Danny Jones Podcast - #408 - Trump’s Pastor & Vatican’s Most Evil Crime in History | Nathan Apffel
Episode Date: June 26, 2026Watch every episode ad-free & uncensored on Patreon: https://patreon.com/dannyjones Nathan Apffel is a filmmaker & director of The Religion Business, a multi-part docu-series that exposes the scams i...n Western religion, particularly Christianity. SPONSORS https://whiterabbitenergy.com/?ref=DJP - Use code DJP for 20% off. EPISODE LINKS https://www.thereligionbusiness.com https://www.instagram.com/nathan_apffel https://www.instagram.com/religionbusiness @thereligionbusiness FOLLOW DANNY JONES https://www.instagram.com/dannyjones https://twitter.com/jonesdanny OUTLINE 00:00 - Growing up in megachurches 06:42 - Faith in God vs. faith in faith 09:51 - Reading the Bible as a history book 19:49 - Crony capitalism of organized religion 22:59 - Explaining the surge in Christianity in U.S. Gov 26:00 - Trump's bizarre stance on Christianity 27:05 - Trump's Spiritual Advisor 28:45 - Why Trump didn't swear on the Bible 33:03 - Using Bible verses to justify war 37:21 - Islam vs. Christianity vs. Judaism 39:35 - They want to bring the End Times 45:44 - The business structure behind every church 56:40 - Getting arrested for exposing churches 01:05:13 - The biggest financial scam happening in churches right now 01:11:00 - Blood oaths & rituals of the Mormon Church 01:15:40 - The lack of ICAC funding 01:18:23 - How churches protect s*xual abusers 01:27:44 - How congregations react to Nathan's message 01:31:36 - Visiting Kenneth Copeland's property 01:36:52 - Why pastors are obsessed with armed security 01:38:53 - San Diego mosque shooting 01:41:10 - Trafficking the name of Christ 01:46:24 - Nathan's NDE from traumatic brain injury 01:54:42 - The problem with religious "healers" 02:00:40 - What Satan will look like 02:01:58 - Jesus in the garden of Gethsemane 02:10:17 - What if religion is a sham? 02:13:03 - Contradictions in the Bible 02:17:29 - What happens when we die 02:23:47 - Nathan "sees" the path of God 02:32:46 - How churchgoers can reform the system 02:38:19 - How alien disclosure could impact religion 02:46:04 - The early church model 02:51:35 - The dangers of Christianity & Islam Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You're like the RFK of Christianity now.
It's crazy. It's crazy.
Trying to weed out all the corruption in the world.
Yeah. Someone called me obsessed this morning.
They're like, you have a like a sick obsession.
And I'm like, you can call it that.
Well, you have to be obsessed with this stuff to be, to be good at it, to be effective at it, you know.
Yeah.
Like anyone worth their salt and anything is obsessive over whatever they do.
And I'm like, it's not a, is it bad that I'm obsessed about like bringing transparency into religious
organizations. Right. I don't think that's a bad thing. Right. But they did say you're going to,
you're going to account for this one day with God. And I'm like, okay, I think he's on my side in this
one. But yeah. So how did this shit start, dude? How did this whole religious crusade start for you?
Are we rolling, by the way? Yeah. Are we rolling? We are rolling. We are rolling.
Oh, right. When I was, I grew up in the church. So I grew up in mega churches and big churches and
and loved it. You know, I sang in choir as a kid and went to all the youth programs,
the winter camps, the summer camps, and I loved it. I was volunteered, you know, I gave my 10%.
I did it all. My parents singing choir. I sang in choir. I'm one of six kids.
And there was just a couple things in my late teens and in 20s that really, I would say,
shaped me. And I consider it like, I consider it God. I'm a friend believer in God.
And I'm like, God just put me in situations that I couldn't look away.
And like one of them was my youth pastor.
So he was my junior high pastor.
And then as I grew up, he got, you know, he moved up to become the high school pastor.
And then was being groomed to take over this large megachurch that I went to.
He gets arrested for sexually abusing his adopted child.
And he just got out of jail like 20 years later.
And I was like, well, how is this guy being groomed to take over this church?
and he's had decades in churches now
and no one realized that he was
his child.
You know, like this is just bizarre to me.
And then,
and then I went to Brazil.
I was in Rio.
Yeah.
That same trip, actually,
and one of my buddies,
a bodyboarder,
a pro bodyboarder from Brazil is like,
hey, I want to take you to this seminary.
Speed bump.
Pro speed bump.
Exactly.
Exactly.
Spongers.
There's all sorts of names.
But he's like,
I want to take you to this seminary
in the master.
mountains in the favelas, like in the poor regions of Brazil. And I'm like, let's go.
Yeah. Seminary is basically like where you go to learn and study the Bible. Right. And so I roll
up to it. And he's like, you're going to love it. It's this old white guy from Texas and his
wife that run it. And they've never taken a dollar, ever taken a dollar. And he's like,
he's like, you need to hear their story. So what happened was they graduated seminary in Texas in
the like, I think the late 70s. I can't remember the year. And they just felt led to leave America.
So they go to Brazil with $3,000 and they want to spread the gospel, the message of Christ.
And he's like, this guy had one main point.
He is not taking money from anybody.
And so he bought this brick-making machine.
And so he would make bricks during the day and then go out and teach people about Jesus at night.
And they ended up building this little brick house out of their brick-making machine.
And they took one orphan off the street in.
And they're like, we're going to teach, you know, you can live with us.
We want to teach you the gospel.
we're going to teach you how to make bricks.
So not only are they teaching you the love of Christ that the scriptures say,
but we're going to teach you how to do something to make money.
And 50 years later, they have hundreds of orphans running through their program every year,
and they have different skill sets that they teach these kids,
whether that be sewing and dressmaking, whether that be mechanics.
They have a mechanic shop, whether that be brick making.
They still make bricks.
And so they take these street kids in off.
of the streets, give them a roof over their head, give them something to eat, and teach them
the gospel, and then send them out when they're grown up. And it's like, you've got a career
now, and you've got a great way to spread the gospel. And they never took a dollar. Wow. And I was
like, this is such a beautiful system because it's so antithetical to the American church system.
Because American churches, you know, the pastors love to say, hey, you know, like, we need your
money. We need 10% or even more. Give us go above and beyond 10%. Right.
But then if you need help, they go, we're not going to, you need to learn to fish.
Well, it's, it's the American way, right?
That's the American way to do religion.
Correct.
You know, like righteous gemstones nailed it.
Yeah.
That is one of my favorite shows of all time.
Yeah.
That is reality.
It's a walsh, baby, Billy.
It's a walsh.
It's not, after I pay my scientists.
What's his elixir called?
Oh, I don't remember.
He's like, baby, Billy's Jesus Christ elixir.
It'll cure COVID-19.
Oh, you got it.
You don't have to play it.
It's so good.
His character.
It's one of the greatest shows, dude.
It's so fucking funny.
Yeah.
Well, and it is reality.
Like they did go above and beyond a little bit, but like watching this right now, this is a megachurch.
And this is the prosperity gospel.
Right.
Yeah, there it is.
There it is.
There is a QVC with baby Billy's health elixir.
It's so good.
And you can take that business.
So this is what a lot of people don't know is you can take for-profit businesses and
bring them under.
Dude, this is so good.
Sorry.
Oh, yeah.
So he dies and then he gets stung by a bee, comes back to life.
Then he tries to sell what he's, then he says he talked to God when he was dead.
He tries to sell the information he got from God.
It's so good.
That's what we do.
We sell shit here.
Well, we capitalize and consumerize a faith that.
was never meant to be sold.
Right, right.
You know, I always tell people,
the message of Christ is not easy to sell,
but if you can figure out how to package it,
then you can sell it.
So that's what all the add-ons are.
Like, you gotta give 10% or above and beyond
to really be blessed, Danny.
Right.
Like, none of this is scriptural.
These are just add-ons that man has built and wrapped around.
We turned it into a subscription model, basically.
Yeah, exactly.
And subscription models are the most lucrative models.
It's the future, baby.
So what, you said you were born, like,
in the Catholic Church, right?
No, I was born in like non, I was born in that.
Like that type of stuff.
That's over a little louder than what I was born in,
but like I was born in the non-denominational,
what I call the Wild West side of Christianity.
So most people that I know personally,
who grew up like hardcore being pushed into that with their parents,
they usually like rejected by like their teenage years,
you know what I mean?
They kind of, they don't really stay with it the whole time.
Was there ever like a period of your childhood
where you like weren't seriously religious?
just? Not my childhood. It was when I got into my 20s. And so, you know, like I said, it's one gentleman,
a Catholic professor and theologian and philosopher in the show. He says, Nathan, most people
have faith in their faith in God, but they don't have faith in the God of their faith. And he's like,
it's a really subtle shift. So people have faith in their faith in God. So if I go to Billy Bob's
church or whatever his name is, and it's big and
loud and flashing. I feel all warm and fuzzy when I go, that's my faith. I have faith in this
system that we've built. But I don't have faith in the God that's supposedly behind it.
Because if you actually believe what this book said, oh, you brought your Bible. Oh, yeah.
This God calls you to do serious, like seriously dangerous things and things that aren't necessarily
for the betterment of yourself a lot of times. Right. And so you'd rather just put your faith
in your faith in this institution in that in that healing formula and you know the subscription model
because that's safe and so i'm sure a very low percentage of Christians who call themselves
Christians or go to church every week I've actually read the entire Bible only 13% oh wow that low
yeah yeah 13% so you're technically you don't even know what you're believing so you have faith
in the faith in the institution um and so it wasn't until my late teens where I started questioning that
I was like, this is all a sham.
You know, I had, I realized like in high school,
I'm like every kid, most kids wanted to go to youth group
because that's where they, you know,
you wanted to be seen by the, with the cool kids.
You know, I wanted to be sitting in that front pew
with the cool kids.
And I've just, I've always been like a counter-culturalist,
like I don't like, like one of my mentors always said,
Nathan, as soon as you're with the majority,
you're doing something wrong.
And like, so I would always see everybody
going to these youth groups because that's where the cool kids went.
And I'm like, what it, like, it started rubbing me wrong.
Yeah.
And that's when I started poking holes or asking questions.
And I realized, when I was 25, I bought the domain, ReligionBusiness.com.
So that was 17 years ago now.
Because I just felt there was something wrong with this institution, with the faith that we had built.
And as I started asking questions, I realized it's just a house of cards.
And you can flick one card and the whole house will crumble.
whether that be the finance card, whether that be the accountability card.
And so, yeah, so that's really where I question my faith and my faith.
And so for the first time ever, I actually read the book.
Oh, wow.
Cover to cover.
And I'm like, whoa, this book is way different than what we preach, you know, from that stage and what we've built.
It's actually antithetical to it.
It's totally the opposite.
Right.
And so that's when I picked up my proverbial cross and was like, okay, let's go.
I just started reading the Bible not long ago for the first time.
And I was advised to read it backwards.
So I started, I started with Revelation.
That's big.
It's the crazy as fuck, dude.
It is.
It is insane.
Yeah.
That's going on.
Like, I don't know.
I can't make a valid assessment yet.
I'll wait until I get through it.
Where are you at now?
I'm on like, I don't know which part I'm at, but I got through basically everything about the messages about all.
the seven churches or whatever. And it's like... So you're still in Revelation. Yeah, I'm still in
revelation. You're just starting? Yes, I'm just starting. And, um, you know, some of the stuff in there
is just, you know, to imagine that somebody was sitting somewhere on an island or somewhere on
earth writing this shit. Yeah. It's kind of hard to imagine, you know, because they're writing about
like this figure, this ghostly figure with the, the tongue of a sword or the tongue of a sword or a dagger
her tongue and revelation who told you to start in revelation if you don't it's a bold move
it's a bold move a gentleman who's been on the show a couple times who is a classicist okay
who's an expert in ancient greek he told me to read it well first he said you got to read it in
greek and read it backwards i said i can't fucking learn greek yeah but i will read it backwards
so i'm gonna try and see what i see what interesting yeah i always tell people like the
the bible is people see it as oh my gosh it's 66 books
It's so complicated, or at least the current canonized, most popular version of 66 books.
It's just one story though.
You know, and it's about creation and then the fall of creation and the redemption of that creation.
And so when you, I always tell people, look at it as one massive historical story.
And that's what really, what I've been in church, I was raised in church, like in a car seat,
you know. And so when I finally read it cover to cover, I said, Nathan, I'm going to read it without any,
I don't want to try to get any revelation from it.
I'm not trying to see how it applies to my life.
I just want to read it for what it is as a history book.
And when I read it just as history without my like youthful bias, you know, being raised in an institution,
that's when the book came alive because you realize like, oh my God, there's fire raining down from heaven
onto altars and burning up altars, you know?
Right.
Dead men are raising up.
And like, it's a wild story.
It's like Lord of the Rings, you know?
Right.
Yeah.
No, it is.
I kind of got corrupted, though, because I've talked to so many religious experts on this podcast
and so many, like, scholars in different parts of, you know, ancient religion, ancient
history involving Christianity in the Romans and the Greeks. I kind of have like a, I already
have a warped perspective. So I wish I could, you know, I try to like reset myself and like go out
out with a blank mind because I hear a lot of people talk about the same when you talk about it,
how it's just like it's this, it's this crazy kind of, it opens like a portal to, you know,
when you read it.
And it's like you can connect with it.
And it does something to you.
And I'm trying to get there.
I always say it, for me, it's like, I see it is it's the history of humanity.
It's the greatest literary work of mankind.
And so there's something, whether, because I sit with a lot of atheists, agnostic, Muslims, Christians.
And I, like, I have a love for everybody.
And I'm like, now, this book will teach you something whether you believe it's divine or not.
Like, it's a brilliant book.
And then Christ, like I'm a, how would I say it? Like I push against everything. So I pushed against that book most of my life.
Really?
Oh, yeah. And I pushed against like the deity of Christ. And, you know, he says, I'm the way the truth in the life. No one gets to the father except through me. And I pushed against that for 35 years. I just couldn't, I couldn't rationalize it in my head. How, you know, there's only one way technically to to our creator, to our father. And so I wanted to displead.
prove it actually. I'm like, this is, I want to prove this thing wrong. And in, and over the last 10 years,
just like you, I think it's divinely inspired, but I've gotten to sit with some of the leading
theologians and scholars in the world. And it's just, it's fascinating to hear from brilliant minds
and different perspectives and, you know, different theologies on that book. And so the book,
I'm obsessed with the book now. It's, it's, it's, it is a literal obsession. Yeah. I mean,
that's one of the, that's one of my, my biggest interests is like, who,
the hell was Jesus Christ and what was he really doing? Like if you could take a time machine and go back
2,000 years and see like what he was really doing and what who who he was talking to and like
who he really was because, you know, with that telephone game, that 2000 year telephone game,
I imagine it's going to be really fucking hard to keep that story accurate. And there's people that
have warped it over time, not just with literal translations of languages.
and being generous with those translations to fit whatever their narrative is,
but also people, not just now, but throughout history,
these church fathers have been profiting off this for a very long time.
Yeah.
So there's a very high potential that that story's been warped to an extreme.
Yeah, I have this theory, and I call it the pendulum theory of Christ,
and I don't present it publicly very often, so I'm going to present it to you.
And when I see Christ in that book, you know, you know how pendulum swing left to right.
And there's always like that.
So over here I see like my mom and my brother who are these extremely conservative Christians who believe this book is, is the divinely inspired, the word of God.
It's infallible.
You know, in Christ is the literal son of God who was born and a virgin died on a cross, raised and resurrected and is coming back.
Like that's this literal conservative version of this book.
And if you swing the pendulum all the way over, historians unanimously agree that there was a historical figure named Christ who was crucified by the Romans.
Yes.
So let's-
There's a couple wackos out there who don't believe he was real.
For sure.
But what are they called mythicists?
Is that right?
Oh, I don't know.
I think they're called mythacists.
Okay.
They think he was a myth.
But let's swing that as the other side of the pendulum, right?
And so Christ is on this pendulum.
And his teachings, though, were so.
profound in Israel at the time that they killed him for it, right? Because he was pushing against an
institution so hard. So I always say, like, if we see Christ on this pendulum, whether you believe
he's the son of God and the infallible word of God is accurate and he was born and raised
and resurrected, or he was a man who taught to love your neighbor as yourself and love no other God
before me. But he died on a cross but didn't resurrect. That's the pendulum. And this is where I see that
verse where Christ says, I'm the way the truth in the life, no one gets to the Father except
through me. No matter where you fall on that pendulum, I believe the ethos of Christ, the logos of
Christ is going to meet you there. Because when you look at his teachings about loving your neighbor
and Matthew 25 about helping the hungry and the thirsty and the naked and the sick and the poor
and the prisoner and the sojourner, when you really get into the weeds of Christ, that is the way
to love others above yourself. That is the truth, actually. Put the ego in.
aside, you know, and that is the way I experience life. Like you as a father, I'm a father,
like giving yourself to a child and like you're, they are above you, their needs are above
yours. That is like the ultimate. And so I always talk about this pendulum. Like wherever you
fall on that pendulum, if you're searching for Christ's true, the logos behind Christ, you're going to
find it. And yeah, so it's really like I love that. Like you don't have to be this legalist
obsessive, this is infallible word of God.
No, Christ is going to meet you.
His teachings are going to meet you where you're at if you're searching, you know,
but so many people just don't search.
Right.
And so that's the beauty of Christ.
I think, like, I love talking to people wherever you're at on that line and that spectrum
because it's like I've wrestled with it from from this side of the pendulum all the way
through, you know, and I'm kind of moving along the pendulum like this sometimes, you know.
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Now back to the show.
Religion itself is just also very, it's very interesting to me because I feel like it fits into the human psyche perfectly.
You know, it's like the fact that humans have this ability, like unlike any other animal on earth, to have reason, to be able to reason and game things out and think ahead into the future and also think into the past.
we are able to figure out that, okay, my parents made me, their parents made them.
Everything created something, right?
So we can't create ourselves.
So therefore there must be this other thing that we don't know that created us.
There's this gap in our knowledge.
And we figured out a way to fill it.
Some people call it like the God-shaped hole in the psyche.
So I do think that like the human brain is,
perfectly constructed to fit this.
And it's a perfectly reasonable thing,
especially if it's something that will help bring communities together
or make people's lives better.
But, you know, like with everything you're doing,
there's also this huge segment of society,
which unfortunately in today's media
is the only thing you hear about.
You don't hear about the good stories.
You only hear the negative stories.
That use this stuff as either a crutch
or an excuse or a shield.
like really bad people, like all of a sudden embracing the Bible and like, look at this.
I'm a Christian now.
You don't look at anything else.
And then, you know, people that are just like making insane amounts of money, which, you know,
I wrestle with that all the time with all kinds of subjects where you have these mega corporations
behind things that are good and they're just making insane profit and monopolizing them, you know,
at the, you know, they are good things.
