian and became an agnostic in part because of Dawkins and Hitchens. The argument was always you can me moral without subscribing to Christianity but does seem like the last decade that the atheist movement ostracizes anyone that doesn’t subscribe to a more progressive ideology politically. Think Hitchens would be considered a bigot by many in the atheist sphere and possibly critiqued because he had friends who were Christian
@peterwestwood23074 ай бұрын
Doesn’t seem like that to me tbf
@mogznwaz4 ай бұрын
I recoil automatically as soon as a ‘movement’ starts to feel like a dogma…. And I suspect Hitchens would have too.
@dominicgerman59084 ай бұрын
I don’t get why people are blaming the new atheists for all the progressive ideologies. Seems more a product of postmodernism
@CMA4184 ай бұрын
By progressive do you mean let the gays be? Or healthcare is a right not a privilege? Or something else?
@ifluxion4 ай бұрын
I feel that the cause and effect is the other way around. People will rationally change their belief based on what they see is more convenient to act on, and very few people actually have the meta-cognitive ability to see what they are doing. I think that the reality hits first before beliefs, not the other way around. People are blindly following this cult of ridiculous progressiveness not because they decided not to believe in Christianity but because what they want in their life is against the teaching of Christianity. I see them as "atheist by convenience". And I actually do not like these progressive political ideologies, despite being an atheist myself. I'm an atheist not because it's convenient for me, but because I think it's just the right answer. Political ideologies has nothing to do with my reason for being atheist. And people who are, in my opinion, is just an opportunist than anything else.
@judahbrutus4 ай бұрын
I'm not an emotional person and when I hear the music come on I zone out for the whole worship time. Everyone is typically really into the music and have their hands raised, we are known for our band. However, when the scripture is read I always get goosebumps and get the feels ..
@undiscoveredstars10024 ай бұрын
Everyone likes a fairytale
@ethancollins45934 ай бұрын
Best moment was Alex saying he was a cultural gym bro lol
@henryconner7804 ай бұрын
I knew God was real when I was given everything in youth, yet had suicidal ideation and addictions beyond my control. I studied theology and philosophy for years and ended up believing Jesus Christ is truly The Word in Flesh. I’m still trying to be more like him.
@henryconner7804 ай бұрын
@@warbler1984 it’s abusive to study the Bible and theology for several years, come to believe God and then through Jesus I’ve began to transform my life and everyone around me is noticing? God didn’t put myself in that situation, I did. With my free will and bad decisions I ended up where I was. What are you even saying? It’s not “relief” either. It’s helping me overcome ACTUAL abusive relationships with addiction and substances. Do you know anything about Christianity? If someone finds meaning in things, that’s an abusive relationship to you? I’m sorry you grew up that way, that must be very difficult. Good luck man, I wish you the best
@XxUSAF1RExX4 ай бұрын
@@henryconner780 I think what he's saying is that its kinda fucked up to put someone in that situation in the first place knowing that such a life would lead to despair and agony, and god "did nothing until you believed." Its not like a person came into your life and made a change with their presence. Its a supposed god who knows and plans your whole life supposedly before your born. If gods were real then they would make sure there are ways to ensure someone will have a happy life and not lose their free will doing it. But no, he intentionally made the events of your life lead to drugs addictions and feelings of suicide. Also God didn't give you strength at all you found the strength within yourself to overcome those obstacles. Stories like yours are great but when i hear people not give themselves the credit they deserve and give it to some god, its just frustrating. Also Grew up Baptist and reading the bible was ONE of the things that lead to my deconstruction....Hell i think it single handedly started me to question my birth religion in the first place. Its a pretty fucked up book all through, but especially the old testament. Definitely not for children. believe or don't believe, its clearly helped you, but the fact i can go to india and find people saying the same thing about hinduism, and Saudi Arabia with Islam, is pretty damning for any religion
@RSorkin4 ай бұрын
@@XxUSAF1RExX… jesus christ wishes he was you. Can i pray to you? Cuz GODDAMN that shit was impressive. I literally could not have said it better myself. Like do you have any other comments to people i can read, cuz that shit made my whole day… and i just woke up. Live Long Legend
@henryconner7804 ай бұрын
@@XxUSAF1RExX I’m Christian Orthodox. We believe free will, I had thought my responsibility was implied through my free will. It seems you don’t understand Orthodox theology, that’s perfectly fine, you have never been exposed to it maybe. We believe God knows our lives and how they would unfold in every scenario. So it’s not Orthodox to believe God made me do evil, that’s heretical. I chose to do evil, I chose to let temptations control my life, and I chose to ignore the good. I chose to be weak hearted and let worldly pleasures destroy me. The Father most certainly gave me strength through Jesus Christ, and his teachings has given me profound strength in my life. We Orthodox truly believe that suffering and going through what I did for example, is in many ways a gift from God. For it makes man holy to go through suffering, it makes man have love and humility in his heart. That’s a serious blessing. You contradict yourself, you claim God is the one who made me do evil things, but yet, when I mention the strength and courage I’ve gotten through God, you easily dismiss God for being the one to help me. It’s contradictory at its core, and lacks logical cohesion. Of course, I understand I chose to start doing good. I also think your broad parallels to other religions is dishonest and vague I’ve studied world religions in college at University of Michigan, while there may be some parallels it really isn’t the same.
