Rogan says he goes to church, amazed at the historic consensus on Jesus Christ
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Podcaster Joe Rogan praised the quality of the religion, noting that he enjoyed going to church and listening to the Bible and its teachings.
between him Interview with “Triggernometry” host Three commentators, Francis Foster and Constantine Kissin, note the benefits of inner peace and moral certainty. After Kissin pointed out that he had started attending church services again and thoroughly enjoyed them, Rogan agreed.
“So do I. This is a group of people who are going to try to make their lives better,” he said. “They’re trying to be a good person, and they’re trying to – for me at least, the places I go to – you know they read and analyze passages of the Bible. I’m really interested in what these people are trying to say, because I don’t think it’s anything.”
Rogan added that he has seen many self-styled intellectuals mock religion and reduce it to “fairy tales,” arguing that this is a shallow way of looking at thousands of years of accumulated human experience.
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Joe Rogan talks about his experience of going to church and studying the Bible.
“There’s a lot of, like, atheists and secular people who just like to dismiss Christianity as silly. You know, ‘These are just fairy tales.’ “I’ve heard, you know, self-intellectuals say ‘that’s a fairy tale,'” Rogan said. “Like, I don’t know if that’s true. I think there’s a lot more to it. I think it’s history, but I think it’s a confusing history. It’s a confusing history because it was so long ago. And those people say things in an oral tradition, then write things in a language you don’t understand, in the context of a culture they say what you understand.
Rogan notes the ubiquity of flood myths around the world and points out that there is scientific evidence that prehistoric floods were caused by comet impacts. He argued that there was clearly little physical evidence for the claims made in the biblical narratives.
Rogan particularly praised Jesus Christ, noting that he was philosophically remarkable and A historically valid figure.
“Christianity in particular is the most fascinating to me, because it’s the one person that everyone agrees exists, that had the best plan and best example of how humans should interact and behave with each other, and died in a non-violent way, like didn’t even protest, died on a cross,” Rogan reportedly told Us s. “Like it’s a compelling story.”
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As the New Atheist movement of the 2000s has waned, many young people are returning to various denominations of Christianity. (iStock, courtesy of user Vasil Dimitrov)
“This is a historically documented man,” Rogan later noted, speaking of the uniqueness of the Christian Messiah. “That’s where it was weird, because there’s a universal portrayal of what this guy was like. It didn’t seem that different among all the people who knew him. It was weird.”
Frances Foster praised the episode Roman Catholic mass Where worshipers wish each other peace, noting that some strangers form a real human connection with a handshake and three words: “Peace be with you.”
Rogan agreed on how powerful a gesture this is, arguing People want something outside of themselves And their willingness to guide.
“You just rely on your whims and your, you know, whatever moral thing you want to do, you know, then you know what you get? You get people who are unable to answer the question of whether you should protect the unborn, or whether they have human rights,” he said.
“If you have religion, you go ‘Wow, that’s a good question,'” Rogan said.
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Russian-British comedian and political commentator Konstantin Kissin noted that he has been attending church recently and enjoying it. (Screenshot/Youtube/OxfordUnion)
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Foster is a new atheist movement popular in the early 2000s and claims that people don’t need religion.
“I think that’s fundamentally wrong,” he said.
Kissin and Rogan both noted that they were once interested in the New Atheist movement.
“But a lot of them fell apart,” Rogan said. “A lot of them get a real personality; they don’t seem too intellectual. They don’t seem quiet, which is interesting.”
Rogan noted that he has met Christians with whom he both agrees and disagrees politically, calling them some of the happiest and kindest people he has met in his life.
Alexander Hall is an associate editor at Fox News Digital. Story tips can be sent to Alexander.hall@fox.com.



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