It's just like at any level of society, any sort of product, any sort of idea or ideology
out there, there's always somebody behind it or some corporation behind it that's profiting
from it.
Well, that's where Christ's message is the reverse of that.
Right.
And I said someone on Tucker and just got obliterated for it.
I'm like, capitalism should have nothing to do with Christianity.
Of course you got obliterate.
It is the worst part of capitalism, right?
There's a scale with capitalism, right?
When it goes way off the charts, that's when you see society start to decline.
Like when you see what's happening with capitalism getting baked into the government
and getting baked into our politics and wars and religion.
That's when it goes off the rails.
Yeah, I call it crony capitalism.
It's like the capitalistic structure is a beautiful economic structure,
but it does corrupt if you don't keep it on guard rails.
And we constantly, I always talk about reform.
We constantly need to reform.
systems. And even the biblical narrative is this idea of birth, death, and resurrection
over and over again. When something corrupts, you kill it as quickly as possible because
new life comes out of that. You know, beautiful new life. It's like a forest fire. You know,
forests have to burn the deadfall. Because if it doesn't, it just chokes out the forest. And that's
the point of a forest fire. And so we have institutions and systems now that don't let the forest
fire move through. And that's politics and religion, right? We bail out corporation because
it's too big and it's just so that's why I beat this obsessive drum of reform over and over again
because these systems have leveraged capitalism and to a point where it's it's just I call it
crony capitalism and people will their excuses Nathan capitalism is wonderful but it's like sure
two things can be true at once capitalism can be a great economic driver to lift a nation up out
of poverty or up, you know, up its GDP. But at the same time, if you don't have guardrails on
that capitalism, when new technologies come into play, it just creates opportunity for abuse.
And that's what we're seeing in government and in religion, an organized religion, is the systems
haven't reformed. The laws haven't kept up with technology. And so now, politics and religion are
the two most abused systems out there. And they claim, oh, if you're trying to reform a
us, you're a socialist or a communist or you're against us. It's just pathetic. What do you,
what do you make of this new Christian surge in the U.S. government and using it to justify
these foreign wars and stuff like this? I think this is history. Humans aren't that smart.
History repeats itself. Look at Iran and what happened in the late 70s, you know, the sexual
revolution dipped into Iran, morals were in decays. So a big part of the country was like,
hey, we need to get our morals in line. What are we going to do? Oh, Islam is the way to do it.
So they forced Islam down with the Ayatollah. So Islam became a theocracy, right? Islam became
the moral dictator in Iran. And for a couple decades, it kind of worked. But again, systems corrupt.
that Islam became a massive tool for abuse.
And this is, and we've culminated here.
I see the exact same thing happening in the U.S.
The church is corrupted.
The institutional church is so corrupt morally.
And what I mean by that is you can go to a Sunday service in any denomination,
and usually you'll hear a relatively decent sermon from that stage about, hey, Danny, be a good person.
Like, love your neighbor.
give, but then the structure of that institution runs antithetical to the message.
Right.
Right.
And that can only hang on for so long.
And so I believe we're at a tipping point and inflection point in Christianity, which is
the majority religion in America.
And so the populist Christian senses something wrong with the institution.
They can't really articulate it.
And that's what the religion business is doing is it's articulating this inflection point.
And so now the pastors are like, well, shit.
Like, we're not that, like, we're not going to renege on our business model because it's very beneficial to us.
So we're going to try to force Christianity from the politic down.
It happened in Rome as well.
Constantine saw Christianity as a glue to bind the empire together.
Right.
Like Carl Truman in the religion business calls it, he's a Reformation thought expert.
He calls it like a common imaginative ground in every nation state needs.
this. If you don't have a common goal, the nation fractures. And so Constantine was like,
Christianity can be a great common goal for Rome. So he brought Christianity up as he became a
Christian which would eventually turn Rome into a Christian nation. And so the same thing's happening here.
America's fracturing. And so the politic, the right side of politics, the conservative side,
I'm not saying the right, but you know, the rights, the right side of politics, the conservative
side, not the current administration. Yeah, the current administration sees
Christianity as a mechanism to move its agenda.
That's what I believe.
And so it's catalyzing that.
That's so interesting.
And it's using scripture.
It's using out-of-context scripture
to promote its agenda.
Yeah.
And it's so transparent, too.
You know, like I think Trump's one of the only presidents
who was sworn in who didn't touch the Bible.
Didn't put his hand on the Bible.
That's a big problem.
Right?
Isn't that weird?
Did anyone ever ask him about that?
Yeah.
I wonder. And there was that whole moment when the riots were happening during his first administration in D.C.
And he came out and he did this thing in front of this church. And he was like they handed in the Bible and he was holding it like it was, I don't know, a dirty diaper or something.
And he was like reading from it. Like he doesn't seem like a historically a very religious person.
Well, he doesn't when I can't remember the exact quote, but someone was like, hey, what's your favorite book of the Bible? And he's like the old and the new test. All of it.
I saw that. I saw that. I would be hard. They were even trying to be generous with him. Yeah. Oh, maybe this one.
Maybe this one.
You know what?
Yeah, all of it.
I don't want to get hung up on any details.
It's just, and that's what, that arrogance of the scripture is saturating in, in the national church.
Yeah.
That's him being sworn in this time.
Find out if anyone ever asked him about it.
And then that lady Paula White, what's her story?
That's his personal pastor?
Spiritual advisor. Spiritual advisor. So Paula White is, yeah, Trump's President Trump's spiritual advisor. She's just all say been a leach in the Christian system for decades now. You know, she's started multiple churches or taken over churches. And there's a pattern in one specific niche where someone will move into a church and institution and basically drain it of its resources, then move on. That's what Paul.
White does. She'll take over a larger church, drain it of its resources. People usually fracture
or leave, and then she moves on to the next one. Didn't she marry like the keyboardist of Journey?
Journey. Yeah. I love Journey. She's a rock star, dude. Good songs. Good for him. Yeah. He got himself a good
preacher lady. Well, no, now he's just plays the keyboard in worship. I feel bad for him. I'm like,
you went from Journey to this. It's a demotion in my opinion, but. Well, didn't she didn't you, didn't
go to, doesn't she have a church here in Florida? I went to her church in Apopka. Yeah. Oh,
really? Well, it's her son's church now. Oh, okay. Yeah, but I went to, my wife and I went to
Easter Sunday service at her church, yeah. So a couple months ago. Does she have a like a chain of
churches or just one? Just one. Oh, well, that's good. At least she's not like turning it into a
chain. She actually has none now because to to become a special government employee, she could not
have that outside job. So she gave it to her son. She passed the church down to her son.
Oh, okay. Which is baked into the bylaws. Oh, wait. Whoa, this is big. Reverend Franklin Graham
explains why Trump didn't swear on the Bible.
I'll zoom in a little bit. During Monday's inauguration ceremony, after the incident sparked a
flurry speculation amongst Christians online. Speaking to Premier Christian news, Graham insisted
that the omission had no spiritual significance and said it was simply an issue of ceremonial timing.
you're supposed to be sworn in by 12, Graham said,
and I think it was now 12-0-1.
And so that was just kind of hurried
and he didn't have time to put his hand on the Bible.
Okay, I want to break this down for you
because do you know who Franklin Graham is?
I have no idea.
Okay, so this is big.
I've never seen this.
So Franklin Graham is Billy Graham's son.
Billy Graham is one of the biggest evangelist,
like old school evangelists in America.
The fact that Bill or Franklin Graham
would Franklin Graham also run Samaritans Purse, which is a multi-billion dollar a year,
or multi-billion dollar organization.
What's it called?
Samaritans Purse.
Samaritans Purse.
And then he also took over the BGEA, which is the Billy Graham Evangelical Association,
which was his father's, another organization that his father had started.
And so he's taken multiple salaries.
But the fascinating thing about this is Franklin Graham is a spiritual figure for President Trump as well.
So I'm going to read this. Graham insisted the omission had no spiritual significance and it was simply an issue of ceremonial timing.
Franklin Graham, as a Christian leader, why do you care at all about ceremonial timing as opposed to spiritual significance?
If I was up there with him, I'd be like, you're going to swear on this Bible.
This is our faith.
Like my uncle, a congressman from multiple terms swore on the Bible.
Like when I got married, I swore on the Bible because there's more significance to this book and loving your neighbor and being an honest man of integrity than ceremonial timing. Does that make sense?
Yeah.
So one of the biggest spiritual voices in America said, screw the spiritual significance. It's about ceremonial timing. Like what a pathetic excuse.
Yeah. That's kind of a silly cop out, right?
Yeah. But same thing is, you know, Billy Graham would be rolling. I'd confidently say he's rolling.
over in his grave in regards to Franklin, his son's stance on the Iran War.
What is his stance on the Iran War?
Can you pull up Franklin's, he just made a, I don't want to misquote him, but he's,
Franklin's using scripture to justify the war.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
And it's just a bull, again, a bold, his father was adamantly against that type of movement.
And his father talk, his father was well versed on the synagogue of Satan and just this whole idea.
Really?
Yeah. And so Franklin,
just totally gone in a different direction.
And it's when this book...
Where's the synagogue of Satan?
I've had somebody call our studio
the synagogue of Satan before online.
Oh, really?
Yeah, somebody in the comments said,
this is the synagogue of Satan.
Yeah, let me,
because I don't want to misquote the scripture.
I thought it was pretty cool.
Sounded metal.
Yeah.
You should be like the one guy,
who's the English dude,
who was on Pierce Morgan,
who was going through his Bible for like 20 minutes.
Oh, who was...
Russell Brand.
Did you see that?
Yeah.
Okay, so Revel, you're in Revelation.
2-9.
Oh, yes, I do remember reading about the synagogue of Satan in Revelation.
Yep.
I know your afflictions and your poverty, yet you are rich.
I know about the slander of those who say they are Jews and are not, but are a sin of
God of Satan.
Right.
And then in Revelation 3-9, I will make those who are of the synagogue of Satan who claim
to be Jews, though they are not, but are liars.
Mm-hmm.
And so the sin, like, I'm not an ex, like, Revelation is a book that terrifies me because it is,
it's a vision.
Yes.
Like I read it.
Revelation 18 is one of the most interesting books to me
because it talks about trafficking souls and bodies.
Right.
The church is doing that.
The institutional church is doing that.
Yeah.
But I'm not an expert on, you know,
I would never fake like I'm a prophet
trying to foresee into the future.
And that's what a lot of these big name, you know,
preachers are doing now.
And I'm like, that's not my cup of tea.
I'll just stick to what I know of the scriptures.
And, you know, try to be a good.
human. Right, right, right. What were you just talking about before? We talked about Franklin Graham.
Oh, yeah. And on the war, right? Yeah, let me pull it up. So he's using the Bible to justify
this war, as are, as is everyone. Same thing with Mike Huckabee, you know, and, you know, Mike Huckabee.
Who's the Department of War again? What's his name? Pete Hegsuff. Yeah, yeah, same thing.
They're just, they take one scripture. Who's, uh, oh, Netanyahu the other day read one scripture
verse out of the Bible and was like, this is why we're at war. Because the,
Bible speaks about war. And I'm like, wait, what?
That dude's an atheist.
Yeah, it's just, it's so wild to me when you look at it. And I, I'm not an expert on
scripture, but I've read it probably 16 times at this point. The whole Bible. Yeah. And I've
read a lot of the early apostolic writings. And then you should learn Greek and read the Greek version,
bro. It'd probably be, it would probably be like a whole other fucking experience. So there's this awesome
app. You should download it if you're really interested in the Greek. And it's called the Blue Letter Bible.
The Blue Letter Bible. And you can, if you're,
if you're reading the scripture or you've got a verse you're interested in, you can pull it up
and it pulls up the Greek, the Hebrew, the Aramaic, whatever religion it is, or whatever language
it's in. And it shows you all the cross references. So you start, I'm starting to understand
a little bit of Greek because of that out. Yeah. What's fascinating language, dude.
1.2 million unique words in Greek. You know how many unique words are in Hebrew?
Uh-uh. It's like 80,000?
It's less than 100,000.
Oh, wow.
Less than 100,000 words in Hebrew,
over a million in ancient Greek.
That's intense.
And I think modern English is only 500,000.
Wow.
Such a deep language.
Yeah.
And Hebrew is such a brilliant language, too,
because it's, you know, it's a mathematical language.
So there's like, there's a meetic language.
Yeah, there's a beautiful undertone in regards to like 666,
you know, in the Bible and the mark of the beast.
and that actually translates to Nero Caesar.
Yeah.
And so that's where the Geneva Bible,
the first translation out of Latin,
the monks wrote in the side columns
or in the margin notes that 666 was political power,
was the monarchy.
And that's why King James was like,
get this stuff out of here.
It's a fascinating journey with biblical translations.
Yeah, it is, man.
It goes so many.
It goes everywhere. It connects everywhere. It's fascinating.
But I do want to get back to that 666 and that idea of monarchy power eventually.
It just, just it's an interesting topic to talk through.
Yeah. So this is Franklin Graham.
What is there, Stephen?
Says Trump is justified to fight evil in Iran amid Paul. Oh yeah, he's beefing with Pope Leo
whose brother lives right down the street from here we just found out.
Oh, no way. Yeah. There you go on. Play it. Let's see what he says.
Oh yeah, you need these to hear it.
good old Hannity.
Hate Hitler analogies.
I think they've been overused.
However, if the world had an opportunity to take out Hitler
before he killed millions of people,
would that have been the morally right thing to do, Reverend?
In my opinion, absolutely.
And I think a war is justified to fight evil.
The Second World War to stop Hitler,
no question was the right thing to do.
And this thing with Iran,
Ron has said that they want to wipe Israel off the face of the map.
They want to destroy the Jews and drive everyone in the sea.
They've said that.
They call America the Great Satan.
They took our embassy, held our Marines and our embassy staff, I think it was 444 days.
These people are dangerous people, and they're danger to the world.
And all of the Gaza, that is the Iranians.
You take what's happening in southern Lebanon, that's the Iranians.
So, yes, I think President Trump has done the right thing.
I hate war.
I don't like war.
No support war.
But sometimes you have to fight evil.
And that's exactly what President Trump is doing.
And it will be a much safer world, much safer in the Middle East when President Trump gets this done.
You know, that's from what I understand is a lot of bullshit, too.
The whole way that our government has tried to paint Islam as like the most evil.
thing in the world that doesn't meld with Christianity. I've talked to a few Islamic folks who
say that, who have made the case that Islam is more compatible with where Christianity
than Judaism is. Because they reject Jesus Christ. Correct. And Islam at least thought he was a
prophet. And they like worshipped the Virgin Mary or whatever or Mary. I don't know about Mary,
but I know that Islam sees Christ as a prophet. Right, right. And there's a lot of similarities with
Christianity and Islam way more than Judaism.
Yeah, the one like,
it's just the cultural things different.
Like it's, there's a bigger,
bigger cultural divide.
Judaism is more westernized.
Yeah, I think I have a lot of good friends
that are Islamic and I visited multiple imams
and sat with multiple mams
because I'm fascinated with the faith.
I do see Christianity and Islam is oil and water though,
because Islam will eventually say,
hey, if you don't convert,
you know, we've got a serious problem.
And so there is a, it's a sledgehammer type faith,
whereas Christianity is the reverse.
And so when I hear Franklin Graham speak like that,
I'm like, you're not speaking like a Christian.
Yeah.
And it's just ironic, you know, they talk about like,
he's like, oh, I don't want to talk about Hitler,
but we're going to talk about Hitler.
Right.
You know, and it's just the assumptions made in that,
in that statement.
And then you put Franklin Graham up there.
You're using Christianity to justify a war.
You know, you're using Christianity to justify or you're using the Old Testament to justify the nation state.
And it's like, that doesn't make sense.
And that's where Mike Huckabee was so interesting is when Tucker was interviewing him,
you know, Tucker's like, well, why don't you just, why don't they take all the land, the promised land?
And he's like, well, maybe they should.
And I'm like, there's the quiet part out loud.
And it's like, you want to take all this land.
And on Tucker's.
They want to make it.
They want to turn it back into ancient Babylon.
If you look at the greater Israel and you look at ancient Babylon, it's almost identical.
Yeah, they want to reclaim.
And I said this on Tucker.
I said, you know, there's a nefarious they behind all of this.
And all these people online are like, he's talking about Jews.
And I'm like, no, I'm not actually.
I think there's something even behind Jews, whatever.
Yeah, like whatever.
There's something behind that that when you read Revelation and you read this full book in regards to reclaiming that promise land and building the third temple,
there, I think it's the banking systems.
I think there's something so big and there's something about reclaiming this.
And the nation state is just a, the nation state of Israel is just the first foot to do it.
And they're leveraging this area as the excuse saying, oh, the Jews need this.
You know, we need to give them land.
But they're not even doing it for the Jews.
They're doing it for much more nefarious reason.
And I think Israel is being used as a pawn.
Just the way, same way United States, people who run our country are being used as pawns.
Correct.
There's not, there's a global agenda.
I think behind all.
Who do you think is behind it?
Just speculating.
Like the banking system.
The Rothschilds.
Yeah.
The big banking families.
Yeah.
And I don't know why.
You know,
maybe it's just you're so,
like when you look at this book,
when you read it from cover to cover,
you realize you have no real power.
Like if you believe in Christ and he said it's finished on the cross,
it's done.
Like there's nothing I can do except love my neighbor and enjoy this amazing life
that I've been able to experience.
And so, and then, and, but when I look at this book, you, everything cyclical, someone's
got a round trip back to something.
And greed and man always round trips back to the beginning.
And what's the beginning of this book?
The Promise Land.
Hmm.
You know, well, the Garden of Eden, but the Promise Land.
Right.
And so I think there's some weird, cultish desire to rebuild that third temple, that physical
temple. Pete Heggs had talked about this.
He talks about building the third temple.
So what's supposed to happen when the third temple?
The third temple is built? Christ comes back.
Oh, that's when Christ comes back.
Let me quadruple check.
But when the third temple is built, I believe.
Steve can look it up.
Steve's got the quick fingers over there.
Yeah, there we go.
Yeah, what happens when the third temples built?
So that's where the Eloxa mosque is, right?
They want to build that third temple on top of the Eloxa mosque.
I don't know the exact area.
I just know that there's, I can see.
When you read the scripture, you're like, oh, people are trying to rebuild the.
Well, construction of the third temple is a highly anticipated.
debated concept depending on the religious and prophetic framework, Judaism, Christianity,
Islam. The event carries drastic different meanings, ranging from literal fulfillment of biblical
scripture to severe geopolitical conflict. Orthodox Judaism, rebuilding the temple is a center
of prayer. Arrival of the Messiah. Yeah. Okay. The building, okay, the building of the physical
structure is closely associated with the arrival of the Jewish Messiah, marking the end or marking
era of global peace, the in-gathering of the Jewish exiles to Israel and the universal knowledge of
God. So right here, this one, for many evangelicals dispensational. This is the end times prophecy,
right? This is what everyone's talking about right now. For many evangelical and dispensational
Christians, the third temple is a critical marker of end times and the events leading to the
second coming of Jesus. The tribulation, according to interpretations of the book of Daniel and
Revelation, the temple will be rebuilt at the start of the seven-year period of tribulation.