@three_owl_night4 ай бұрын
@@XxUSAF1RExX agree. If one focuses on their own things and have a relationship with Jesus, that can bring oneself from the misery and make them have a better, more fulfilled life. But the moment you start looking beyond your own community and see other people having similar experiences through other religions, things get quite tricky.
@a.r.npotential1504 ай бұрын
I follow the way(you would call me Christian) . Alex takes an approach to discussing the impact, critiquing the areas that don’t add up, and fearlessly holding everyone to account (better had done your homework when you sit down to have a discussion with Alex), is so refreshing as a follower of the “way, the truth, the life”. Thank you Alex, I’ve grown in my understanding and perspective listening to you.
@travist23394 ай бұрын
Life without religion is scary, many people just aren’t capable of handling it
@dodumichalcevski4 ай бұрын
How ? I was never scared of life
@TheMissiIe4 ай бұрын
Scary? The safest countries on the planet are completely secular... it's religion that makes countries scary
@someonesomeone254 ай бұрын
It's true that nihilism is bleak in many ways, and can be difficult to accept. But once accepted it works out fine.
@travist23394 ай бұрын
@@dodumichalcevskiI think it’s death/finality and the meaninglessness that scares people
@dodumichalcevski4 ай бұрын
@@travist2339 Yeah but doenst make it true 🤷
@mbg40414 ай бұрын
Australia is not what I would consider a particularly religious country. But the revelation that Australia had its first openly atheist prime minister in the 2010s was a very big deal. Very interesting to read back on that
@grannyannie29484 ай бұрын
Fellow Australian, we are actually more Christian then you think. 30% of parents and rising use fee charging Christian schools. Christianity is still the majority religion at about 50%, in the UK it is a minority. Was it Kevin Rudd?
@undiscoveredstars10024 ай бұрын
@@grannyannie2948that’s a shame
@grannyannie29484 ай бұрын
@@undiscoveredstars1002 Why?
@Chicky1234-m3f3 ай бұрын
As an aussie we aren’t super religious in fact out of all my religious friends I only know one that follows it😂
@grannyannie29483 ай бұрын
@@Chicky1234-m3f We are not big church goers. But it's rare to meet an Australian who is completely atheist with no spiritual beliefs. I babysit after school, and the state of the government schools is so bad, most children are very devout, because they go to Christian schools. As for the far right, which I think was the topic of conversation, it is true, because we have freedom of religion in Australia, but we don't have freedom of speech.
@jaqmart3 ай бұрын
A leap of faith is necessary - even Pascal's wager. Blaise Pascal said that it is not possible to prove or disprove that God exists and he thought it is better to bet that God exists.
@greetingsbox42293 ай бұрын
Thank you Alex for confirming why the nonsense Gospel of Thomas is not in the Bible.
@EZeasyET2 ай бұрын
They’re all nonsense though…
@scottmontgomery1334 ай бұрын
I’m a Christian. It is definitely a choice to believe. I think biblically it is meant to be a choice. There are many reasons I choose to believe, and it’s in the convergence of these reasons that it really becomes pretty easy to have faith, but it took me many years to get to this point. One reason that’s often overlooked but is indirectly touched upon in this conversation is the truth found in “goodness.” When I test the way of Jesus in my life it’s always just good. For example, if I have an argument with my wife, and I surrender it to God and think how would God want me to react and treat her… boom it’s always good. I let my pride and resentment guide me… it’s always bad. This is just one example. But true in literally every aspect of my life. It’s basically become a law of nature to me. It’s good therefore it’s true. “God saw all that He had made, and it was very good.”
@BubbaF0wpend4 ай бұрын
Why don't you try and choose to believe allah split the moon.
@Shawn-nq7du4 ай бұрын
Truth, beauty, and goodness, the three transcendentals, lead many to God.
@markallen80224 ай бұрын
I don't understand how you find it a choice to believe. Can you believe there is no gravity? Can you go up a very tall tower and decide that you can fly?
@dominicgerman59084 ай бұрын
It sounds you’re choosing to believe the good stuff in the Bible and maybe choosing to ignore some of the not-so-good stuff. Which is fine, those are the best kinds of Christians.
@RegularHunter4 ай бұрын
@@markallen8022because the existence of God can neither be proven nor disproven; it’s a choice each of us has to make, and reasonable minds can and have disagreed.
@nicolagoss99323 ай бұрын
Two of my favourite people, speaking on one of my favourite subjects. ❤
@burper-oe6tm4 ай бұрын
My favorite KZbinr plus my favorite collab guy
@lonecandle57864 ай бұрын
From my viewing of the Ayaan-Dawkins discussion, she didn't clearly answer whether or not she believed in the tree. The impression I got was that she doesn't, and only chooses in the sense that I choose to pretend that the characters in my favorite show are real so that I can get into the show and it makes the show more fun, but I, of course, know that they are not.