So it's just, you're trying to rush in the end times, which is so fascinating to me.
It's like, let's rush in a shitty time for everybody.
Like, I don't get it.
But yeah, I think, I think there's a nefarious day behind all of this.
Because they want to be raptured or they want to, they think they're going to be raptured.
Well, whatever your theology is in regards to revelation, that's why.
Revelation is such a crazy book.
Yeah.
And like I'm the first to say, I don't understand that book.
I think it's brilliant.
I think it foreshadows a lot of like of, of where John, who's the author's, like, mind was at the time.
But I don't fake, like, I will never fake to, to know or be able to interpret Revelation.
And a lot of people will confidently say, this is what it is.
And it's like, that's the future.
I don't know the future.
I'm just in the now and I'm trying to love my neighbor.
And I'm trying to get people back.
my fellow quote unquote self-professional Christians back to loving their neighbor instead of building
these these monarchies that we've built yeah it's like you look at every church in the u.s it's a literal
Vatican so when the reformation happened in the 1500s with Luther and Calvin and zvigli you know they
they really went after the roman catholic church and they did some really good things they
they got the Bible out to in multiple languages so the the Vatican didn't own the Bible in
You didn't have to go to the church to read it, right?
Because someone had to read in Latin.
So now the common plowboy or the common farmer could read the Bible in their own language.
But what they didn't do is they didn't reform the institutional structure of the church.
So this is the one miss, I think, during the reformation is they democratized Christianity,
but they didn't democratize the institutional structure.
So what happened?
Like, we came to America and the institutional structure
today just mirrors the Vatican. It's, hey, you don't need transparency of your finances.
Hey, all power sits at the top. Hey, they need to just trust you with what with your teaching and
then with the money and how it's how it's being used. So I always say we went from one Vatican
to just 400,000 mini-Vaticans in the U.S. now. And it's, that's the one miss with the
reform the reform institutional structure. And so that's what I'm here to encourage is let's reform
the institutional structure. And now the government is to the point of, you know, end times prophecy,
the government is using all these 400,000 mini-Vaticans in the, and what I would say,
the idolatry and selfish greed of their leaders for the government's own gain, if that makes
sense. Yeah. Yeah, that certainly makes sense. So explain, explain like the base layer of this
whole thing for people. Like when it comes to like becoming a church, right, and getting, like,
How do you actually become a church and why is this system not working?
Yeah.
So there's estimated of 400,000 registered, quote, unquote, churches in the U.S.
And how, sorry to interrupt, how much money do they make to?
Domestically about $550 billion and then globally about $1.1.1 trillion a year in individual donor giving.
So that's just Christian churches.
That doesn't include Islam.
This is all donations?
All donations.
1.1 trillion.
So it's bigger than the U.S.
military budget.
for now. You know, they're asking for $1.5 trillion now. But, and they're going to take from social
programs, American social programs, to fund that, that military industrial. Really? Yeah. Yeah. But,
so. We're becoming the Antichrist country. Yes, dude. I, I, yeah, we can talk about the
antichrist and just theoretical ideas. Yeah. But so you have to pick a sandbox, right? If you're
accepting money, you are a business. And so in America, there's really like three main buckets
of business. There's for-profit companies. There's nonprofit companies. And then inside that
nonprofit sandbox is religious exemptions. Got it. And so the government created these sandboxes
to plane because you just have to, you have to pick a sandbox to plane. What rules control this, this business?
And so in 1913, the government was like, hey, churches do something really beautiful.
They help in the lower marginalized communities of parts of our communities.
And so we're going to give them a special tax exemption where they don't have to pay taxes.
So the nonprofit sector is only 112 years old, which doesn't seem like much, but that's a very new sector.
And so what the government saw was religious organizations are helping in the spot that capitalism leaves behind.
And so what I mean by that is as capitalism raises the net worth or GDP of a nation,
there is a group that's always left behind.
And so that is where Christianity thrives with the needy and the helpless and the elderly
and the orphaned and the widowed and the marginalized.
And so at the time in 1913, churches, your life was pretty small.
Your world was about an 80-mile radius, right?
You wouldn't be going past 80 miles because we didn't have cars, really, and we didn't have
technology. Right. And so your local community was your world. So we wanted to better our local
community. I wanted to better the park down the street because I wanted all our kids to be safe.
You know, so it's this idea of social capital. So we wanted to build social capital in our
local communities in the government, the U.S. government. Rightly so said, hey, let's carve out this
sector for organizations that are helping in their local communities that we can't as a federal
government and state government go do. Awesome. And so there was about 12,000 organizations at the time
that got this exemption. And so what did they do? They worked in their local communities. They
had food pantries and homeless shelters and they did beautiful things. Well, as technology develops,
we have radio, TV, internet. Now these nonprofits start looking out because there's more money
to be had outside the local community. Right. So this is no one person's fault. But as you start looking
and you're saying, hey, there's 5,000 people in my town.
Well, with radio, we can reach 50,000.
With TV, we can reach 500,000.
With the internet, we can reach 5 billion.
So instead of your vision as a nonprofit being about the local community,
now it goes global.
And now it becomes how much money can we scrape off the table?
And our mission and our marketing angle is these helpless people.
But the nonprofit sector has totally lost its original site.
The government saw this sector.
as building local social capital in your local community.
And now the most successful nonprofits,
sucking the majority of the money, are looking global.
And so now they don't really care about that local fabric anymore.
And so remember, I said there's 12,000 organizations in 1913 that got that exemption.
Yeah.
Today there's 1.9 million in the US.
And the only argument that you can push back on as well, Nathan, population increase.
Okay.
Right. Population increased 4.3% over the last 112 years. So if you do that math,
there should be about 60,000 organizations. But today there's 1.9 million. And how many of
those are churches? 400,000. 400,000. Yeah. And so you have to ask why that each church,
I mean, okay, 400,000 churches. And are they all Christian? No, those are religious institutions in
just religious institutions. Yeah. And so you have to ask why the explosion is,
in the sector. It's not because our social fabric's getting any better. It's because people have
realized smart businessmen and women have realized that the nonprofit sector is the greatest sector
to put money and raise money and then religious exemptions in particular are the best sector
to play in a totally dark world. And I'll explain what I mean by that. So you have the nonprofit
sector, nonprofit has to file what's called a Form 990. It's an annual informational sheet. It just
shows the federal government where your money goes. Whether you raise 10,000, well, whether you raise
$50,000 or $50 million, it's just a simple waterfall of, hey, here's the top executive salaries,
and here's where the bulk of our money went. Awesome. No one should be afraid of that document,
but churches, religious institutions do not have to file that document. And so what that does is it
means there's no legal document a religious organization could be held to account on.
They don't report anything to the IRS.
They report nothing to the IRS.
Wow.
And so what I mean by that is if I take, if your church is 500,000, and this is an argument
that we get all the time.
Nathan, you're always going after, sure, the big churches are bad.
The small churches are good.
There's a lot of, and I want to preface this.
There's a lot of good churches and a lot of good pastors that want to do the right thing.
But so I've got a $50 million church.
You've got a $50,000 church.
My $50 million church, that $50 million, there is no document that my congregants
donors can hold me to account on.
So it's all about them trusting me and me being a moral person and upright person.
If I've got $50 million in an account and no one's going to really know what I'm doing
with it, I know human nature.
I'm going to get a little loose with my spending most likely.
And so secrecy does not enable good behavior.
It enables bad behavior.
Yes.
We always say ultimate power ultimately corrupts.
Yes.
And so even if your church is only $50,000 dollars a year, you,
you play by the same rules that I play by.
So it all falls back on the moral integrity of man.
And that is a brutal, you know, place or status to live by.
Because I, based off this book, I know the hearts of man.
Right.
And it's like, I don't, like, we need external accountability.
I need external accountability in my life.
You know, you need it as well, right?
Right.
And so it's right now, the, the, the instance.
institution that is supposed to be the beacon of truth and integrity and transparency,
which is the church,
actually plays in the darkest legal sandbox of all sandboxes.
And then as soon as you question the sandbox, they say, oh, you heretic, you antichrist, you spawn of Satan.
You know, and I'm like, no, no, no, I'm just questioning the box, you know.
I would like, we should bring accountability into this box.
Why?
Because I said it, $550 billion is given annually to Christian churches in America.
that means the Christian church could radically transform the social fabric of America almost overnight
if we utilized and stewarded those resources properly.
But we're not.
And so what has happened?
Capitalism has crept into Christianity over the last 112 years.
And now capitalistic mindset, which is what?
Ownership, profits, and growth, those three main, like, tent poles of capitalism have crept into Christianity.
Right.
What are the three main tenets of Christianity or of the Christian church?
Love no other God before me.
Love your neighbors yourself and share.
Like it's antithetical.
So when I said capitalism has nothing to do with Christianity, I meant it.
Capitalism is not a bad thing.
Two things can be true at once.
Capitalism can be a good economic driver, but it shouldn't be involved in Christianity.
Because Christianity in its own book says that this runs.
antithetical to the desires of man. In James, it says pure and undefiled religion is to help the
orphaned and widow that in their distress and to be unspotted of the world. That means to fight
every natural instinct of Nathan, which is, I want to build wealth. I want things. I want to be
comfortable. I want, I want, I want, I want to surf the wave pool. I want to surf the wave pool. Exactly.
And so it's like we have to run like Christianity is a beauty is so beautiful because it pushes
against the instincts of Nathan. But capitalism has crept into it now. And now it's, hey, Danny,
if you believe hard enough, you're going to be blessed. If you give enough, you're going to be blessed.
And so capitalism has corrupted the nonprofit sector, which is the social system of America.
That's why in the nonprofit sector, so in the for profit, in the for profit world, Danny, you can
start a business, you own that business. You can finance it yourself. And then guess what? Like,
you deserve the profits off of said business
because it's based off of your work ethic.
You own that business.
In the nonprofit world, you don't own a nonprofit.
This is my favorite question
when I'm almost getting arrested at the churches.
I always, all their security guards surrounds me
and they're like, you gotta get off this,
this is private property.
And I go, who owns the property?
And they all go, oh,
because none of them can answer the question.
They all say it's private property.
Yeah, it is private property.
It's owned by the corporation.
Right.
But who owns the corporation?
No one owns the corporation.
liberation. Legally. And so that's the beautiful thing about the nonprofit sector is it was never
meant to be a capitalistic sector. There is no ownership. It's not about profits. It's become about
profits, but it's not about profits. And so what's happened is the nonprofit sector is corrupted,
and you learn this in the religion business. And so now it's, there's only two solutions to reforming
the nonprofit sector. One is the government. And then two is we clean up our own house. And so that's
what I'm encouraging is let's clean up our own house. We don't want the government to do it because
the government's not very good at doing much. Right. So let's clean up our own house. So you've
you've almost been arrested multiple times going into these churches. Oh yeah. I've been arrested once.
I spent the night in jail in Texas. Really? Yeah. Yeah, just for being on the property,
just for standing there with a sign. Where did you go there? That was in Grapevine in Dallas, Texas.
I had reached out to this church for a couple years. Um, so this pastor in particular,
in religious exemptions, pastors, there's this beautiful, there's this interesting thing called a
housing allowance. So if you're a pastor, you're going to be taxed on your salary, but you won't
be taxed on your housing allowance. It's a tax-free stipend. Okay. And so there's this gimmick
now where you can offset a lot of your tax burden if you take the majority of your, of your,
quote-unquote, salary as a housing allowance. Does that make sense?
And so you might take $100,000 in salary, but then $500 grand in a housing allowance.
And so there's one pastor in particular who, through a lawsuit, the only way you can find this data out,
because remember there's no legal documents holding churches to account.
So the only way you find any of this information out is through discovery and lawsuits.
And so there was a lawsuit, I believe, in 2005.
And in discovery, the housing allowance list got put out.
the public. So this pastor, his housing allowance was $240,000 a year on top of his salary.
And so I'm reading the housing allowance doc and it's it's going to pay for your down payment,
your home, your mortgage, your property insurance. And it lists everything down to light bulbs
and home cleaners and house cleaners. And I'm like, this is pretty nice. So this pastor can spend
a quarter million dollars basically a year on whatever. Wow. So the problem with that is that's
2005. This is 2024 at this point. So you've got 19 years of past and I have his real estate.
So he owns a beachfront home in Florida, which I think is valued at 10 million. He owns a $6.5 million
home in Dallas. And so the mortgages alone totaled about 300 grand a month. And so my question is,
or the estimated mortgages. So my question is, what's your housing allowance today? Because that'd be
$3.6 million a year in housing allowances.
And so I just would call him and I'd call the church.
Hey, I have a question, I have a question.
No one would answer, no one would answer.
So I finally reached out to their lawyers.
And I was like, hey, I'm in town.
And this is in the show.
I'm like, I'm in town.
No one's called me back.
Like, and it was a Friday morning
when I called the law office.
And I left a message and I'm like,
I'm in town.
I love the chat.
And if I don't hear from you,
I'm gonna come to church on Sunday.
You know, so I'll see you there.
I don't gotcha anybody.
It's like, I want to talk.
Right.
And so we show up to the church service.
They ID me before I even walk in.
So I'm walking in the front door.
And this is all on the show too.
And there's this big officer.
He sees me.
So he jumps on his comms.
I walk in.
As I'm walking through the door,
their head of security passes me and looks at me.
And I walk into their bookstore.
And I'm trying to buy a book, a sweatshirt, and get a cup of coffee.
And then I'm going to go into the service.
I'm not here to disrupt.
I'm here just to do my little due diligence and do my thing.
And instead, they surround me, they walk me outside.
And they're like, you need to leave.
They wouldn't let me buy the sweatshirt.
And I'm like, that's, I want to buy your goods.
Like you've got a store.
Let me buy your sweatshirt.
They wouldn't let me buy it.
And so.
This isn't the one.
I saw the first episode where the chick walked by with the $400 beanie she was wearing.
Oh, no, no.
That's another one.
That's another one.
I think it was like, it was more than $400 bucks.
Yeah, yeah, that's a funny one.
But so this is episode four.
And so they're like, you need to leave. And I'm like, why? I want to come to church. I'm not bothering anybody. Like, you're bothering me, actually. Like, why are you kicking me out? And they're like, you need to leave this property. And so that's where I go, like, who owns the property? They couldn't answer it. I leave. But the night before, I figured they would do that. So the night before we made signs. And all it said was, Pastor Ed, what is your housing allowance? And what is your salary today? Because I also know who's on the new housing allowance list for this year. And he had put his wife on it.
and he had put his lawyer on it.
Wow.
So the church's lawyer, this ironic,
who was also the CFO of the church at this point.
So you have a general,
the general counsel who's also managing the money.
That's called a conflict of interest
of this multi-million dollar church.
Very big church in Dallas.
Is that not allowed?
Can the CFO be a lawyer,
like a hired like a legal counsel for any corporation?
Well, it's just a conflict of interest.
Right.
Because you're representing your own financial decisions
for a multi-million dollar organization.
Like you're either the CFO or the general counsel.
Like it's just a conflict of interest.
Right. I see what you're saying.
And so I show up the second service with my signs.
I just walk into the parking lot.
I don't even go into the building.
And I'm just standing there in 20, like probably 20 armed security guards around me.
And it's hilarious because they're all like, they're all Mickey Mouse.
Like one's wearing all black.
One's an all camo.
You know, one says like private security.
Like they've just bought it all on Amazon.
on you know. And they all like most of them have gun though guns though. And then they do bring
their one deputy out to quote unquote arrest me. But his other guy had already put his hands on
me. So they violated my civil rights multiple times. My elbow, they tore a tendon in my elbow.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. I went to the doctor because I couldn't straighten my elbow. And he's like,
you can either have surgery or just or just PT it for a long time. So I still can't straighten it.
You got to get some stem cells, dude. Yeah. Yeah. But it's um, so they,
They arrest me and they charged me with criminal trespassing for just wanting to ask him about his housing allowance.
Wow, dude.
And so get out of jail the next day.
And like, he's one of my favorite guys because I, like, I want to know.
Because he's such a-
What's his name?
His name's Ed Young Jr.
Ed Young Jr.
So this is what I mean by capitalism creeping into religious organizations.
His church is tens of millions a year in revenue.
No one knows where the money goes.
No one knows his housing allowance.
No one knows his salary.
He drives golden range rovers.
He just did an extension on the church that has an parking, an underground parking garage for his cars and a pickleball court for himself.
Wow.
This is the church.
And then they're doing another raise to quote unquote build a new building and they're raising 30 something million bucks.
No one's even seen a budget for the build.
It's called the anchor project.
And he's legally not.
And this guy legally doesn't have to report shit to the IRS.
Nope.
And this is the thing is it's we've turned churches into capitalistic ventures.
And so smart businessmen and women have taken leadership roles and the sky is the limit in the sector.
Let me ask you this.
Are these guys also lobbying politicians to keep it this way?
Yep.
That's not surprising.
Yeah.
You know, so like this guy's Ed Young Jr.'s dad runs a 90,000 person church in Houston.
called Second Baptist. We were just there and got escorted off by their police.
Awesome, awesome, general, amazing police, by the way. But so this is how shady it is. So his dad
took over that church in the 70s. They have a billion dollars worth of assets, that church,
a billion in assets. 90,000 members. That church is a Baptist church. So that means that
those 90,000 members get to vote on what happens with the money,
budget, all that. That's really healthy, right? Ed Young Jr.'s Church in Dallas and Grapevine
does not allow voting rights. Well, him and his lawyer, the CFO in Dallas, go down to Houston,
remove his dad out of power, put his other brother in power, and remove the voting rights of
90,000 members. Wow. So now a billion dollar corporation in assets no longer has voting rights
from its members who funded the whole thing, and it's managed by six people.
Those six people, four are related, and the other fifth is the lawyer I'm talking about,
and the sixth is the random.
So they now have carte blanche reign over a billion in assets, all in the name of God,
and there's a lawsuit happening right now over that.
Who's suing them?
A group of congregants that want their voting rights back, yeah.
And how do they convince all these people to donate this money?
misinterpreted scripture give us 10% of your money you need to tithe to us hey give above and beyond
and christians are generous people this is the thing christians are the most generous people in the
world they give a lot but the bible doesn't say just to give the bible teaches you to steward
your resources which means hey i'm not going to give to something that is just building an enterprise
or institution i'm going to give to where christ told us where to give the hungry the thirsty the
naked, the poor, the prisoner, the sojourner. And so what the churches do now, like the Mormon
Church, for example, the Mormon Church is worth $300 billion, probably closer to $350 now, $350
billion. They'll hit a trillion dollars in market assets in the next 15 years, a church.
They got a new TV show. You see that, Mormon wives or whatever?
It's right in my backyard. I'm in Utah. Is it? Oh, shit. But so they'll hit a trillion in assets.
It's the Mormon church made 25 billion in profits in the market last year.
25 billion.
And guess what that is?
Untaxed.
Because they're a church.
And so this is where it gets even crazier, though.
They gave away $400 million to humanitarian aid.
That's good.
Yeah.
That's 2% of their profits.
They demand their congregants, give them 10%.
and they keep 98% and put it back in the market.
Oh, my God.
So talk about the Antichrist.
Talk about institutional power.
Talk about 666, Neuros Caesar,
where everything combines religion in a monarchy is a theocracy
with unlimited power, unlimited resource, accountable to no one.
And again, every religious institution in the U.S. is set up like this.
So what's happening is you can also, there's a church, Ed Young Jr., the guy in Dallas that I've been arrested, he also acquired a church here in Sarasota.
Oh, wow.
So the thing with churches or nonprofits in general is when you shut a nonprofit down, you can't just take the cash and walk away.
You either have to give the assets away to another charity or give the money away to other organizations.
So what you do is you can keep a failing, like let's say I had a nonprofit.
and you were a successful nonprofit, but I had a church that was paid off.
So 20 years of congregants have paid down this beautiful, you know, church.
Cathedral that you and I are sitting in.
Yes.
The building's worth $25 million.
Well, I can just sell you the building.
You take over the debt.
So you're going to go to your congregants and say, hey, guys, I need $25 million to buy this building.
I take the $25 million, put it in my pocket and just never shut the church down, the entity down.
Wow.
So the real estate side of this scam is the biggest financial scam happening in churches right now.
Because what you're doing is you're leveraging generation after generation to remortge a building.
And leadership is just sucking that money out and doing what they want with it.
So generation after generation is paying down the same building.
That's bananas.
It's crazy.
The same thing's going on with Church of Scientology.
They own like, they're one of the top real estate holders in the United States with all the real estate that they own.
You know who's bigger?
The Mormon Church.
Oh, really?
The Mormon Church owns hundreds of thousands of acres here in Florida.
They actually want to build their own city.
They're planning on building their own city outside of Orlando.
What?
Wow.
It's called Deseret Ranch right now.
Uh-huh.
Yeah.
That's fucking crazy, dude.
Yeah.
The Scientology thing's wild, too, because this whole area that we're in right now is like one of the hubs of Scientology.
Elron Hubbard was literally had his boat parked, like, less than a mile away from here.
What's that great?
El Ron Hubbard quote, if you want to get wealthy, start a business.
If you want to get rich, start a religion.
Yes, yes.
Great quote.
You know, he was buddies with Alistair Crowley and he was buddies with Jack Parsons.
He was a, he was a wild dude, wrote a lot of science fiction.
And, you know, it's interesting that Scientology is like one of the cults that has been able to survive.
You know, like there's so many evil cults that have been taken down, right?
You got like the children of God, the children of God cult.
And there's a ton of them like that, right?
That preyed on children and trafficked people and stuff like that.
And it seems like Scientology was able to get away from that kind of stuff.
And I wonder if that's maybe how they survived because they, I mean, there has been accusations of them abusing people and like enslaving people.
And they have their cadet org where they raise the babies.
They keep the babies away from the parents.
And they also have the C.org where people work inside of Scientology for basically no money.
And you can see them walking around the town here.
They wear these little blue vests and they look like zombies.
Crazy.
And it's just it's alive and well here at least.
I don't know how it's like how it is all around the rest of the world.
But yeah. Scientology, you mean?
Scientology, yeah.
You know.
And some people when I've talked to them,
explain, you know, that Scientology at the base level, at the introductory level, isn't like that bad.
It's kind of like, it's all about eliminating all the negative influences your life, you know, becoming a better version of yourself.
And it's kind of, it's very self-help Tony Robbins type stuff.
Yeah.
And it isn't until you get to like all the way through the hierarchy of whatever it's called, Zeno, that you start to learn about like intergalactic aliens and all that kind of weird stuff.
The Mormon church is kind of like that too.
I just, I'm filming, I just shot an interview with, with a couple people that were ritualistically abused from three years old on.
Really?
And, you know, they allege that they saw kids get murdered.
Oh.
They would take this thing called the blood oath.
And so a child would be murdered in front of them and then all the kids would drink the blood.
What?
And it's, it's, and they say the same thing.
They go, this isn't a fringe part of the faith.
it's baked into the very foundation.
But for the most part, the lay people at the bottom are like, this is amazing.
This is a great faith, right?
It's do good, like love your neighbor, you know, pool our assets.
But then as you move up the hierarchy, it gets darker and darker.
Yeah, it's, was this like some weird offshoot of it?
This is how they allege it happens in the temple, one of the temples in Salt Lake.
And like one of the main primary temples.
We're going to, this is in season two episodes.
episode one, we're going to drop names. These girls drop literal names. And I'm trying to corroborate
two bits of evidence, and we're about to corroborate one. And it's, you're talking about
blood oaths, which is blood in blood atoning. And then this idea of sin atoning, which is if you
have sex with a child, you basically, that's how you purify your sin. And so these girls
claim they were three years old on.
Oh, my God.
dude yeah it's a big big story so season two episode one is about child sexual abuse because that's the
so season one is all about the problem the financial mismanagement the legal architecture in the
u.s season two is all about how the christian church can actually solve most of the social issues
in america from homelessness to foster care um to prison systems but it starts with sexual abuse
Most of our social ills in America stem from child sexual abuse and trauma that happens when you're a child.
And so the first episode is about child sexual abuse and how religious institutions often incubate it as opposed to keep it at bay and fight.
Well, I had a guy in here who was part of the children of God cult.
And he said when he got into it, he was basically like a hippie roaming wanderer, kind of like,
just roaming around the country.
He had no job.
He had no purpose or meaning to his life.
And he came across these people that were like preaching
the Bible to him and Jesus.
And he was very desperate, right?
And he really had nothing going on for him.
And he was seeking purpose, a community,
something to be a part of.
And when he got into it and he started recruiting people,
that's the exact type of people they would look for
other than like, you know, they would use this thing called,
what was it called?
Flirting, something flirting, fishing.
flirting or something, something weird. Flirty fishing.
Flirty fishing. Yeah, yeah. Where they would use like attractive women that were in the
cult, young women, to basically like honey trap people into joining. Like getting men and
like having sex with them and then like convincing them to join. Yeah. And again, like it seemed
to aggregate all of the most desperate people who had no sense of purpose, no sense of community,
no job, what have you.
You know what I mean?
And those are the most vulnerable people that get preyed on when it comes to things like,
you know, sexual abuse and any kind of, you talk to any prostitute on the street
or any like drug dealer or someone who's, you know, and go to Skid Row.
And I guarantee you all of those people had no parents growing up or lack of,
very close to that, bad situations.
Yeah.
So, exactly.
And to your point, Christianity does, is, like Christ says, I didn't come for the righteous.
I came for the hurting and the broken.
Yeah.
And it's like, but the hurting and the broken are vulnerable.
And when you have a capitalistic system that their main target audience is the hurting and the vulnerable, we got a serious problem.
You know, and yeah.
So I always say where there's financial abuse, there's sexual abuse right behind it.
Because if you, if people don't know your finances, I can use those finances to cover up other crimes.
Wow.
And this first episode of season two is wild.
It's clocking in at three hours and two minutes right now.
We're going to try to get it down to two hours.
This is the first episode.
It's huge.
Do you have like a cap on how long it can be?
Two hours.
Yeah.
Okay.
So every episode, so season two is a rolling release.
So we focus on child sexual abuse.
We talk about how, you know, the state, our country's ICAX,
which is internet crimes against children units, are hyperly underfunded.
You know, the war on drugs at the border, I think, gets 40 billion a year from our federal government.
Our entire national ICACs get less than 40 million.
And I can't remember.
And ITAC is what exactly?
ICAC is an internet crimes against children's task force.
Internet crimes against children's.
So it's like our main front line for child sexual abuse in America.
And these guys are badasses and you meet a bunch of these men in the show.
So they're like online, like monitoring all, like NSW.
They're the ones scrubbing, they're the ones scrubbing roadblocks and all that.
And so, but, but it comes down to less than one point, no, no, it comes down to less than a million dollars a year per ICAC that they get federal funding on.
So they're extremely underfunded.
What you learned about this in, in this episode, one ICAC officer from Florida actually, from Pensacola, an amazing dude.
He's like, I had to turn a dad away.
A dad comes into my office or he asks for me and he comes in.
he goes, hey, someone's asking my six-year-old for naked photos.
Like, can you please track this?
And he goes, I had to turn the dad away because we couldn't buy a $300 hard drive.
We didn't have the budget to buy the hard drive to put the files on.
And he's like, I had to send this dad away.
And he goes, so I come back to work the next day and I'm working on my computer
in the front desk calls.
And they're like, hey, can you come down?
There's a man here.
And he's like, I walked down and it was this dad.
and the dad goes, will this hard drive work?
He buys the hard drive.
And he buys the hard drive.
And Chris goes, yeah, that'll work.
And then he pulls another hard drive out.
And he goes, I bought this for the next child's dad that walks in and pushes it over.
And he goes, that's the main problem with ICACs.
Because we're so underfunded.
And so my goal with this episode is to say, hey, Christians, we can 10 to 50X ICAC funding.
And it would be a rounding error for our churches.
We wouldn't even see it on our financials.
So we can become the front lines for children.
And so every episode in season two is a problem in a major solution
on how we can actually get it done.
But yeah, so the problem right now is, again,
religious institutional structure.
It goes back to 1913.
The guardrails on that system have been corrupted with technology
and we haven't reformed it to the point now
where that 1913 structure is so.
so corrupted, it doesn't only incubate financial abuse.
It proliferates it, and then it incubates sexual abuse and predators right behind it.
And so everybody's like, why are there so many predators coming out of churches?
It's not rocket science.
Look at the structure of the church.
You don't need to legally background check your employees.
If a predator wants to volunteer in a youth group, oftentimes I don't need to be background checked.
Wow.
Guess what?
Religious organizations are not federally mandated to be reporters.
And so here's my question, ready?
If we run a big church, a $50 million a year organization, and a young girl comes in and says, hey, this pastor me in the bathroom, our natural instinct is going to be to say, oh, shoot, like, we got to keep this quiet.
This is going to hurt the brand of the church.
And since we're not mandatory reporters, we don't have to call the police.
Churches, clergy should be mandatory reporters.
If someone comes in, there's seven states, I believe it's seven states that are mandatory reporters.
Other states are not.
So instead, we want to fix this internally, which means what?
I'm going to use donor money to silence to pay off this victim's family.
Jesus.
And so a good friend of ours, Elizabeth Phillips, is pushing Trays Law right now.
It's in D.C. right now, it'll be on Trump's desk, hopefully within a month.
And it just passed with a unanimous vote in the Senate.
I believe it's on the House floor in the next few days.
It's called Trays Law.
But churches were using NDAs to silence victims.
So a church is using a non-disclosure agreement to tell a kid they can't tell people they were at this church.
That's just evil personified.
A hundred percent.
And it's like this is the church.
This is supposed to be the beacon of light, the beacon of truth.
Yeah.
And again, it's about the legal architecture of the system.
Yeah.
You know, one part of me wants to think that, you know, any good Christian person or, you know,
any Bible believer would want to do everything they can to abolish this.
And the other part of me is like, I could be wrong, but I feel like most people, just like
you say, only 13% have actually read the Bible, most people are just using this as a,
for lack of a better word, just like a coping mechanism, a way to make themselves
feel better about everything that they do in their lives that may be bad.
You mean the religion or like enjoying religion?
All the people that donate this money,
like they donate the money because they think that they are going to be forgiven of sins
or Jesus is,
they're going to go to heaven or whatever.
Here's a big one.
So an economist in the religion business season one says this.
He goes, Nathan, giving is not a selfless act.
He goes, we actually contract dopamine spikes.
Oh, yeah.
You give money.
He goes, it's a consumerist.
action. If I just get to give money and walk away, that makes me feel good. It does. If I have to sit down
with that smelly homeless person and sit there and look at him or her in the eyes and see myself in her
or his humanity, that's biblical giving. Right. But no one wants to do that because it's dirty and hard
and it takes time. No one wants to sit with their suicidal friend because that is like really terrifying,
right no one wants to like go out and we did this a couple weeks ago like I went out with a great
nonprofit in the streets of san diego we walked and talked to prostitutes down in um the blade and it's like
to do that takes like serious intention and instead I want to watch my football game and drink a couple
beers yeah you know so giving that giving is a straight dopamine kick what is this the vatican
officers ruled that Bishop Michael W. Fisher erred in the way he went about collecting money from
parishes to be used towards a bankruptcy settlement with nearly 900 child sex abuse victims.
Oh, dude, that's nothing. This right here? What is this? This is from last year,
$300 million for, they collected $300 million for 1,300 cases of sexual abuse. That was last year.
and then this year
they collected 800 million.
I have a video right here.
For the LDS church?
800 million.
Wow.
This year.
How long is this video?
Three weeks ago.
How long is this video?
This video is three minutes long.
Oh, go ahead.
Play it.
$800 million to settle claims
from 1,300 sex abuse survivors.
I went to Zuz anchor, Sandra Bookman,
is live in the newsroom right now
with much more on the proposal
and what it means for the survivors
and the future of the church.
I do like 1.25 speed.
This case stems from claims under the Child Victims Act.
That legislation, if you recall, was passed back in 2019,
and it gave a one-year window for sexual abuse survivors
to file civil lawsuits barred by the statute of limitations.
This proposal is the result of years-long negotiations,
and it is still subject to full survivor agreement before it can be finalized.
The proposed settlement comes months after the church sold off valuable properties,
laid off staff, and cut its operating budget to come up.
with the funds. The Catholic Archdiocese of New York has agreed to pay $800 million to settle
lawsuits with 1,300 sex abuse survivors, marking one of the largest U.S. clergy abuse payouts.
These negotiations follow six years. Attorney Jeff Anderson represents 250 abuse victims.
He says their reaction to the settlement proposal has been mixed. For some, it is a real
relief to know that there is some reckoning and some responsibility being taken. For other,
there's just anger because there is no way the pain can be alleviated.
Under the proposed settlement, the $800 million will be paid into a trust for survivors
over 15 months with a $615 million initial payment.
Accusers would have a $250,000 quick pay option.
The church has also agreed to release documents regarding offenders and maintain a public list
of accused clergy.
I love how this whole podcast, I'm just going, Jesus Christ.
You tell me.
Well, the interesting thing I want to reference there is.
Sorry, I don't mean to offend anybody.
No, the statute of limitations.
I think they said one year look back.
So this is a huge problem.
So that $800 million, they said you can come forward for one year.
To acclaim that.
To say you've been abused.
Right.
So some people might not know this is going on.
They might not even see this memo.
And so this is a major problem.
And so my friends who were like,
again, Elizabeth Phillips is a beast in the best way possible in her team.
But they're going after statute of limitations because statute of limitations,
there's potentially hundreds of thousands of victims out there that they've,
they've basically timed out of their window to be able to come forward.
And so.
That's what happened with the Epstein files.
Yeah.
Now that they finally come out, a lot of people that are in there, like the statute of
limitations has expired.
If they were released them in the last administration, those people would probably be in prison.
So I was in Missouri at the, what do you call it, the capital for a hearing.
And they were lobbying for Trays Law.
So they were sitting there presenting the argument for why children should, child victims
shouldn't be silenced with an NDA.
And then they're going to talk about statute of limitations.
Guess the two groups that push against this.
There's only two.
Churches and pastors.
I don't want to guess.
And insurance companies.
What?
Oh, wow.
because the insurance companies are going to have to pay out claims.
Wow. Churches and pastors and insurance companies do not want to take away NDAs for child sex abuse victims.
It's the only two groups pushing against it because they're the two groups that are going to have to pay out or their house of card.
There's a lot of skeletons in those closets.
And so we're going after three things.
And Elizabeth is crushing it on Trey's law, which is NDAs.
And then that'll probably go into effect as soon as possible, like very soon.
Then you have statute of limitations reform and then mandatory reporting.
Clergy should be mandatory reporters.
And if we can get those things across the finish line with this first episode dropping,
like we've done our job.
And everybody can call me the Antichrist all they want because I'm like,
I help protect the kids a little bit, you know?
And it's like that's this is when I look at Christ,
he went into the temple and flipped tables.
and he said, you've turned my father's house into a den of thieves.
And I just see churches as that today.
And there's a very broad statement.
But we've taken a capitalistic mindset, applied it to a faith that's antithetical to capitalism.
And now the casualties of that are child safety and the needy that we were supposed to help.
And so I'll go back to the LDS Church.
Of that 25 billion in profits they made in the market, only 2%.
went to humanitarian aid, and then a bunch go to silencing systems.
And so we're building systems that insulate and calcify themselves,
which is kind of the definition of an antichrist.
Have you ever talked to like a congregation of like a big church or anything like that
or corralled a bunch of these people say, you know,
who are maybe peripherally aware of this but not really exposed
and like just basically dropped all this on them and gotten feedback?
I've talked to hundreds of pastors and thousands of congregants over the years.
But it wasn't until a couple weeks ago in Houston that a church,
for the first time ever I got to stand in front of a church and actually talk to them.
And so that's where I do, there is hope.
Like I do, the congregation and a lot of good pastors know there's a problem.
And so I'm like, I'm going to do a PSA right now.
I'm begging one of you pastors that run a big church to step out and say,
I'm ready to be the face of change.
Like, let's change the system.
Let's run our institution with accountability and integrity
so we can gain the trust of our congregation
and let's lead by example.
I will talk to any pastor out there
who is willing to pick up that banner with us,
which I don't think that's a very big ask.
But for five years now, we've been filming,
it's a much bigger ask than I think it should be.
So there's my PSA to pastors out there.
Like, be the leader, be the tip of the spear in this reform.
Like you can do it.
Yeah.
And didn't you say, I think I heard you talking to Julian Dory about this,
but you were saying that these churches or maybe just the mega churches,
they have like full on marketing campaigns where they'll blast out like mailers.
And they know there's a certain percentage of return they'll get on these mailers
that are literally asking people, like old people.
Yeah.
To just send a check or send cash back to them, right?
Yeah, that's been around.
since the 70s. So that's an old school model. So that's the Kenne of Copeland's of the world.
You know, you've got 200,000, 300,000 mailers, and you just blast them out and you know a
certain percentage are going to come back with a, you know, it's like every politician.
Our average donation is 80 bucks or whatever. Yeah, the same thing. The pastors have their
average donation. So they know, hey, if we send 50,000 mailers out, we're going to raise
400 grand. You know, it's a math game. The young pastors today, they're doing, they're
geofencing other churches.
So like if I, and we call it religious economic theory in the show.
So if all three of us have a church in this area, I'm competing against you, bro.