@Jazket4 ай бұрын
What an incredible delivery guys. Incredible I say. I could have sworn I was listening to two of our best Christian apologists today! High theological IQ from you both👏🏼👏🏼 God continues to bless you both. 🙏
@carolm7534 ай бұрын
Instead the “sacred” as what draws people to religion across time, I think it’s better clarified as what provides **hope and order**. Coming from a extremely religious and also academically religious background, I have heard this insinuated and spoken explicitly countless times. People have trouble letting go of their religion (or questioning their religion at all) because it is the ultimate fallback hope to acute and general mundane suffering in life. It orders the chaos and puts a light at the end of the tunnel. That is the draw to religion more than anything else about beauty and love, although those play into the same theme. Believed by its adherents, religion specifically secures a final hope/resolution and *enough* current order. However, it just does a poor job of inviting *everyone* to a path of spiritual transformation. Religion seems to be inherently sectarian and gated-group-forming. I would suggest precisely because it has to determine ultimate value/categorize humans in kind of a binary “are you in or are you out with God/heaven” kind of way. When that is the final stakes / dichotomy, religion will be sectarian. And an open-source spiritual path will be thought of as “secondary” or will be heavily devalued. I think today we are seeing the results of massive nominal-only Christianity and the desire for more real spiritual transformation/Aka fruits. Religion, if keeping ultimate binary stakes, cannot provide this. It will always devolve into a mechanistic belief system to secure hope. I honesty think people prefer a sense of “guaranteed hope/order” over the real ambiguity of pursuing the spiritual path open to everyone and anyone.
@alinachrist84164 ай бұрын
Agreed. Well worded. People have tried finding solace in the logic of new atheism but like all movements, it was destined to have a deadline to its popularity. It alienated a lot of people and the pendulum is swinging back to a mean position and in some parts of the world, to the other extreme as well.
@carolm7534 ай бұрын
@@alinachrist8416 for sure. I think there is a spacious meeting ground for all of us. Assuming there will be a perfectly harmonious future one day can also mislead us. Peace and love are a means, not an eventual end. Aka I don’t think unity=final same thinking for everyone, but unity= an effort to collaborate despite not thinking the same. Our diversity/collaboration, once you accept it’s gonna always be that way, is actually pretty fun! :)
@three_owl_night4 ай бұрын
That is very well articulated. My husbands side of the family is very religious, and all their testimonies share those elements you mentioned; some of them are obvious and on the surface, others are less articulated but still clearly observable from someone on the outside like myself. The obvious ones are the hope of salvation (eternal life after death which makes everything that happens in life bearable) and knowledge that everything is God's will (which is order, regardless of whether one likes that order or not). The less obvious one is the in/out group dynamics.
@corygiesbrecht91334 ай бұрын
Around <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="684">11:24</a> more I realize that Alex forgets the entire Eastern philosophy and "religion" like daoism and zen. No need to appeal to an "other" or "sacred" outside, the sacred, for we are and all is sacred and profane at the same time. Everything just is. It's very liberating and what the seekers in the west need to hear.
@alextyze4 ай бұрын
You are wrong... He knows that Eastern Philosophy of "finding God inside yourself" is one of the worst possible Philosophical ideas. Love the God inside yourself is to Love yourself. Finding Peace inside you is to ignore all those who need help outside you. You can understand it better from a Slavoj Zizek book called "Christian Atheism". PS: There are many Christian books better than this one, criticizing Buddhism for example, but I am not going to recommend it.... I know you wouldn't read them just because they are Christian books .... Better recommend a Left wing Atheist book to explain what I am trying to say.
@corygiesbrecht91334 ай бұрын
@@alextyze I can appreciate your comment. Not sure you understand eastern concepts well but you had limited space to explain. It's not about finding god within yourself or to love yourself, and if it was that would still not negate helping others suffering. It's difficult to liberate others from suffering if you are suffering yourself internally. I was a Christian for over 30 years and spent 7 years of it in a theological seminary. Most likely a lot of what you've read and found helpful I might have read or approached from a different writer or perspective. Nevertheless, I still hold that Alex' discussions will be greater once he begins to look at and incorporate more eastern approaches but his audience, like yourself, likely would find it to different an environment to comprehend and incorporate easily.
@dahliaherrod43014 ай бұрын
How can you be both sacred and profane at the same time? To be sacred it to be set apart for a specific purpose. It's impossible to be set apart and also adulterated with that which is NOT sacred.
@AntonioGalio-yh5zo4 ай бұрын
why do you call them things sacred and profane if they are the same?
@tijgertjekonijnwordopgegeten4 ай бұрын
@@corygiesbrecht9133I wouldn't necessarily say that it's because the environment would be too different to comprehend (though it may be part of it). But it's mostly about relevance, most of his audience is not interested in eastern religion which is why he doesn't talk about it much.