Like I want your congregants because with congregants comes money.
So you can manipulate the ads based on where they are.
So I'll geo fence your community and they'll see my ads.
I'll geo fence your community and they'll see my ads.
It's literally just business.
It's the shrewdest most like cutthroat form of capitalism and it's in churches.
It's so crazy.
And they use tithe money.
They use donor money to fund all this.
And then they say, look at how God blessed us.
We have all this big stuff.
It's like, no, you're just a better marketer, bro.
You like, when you're a better speaker, you figured out the model.
Right.
And then you have no external accountability so you can scale as fast as you can.
And now a big thing is I can bankroll my congregation.
So I could put future debt on my congregation.
So if I'm like, let's say I've got a thousand people in my pews,
and they give $2 million a year.
Well, we want to do a new build.
So I'm going to go to the bank and get a $15 million loan
because, hey, this is our forecast off their donor,
off their generosity.
Look at my last two years tax returns.
Yeah, I'm bankrolling my congregation for future debt.
Wow.
You're leveraging them to buy more real estate.
It is the biggest racket.
And then people look at us and they go,
you are tearing down the body of Christ, Nathan.
And I'm like, I don't think I am.
I think we're just saying,
hey, there's a lot of really dirty business practices in this system.
And like, let's get back to preaching Christ and living like Christ.
Yeah.
What is Kenneth, speaking of Kenneth Copeland, is he still alive?
Oh, yeah.
He's still doing his thing.
He said he's going to die at 120 years old.
Oh, yes, I saw that.
He made a prophetic statement that God's taken home.
Yeah, he's a wild one, man.
Yeah.
I mean, that famous video of him talking down to that reporter, he looks like.
Yeah, we went to, yeah.
We went to Kenneth Copeland's property.
I've been to this exact town.
Oh, is that with Tommy G. You went there?
Tommy G., yeah, yeah.
Yeah, what happened with that?
They didn't want to arrest us.
They were, their security was smart.
But so...
Where was his property?
His property is in Eagle Mountain, so outside Dallas.
Okay, okay.
In Fort Worth.
Something about Texas and Jesus, dude.
Well, because Texas has some of the loosest laws for churches, state laws.
And so your private planes can be registered as houses of worship,
which means you don't pay taxes on them.
Your plane can be a house of worship.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So that's why all the big boys want to be there
because it means you can buy a plane
and not pay tax on it.
Wow.
Yeah.
Because you worship in it.
So that's why he's saying like,
I don't want to be in the tube with demons.
You know, he needs to worship in his own tube.
You know, is what he's insinuating.
Yeah, but so the kicker with him is,
so he bought a, I don't remember the exact acreage,
a 1,200 acre ranch.
and he called it,
dang it, what would you call it?
We got a copy of the original mailer brochure
that he sent out to thousands of people in the 70s.
Oh, really?
So he buys this 1,200 people.
Try to find that image of that thing.
The revival capital of the world.
There it is.
It's in the show, so it might pop up
the revival capital of the world.
But he claimed to build,
he was going to build five things,
a radio station, a TV network,
the ministry facilities,
the elderly retirement home, oh, six, the park and a hotel for people to come and stay out when they
come to his church.
Like Disneyland, basically.
That was his pitch on raising all this money.
He only ever built three of them.
Can you guess the ones he built?
The radio station, the TV network, and the ministry buildings.
The three things he needed to build his brand.
But people gave to the elderly home.
They gave to the hotel.
They gave to the park.
In the for-profit world, that was.
would be called fraud. Yeah, you'd be investigated by the SEC and you'd be in prison.
Yes. No, but he calls it faith. Just keep giving in faith. And so today at the end of the
property, so it sits on a lake. So at the very tip of it that sits on this beautiful lake,
his 19,000 square foot home is there. There it is right there. Wow. Look at that. Yeah,
it's a bunker. So Tommy and I just wanted to get there. Go to the one below it with it. Yeah,
to the right. Yeah, look at that.
Yeah. So if you actually go back to the other one, so this is, so that one, he actually dug that canal. Yep, click on that one. So that waterway was not there. So they built that for what for personal use?
Extra fishing, man. Yeah. Biblical fishing. Yeah, biblical fishing. Well, and ironically, uh, probably to make it more private.
Ironically, is there one that's a little more zoomed out, a top down like that? You can, um, find a more zoomed out top down.
There you go. The left.
Yeah, the left. Yep.
So if you zoom in, if it's a high-res enough,
there's a, he has a high-fenced hunting ranch.
Oh, it's going to be low-res.
So he has deer.
So he has a deer blind and he just shoots deer from his deer stand
and his high-fenced hunting property.
Wow.
Yeah.
But so the kicker with this home is Kenneth does not own this home.
So if you get a housing allowance, you own the home as the pastor,
like Ed Young Jr., right?
So he's acquiring all this real estate by tax-free housing allowances.
But this is different.
So this is called a parsonage.
So the church can build you or you can buy,
the church can buy you a parsonage,
which means basically you get to live in it rent free.
So the church owns this house.
Kenneth doesn't own this house.
So that photo will do if that one's big enough.
And so we wanted to see it.
Tommy and I were like, let's go see it.
No one's seen this house.
Right.
Like we want to see it.
We just want to see if we can even get to it.
And so we did.
Dude, gates were just automatically opening for us.
We made it all the way to that T-section above the tennis court.
We made it all the way there.
No way.
And there was a final gate there that was a keypad.
But ironically, you had to drive on his private runway.
So he has his private airstrip on this church property as well.
Yeah.
So we- Do you keep his planes there?
He did, but his planes got too big.
He bought bigger planes that couldn't land on that runway.
So now he has a private hanger at another airport.
You know, it's never enough.
It's never enough, Kenneth.
Kenny boy.
Didn't some guy, like, come up and, like, flash his gun at Tommy?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, and he was, from what we've heard, he was Kenneth's private, like, main security guy.
Okay.
And but that guy has bounced around the U.S. to different churches because he keeps getting fired at different churches for doing cowboy, cowboy shit like that.
Showing his guns to people.
Now, why would Kenneth need so much security?
Um.
Why would he need any more security than any other random billion?
Would he need more than like, you know, just another billionaire?
Pastors today, because there's this concept of persecution.
And Christians love this concept of persecution.
So American pastors, it sells.
I'm being persecuted.
The Bible talks about persecution.
Christians in Nigeria are being persecuted.
They're being killed.
These pastors are just arrogant.
And I feel like they want to feel persecuted.
But so when we walk down there, there's one shot in the religion business where in the front lobby alone, there's six armed security guards.
Like, what do you guys? Like you're, you're, this is what's ironic. We all have kids. They go to schools. Most schools have one resource officer to protect our kids. Right. These churches have like 10, 20, 30 armed security guards.
I have a buddy. I won't tell, to say his name, but he started going to a church that I attended for a minute. And he's like, Nathan, they asked me to be on their.
sniper team. And I was like, what? He's like, yeah, they want me on the roof during outdoor events.
And I'm like, let that sink in. These churches are so like obsessed with themselves. They're like,
let's put a sniper, a private sniper on the roof. I think that's more of a liability than anything,
right? You've got a guy with a sniper rifle. They think like some like suicide Islam person is going to
come trying to bomb their church or something. Yeah. And you look at you look at the stats. Yes,
there are churches that do have horrific act, like shooting shootings.
Right.
There are schools as well.
But it's like any mass casualty shooting is awful.
But the juice is squeezed different for our children compared to churches.
There's one resource officer at the school.
That's fucked up.
And then I got buddies who go to a, we go to a small church and they're talking about sniper teams.
Right.
I feel like we got too much time on our hands.
For a small church, no less.
We got too much time on our hands, guys.
And so what was the speaking of like violence in churches?
What was that recent thing in San Diego?
Were those dudes with the guns with the crosses on them?
At the mosque?
Was it a mosque?
I know, I know a mosque was a...
Maybe it was a mosque, yeah.
I'm pretty sure it was a mosque.
Somebody who went and shot up a mosque in San Diego.
Can you find this, Steve?
It was a school.
I think they had a school in session, a kid's school in session.
And these dudes had crosses carved into their guns.
and somebody was telling me that like there was no media reporting of these dudes being Christians at all.
Like typically if it's the other way, right, if you have like an Islamic terrorist or something that's doing stuff like this,
the media is always going to leave them like Islamic extremists or like Muslim extremists.
But from what I heard, based on somebody who told me about this,
is that all the reporting on this San Diego thing,
No one actually called them Christians.
That'd be fascinating.
I could see why, right?
Oh, wow, that recent.
Three people killed, how many days ago was this?
Literally last seven days ago.
Three people killed in Islamic Center of San Diego shooting,
tried to draw gunmen away from the mosque, police say.
Three people were killed in Monday's shooting in San Diego's largest mosque,
two teen shooters, who both,
who have both now been identified by police were found dead with self-inflicted gunshot wounds nearby.
Keep going on.
What do you got going on here, Steve?
Is this another story?
I think that is a different story.
I think that's it.
Maybe...
That's just a video.
Yeah, the video.
Find out something else.
Get off CNN.
Well, division sells, right?
So it's like if divisive news sells.
But people do a lot of bad things in the name of Islam and people do a lot of bad things in the name of Christianity.
Right, 100%.
But yeah, it's just interesting how the media tries to spin stuff.
It's like the media always tries to lock in on Islam, right?
It's never like, when's the last time you heard a story of a Christian extremist doing anything?
You know, you never hear that in the media.
Rarely for sure.
Well, because what's going to sell the continue to sell this Iran war.
Right.
Well, one of the craziest things too, which we've talked about at nauseam on this podcast is like the whole Peter Thiel thing.
thing trying to paint everything in Silicon Valley under this guy under this umbrella of
Christianity you know have you looked into this at all I haven't looked into it much educate me
you know I know he did that big seminar on the Antichrist yeah he did the seminar on the Antichrist but
there's been this movement that he's been a part of in Silicon Valley where him and a few other guys
to feel their AI techno billionaires have been they started they opened up a new church I think
in Silicon Valley and now
you know, Silicon Valley a place that's been historically not religious, been godless, you know,
is now like everyone in Silicon Valley is like becoming very, very Christian because all these
CEOs and all these business leaders there that are connected to Peter Thiel are encouraging
their companies to be more Christian and to go to church. And it's becoming very much part of the
culture in Silicon Valley now, which is very interesting to me. Because Christianity sells.
They figured out how to package it, you know.
It's, it's, again, 62% of the U.S. is Christian, I believe, or self-professed Christian.
That's 160-something million people.
You know, you're talking about...
Find like the New York Post or New Yorker or one of those big articles on that, Stephen.
That's just fascinating to me.
It's, again, Christianity has been monetized.
So there's a really cool book that most people, most Christians haven't heard of called the Didaicay.
It was written, they estimate around like 70 AD.
So, you know, 35 years after Christ.
Christ died. And if you believe in the scriptures, you know, rose and Pentagon again.
The Didiquay.
Didi. And in the Didakei, it talks about trafficking Christ and trafficking the name of Christ.
So only a few decades after Christ dies, the early apostles already see that people are selling his name.
And so in chapters 12 and 13 of the Didiquay, it talks about if someone comes to you, because the
script, the Bible talks about what the disciples should do and how they should go out.
and you should go into someone's home and you stay with them and eat what they put in front of you
and drink what they put in front of you because the laborer is worthy of his wage.
So if I'm out there telling people about this itinerant rabbi Christ and how he's here to, you know,
present a saving gospel and save you, like you should provide susten instance shelter for me
because I'm giving you this gift.
Right.
So at that point in the Didiqe, people were already just leaching off of other people.
So it's like, hey, I'm a rabbi teaching the name of Jesus.
I'm going to stay with you for a couple of weeks.
And all of a sudden, you just start leaching off of people.
Yeah.
And so the Didicate, these early apostles are like, hey, here's how we get around this.
If someone stays with you for more than three days, tell them to get a job.
They got to go get a job because it literally says they are trafficking the name of Christ.
Wow.
And so when I look at a lot of institutional churches today in America, I'm like, you're just trafficking the name of Christ.
Like you're selling it and you're commoditizing every aspect of that name.
And yeah.
So, yeah, the system's broken, bro.
It is.
And it goes so deep, man.
It really does.
Have you, there's also another thing, this study on psychedelics called the, it was called
the John Hopkins religious professional study where Johns Hopkins, they got leaders of,
every big faith, right?
Like Christianity, Judaism, Islam, and I think a couple others.
And they brought them into this study and they gave them all, I believe, psilocybin.
And the goal of it, I believe, was to find some sort of common core to all religions.
I think the term for this is perennialism, which is the idea that like every religion started from one idea and like branched off into its own little thing.
and what they found was the drugs enhanced or solidified all of their pre-existing beliefs.
So when they had their experience on psilocybin, they had the Christian leader, had a very Christian experience, like when he went to wherever he went on his trip.
And the Islam person, the same thing.
Like their whole experience was Islamic.
And it's really interesting because you see the same thing with near-death experiences.
People historically who have had near-death experiences explain wherever they go being directly tied to whatever their belief is.
And that goes for Christians, Jewish people, et cetera.
So I find that very, very interesting.
Like which one's supposed to be real?
If each person, when they have near-death experiences, their pre-existing belief that's already inside of them is manifested.
into this whatever the fuck is happening in your brain when you die you come back or when you take
some sort of a psychedelic drug what does that mean dude like what how do you explain that i don't know i
almost died i had a traumatic brain injury when i was 16 and and i didn't like go up to heaven but i was
lifelighted from cabo um to san diego and and i firmly believe like i firmly realize remember i was laying
like i don't remember two weeks of my life but i do remember the being on the plane and really
There was a female angel just sitting right above me.
And I just stared at her the whole time until I, until I touched down.
And then I don't remember anything else.
How did you get a traumatic brain injury?
I fell off like a 40 foot cliff, basically.
Yeah, I was on the quad with my brother.
And we were just in the sand dunes.
And I used to jump.
In Mexico?
In Mexico.
And I used to jump bikes and motorcycles.
And so I just saw this little wind swept lip and I just hit it.
I think I was in like third gear.
and there was just no back.
So the wind had just torn this whole dune up.
And so it was like probably a 40 foot drop.
And so I chucked the quad.
I was 16.
I had just got my license and I like chucked the quad
and I knock my little brother off.
And so I had no more momentum.
So I just stuck on the quad and the quad flipped over
and just crushed me.
And so yeah, I had bleeding on my brain and that was a mess.
And so they just duct tape me to a stretcher,
put me on the back of a quad and like got me out.
And then that was...
They put you on a plane right to San Diego.
Well, they had to wait.
I don't remember the exact details, but...
Were you unconscious most of the time?
Most of the time, yeah.
Yeah, I just don't remember anything for two weeks.
And I don't remember the exact details,
but my grandpa had to get a private plane from Arizona
to pick up a nurse and fly down.
So, because I don't think life flight would go international.
So a private plane had to come down and pick me up.
And they had to keep the airport open
because it was in the middle of the night.
The plane came in.
So it was a miracle for sure.
So that's why I firmly believe in miracles,
and I firmly believe in the power of prayer
because my family's a big,
like I have my uncle and aunt
were missionaries in Kiev, Ukraine,
and there was missionaries in Papua New Guinea
that we knew.
And so there was people all over the world
praying for me that whole time.
And I firmly believe in the power of prayer.
And I think I'm here today.
What would have happened if you couldn't have got that flight?
I probably would have died.
Really?
Yeah.
They wouldn't have been able to take care of you
of the hospitals there?
No, this is Mexico.
What is that, 25 years?
years ago. You know, this is Cabo before it blew up. So it was like, it was tiny. Um,
and like I remember the little tiny hospital I was in. They gave me, uh, blood thin,
like some pain drug, which thinned my blood. So the bleeding got worse on my brain. So it was
just, it was a, I wouldn't have made it in Mexico. And, uh, yeah. When you got, when you got
back to the States, what are they, what are they doing? Like, how do they, they were going to,
they were prepping me for like brain surgery. I don't remember. They were prepping to
relieve the pressure off my brain and the doctor was like, let me just watch and wait. So they,
They left me for a few hours and he just monitored me and the swelling didn't get worse and the bleeding didn't get worse.
And so I think I was in there for two weeks.
I can't remember the exact time.
And the bleeding and swelling just slowly subsided.
And I woke up one day just wide awake and he's like, you're a walking miracle.
The doctor said.
Whoa.
And yeah, I left the hospital and went back to school and I lost my driver's license because I had a grandma seizure in the dunes.
And so what kind of seizure?
Grandma is like the worst type of seizure.
Basically your brain's just disconnected from your body.
And so for a couple years, I got brain scans and I think most of the things fell back
into place, you know?
Oh, my favorite.
My favorite memory of all this is I get back to school and everybody in my class,
I mean, I think I'm a sophomore.
And they made me this big card and one girl, all she wrote was, I thought you died and
just signed her name.
Oh, no.
And that just stuck with me.
I was like, that's pretty funny.
I was 16.
16.
Yeah.
God, dude.
But yeah, so those near death experiences really reshaped the way you think and see things.
And yeah, but I didn't have like a Christian experience, if that makes sense.
I just, I just saw this being that just sat with me the whole time.
It was just right above me, a foot above my head.
And it was like a woman, like a female figure.
Yeah, it was a female.
It was a blonde female.
And what makes you say it was an angel?
Because she just didn't, she didn't move.
She literally like hovered there.
She was, I don't remember her face.
I don't remember any detail.
She just sat just like a presence.
A presence, but a physical, like I could see it, you know, and I, and I just stared at it.
Yeah, that's bizarre. And you never forgot that.
Never forgot that. Yeah. Now, there was a nurse on the plane, so maybe the nurse, like, maybe she was, I don't know, but like, just I remember this being right, like, right there with me the whole time. And then as soon as we landed, she did that energy disappeared, that being disappeared.
Wow, dude. Yeah. It's so, yeah, I hear these stories.
all the time and it just always blows my mind, you know, because like the power of belief
is a real thing, you know, and you can explain, you can see that when you go into these, when
you see the videos of like, you know, Kenneth Colt, Kenneth Copeland when he does the things where he
like, the people are lined up and like touches him. They got, wow. Yeah, Benihin whipping him with
jackets. Yeah. And, you know, there's even people that are like exorcists that do this stuff and they
charge money to do exorcists on people where they even do them over Skype or like,
Zoom. And they'll charge like 300 bucks a pop to do an exorcism or whatever. And like somebody can be in
their presence. And they believe so much in the devil. They believe so much that the devil has
penetrated their soul. As soon as this guy comes up to them and starts doing something,
they start like speaking in tongues like a demon and doing these things when that's probably
bullshit. Right. These people believe this stuff so wholeheartedly.
And this con man is coming in and convincing you you're possessed by a demon that you literally, it affects every fiber of your being.
You start convulsing uncontrollably because of your belief.
And there's the perfect analogy that describes this is there's this, there's this voodoo cult in Haiti.