@nutzer57144 ай бұрын
I really like the development of Alex.
@alanarcher4 ай бұрын
The fact that Alex delves so deep into the Gnostic texts is extraordinary. The more he talks about the Gnostics and their conception of the universe, and reality as a whole, the more it feels like Buddhist Cosmology: Samsara, de realm of birth and death, is to be seen as a prison. A place - and a process, at that - where you are 'locked in', 'enslaved' by your own craving and clinging, which originates fundamentally from ignorance - that is, we see existence in the wrong terms, and therefore keep running around and around, chasing our tails, going up and down, up and down, eternally, until we find a way out. The way out is to destroy that very ignorance. There is no other way. And the way to end ignorance is the Eightfold Path, which leads you to the Truth of nirvana and liberation. We have a remarkable parallel on that aspect in the Gospel of John (which seems to be focused on liberation): So He said to the Jews who had believed Him, “If you continue in My word, you are truly My disciples. Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.” See: 'You will know the truth, and the truth will set you free'. Well, 'What is truth?' Pilate asks him later, but gives him no time to answer. Christians insist on repeating the words of Jesus, 'I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life'. Great. What does that mean? How do you apply that to your life, to your cognition, to how you see and interpret the world as a whole? How does THAT free you from being enslaved to sin and ignorance, because sin can only be born out of ignorance? What is a Christian supposed to DO in this world, instead of waiting passively for the Second Coming while the world turns to ash? There is a lot to unpack here, because the more you look at it, the more it seems that immense parts of Christian Cosmology have been erased and/or hidden, as if to intentionally make things more difficult and obscure. Maybe because the Powers That Be don't WANT you to be liberated.
@joannemoore39764 ай бұрын
Agree there are some fascinating parallels between Gnostic cosmology and Hindu philosophy too. Such a Barbarello the female aspect who is something like Adi Shakti.
@aguspuig66153 ай бұрын
To me stuff like this is the biggest argument against religion being a biological bug that helps us build societies. The level of specificity and wierdness to these traditions goes far beyond ''we dreamed of a bearded guy in the clouds that tells us to be good to eachother or he will punish us''. Its so specific, wierd, and consistent across different parts of the world, it has to be real in some capacity
@Fairbranksthecat2 ай бұрын
Harmony between order and chaos within oneself will project itself into the physical world.
@codiejcollins4 ай бұрын
The pendulum inevitably swings
@DeadEndFrog4 ай бұрын
And the masses are always amazed when they arent used to it swinging
@harrywatson26944 ай бұрын
but there is a reason for said swinging. it doesnt just occur
@DeadEndFrog4 ай бұрын
@@harrywatson2694 yes, cause and effect, amazing
@pitotzen23874 ай бұрын
The rise to Christ and Islamism in the west will push the minority atheist movement off the cliff
@pitotzen23874 ай бұрын
Atheism is not a pendulum, it’s an anomaly in history that has utterly failed. The people have awoken to the realization that with the removal of God from society, the downfall of society simultaneously occurs because they are inextricably linked, and more importantly it is a false belief. It now faces disintegration, for it offers society nothing but lies and ruin. The future is Theist. ❤
@lievenyperman93633 ай бұрын
Excellent conversation. Thanks guys.
@AlexThaxton4 ай бұрын
Damn that's a sweet Fall Out Boy t-shirt Chris is wearing.
@yanivhadar44894 ай бұрын
It is more likely that the tree is evolving, producing new kinds of fruits. An apple can appear in multiple colors, textures, and flavors, but if someone asks, "What's that?", the quick answer would still be "Apple." One can adhere to a set of rules and values, striving to align with the morals Jesus represents, without necessarily believing the entire story. Speaking as a Jewish Spinozian/Nietzschean/stoic seeker, I also bet that not a single Jew was wearing a yarmulke 3000 years ago.
@SeanusAurelius4 ай бұрын
Except that in this particular case, Jesus actually demanded belief (faith - they are the same word in Greek). The gospel of John could not be more explicit, it states multiple times that the purpose of the whole piece is that you believe in Jesus and Jesus says that that's what you need to do repeatedly. "That all who believe may not perish". "No one comes to the Father except through me". Etc.
@yanivhadar44894 ай бұрын
@@SeanusAurelius I understand your point, and you can see similar cases in other religions. The Jews demanded Samuel unite all tribes under one kingdom and find a king, so no one came to God except through Saul. From an unreligious perspective, this is a smart strategy. By telling people they must come to you first, you gain control over the chain that connects humanity to God. This is why Muhammad claimed to be the last true prophet, to gain power over that chain. The Old Testament opens with Genesis, telling two different creation stories. Which one should we believe? Or perhaps it's simply a good, nonliteral story. Maybe God wanted to share values, morals, and rules to help us become better people, and the best way to do that is by mixing parts of history with good storytelling.
@_wael4 ай бұрын
The point of Christianity is that you are saved by faith, the thief being crucified performed no works and followed no specific morals of Jesus. Yet Jesus says he will go to heaven. These people and their fruit are closer to atheists or Jews than Christians.
@karaokeandrandomclips4 ай бұрын
@@yanivhadar4489 The morals Jesus taught isn't just to be "good" in this life, but to have a personal relationship with him and be with him forever in the next life though. And it's not about gaining power- many of the early Christians were persecuted and killed for being Christians. Even Jesus himself was tortured and crucified, and said his followers shouldn't be surprised if the world hates us for following him.
@undiscoveredstars10024 ай бұрын
Except Jesus was gay and had 12 boyfriends
@95JakX4 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="72">1:12</a>:05 A Muslim friend I met at work essentially told me the same thing in as many words. It was very helpful in understanding their perspectives better as I was ignorant beforehand.
@aiya57774 ай бұрын
I have a question, in christianity can free will, exist independently from the devil? or the devil must exist to make free will possible?
@antonioperez40914 ай бұрын
He who says "Better to go without belief forever than believe a lie!" merely shows his own preponderant private horror of becoming a dupe... This fear he slavishly obeys... For my own part, I have also a horror of being duped; but I can believe that worse things than being duped may happen to a man in this world... It is like a general informing his soliders that it is better to keep out of battle forever than to risk a single wound. Not so are victories either over enemies or over nature gained. Our errors are surely not so awfully solumn things. In a world where we are certain to incur them in spite of all our caution, a certain lightness of heart seems healthier than this excessive nervousness on their behalf. William James,
@Ahamdulillah10014 ай бұрын
I have to acknowledge Alex, probably gives a better account of the difference between Islam and Christianity, than most other non-muslim podcasters. His understanding of Islam is still flawed but I have to say I'm very surprised by his understanding. He has clearly tried to research the topic in a more honest way than most. He has definitely earned my respect.
@Roxie-m9i2 ай бұрын
I believe Alex is a brilliant young man, and he does his research. There's no question about that. I also have Faith an hope that there is a God, I believe in sight unseen faith by choice. I would go to Alex for the truth about scripture more so than I would any Christian today because they are so biased and many don't do their research and some Christians are rather mean to you when you question the Bible. Because if you question the Bible, you might get true answers, and they're afraid of that that's my take and my experience with overzealous Christians. I've learned more about the Bible outside of reading it myself from Alex, thank you, Alex for being a scholar of the Bible. Whether you know what or not you're doing God's work as far as I'm concerned, because. when you quote scripture and tell us about what it really says, it's wonderful. I appreciate you 100%.
@samspade9834 ай бұрын
If there were as many new Christians in the world as there are ads in this video then there truly would be great Christian revival.
@JordanMillsTracks4 ай бұрын
😂
@boringbiblestudy18134 ай бұрын
As a Christian, I am always glad to hear from an intelligent and honorable atheist like Alex O’Conner. I greatly appreciate this channel and the quality perspectives it offers. It does seem that in trying to address wisdom to help people navigate the modern world, a spiritual dimension is often neglected, and I know that is because Chris is not particularly in that world, but I would love to see him engage more with it. More quality perspectives from all sides willing to have a constructive conversation. I can see Paul Vanderklay being a Christian who would work well on this program.
@Shawn-nq7du4 ай бұрын
Honorable? Are you kidding me. The way he paints God as a monster to his audience because of his fundamentalist and literalistic understanding of the OT. Did you watch the Dinesh debate and many others where he interprets Scripture literally? I don't know how many souls caved into atheism because of his fundamentalist approach on Scripture where he selectively cherry picks Scriptures and takes them out of context. Just curious why you name yourself boringbiblestudy. Maybe you too bought into his hermeneutics on Scripture.
@bbainter78804 ай бұрын
Plus one for PVK. Would be a great convo
@avisian80634 ай бұрын
@@Shawn-nq7dumy friend, until 5 minutes ago, Christians also believed that. The fact that apologists have had to sanitise the bible because it no longer aligns with modern morality is really the nail in the coffin of the claim that the bible offers any real foundation for an objective morality. And yes, I saw the dinesh debate, and just because Dinesh doesnt have an answer doesn't mean O'Connor is dishonourable. Just that his position doesn't have a great deal to offer. If that debate has lost souls, God should get better arguments
@boringbiblestudy18134 ай бұрын
@@Shawn-nq7du When I say honorable, I mean that he is generally charitable towards other Christians and tries to represtent their views accurately. His attacks are towards the arguments and not towards people. What is your definition of honorable? Alex thinks God is evil because of the way he interprets the scriptures and his own value system? This makes him wrong. Can people not be honorable in representing their views while being wrong? I agree he misunderstands verses and misses context sometimes, but cherry picking would suggest he is intentionally doing so. Yes, he has likely led many people to atheism, and that sucks, but I'd rather have someone make good arguments for atheism that get people thinking carefully than sloppy, emotional, uncharitable arguments for atheism which get people caught in their emotions and a false sense of superiority over the Christian views that they never understand. Alex often explains the Christian perspective accurately before explaining why he thinks this is wrong. I'd much prefer two intelligent and charitable interlocutors debating a topic than two idiot blowhards, and I find Alex is someone who is respectful and intelligent who can challenge me without insulting me, so I find that honorable. I chose the name Boring Bible Study because I had been studying Numbers, the book of the Bible I thought was most boring, and found that it was actually kind of interesting when I looked into it more. I wanted an outlet for all the things I had learned, so I started a KZbin channel to post my thoughts. I thought Boring Bible Study might catch people’s attention which in your case proved true. In retrospect, I've learned how to access much better quality commentaries since my videos on Numbers, so I do not know that the work there holds up very well, but it was a good stepping stone to what I am doing now where I am teaching at church.