I forget the name of it.
But they basically, they had this belief.
They have this voodoo religion where they,
and this is like an, it goes,
it's like ancient for them, it goes way back,
where they had this ritual
where they will take this,
it's a puffer fish venom that they consume.
And what it does is it,
it paralyzes the body.
So they take this venom
and then they bury the person up to their neck.
Oh, geez.
Like they're dead because that literally paralyzes you.
You're conscious and you kind of trip, I think,
but you can't move anything.
So they,
They bury you and then they give you this drug called scopolamine.
And then when they come back, they believe they're zombies.
And they look and they move like zombies.
And this religion's been happening forever.
And scientists went down to study them.
Pharmacologists went down to figure out exactly what they're doing,
anthropologists.
They've been studying these guys, these,
this tribe for years.
And they figured out the drugs they were taking that,
that pufferfish venom and the scopolamine.
And they're like, okay, does this make you?
Does this really turn you into a zombie?
Does this somehow affect your psyche at all?
Make you believe that you're turned into a zombie?
And what they found out was no.
Like if me and you took this, it wouldn't do that to us.
But when you take those drugs in that cultural matrix
and with that belief system that that's going to happen to you,
it literally does this to these people.
Yeah.
So that has to be the same thing that's happening
with these people that are in these churches
that believe so much in this stuff.
And these people are coming in there,
convincing them that when they touch them,
they're going to get blasted back six feet
or a demon is going to come out of them.
Yeah, I don't want to knock anybody's experiences,
but I agree with you.
A lot of this is just stimulus-related.
You know, but I do think Kenneth Copeland fully believes
he's doing the right, right?
He believes in what he's doing.
I think Paula White believes that she is, you know,
the authority in the word of God.
Like I think these people actually believe it.
On the flip side, there's a church in North County, San Diego.
We did a video about it a couple months ago.
They have this healer come.
And he's healed, quote unquote, healed lots of people.
And I know two people personally that this guy's healed.
Their family members and then the family members have died.
And there's video in the post about this of this healer, praying on this man,
and he's saying, your cancer is out of your body.
You know, in Jesus' name, your cancer is gone.
You are healed.
So this man firmly believes his death sentence cancer that he's about to die from is gone.
So he's not taking his treatments.
He's like, I'm healed.
Wow.
Dies.
My friend's wife, really sick.
Same thing.
This guy's coaching her, saying, hey, you have the faith.
You're going to be healed.
She dies.
Leaves behind three kids and a husband.
At what point do these healers become liable for the medical advice they're giving?
Right.
And so this is what's crazy.
So like, so.
But here's his response.
He's convincing them they're healed so they in turn don't take any sort of like standard cautionary.
Hey, if I have enough faith, God's going to continue to heal my body.
I don't need to take any medicine.
I don't know.
Do it change my life at all?
But here's what's crazy.
His rationale is Nathan, well, some people do get better.
Right.
And I'm like, are you serious?
of course some people would get better, dude.
Like- What percentage of them?
I can't remember. I think he said 60%.
Like he threw one of his followers threw the stat out.
And I'm like, dude, that's probably average in general.
Well, I think there's something to that though.
I think when you, I think when somebody gets a cancer diagnosis, most of the time, they
they lose all hope.
And when they go in there and they get treatment and they're in this hospital, which is a
terrible environment to be in and you're around all these other sick.
people and like getting cancer is not a great thing. You probably, you know, it's going to affect your
mind. It's going to affect your psyche. It's going to affect everything about you. And you start to
become depressed. And that has a cascading effect. You know, it has a snowball effect. The negative.
And that can weigh on you. And then you start to like, every day you lose a little bit more
hope into where eventually you mentally give up. And then that can literally kill you.
So I think there's definitely something to be said.
for what if you are, it's better to be in the mindset that you are healed, that you are miraculously healed, right? And other, compared to thinking I have this, you know, this terminal illness, it's a death sentence. I only have this much time to live. I guarantee if you took 100 people and you put them in a study and you took half of them like a placebo control thing that have like the same cancer. You say, uh, 50% we're going to tell them that they're healed by God and they're going to live. The other 50% we tell them they're going to die. I guarantee, like, I,
I would be very curious to see the outcomes.
I would agree with you on that.
That probably is a, you could probably perform that study in this group.
It's like yelling at a plant for, you know, first putting Mozart and letting the plant grow, right?
Those studies are real.
But at the same time, you're claiming multiple, you've healed these people and then they die.
It's a problem when you're doing it that way.
I don't think that's your power, bro.
Now is mindset a real thing 100%.
Like, I always tell people in all this arena, whether that be like,
like exorcisms or deliverances or healings.
It's like I can only speak from my perspective, but I firmly hear God when I'm quiet
and when I'm meditating and praying and reading this book.
That's when I feel his presence.
And that's when I see actual transformation in my life.
Me going to these big loud rooms and being around people, like in singing songs
and getting emotional, that makes me feel good, you know.
But I grow when I know the word.
and when I know what it does to me
and how it transforms me and sanctifies me.
And so I actually, as I get older,
I get quieter and quieter with that book
and with my prayer and my thought,
which is that mental exercise of like God has me, right?
But the beautiful part is like,
it's a beautiful, painful part.
But like when Christ,
the book claims that when Christ knew he was going to the cross,
this guy who's technically God,
incarnate, per the scriptures, he sits there and he goes, God, take this cup from me, man.
I don't want to drink this cup. And he's talking about getting crucified. And he's like,
I don't want this cup. Like, I'm not ready for this. When he's on the cross? No, right before.
Right before they come and arrest him in the garden of Gassanem. So he's sitting there and he's praying.
There's a lot of speculation about that, about that. Oh, is there? But you read it? No, it's beautiful,
though, because he goes, but not the, and this is where I'm going, not my will. Yep. But yours be done.
And that is the biggest arc of Christianity is it's not about me.
So it's like, yeah, I want to live a big, beautiful, fulfilled life and see my children age and see grandkids and do all that.
But it's not my will.
So use me in this moment, God.
Yeah.
And like the way Christ tells us to pray, give us this day.
Like, God give me today.
That's the only thing I can see.
Everything else out there I'm not stressed about.
I'm not stressed about tomorrow because I can't stress about it.
What is that going to do?
How is that going to benefit me at all?
You know?
And so when I see these healers, it's like you're focused on the wrong.
I believe they're focused on.
And these exorcists and all this, you're focused on the wrong outcome.
It's like it's not about me.
Right.
And like that's the beauty and that's the differentiator of, I would say, of Christianity
compared to all other religions.
Yeah.
Is there's, there's major differentiators.
And all these people too, all these tech people, these tech bros who are like
becoming super Christian and they also at the same time, they want to live forever.
Well, but see, that's so.
They want to put their brains in a vat.
The book talks about Satan coming as light.
You know, Satan isn't going to come as this, as this devil with horns and a red cape.
Right.
He's going to come looking and sounding like this book, but he's not going to be the book.
Interesting.
He's going to shift the truth just enough to, hey, you can live forever.
This is what the second coming means.
We need to build that third temple.
This is, you know, this is the thousand-year reign of Christ.
man has always tried to build empires.
Right.
And we're trying to build empires using Christianity as the sales tool.
So I haven't done much research on Teal and in Sacramento.
Or I'm sorry, in San Francisco, but I just see them, they see Christianity is a great sales tool.
It's the next sales tool.
Yeah.
And you look at Trump and you look at Hegsef and you look at Huckabee and you look at Huckabee.
and they have such a twisted perspective on this book
and most Christians have never read it
to where they can use it
to leverage their own bias and their own gain
is what's happening at scale.
So that's why I always tell people,
read the book, please.
Just read the book.
I don't care.
Anything out of everything, just read the dang book.
Yeah, no, it's very interesting.
Obviously, I haven't read the whole thing yet,
but I've discussed it with lots of people on the show before.
And
And there was one passage, that passage you were talking about, I think it's Mark 14, where Jesus is in the park, in the garden of Gassimini, and it's like the middle of the night.
And he's with a naked boy.
And the boy runs away naked or whatever.
When the cops come, when the cops come to arrest him, there's lots of classical scholars and Greek scholars.
religious scholars in general, that there's this like underground war over what this passage
actually means. Not what it means, but like, why would they put that in there? What was happening
in there? And so when he gets... Is it Mark? Could you? It's Mark. Is it Mark 14? Yeah,
pull it up. Steve can pull it up. Um, Mark 14. What was the verse? Do you know? 14. 14. 15. 51? 14. 14.
And now a certain young man following him.
Yes, that's it.
Is that, was that right?
Dude, you nailed it.
No, 1451.
Wow.
Now a certain young man followed him having a linen cloth thrown around his naked body.
And the young man laid hold of him.
And he left the linen cloth and fled from them naked.
Yeah.
So what's the, what's the?
So those people that have questioned, what was Jesus doing in a park at 1 a.m.
With a naked little boy, you know, the young man, there you go, wearing linen cloth, fled naked.
And then allegedly, I've done a whole podcast on this, on this segment of the Bible.
Who have you talked with about it?
And I've talked with religious scholars.
I've talked with classical scholars.
I've had two classical scholars debating this, debating each, debating each other on.
People that literally dedicate their whole entire life to translating and reading ancient Greek.
Because when you read the actual Greek, it's crazy.
the words in Greek can have multiple meanings.
Yeah, love has multiple meanings in Greek.
So when Jesus was arrested and the cops come, the Roman cops,
he goes, why are you coming at me like I'm some laystace?
So the word laystace has multiple meaning.
It can mean a pirate, which also can mean a human child trafficker.
So allegedly when Caesar was kidnapped as a kid,
the pirates that kidnapped him, they were like human traffickers.
and they took him. He was a child. And then he said, you guys are fools or whatever. You guys need
to return me or whatever. There was a ransom that was paid to get him back. And then as soon as
they returned Caesar, he went out and hunted them down and he crucified them. And they called him
lace days because they were traffickers. So Jesus is telling the cops, why are you arresting me?
Like, I'm some trafficker or something like this. And he's in a park with a naked kid. So there's all
kinds of weird speculation about this. Like, what was Jesus really doing? You know? And we had one guy on
here who thinks that Jesus was literally tripping on some sort of a psychedelic drug in the garden
and using the boy's bodily fluids as an antidote to get over the drug.
That sounds pretty speculative.
Like there's scholars that debate this shit.
It's wild.
And then there's also this author named Lucian who writes all about viper venom's,
like antidotes, like antidotes and stuff like this.
Yeah, yeah.
I've read a little bit about that.
So in the ancient world, like snake bites were very common.
People were always dying from venom from snake bites, right?
Yeah.
And like even the surgeon general of the Roman Empire, Marcus Aurelius,
wrote all about this stuff.
And they were constantly coming up with antidotes for snake bites.
And like the emperors would take these drugs, these cocktails of venoms,
like low-dose venoms to boost up their immune systems.
Because people were constantly trying to get assassinated using venoms, right?
So the emperors were paranoid.
They were going to get killed.
And Lucian was saying, I forget exactly what it was.
There was a specific word because Jesus is on the cross and he's very thirsty.
Yeah.
Right.
And apparently those viper venoms make you like extremely thirsty.
Like one of the symptoms of being bitten by one of those vipers that were in that area that conduct part of the world was like extreme extreme thirst.
So like apparently what Lucian was saying, who's a non-of-a-lawful,
author. I forget, I think he was like maybe 300 AD, 3 to 400 AD, was speculating that there could
have been an antidote to the venom on the sponge, but Jesus refused it. Okay. But like,
take this all with a grain of salt. For sure. It's just interesting how there's so many authors
from the time of Christ, like through the centuries after Christ that were writing and hypothesizing
about him.
Yeah.
And there was even people that were that were trying to discredit him,
people that were trying to make up ancient propaganda about him.
And this is the problem with ancient texts in my view,
is that you can read all this ancient Greek work that has been written through the Greek right now
over the centuries.
Yeah.
And it's like, how do you know what is like an ancient tabloid that's, you know,
trying to assassinate the character of some figure or some political
figure or some religious figure or whatever it is. Like you can't just read something and be like,
aha, this must be true. 100%. Well, that's why the pendulum of Christ that I talked about is so fascinating.
Yeah. Right. You know, because people will say, oh, Nathan, this new King James translation is the
infallible word of God. So people say the NLT is, Nathan. And it's like, no, to your point,
Greek has multiple, like, like I love diving into the Greek because there's even words that don't,
like John 1, actually ties really closely to Hebrew 6.1.
But they use different words, but the Greek is the same.
And you want to know what?
There's another whole layer to this, bro.
There's fucking, there's dictionaries that exist,
that their whole goal is to change the meaning of words.
So like, I've had people on here debating the meanings of shit in the Bible.
And they'll be like, well, this, one guy will say, no, this is what it means.
Look it up on the dictionary on the on the TLG, right?
The Greek dictionary.
We look it up.
He's like, no, no, no, no.
You got to go to this dictionary.
You got to go to my Mormon dictionary to find out the real meaning.
Like, dude.
But that's the beauty of Christ is, is you can.
be a literalist and believe everything, you know, because I've heard, oh, Nathan, this is just a great
example of how the gospels are accurate because, and they were their own interpretations of what they
saw. Because if everybody had written that same thing, that means they're copying each other.
But the fact that Mark or whoever wrote Mark, most likely, like that is the sign that, hey,
this is authentic to Mark, to the book of Mark, right? And so that's the argument I've heard there.
But that's what's, again, that's why the pendulum is so fascinating me.
Yes.
Because nothing like this scares me about my faith.
Right.
Right.
And it shouldn't.
No, nothing about me questioning the institution scares me.
It actually deepens my faith because I'm like, ooh, manmade traditions are just manmade.
It's just fascinating on every level.
But we cling to it.
Like nobody's business.
Nathan, that church, that business, that institution you were raised in, you're attacking it.
I'm like, no.
I love the people in that building.
I want to actually preach.
teach some truth, some biblical truth to them about kind of what that building actually is.
You know, and it's, but we, you know, Christ talks about it. You know, the blind lead the blind
into a ditch. It's like we have scales over our eyes because we love our own traditions and our
own biases. And as soon as those are questioned, the problem is, hey, if I've given to this church
all my life, I'm an idiot if all of a sudden they're taking advantage of me or the system's
taking advantage of me. I have to admit, man, I've been taking advantage of. And that takes
humility, right? To be able to say, dude, I've been given to this system and they've kind of been
robbing me. And when you look at the institutional church, six cents of every dollar given,
only like only six cents goes outside the walls to actually help the people that Christ told us to
help. Yeah, that's crazy. And that's what like all the, and I love, I want to listen to some of
these podcasts that you have because I love, yeah, I love the debates because again, it only
deepens my faith because I'm like, I actually want to know as much as possible. And I want to live
like Christ. Like there's no, in my opinion, there's no more ultimate way to live than live for
others. And so it's like, sweet. If I can do that. Yeah. Home run. That's a very good message.
Yeah. And someone said, well, Nathan, what happens if it's all a sham? What happens if like it's not real?
Right. Like what happens if you die and you just go dark? Well, how do you prove it? You can't put a time machine.
You can't, but I'm like, awesome. What a good?
great way to live then. Right. I followed a book that, hey, there's no heaven. There's no Jesus,
but I followed this book and lived for others. I'll take that any day of the week still.
Yeah. And so it's like, that's where, that's where I'm like, you know what? I have my faith and
Christian, I got like, my faith has just been deepened and the more I'm in this word and soaking in it,
the more it radically changes my life. And yeah, so that's, that's my encouragement to people in
regards to Christianity in Christ is like, don't be afraid of it. Don't be afraid of verses like that.
Right. I'm proud that you're never. Yeah, you can't. 1451. Right. I mean, there's been a lot of books
critical of the Bible and, you know, the Bible from what I understand, and I've heard smarter people
than me explain that it's full of contradictions. There's, you know, lots of the stuff, lots of the stuff that's
mostly testimony, right? Like unbelievable testimony. Like, you know, there's that guy Thomas Payne,
I think he was a philosopher who wrote a book called The Age of Reason where he does like a thorough examination of the Bible and like he's very critical of the Bible.
And he was one of the founding fathers.
He was like close to Thomas Jefferson.
And, you know, one of the cases he makes is like, oh, the Bible, you know, it's a book composed of testimony with anonymous sources that with claims that are unimaginable.
Right.
So he's like he uses the example.
Like imagine you're in court.
or imagine yours in your everyday life.
Are you gonna believe somebody's testimony
just based on the fact that they told it to you?
Now, claim that the testimony came from an anonymous source.
Now claim that that testimony that came from the anonymous source
is that somebody moved the sun and the moon.
A human being was able to move the sun and the moon
or have a conversation with God.
Like, that's what the Bible is.
It's composed of testimonies that are like that.
So like some people, like they want to just look at that, like the hard materialist view of that, of the book.
And that's the reason they can't believe it or they want to call themselves an atheist or something like that.
But for me, it's like, you know, I'm in the boat where I don't believe and I don't not believe, right?
I'm just fascinated by it.
100%. And that's a great place to be.
And in regards to the contradictions in the book, I find it a fascinating study.
and I talk to lots of Christians who I firmly respect
who believe this book is the infallible word of God
and I play with him.
I'm like, okay, Judas died.
How did he die?
He died three different ways.
Right.
I don't think you can die three different ways, right?
You can only die one way.
Like, did he hang himself?
Did his guts explode in the field?
Like, how did he die?
And in my opinion, those subtle differentiators in these stories,
if the three of us go out to dinner
and we walk around downtown,
our three stories tomorrow when we write them down will be slightly different.
And so that's the beauty of it.
It's like to me it confirms the authenticity.
It doesn't mean Nathan like look at every small nuance that is actually a contradiction
because these stories do contradict each other sometimes.
But when you look again, the story of the Bible is one story.
It's creation.
It's are we created or are we chance?
I think we are created.
And I wrestled with that for 30 years of my life.
and then the fall like there's an inherent sin i believe like baked into humanity i do agree with
that and like i i firmly believe that and so okay what's what's the what's the outcome of that's
that's interesting i want to redeem myself like i want to be redeemed and i can't redeem myself
my creator has to that's the story of this book yeah and that's it and then all the other
of nuance, the translation issues, the hiccups and humanity and how we've leveraged and weaponized
this book, I'm all for all those discussions. Because at the end of the day, the book's about
one story. And like, that's what I love about it. But we get so obsessed because a lot of the
times I always say people have there, and my Christian friends love to hang me on this. I'm like,
I think there's a big difference between belief and faith. So belief is, I believe this. So my understanding is
rigid. This is my belief. It's usually a bias that you're raised in. Like I was raised in a non-denominational
church. I was raised, you know, sex is wrong and drinking is wrong and cussing is wrong. And I was
raised, you know, you know, follow the rules. And when you get married, you have a ceremony and you do
this and you sign this contract. And that's my belief structure. But faith, I'm not a, when you have
faith, you're looking only forward and you're saying, God, you've got me, like teach me, pour into me.
and you're not afraid of conflicts.
You're not afraid of constructive criticisms or even outright, you know,
individuals arguing against your point because you're like, hey, like, my God's got me
and I am created.
I do firmly believe that.
So other than that, it's like...
I do think some of the people like that, too, they also do Christianity a disservice by
acting like that.
It's like you're acting like a fool.
I had a guy on here once, one of those exorcist dudes who we got in here.
to a back and forth about drugs.
And, you know, he was making the case that he was trying to argue with me that drugs were the devil.
And if you go, if you use drugs, you're, it's an apostasy.
You're going to go to hell and all this stuff.
It's not what God would want it.
And then I was like, well, what about legal drugs?
What if they're legal under the Constitution and they're being used to cure ailments or like things like PTSD or cancer or whatever?
Like that's like, oh, well, that's a different thing.
Don't try to play that game with me.
Oh my gosh.
And I'm like, I don't like, and I'm like also, how come every time I get really high
or smoked a ton of weed, all I think about is spending more time with my kids.
Yeah.
Is that the devil?
Yeah.
Or put that illegal substance against a legal substance like alcohol.
Right.
A lot more people die from alcohol.
Oh, yeah.
You know, like, yeah, that's an interesting one.
I do believe.
Like my point is like people like him.
Yeah.
They bastardize it.
And they pay it.
They give it a bad name.
Yeah.
Well, because it's a legalistic faith or a legalistic belief.
Right.
You follow these rules.
You're good.
Yes.
You're going to get into heaven.
It's like, I don't really care about heaven, to be honest.
Like, you know, when Christ prays, he goes, when he tells you how to pray, he goes,
you know, thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.
We're trying to bring heaven down.
And I think we can do that.
I think there's moments where heaven comes in clips of the earth.
What do you think happens?
when we die. I have no idea, man. I'm excited for it. It's the last great adventure, you know.
Like I've lived a pretty cool life, pretty wild life. And I'm like, that's going to be the biggest
adventure yet. Yeah. You know. So you don't think there's a heaven? No, no, I believe there's,
I do believe there's something. But I don't think the streets are paved with gold. Right.
You know, like, like the Psalms and there's beautiful, the stories in the Bible about the streets being
paved with gold and it's more beautiful than you can imagine. But you're talking about the quote-unquote
God that made gold. Like I think a lot of these stories are poetry. And it's like, when the author
was sitting there writing, what is the most beautiful thing he could imagine streets of gold?
You know, do I really think my God, who, when I've seen my child be born and just weep over that,
that is so much more beauty. Like there's so much more beauty in that.
that moment than in every street in America being paid with gold.
I can care less about gold.
So do you think my God who would give us glimpses of heaven like that would be like,
okay, I'm going to pave my streets with gold.
No.
It's like I have no idea what that is going to be like, but it's going to be.
I use this analogy of like, I think our God is a loving being who gave part of himself
in us.
That's the breath of life and man.
And I think when I die, my breath's just going back to him.
Like whatever sliver of him that's in me, it's going back to him.
And I've seen a lot of people die.
And I've seen footage from ICAC officers, actually, where they show me murder victims.
And you'll see a mist rise off some of the bodies.
Whoa.
Yeah.
So he's like, check this out.
And yeah, there's literally like a white mist that hovers and then goes.
Like the soul.
Something.
That's wild.
Yeah.
And I'm like, see?
And I'm like, that's that energy going back.
That's that sliver.
And I'm like, who am I to be like, okay, God, when I get to heaven, I want to surf perfect waves.
You know, I want to sing and have fun.
No, he just wants his energy back.
And I'm stoked.
I'm like, let's go.
Right.
Bring me home, whatever that is, you know.
But until then, I want to live like Christ.
And whatever happens up there, I don't know.
Like whatever happens in Revelation, I'm not the foreseer.
I'm not a prophet.
it. I won't. I won't. It's just interesting to think of. Have you ever done psychedelics?
No. I've, uh, I, I, in my 20s, I had fun, but I was terrified of psychedelics because my mind
is already super jacked up. You never tried psychedelics. No. Um, I've had a lot of friends who have,
yeah. And we have this discussion a lot because I'm like, I think my business partner, um,
does psilocy. I think psilocybin. Don't quote me on that. Um, and, and he talks about like how,
like how he's had great experiences.
And I know a lot of military, like people in the military that have come out and,
and gone down to South America and done ayahuasca and they come back like transformed.
I know, I know victims who have done that.
And they come back like literally transformed.
And I, I've gotten to talk with a lot of them.
And I'm like, there's something super healing about that.
I just, since I've, like I said, I messed.
I was an idiot in my 20s.
Like, I'm very glad to be here today.
Yeah.
But when I look at drugs and illicit substances, even alcohol, like,
because I love a good tequila, but I'm like, I think God gave us the power to work through all of that.
Yeah.
In meditation and in prayer, if that makes sense.
And in silence.
And that's just my take on it is, is I think, I think, and who is I talking with?
Do you know Blurry Creatures, that podcast?
Luke Rogers, Aaron Rogers.
They talk about Nephilim.
Aaron Rogers.
Aaron Rogers' brother, Luke Rogers.
Blurry creatures, great guys.
Talks about Nephilim and shit.
Yeah, they're obsessed with the Nephom and the Apocrypha.
They're great.
That's amazing.
But we were talking with them and they're like, yeah, we feel like,
I can't remember who was Luke or his one of his counterparts,
but they were like, yeah, I feel like it shortchanged the payoff of the healing, so to speak.
Short changed the payoff.
Like it rushes.
the process. Right. Like there's beauty in the struggle. Yeah, yeah. You know, like I sat with one of my
close friends last night with my wife and we went to dinner and he just lost his wife. And he's,
you know, he's just like exhausted and beat up. And, you know, just he's like, I'm so, I'm so,
I can't remember the exact language he said. But it was, he's like, I'm in so much pain.
But I know like God is sitting here with me. And, uh, oh man. My wife brought up a, uh,
Spurgeon quote.
And it was basically about in the darkest moments,
like that's where the biggest growth happens.
Yes, that's totally true.
And it's like so you don't want to short change that.
You know, like like don't ignore it.
Sit in that.
Yeah, like sit in the pain.
Like your creator's sitting there with you
and that's when the growth truly happened.
So I'm just saying like I don't know if psychedelics short change that at all.
You know, because I've been in some really, really dark moments in my life
where I just sit there and I feel the feel the weight of eternity and you know just resting on my
shoulders. I'm like, oh, this is this is real. Yeah. You know. Um, because like when I'm reading
revelation, that was the first thing I thought of when I was reading drugs. I'm like, are these dudes
on psychedelic? Yeah. For sure. Like, how else do you explain this? Yeah. How do you rationally explain
this? Like, are they making it up or are they on drugs? But you know, when you think about-
or are they fucking aliens. Yeah, he talks about, you know, there's a, John talks about like being pulled up in the
spirit, you know, he talks about his spirit being pulled up. And it's like there's moments where
you have these out-of-body experiences, you know, where it's like, I feel like John was on some massive
trip where they're drug-induced or not. Right. You know, but he's sitting there and being shown this,
you know, this revelation. It's like, that's a pretty powerful trip. But I feel like, again, as I get
quieter in my life and as I, like, meditate on the scripture more and I pray, I'm like in
constant prayer. I feel like my life is a prayer. Like I'm actually seeing so clearly.
For the first time, not for the first time, but I'm seeing patterns and I'm seeing things.
I almost feel like there's moments where I'm in the spirit too, if that makes sense.
Where I'm quiet enough, where I'm seeing, I'm like, oh, I see you, God. I see the, I see the path.
And we, we call them breadcrumbs in the religion business. But like, I feel like, I always talk about
in the show, God, like, would put a breadcrumb in front of me and I'd walk and pick it up.
and eat it and then there'd be another one, you know?
But now it's like I see the trail more.
Yeah.
And I'm like, and I feel like that's what what the will of God is.
And like, so I'm like, oh, I see the will of God.
And it's sometimes not to my benefit, you know, but I'm like, oh, I see it.
And I see where I need to go.
And so I like yearn for that feeling now where I'm like in lockstep I feel.
I'm like, oh, I see what you're doing with me.
I see where you need me to go.
And sometimes it's good for me.
Sometimes it's not, you know, but I see it.
and I'm going to walk that path.
Can you give me like an example of one of those moments?
Yeah.
So what is sin?
I'm going to back up real quick.
Like when you translate sin, it just means missing the mark.
Like an archer.
Okay.
I'm looking for that bullseye.
So what's the bullseye?
This is what I ask most Christian friends and they can't answer.
And I'm like, well, you have to know what the bullseye is if you're ever talking about sin.
Yeah.
I think the bullsize is the will of God.
It's if I'm in lockstep or behind God and I can see.
see the bullseye. That's where I'm being used. That's where I'm safest. So a good example is
so God is the bullseye got his will his will is the will of God. So when Christ says in the
praise in the garden, you know, like take this cup from me but not my will but yours. Christ is
showing his humanity going like I don't want this. I don't want to hang on this cross. It's going to be
brutally painful like take this from me. But not my will because he's saying this is my bullseye.
I don't want it, but your will.
And so if the bull's eye is me hanging on a stake of wood, I'm going to do it.
And so that's what I mean is like, it's like, okay, like, how do I get in line to the will of God?
Like, how do I click in?
And it's, it's, I have to completely drain myself of Nathan.
Like, Nathan can't, my desires, my flesh, like, it has to be totally drained out.
And that's when I feel like most in line.
And so it's literally like a meditative state for me.
It's like when I'm when I feel I don't have to do anything if that makes sense like I have my skills
I'm filmmaker. I'm like I love people. I want to help. But so it's almost like I feel when I feel
myself be pulled. Like a flow state. A flow state. Exactly. Like it's it's that moment on a wave
exactly where you are so locked in that you're not thinking. You're watching the ribs of the wave
come up, you know, and you're just like you feel your rail and you're not doing anything. Like you're just,
You're just leaning into it.
Sister Rosemary talks about it in the religion business.
Season one, she's this Catholic, what would she call her mother?
I don't even know.
Out in Uganda.
And she took about, avowal celibacy, avow poverty, and avow of charity.
And I mean, like, this woman is just, like, amazing.
And she pulled, like, she would, all these young women that would be abducted,
these kids that would be abducted in Gulu and in northern Uganda,
they'd be taken into the rainforest and they'd be turning to child soldiers the boy would be
the boys would be turned into child soldiers the girls would be taken on as child wives and so
she basically said hey any girl that wants to come out of that forest you can you have safety on my
comment what episode is this uh she's in three of the seven episodes um yeah season episode one and two
are like super legal so you learn that you got to learn the architecture but then it starts speeding up
Got it.
Three, four, five, six, and seven are super adventurous.
But so now she's got like 300 women on her convent and their kids.
And I'm like, how much does it take to run this whole operation?
And she's like, I don't know, like $80,000 a year.
And I'm like, wait, what, to run this multi-acre facility with schools for the kids and the women are learning trades?
I'm like, this is cool.
But she goes, Nathan, I'm like, how do you pull this off?
And she goes, I don't know.
And I'm like, what do you mean?
You don't know.
And she goes, I don't know, I just, when I see a need, I fill it.
And I just step out into the unknown.
And so this is that flow state.
And I'm like, what do you mean?
And she goes, yeah, if I see something, I feel led to do it, I just do it.
And I fall into the unknown.
And that's where I find God, because God is the unknown, because he's been there before.
He's everywhere.
And I'm like, holy crap, that's where I want to get to.
That's that flow state where you feel so locked in.
And I see Sister Rosemary, and she's so locked in.
She's got the biggest smile on her face, you know.
How does she pay for all that?
Donors.
She doesn't get a dollar from the Catholic Church.
This is what's so crazy.
What's her mansion look like?
Oh, it's, I've been to her, it's one room in a, in like a building.
And this is my favorite part too.
I'm like, okay, Sister Rosemary.
So we're in Uganda.
She shows me this beautiful, like this beautiful space.
Yeah.
And she's trying to get it to actually where it becomes break even.
This is a brilliant.
model to where she never asks for a dollar again. And so I'll get to that. But I'm walking around with
her and I'm like, hey, where's your church? Like, where do people worship? And she goes, you don't want to
see my church building. And I'm like, why? She's like, it's a storage facility. And I'm like,
wait, what? She's like, yeah, that's just where we keep all our boxes and stuff. And I'm like,
well, where do you worship? And she's like, everywhere. She's like, right now. She's like, I go and
pray with the girls. We do this. She's like, we don't need that. Like, we need places to store things.
So the church is, the building is where we store things.
Wow.
And I was like, that is so awesome.
She's so busy outside the walls of the church.
She doesn't even have time.
That place is a storage unit for her.
And so what was the other?
Oh, so this is what's cool.
So she needs 80,000 a year right now to run the school for the women.
She keeps 300 women full time with their kids in school.
And then she also has an orphanage.
in a town away, and then she feeds a couple hundred orphans in South Sudan.
And so everything has a little cost, but she's like, yeah, we just started a farm.
And so in a couple years, the farm's going to be able to feed all the kids in Sudan.
And then the women learn to make clothes at the school.
So we sell the clothes in the markets.
And then we also have contracts with the restaurants.
So we make their aprons and their shirts.
And I'm like, are you?
And then she has a little auto body shop.
and I'm like, and then they have a restaurant on site that the public can come in and eat at.
And she's like, yeah, I want to get to the point where we never have to ask for a dollar again.
And I'm like, this is cool. You've flipped the model, right? Because right now, you go into an average church.
Yeah. And the average leader will say, hey, I'm not going to give you a fish because you need to learn to fish for yourself.
Which is a good, hey, teach Amanda fish. But what is the institution doing? Give us all your fish. We need fish constantly.
give us your money. Give, give, give, give. And we've created an institutional model that is so
donor hungry, it's literally just beggars, 400,000 beggars. Whereas you have women like Sister
Rosemary, we're like, we're going to flip the model. The husband and wife in Rio, remember in
Brazil that I told you about, they never took a dollar because they're like, we're going to make bricks,
and we're going to teach people how to work. Like the model is just flipped.
But so it's, yeah. It's just so anti-Western.
in society. Correct. You know? Well, and that's the thing is when we look at our-
Which is why it works. Yeah. Well, when we look at our culture, it's like in our institutional
structures, I don't, like everybody's like, oh, you hate on pastors. I don't. They're byproducts of
the system they were raised in, just like you and I are. But we have to be hopefully wise enough
and discerning enough to step back and look at the systems we play in and say, how can we
better this system? And for churches, it's how can we bring transparency back into the
financials? That's how can we bring transparency back into the financials? That's how you.
shouldn't be a rocket, like a big question to ask.
For politics, how can we clean up our government so foreign lobbies aren't buying us out?
Right.
You know, these shouldn't be difficult questions to ask, but for some reason, they are.
And so, yeah, we're here.
People always ask me, like, okay, you have this unquenchable desire to call out pastors.
And I'm like, it's very quenchable.
Like, just bring reform into the system, bring transparency into the businesses, and you will
never hear from me again about this.
Like, that's all I care about.
Like just bring transparency into the financial system.
That's it.
I'll be gone.
I'll go surf rink on.
I haven't surfed much in five years.
I'd love to be surfing.
What can everyday people do?
Like everyday churchgoers do?
That's a great question because we have a lot of people.
So we started an online Wednesday night like meeting where my biblical mentor comes on and just teaches for 20 minutes.
Then we have this big conversation.
And it'll usually last about.
about two hours and it's awesome. And a lot of people are like, well, I don't, I don't, like,
should I leave the church? And I say, no, don't leave your church. It's your job to reform
that church. Like, it's your job as a leader and as someone who sees the problem to go back in and
say, hey, we need to clean this up. Right. And so my encouragement to people is start asking
questions and look at your pastor and say, hey, when you ask a pastor, hey, what is your salary?
And they won't tell you. Say, I understand that this is nerve-wracking and scary, but you got to do it.
Like when you look at the industries in the publicly traded space, in every publicly traded company,
salaries are known.
Right.
Budgets are known.
Stake shareholders know where the money goes.
In the nonprofit sector, donors know where the money goes on Form 990.
In public institutions, in libraries and hospitals, you know where the money goes.
In churches, for some reason, all of a sudden, you don't know where the money goes.
I think it's a super nefarious actor behind all this that is.
So here's a big one.
Well, let me finish the state of about the church.
So as a congregant, it's your job to bring transparency and accountability back.
And so pray on it, meditate on it.
Like a church should be regulated and operated like every secular nonprofit.
You should file a 990.
Or at least your donors and congregants should know the basic data on the 990, if that makes sense.
And that's all we're asking for from a transparency side of things.
And so, and I think we can get there.
And I think it's, it's, it's not an unreasonable thing to ask.
No. And, and I think all we need is a couple pastors, like well-known pastors to stand up and say, I agree.
Like it's a dark, it's a dark, it's a dark industry, a dark trillion dollar a year industry.
Let's clean this thing up, you know.
Yeah, what would that do if it all became transparent?
Dude, it would kick the wolves out.
So the people who are in the system that are taking advantage of it.
of it would leave. They'd be booted. And then for the, who would boot them if they're in charge?
The congregants. You think? Oh, yeah. If, so here's an example, if you went to a church and,
and you give, you make 100 grand a year and you've been giving 10%, so you give 10,000 bucks a year to
this church. And you've been going for a decade. So you've given them 100 grand. Yeah.
If all of a sudden, you find out that your pastor is making $6 million a year, would that rub you wrong?
Me, it would. But I don't know if it would rub everybody wrong. Well, that's right.
This is like the 65-year-old woman who is a widow and goes by herself and literally goes to church three times a week, what have you.
I feel like there's a huge chunk of people that would just find a way to justify it.
So I agree with you on that.
So that's where people go, Nathan, who makes you the arbiter?
I'm not the arbiter.
Just bring transparency in.
And if Mama Joe doesn't mind that her pastor makes six, six point five million a year, so be it.
It's not my judgment call.
but just bring the transparency in.
And I do think Christians, and I know this book enough,
that Christians would have a problem
because there's this awesome topic
that no, I've never heard a pastor preached on
called sordid gain in the Bible.
So basically misappropriated gain or unjust gain.
And if when you look at institutions,
a $6.5 million salary for being a pastor, a shepherd is unjust gain.
And I would bet seven out of 10, like Christians,
would just think that is unjust gain.
And what would they do?
They'd leave and go to another church and they'd take their money with them.
And so it's like anything.
Pinch the money funnel and people will, the system will change.
Same thing with politics.
Yeah.
Pinch the lobby funnel.
Pinch the foreign aid or the foreign lobbying funnel and it would change overnight.
Are there any big forces, like big forces pushing back against this?
Just past-
Other than like you, grassroots people who are trying to expose it.
Pushing back for transparency?
Yes.
Like, are there any people in power who want this to happen?
Yes, but it's off.