@boringbiblestudy18134 ай бұрын
@@bbainter7880 Paul Vanderklay has that focus on cultural issues, a breadth of knowledge, and heart for helping people navigate tough issues and the modern world with nuance. I think he'd do great on this channel.
@Nrev9733 ай бұрын
I’ve been dreading watching this because I’m taking an Alex OConnor break. How can you be so sophisticated and so charitable and such a divergent thinker while also being pretty accurate about his historical knowledge. And then look over the fact that Hitler hated the Christian ethos, he locked up tons of Catholics and sent them to their deaths, especially the clergy, I don’t claim to know exactly what God Hitler prayed to, but the way he treated Christians doesn’t show that he was on their side. These atheist apologetics are exhausting 🥱.
@merlintym1928Ай бұрын
He believed in the state. He was "Catholic", but the interests of his German blood nation came first. God wasn't the master he served.
@SawyerCarlson-h6fАй бұрын
?
@Nrev973Ай бұрын
@@SawyerCarlson-h6f Alex can do better, I think he will.
@crucifiddle4 ай бұрын
Great job, Chris, as usual. I've run into several people lately who told me that they were "christians". I would have never known if they hadn't told me first. Not sure what that means...except maybe that the bar is set pretty low.
@ECThurn4 ай бұрын
alex been mewing fr
@pb56403 ай бұрын
Love Alex! He is the next Hitch!
@gooddaysahead14 ай бұрын
Having studied some major world religions I've found there there is much wisdom to be gained when looking for peace, equinimty, joy, acceptance of reality, life's value. But religion also makes absolute claims in the form of commands, rituals, demands, roles, etc. Can't we "tease out" the wisdom from these ancient traditions without accepting Iron Age social and truth claims?
@taobaoexpert1233 ай бұрын
What wisdom can you get from ancient religions that you can't with modern literature?
@gooddaysahead13 ай бұрын
@@taobaoexpert123 Interesting you should say. Wisdom doesn't seem to change over time. Mythological themes of heroism, love, redemption, origins...are common themes of all great literature. The paradoxical wisdom of strength in humility, loving unconditionally, losing self, is generally found in the great religions of the world. Problem? Good literature is hard to find.
@nonyobussiness34403 ай бұрын
@@taobaoexpert123all modern literature is influenced by ancient religions basically a copy so nope dog
@taobaoexpert1233 ай бұрын
@@nonyobussiness3440 Modern medicine is infleunced by old medicine doesn't mean we start trying blood letting again
@aguspuig66153 ай бұрын
I think a better question is why do those rituals arise if the only usefull part of the religion is its wisdom, and why do those rituals resemble eachother across all religions? can we truly be sure that all the spiritual side of all religions is false? and why is there such a strong movement that staunchly belives so if its obvious? For the longest time i was an agnostic, not religious, but humble enough that i didnt think i could be 100% sure religion was completely unfounded. It always baffled me how staunch atheists could exist, if youre guided by reason and logic, wouldnt you just act as if religion is false, becuase you havnt seen god or anything like that, without feeling the need to scream from the rooftops that its 100% false for sure? Atheism seems like a faith based system, like all religions, but at least religions have people who seem to honestly belive they have seen god in some vision, meanwhile atheism has no evidence for anything, yet the same conviction.
@Omer1996E.C4 ай бұрын
As a Muslim, I was astounded by his true knowledge about Islam. This man can make a podcast on Islam too at this point. Though I believe his beliefs are untrue, his knowledge is great. Brilliant 👏
@Eternal18114 ай бұрын
🤮🤮🤮🤮
@txrangertx24184 ай бұрын
I don't think he has a good understanding of Islam at all aside from just a superficial level. It doesn't sound like he did any research on Islam theology and philosophy. Fiqh, Ijtihad, Tawheed, Zikhr, Jihad, Fitna, Dunya, Zakat, Waḥdat al-wujūd, etc. All of these concepts in my opinion are are FUNDAMENTAL to what ISLAM actually is. One has to study these in their depth to have a better understanding into the Islamic Psyche.
@azmainfaiak81114 ай бұрын
@@txrangertx2418I think he has enough knowledge about reality......which Muslim Scholars really Lack
@yahyaaabdelmoez5532 ай бұрын
They are discussing religions based on Thier scriptures Reality is viewed differently by everyone Pretty sure you don't even know any of the concepts he just mentioned@@azmainfaiak8111
@monicatorres496525 күн бұрын
As a christian I love Alex!
@judahbrutus4 ай бұрын
Christianity is beautiful. It leads to happiness, fulfillment and peace
@someonesomeone254 ай бұрын
It didn't for me.
@avisian80634 ай бұрын
Is this new or just that there is a term for it now? Honestly have known lots of "cultural Christians" back when I was actually "in the church" some 20 years ago.
@joojotin4 ай бұрын
Yup thats exactly what I was thinking.
@dominicgerman59084 ай бұрын
Exactly. It’s not new.
@trevors63794 ай бұрын
It's a new term for it. I assume because people today are too afraid to call them "fake Christians"
@Fernando-ek8jp4 ай бұрын
It's more like it used to be something really taboo back in the day. Nowadays it seems like it's more accepted, specially because a lot of religious institutions feel threatened so they are now kind of forced to try and welcome those people who don't really believe but want to play pretend.
@BeastmanWatchUrMouth4 ай бұрын
Alex is probably one of my favorite people in the world
@12monkies1234 ай бұрын
It’s interesting, I liked him as an interviewer but there’s something kind of unlikeable when he’s the one being interviewed.
@Twittchyy4 ай бұрын
We love Alex
@matthewsheffer20144 ай бұрын
There are multiple missed points in the case of the captive taken in war and subsequently married. 1. Impulsive and irrational treatment of the woman is not allowed. She cannot simply be raped as often happens after battles. Time is given to restore rationality. He must not know her before the journey home, or before meeting his family, or before shaving her hair, ( at which point she is no longer a beautiful woman). Furthermore, she has time to mourn and the couple has time to get to know each other. Marriage provides her with a status as a wife and she gets to avoid starvation. If she goes free, she may go where she pleases. But I think the Hebrew culture was far superior to the surrounding cultures that she would likely be won over by the treatment mentioned above. But overall the above restrictions would make many come to their senses and not get married at all.
@PatrickFletcher4 ай бұрын
Wow ... this interview really hit the nail on the head. Truly brilliant!
@smashwombel4 ай бұрын
I just want to point out that conversion can be a process just like deconversion. When you deconvert or deconstruct your faith you start questioning one idea at a time instead of abandoning it all in one go. While many Christian faiths celebrate the once in a lifetime, born-again experience, nothing prevents you from moving to cultural christianity and from there to actual faith. That process can take multiple generations as well, maybe you never believe, but if you raise your children as christians they might end up being true believers.
@grannyannie29484 ай бұрын
Well said
@remps224 ай бұрын
will you still go to hell?
@three_owl_night4 ай бұрын
Why would one want to go to the "actual faith" in the first place? Especially when they already have a decent life by having healthy pracises, just without the religious dogmatism?
@grannyannie29484 ай бұрын
@@three_owl_night Would you really describe the present post modern hell hole a decent life?
@three_owl_night4 ай бұрын
@grannyannie2948 I was specifically talking about people who adopted healthy practices (long term monogamous relationship, forming communities, expressing gratitude and taking responsibility vs feeling entitled and always searching to blame someone). There are plenty of those, and I wouldn't describe them as a part of the hell hole; they are too busy living their life rather than being activists
@spohntube094 ай бұрын
My adult conversion to Christianity is certainly not about right wing conservatism, for what it's worth. And I know others like me that would make the same assertion. But I wouldn't disagree that those people exist. I think a lot of people are taking the path inward to understand the fruit and the tree at their own pace, regardless of the reason. As they come to understand and experience the tree and fruit, their reasons change along with their heart.
@mikewarren5351Ай бұрын
I watched the other podcast with Alex and Chris from 9 months ago, now 12 min into this one. This guy has my train of thought down to a T with coming back to Christianity, minus what I would truly describe as a call to faith that I feel inside me (although he does cover that in a round about way). I’m scared to watch the rest. Is he going to logic me out if it? It’s been so good for me and my family to get back. I feel I’m instilling powerful messages of morality in my children through Christianity that are so needed in these times.
@Tara-zq3il4 ай бұрын
Let's all start saying prayers for Alex to become a Catholic. 🙏🙏🙏.Sometimes you have to hit rock bottom before you are humbled enough to be brought to your knees and realize there is a possibility that there is something outside yourself. It's early days for Ayaan,.There are so many layers to Christianity.
@XDF7452 ай бұрын
Basically you have to be desperate enough to believe all that nonsense.
@SawyerCarlson-h6fАй бұрын
lets not and say we did.
@Tara-zq3ilАй бұрын
@@SawyerCarlson-h6f lol you must have gone to Caholic School.
@SawyerCarlson-h6fАй бұрын
@@Tara-zq3il lol nope. Public school.