It's quiet because they understand the,
they understand the handshake between politic and religion in America.
Right.
So Phil Hackney, he's in season one.
He oversaw the whole nonprofit sector for the IRS.
So basically the lead brain to understand this whole mechanism.
And he's like, the government's not going to get involved, Nathan.
He's like, go clean up your own house.
Because it would be a, it would be a death wish for the government, right?
Civil War would start, people would start talking about civil war if you tried to reform the institutional church from the politic.
Really?
So we just need to get, like, we as Christians need to take control over.
Who would start talking about civil war?
Christians.
Oh, have you not?
Like, they love a good persecution.
If, if I would bet most pastors, if you said, hey, if the government started filing a 990, would that be persecution of the church?
most pastors would say yes.
Wow.
And all you're saying is, hey, just give an
information, a legally binding informational sheet
on where your money goes.
And they say, that's persecution.
No, those Christians in Nigeria being murdered,
that's persecution for their faith.
What is your take on,
there's a lot of chatter online
in the White House just released those alien files or whatever?
How do you think that affects religion
or the church or my take on it,
a lot of people think that it's going to like destroy religion.
I don't think that.
I think people are going to find a way to cope with it.
And just like I can cope,
just how, you know, any person like you can get over a contradiction in the Bible.
I think most people are going to get,
are going to be able to cope with the fact that like aliens are real.
You know, I think that that's not going to, for most people,
I think people find a way to get over it or get able to cope with it.
Well, and what would you call an angel?
What would you call a spirit?
Yeah.
that can, that can, you know, transfer through realms.
I would call that alien.
You know, it's like, who knows what's out there?
I don't know what's out there.
I don't know what the files have.
But again, it goes back to that idea of belief or faith.
Yeah.
Like a belief of the legalistic and rigid.
I have faith.
Like, and I'm excited.
Like, show me whatever you got, bro.
Yeah.
Well, there was this guy who was on, this guy named Hal Putoff, who was on Joe Rogan's podcast.
And he was on a bunch of other podcasts recently.
And there was like a huge thing that came.
out with him. He worked for the government in like the 70s or 80s, whenever Nixon was.
And under Nixon, he was tasked to put together a report on what would happen if they disclosed all the UFO stuff.
And part of the report was like a pros and cons list. And on that pros and cons list was like organized religion.
What would happen to society and people who believe in are part of organized religions.
And that was one of the cons is that it would have a drastic negative effect on,
religious institutions and people's faith and stuff like that.
And that was one of the reasons they decided under Nixon not to release the UFO stuff.
So I'm always curious to hear people's takes.
And there's lots of people like another professor of religious studies that we had in here,
Diana Pesolka from North Carolina.
She is of the belief that a lot of the stories in the Bible and stuff,
even stories that were taken out of the canon.
She thinks that they were likely the same thing
that we're seeing in the sky now,
whether you want to call them angels
or whether you want to call them UFOs.
She thinks a lot of that same stuff is probably,
it's probably a lot of the same stuff.
Well, have you read the Apocrypha
or any of the apocryphal writings?
No, but I heard it's great.
It's amazing.
And you got to realize the Apocrypha
was in the Bible until 200 years ago.
So you had a whole set of books
that have been removed from this Bible.
Every Christian read those books
or studied those books up until a couple hundred years ago. A lot of Christians stay away from that,
right? Yeah. And you got to think why. You know, it talks about dragons. It talks about all sorts
of things. Christ actually quotes one of the writers in the apocrypha. And so that's my favorite
play is like, for my Christian friends. I'm like, well, don't you want to read the guy Christ was
quoting? And they're like, nope. Who did he quote? I think it was the book of Surach. It was a parable
about, I believe, I can't remember, it was a parable about a flower. And basically this guy,
I don't want to butcher the story, but, but makes cakes. Yeah, he makes cakes for, I think,
the needy. And it was supposed to be for his daughter's wedding. And he goes back and the,
the flower just keeps magically appearing. What did you search, Steve?
Yeah. No, you got to type in it, Jesus is
quote. Yeah, type in story about flower. Yeah, there we go. So book of apocryphal, book of
Syrac. Jesus quote. Yeah. The flutes disclosed. Yeah, it's so, so all I'm saying is that the
apocrypha is a brilliant set of books, but it doesn't bode well for the modern institution.
You know, it's very, um, they talk about Nephilim. They talk about giants. It really goes down
that is, is the Enoch part of the apocrypha? Enoch's part of the apocrypha. Okay. I see. It's it'd be
considered an apocryphal writing. Right, right, right. And what's crazy is the book of Jude.
Like you flash forward to the book, right? And this is what's crazy. I read that too.
Oh, you did. Okay. Not the book. I read the letter to Jude. Is that what it is? Yeah, it'd be Jude.
It was like a one page thing. Yeah, it's right before Revelation. So this is what's cool about Jude.
Here we go, Jude. Yeah, what's he asking for the soldiers or something there? He's like,
give me your soldiers. Well, the crazy thing about Jude is he quotes the book of Enoch.
And so it's just fascinating to me that you have books in this Bible that quote apocryphal writings,
but people don't want to read the apocryphal writings.
And you have to ask why.
Like our original, like the 66 book canon's author, authors want to quote the apocryphal writings.
Why don't we at least want to read them?
Right.
And again, they were in the canon until a couple hundred years ago.
And so that's-
And then you have the infancy gospel where Jesus,
kills a kid.
No.
There is a lot of,
there's a lot of gospels that I don't know about.
And a lot have been,
you know,
there's a lot of scholarship on certain books if they were,
if they were written by an anonymous writer
who was writing under the pseudonym of one of the apostles,
you know,
decades or 100 years later.
There's a lot of stuff.
I am not a biblical scholar in that regard.
There's far more brilliant,
brilliant men and women out there than me in that regard.
But the,
the infancy gospel about Jesus when he kills a kid in the infancy gospel.
And then I think he brings them back to life afterwards.
I'm not sure.
But yeah, there's so many of them.
But it's like this shouldn't scare any Christ follower.
Right.
And again, I go back to that pendulum.
It's like anything that comes on the table, read it and pray on it and meditate on it.
And, you know, do research on it.
Like research is a brilliant thing.
Yeah.
You know, we've got a lot of scholars.
out there and it sounds like that's what you thrive in, which is awesome. Yeah, I just love
hearing people's different takes on the biblical stuff and, you know, the ancient religions
and, you know. Well, let's go, like, I want to get to this one point. And like the, like the,
the Elysinian mysteries is what got me into all this stuff. This book by, um, it was called The Road to
elus by Carl Ruck, Gordon Watson, and Albert Hoffman. And Carl Ruck,
was a Harvard classical scholar,
so basically a Harvard Greek expert.
Yeah.
And Gordon Wasson was a,
like a mushroom expert,
I forget what the word for is it?
Ethno, ethno biologist or something.
And then the other guy was the guy who made LSD.
And they wrote this whole book about the Illusinian mysteries
in ancient Greece, how these people,
there would be this yearly thing
where people would go to a lusus,
this temple in a lusus,
where they would partake in these mysteries,
these mystery rights where they would consume wine that was allegedly contained this fungus called
ergot that grows off wheat and it would produce a psychedelic effect.
And they basically the idea is this is where the whole story of death and rebirth comes from.
And Persephone.
Is this where they found it in the jar, the jars they've like traced, they've traced it into the jars.
Yeah, I think so.
This is they found the psychedelic laced in the jars.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's part of it for sure.
What is this, Steve?
This is the infancy gospel.
Because you have such a boy, you can't live with us in the village
or else teach him to bless and not curse.
No, that's not the quote.
Anyways, read the infancy gospel.
I'll check it out.
I've never even heard of it.
It's interesting.
Yeah.
Yeah, but so there's this idea of, you know,
I'm really fascinated with the early church in Acts.
And, you know, they shared all.
And this is that idea of socialism versus capitalism.
Socialism and communism don't work.
from a government perspective.
Right.
Socialism is an individual perspective.
A social ideology is, hey, when I have,
and this is in the scripture,
when I have plenty, I share.
And when I need, someone's gonna help me.
Right.
This idea of social community is-
This works with a small village, right?
And it works from an individual to individual level.
And that's what the gospel is.
Like Christ's message is an individual to individual.
It's relationship.
It's you and me.
It's in our God.
And so if I see you in need or you see me in need, I will help you.
And so when you look at the early church of Acts and then the early church for the next
300 years before Constantine adopted Christianity and became a Christian, you have to see
what the early Christians were doing in Rome to really transform this superpower.
So think of dropping 2,000 people in the middle of the U.S. and be like, transform this nation.
Odds are it wouldn't happen, right?
There was only a couple thousand Christians, Christ followers after he's crucified, but they go into Rome, and it's because of their actions.
They were living out Christ.
So what were they doing?
They were picking up the orphans on the streets.
Like back then, there was no value in life.
So if I couldn't afford a baby and my wife just had our seventh baby, we'd just throw it on the street.
You can't afford it.
There's no value to that life.
And so the Christians were picking up these orphans.
Same thing with the elderly and the widowed.
a widowed woman, an old widowed woman, there was no value.
She was, she's a carrying capacity or a carrying issue, right?
So the Christians were bringing the elderly widows into their houses too.
And the Romans were going like, I'd rather hang out with them than hang out with the individuals persecuting them.
Right.
Because at the same time, in the worst persecutions, they were throwing Christian kids as meat and sport to the wolves and the wild animals and the coliseums.
So at one moment you had Christians being persecuted, then you look over the wall.
and you see these same people you're watching get killed pick up the orphans and the widows and take them in.
Right.
So naturally the culture started shifting in a positive direction to these people that lived out this message of Christ.
So when you look over that and then what did Constantine do, he became a Christian.
He adopted Christianity.
Polytheism was slowly wiped out and Christianity got the resources of their polytheistic gods at that moment.
So Christianity for a moment in time became really brilliant because it was like a startup.
It had money.
So hospitals were a byproduct of this collision of business and commerce and government and faith.
So hospitals are direct byproduct of Christianity.
There was no such thing as a hospital before.
Yeah.
What about the Esclepian temples of 400 BC?
I'm pretty sure hospitals and orphanages.
The ancient Greek temples.
There was ancient Greek hospitals.
Yeah, the temples of Asclepius, I believe it was called.
Pulled up, Steve.
Steve, he looks like a samurai today, bro.
He does.
Slaying these web searches.
Oh, modern hospitals are heavily shaped.
Asclepia were ancient Greek and Roman healing temples
dedicated to Asclepius, the god of medicine,
functioning as the world's first holistic healthcare centers.
Over 300 of these sanctuaries,
which combined physical remedies,
natural therapies and spiritual rituals were established across the Mediterranean.
Does it give you a time?
What's the time frame?
Type in, say, what year?
Gotta love AI.
Yeah, right.
Okay, so I was right, 400 BC, yeah.
Yeah, so chat says Christianity contributes to something closer to a public charitable hospital.
Caring for the poor, the strangers, and the sick is a religious
duty. And so, but orphanage, the word orphanage did not exist prior to this collision. So
orphanages were that were a direct byproduct. And the modern hospital will say, is that's
interesting. I've never, never heard that. But so there's this beautiful moment where an
organic faith gets the backing of a big institution, right? And so beautiful things happen. Modern
hospitals created orphanages are spun up for the kids in the streets. But then what happens is it
it naturally corrupts.
Yeah.
So yeah.
Yeah.
Look at, I mean, look at fucking people who own hospitals today.
Oh, yeah.
This same, this same story permeates into every industry.
Yeah.
So when you look at Christianity in early Rome, it was actually dangerous to Rome.
Because it transformed this, this simple religion that had no real money,
no real power transformed the biggest superpower of its time.
You look at, but before the war in Iran, the Ayatollah, one of the top national
security threats for Iran was underground Christian churches. The Ayatollah came out and said this.
You're talking about underground Christians who have no money, no resources will be arrested,
sometimes killed. You get the death penalty for that. Yeah, sometimes killed. But that's a national
security threat to Iran. Yeah. And they have no muscle. They have no flex. And so when you look at
America today, Christianity and Islam, they're both dangerous. They're dangerous faiths because they
transform empire. And so what is the, and this is where I was talking about that, I think there's
a nefarious action behind, behind the current religious institutional structure in America,
because it's knee-capped every faith. So Islamic mosques, Jewish synagogues, Buddhist temples,
and Christian churches all have to adhere to the same 14 points from the IRS to become,
to get that religious exemption. And so you walk into a,
a mosque, it's identical to a Christian church.
And it's because they all are ran off the 14-point checklist, which was created by the IRS.
And so what that means is you take the teeth out of religion when you look at the 14-point
checklist. You need a building. You need a creed, a formal creed. You need to meet at least once a
month in person. You need child care. So it's commoditized religion to be this place that you go.
And so what I mean by it's it's removed the teeth from religion is Christianity and Islam are both dangerous to institutional power because it pushes against the monarchical structure of institution.
And so Christianity, you got to kneecap it and you got to kneecap Islam because either could take over America.
So what do you do?
You put it in a box, this 14 point.
You give it a carrot.
The carrot to get into the box is tax exemption.
And now the box just sits on a shelf.
Everybody goes to their church.
Because they need you and you need them to survive.
So you've taken the teeth out of religion in America.
And now it's a consumerist adventure.
Well, whoever did that was a genius.
Not in a good way.
Exactly.
Because religion, again, true religion is dangerous to institution,
both Christianity and Islam.
And so it's just...
That quote in the beginning of your doc is the best about how it started as a...
You could probably repeat it better than I'd hear.
In ancient Greek, I've been so busy.
In ancient Greece, it was a spiritual practice.
Yeah, in Rome, it became a culture.
Philosophy.
Philosophy.
Philosophy.
And then.
Ancient Greek philosophy, Roman.
Ancient Greek philosophy, Roman culture.
And then basically an empire, an American enterprise or something like that.
Religion to enterprise.
It's the chaplain of the U.S. Senate said it.
Chaplain.
Yeah, that was, that guy was on it.
He nailed it.
Yeah, it was a very powerful statement.
And it's true.
It's we come on.
Yeah, Richard Halverson.
In the beginning, the church was a fellowship of men and women centered on the living Christ.
Then the church moved to Greece, where it became a philosophy.
Then it moved to Rome, where it became an institution.
Next, it moved to Europe, where it became a culture.
and finally it moved to America where it became an enterprise.
An enterprise, right.
And you just, it's a box on the shelf.
So any political leader right or left can pull that box off and utilize it and say,
hey, my people, we need to do this.
And if you don't know that book and only 13% of Christians have ever read it,
you're going to think, cool, this is what I need to do.
This is what the dude behind the pulpit is saying.
I need to do this.
Oh, dude.
It's crazy.
It seems like this whole thing is almost too big to take down.
But, I mean, the way you're explaining all this stuff and shining light on it, I think is fucking brilliant, man.
And thank you for doing this.
And tell people about where they can find your work, your documentaries, and then about your upcoming stuff.
We just partnered up with Tucker Carlson.
Oh, really?
So you can find the religion business on TCN exclusively for the next three months.
Oh, no way.
So yeah.
That's awesome.
It's going to be cool.
Cool.
Well, link it below.
And when's that new one dropping?
So season two, episode one is going to drop around end of October or November.
It's big.
And so we're dropping-
Is the whole thing already shot?
Already shot, cut.
So season two is a rolling release.
So we have a full-length documentary dropping every six months.
Oh, wow.
So the first documentaries on child sexual abuse and ritualistic abuse.
Episode two is on homelessness and prison systems.
Episode three is on foster care and elderly.
And episode four is on the collision of church and state in D.C.
And that one's going to drop during the primaries of the 2028 presidential election.
Whoa, dude.
Yeah, we're here to reform.
That's heavy.
Yeah.
That's very heavy shit, man.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I mean, the 2028 election is going to be crazy.
because like you're gonna like after this I feel like I mean if you ever spend any time listening to Tucker he
he lays this all out amazingly I mean tuck Tucker's like such an anomaly because he was literally like the
headline act at the Republican convention whatever him and Hulk Hogan yeah and now he's like the one
person that is like calling out all like the crazy stuff that people voted for that they feel like
they were betrayed by his, by his administration on this stuff. And, um, with the foreign aid stuff
and this religious stuff, because it's all tied together. Yeah. It's so intertwined how they're
trying to use the religion to promote the foreign wars and all this stuff. Um, there's a lot of
people that speculate Tucker could run for president in 2028. And, um, personally, I don't, I don't want to
see that happen.
because I don't want to lose the media voice of Tucker Carlson and you can't be the same thing.
100%.
You can't be the leader and the person giving out the truth.
You have to have people that are like pushing back against that stuff.
But whoever it is, like this is going to have to be, I think, a huge point of what they're discussing when they're running.
And it's going to be a contention, a contentious point of debate between whoever the people vote vote for.
because this is like something that's really become a big thing that Americans are interested in
and that want people to take accountability for.
Well, that's my calling.
My calling is to separate the church and the state and say these should not be intermingled.
And like I said, there's 160-ish million Christians in America.
And it's like I want all of them to read that book before the 28 presidential primaries.
and hopefully, God willing, we have a, we're able to influence our Christian brothers and sisters
that, you know, there's a lot of wolves out there.
And one thing I would love to encourage everybody on is this idea of a refiners fire.
So in the Bible, it talks about a refiners fire and you throw everything into this fire.
And whatever burns off is just impurities.
And whatever's left is of God.
And I am all about like this idea of taking this institutional church that we've created.
the 501c3 tax status incentives, the religious exemptions are buildings, everything,
and chuck it into the metaphorical refiners fire.
And that means being brutally honest about financials, about ownership, about assets,
about salaries, and whatever's left standing is of God.
Everything else that burns off is just of men.
And Christ talks about in three of the four gospels, one of my favorite quotes,
is he say, you honor me with your lips, but your hearts are far from me.
Preaching as doctrine, the precepts of men.
So he's saying, you could say all the nice things you want about me, but you're far from me
because you take your traditions and what you've built and you call it doctrine, and it's not doctrine.
And that's the most, like if I could leave everybody with this, don't be afraid.
It's like Isaac putting, or sorry, it's like Abraham putting Isaac on the altar in the Torah.
like we got to put everything on the altar.
And that's how you swing in line with the will of God we were talking about.
It's like, it's all yours.
It's not mine.
It's all yours.
So then all of a sudden you're like when you put it all on the altar,
when you throw it all under the refiners fire,
you're trusting God that everything,
the impurities are going to burn off.
And that's a beautiful,
beautiful, like, time in your life and in the church's life because new growth happens,
dude.
Wow.
Wow.
Well, I'm going to keep reading my Bible.
There you go.
backwards and we'll keep in touch.
Oh, we got a Patreon.
We should probably do it now.
We got a Patreon questions for you.
Cool.
But that's a wrap for the podcast.
Thank you, brother.
Cool.
And we should do another one down the road
100%.
100%.
All right.
Good night, folks.