@ecta96044 ай бұрын
I’m so curious about what a cultural Christian’s honest answer would be to two questions: Firstly, how would you know when the time had come to try something else? And secondly, if you became convinced that Christianity was actually corrosive to civil cohesion, would you stop being a Christian? I think that these sorts of questions get at the main difference between theological and cultural Christians. And I have got to say that theological Christians come across as way more authentic - cultural Christianity seems focused entirely on the mundane world, and in that way it seems to be almost the opposite of a religion. A religion, at the end of the day, is about engaging with a part of reality that is ‘higher’ than the mundane world, and how this higher reality may have correspondingly ‘higher’ claims on you and offer correspondingly ‘higher’ benefits. Get rid of those higher things and I don’t know if you’ve really got a religion anymore - you’ve got a Noble Lie. I think that theological Christians should be cautious about cultural Christian. It may feel like the number of Christians is increasing, but when you eat empty calories you also feel like you’re getting full.
@Joeshapiro74 ай бұрын
As an Orthodox Jew you probably have a point. Our religion is a religion of action. One that requires actions in all areas of ones life. So for us cultural religiously traditional Jews aren't problematic. If they take so many actions they usually wind up doing it for reasons of faith in the end. The problem with applying it to Christianity is that even in its most orthodox denominations it tends not to make demands over large areas of ones life. So in some areas the person lives a religious life and in Others he lives a secular live. As a result he tends to be vulnerabile to secular influence even when it's wrapped up in cultural Christianity.
@Direwolf17714 ай бұрын
As someone who grew up veeeery Christian, I would have viewed a “Cultural Christian” as someone coming in to influence and manipulate. Coming in under ulterior motives.
@zhugh95564 ай бұрын
I have always understood "cultural" Christian to refer to someone who was raised in a Christian environment and is therefore influenced by Christian culture while not being an active believer. In that sense I've never considered it a choice to be made. Any more than any other element of cultural heritage.
@AGW99-df3yg4 ай бұрын
I'm not sure what kind of answer you'd expect for that. The people who try to convert for cultural or political reasons are doing it purely because they don't think there's any better option to achieve their ideal type of society. The media puts on a show of disparaging Christianity, and when these people look at the "good old days" they notice a lot of it involved Christianity so they think that must be why it was good. That's the extent of their logic. Sooner or later, when they realize Christianity isn't going to help them realize their ideal society, some of them will abandon those ideals and go all-in on getting to live forever in Heaven and whatnot, and others will move on to some other ideology, probably more oriented to their goals.
@petretepner80274 ай бұрын
@@zhugh9556 I agree with you. I am/was a Catholic who "married into" a Sunni Muslim family. None of us are hot-blooded "believers", but we do find it important to understand each others' history and culture (including why we say bad things about Protestants, and they say bad things about Shi'ites🙃).
@zenobiadeans368015 сағат бұрын
True Christain is (as you said) having relationship with God ,a journey of sanctification and asking grace to conform to His values .
@mach74794 ай бұрын
Rise of Christian revival is better described as a fall of enlightenment: the period and principles responsible for the greatest improvement in quality of life ever.
@TheMrRelic4 ай бұрын
No, not really. This view assumes atheism is the pinnacle of enlightenment. It isn’t. Plenty of religious minds contributed to the scientific revolution that led to the enlightenment era.
@mach74794 ай бұрын
@@TheMrRelic And most of our physics understanding was contributed by an Alchemist. Yes I think astrology, alchemy, and applying agency to an supernatural world behind the scenes, are all quite against enlightenment (which is just the idea of checking one's and eachother's assumptions)
@khaderlander24294 ай бұрын
Consumer Culture: Modern secular societies often replace religious fulfillment with consumer goods, attempting to fill the void left by the decline of traditional religious values.
@johnofroncesvalles42554 ай бұрын
Also, mass sport has replaced worshipping the Word with a ball.
@nathanm60504 ай бұрын
What? That has nothing to do with secularism, the United States is extremely consumerist and has been religious to a fault for most of its history
@tijgertjekonijnwordopgegeten4 ай бұрын
Correlation does not mean causation... Just because consumerism went up at the same time as secularism doesn't mean that one is causing the other. And who exactly would be doing this? What atheist has enough power in the U.S. (which is more consumerist than the other less religious western countries) to decide that we will now replace religion with consumerism. Please think about things like this a bit longer before so confidently stating a hypothesis that you won't be able to prove.
@kappaprimus4 ай бұрын
Conversely, many religious people are specifically the consumers who keep buying items of "religious significance"
@XDF7452 ай бұрын
Except the most religious of the wealthy western societies is also the most consumerist, vapid and shallow. I'm sure you can guess who it is.
@GorillaStrengthEquipment3 ай бұрын
The tree of knowledge... You are missing the point here. There is a huge difference in knowing that there is Good and Evil and being able to tell the difference between the two. When man became aware of good and evil, he decided be the judge of what was good and what was evil. Man stopped trusting the judgement of God. This, my friend, is what has lead us to the place that we are in.