Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - Rhett Bought a Bible: Rhett’s Deconstruction 2 Years Later | Ear Biscuits Ep.324
Episode Date: February 28, 2022This week, Rhett revisits his deconstruction for the second year in a row. He discusses buying a study Bible to revisit his feelings on his Christianity, as well as other literature that has helped hi...m reshape the way he views faith, as well as helped him find truth and meaning, and why they’re different. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to Ear Biscuits, the podcast
where two lifelong friends talk about life for a long time.
I'm Link.
And I'm Rhett.
This week at the Round Table of Dim Lighting,
we are continuing what is now the annual tradition.
This would be the third annual?
Yeah.
How do you do anniversaries like that?
It's the third time.
The third time.
The second update.
Of our-
Let's say it's the third anniversary.
The third anniversary of our going public
with our deconstruction stories.
Well, it was two years ago.
That's the two year anniversary.
Two year.
See, the numbers confuse me.
And I know they confuse you.
These engineering degrees, man.
Well, we're only talking about the numbers two or three.
So come on, let's pull this together. Two years ago, we're only talking about the numbers two or three. So come on, let's pull this together.
Two years ago, we talked about all of our spirituality
leading up to the present day,
including our spiritual deconstruction
from the white evangelical church,
to be very specific about it.
A lot of people, because we talk about it as a, you know,
our deconstruction anniversary or whatever,
that's not technically true because some people think,
oh, so two years ago when you guys told your story,
you were, that was when you deconstructed.
No, I mean, as I've said many times,
my deconstruction happened about 10 years ago for me.
And I stopped calling myself a Christian in 2013-ish.
So that's getting close to a decade of not being a Christian,
but it took us a long time to gain the nerve
to actually share that.
Yeah. And that happened
two years ago.
If you didn't listen to those,
or if you want a refresher of it,
that series is called The Lost Years.
It was four or five episodes.
You shared your story, I shared my story.
We also shared all of our, you know,
our spiritual backgrounds growing up,
our involvement in Campus Crusade for Christ
as college students,
our involvement as staff members
working full time with crew.
And then we call it the lost years
because that was the part of our career development
that for our, up until that point,
we had not talked about publicly,
which led into talking about our spiritual decon-
Yeah, you know the word.
Deconcrustion.
And then last year, and yeah,
so that was right before the pandemic hit.
And then it just kind of seemed like a year later,
we gave an update, which was a year ago.
We're gonna do that.
You know, that doesn't mean we only talk
about spiritual things once a year,
but each year we wanna give each of us an opportunity
to sort of say, hey, this is where I'm at.
This is how I'm continuing to process
because the process of what's happening
in our spiritual lives is something that unfolds.
And this is like the definitive update for me.
We're gonna start with me and next week we'll do links.
Yeah, and I'm looking forward to this because, I mean,
we see each other so often
and we're having so many conversations
and we have so many things come through our lives
that first of all, make its way on the show,
but second of all, don't, they're more private
that we still talk about.
Some of those things are spiritual in nature,
but there's always seems to be like really pressing matters
and then just your life kind of gets away from you.
So it's like, we don't sit down and talk for an hour,
an hour and a half.
It's like, hey, give me your spiritual update.
You know, it just kind of comes out in bits and pieces.
So I'm looking forward to hearing
more of this bonafide update.
And I was about to say,
and I'm also looking forward to giving mine,
but I'm honestly not.
So we'll see what happens a week from now.
Let's get started,
because as you might imagine, I've got quite a lot to say.
Yeah, I'm all ears, man.
Now, I'm always, I approach these,
the first one and the second one and now the third one,
I approach these with a certain amount of trepidation
because what I have found is many of the things that I say
during these podcasts are then-
Soundbited?
Soundbited across the internet
through multiple platforms for people,
with people or by people who agree with me
and people who don't agree with me.
And so as I calculate,
I end up writing down quite a lot that I wanna get to
because I'm trying to calculate what I'm gonna say
because it will either be used against me or it will be,
yeah, it is what it is, but I'm just letting you know,
I don't necessarily look forward to this either
because these episodes, there's a level of scrutiny
that is applied to them that I'm not exactly interested
in inviting, but it is what it is
and it's happening annually, I guess.
Yeah, there's a heightened awareness
of people listening in,
in different groups of people listening in.
It's not just you talking to me,
where we can get lost in that conversation
on a normal ear biscuit, but.
And also, there's this weird balance
with these things are very personal,
but yet we have a public platform
where we share personal things that we,
we've never really,
we've talked about that and thought about that,
but there's a weirdness to that.
There's a weirdness to this like,
okay, I'm experiencing these things and I'm in process
and I haven't come to all these definitive conclusions
or anything, but I'm sharing them
and I'm putting them out into the world
and then they are used by other people
to either form conclusions, make conclusions,
to combat other people's ideas,
defend ideas that maybe I didn't even want to be defended.
It's just a weird, there's a weird dynamic to doing this.
But let's not spend too much time talking about that
because I do have quite a bit that has happened.
There's a positive side too, right?
I mean, there's a reason that you're ultimately deciding
to still do it.
Yeah, yeah, oh yeah.
I think that the response that we have gotten
anytime we've been vulnerable about these spiritual things
has been so encouraging because they're,
this is a deeply personal thing to millions and billions,
most people on the earth and most people
in the history of the world have had
some sort of religious conviction
that probably changed over time.
And so when people talk about what their religious convictions are, their sort of spiritual perspective and how it's changed over time. And so when people talk about
what their religious convictions are,
their sort of spiritual perspective
and how it's changed over time,
I think there's just a, it's part of the human experience.
And I know for a fact that our story resonates
with a lot of people who have come
from a very similar background
and have experienced similar things.
And so, but again, I don't do this.
I try not to do this.
My natural disposition is to try to persuade
and try to convince.
I have an evangelistic personality.
I don't like that about myself necessarily.
That's something I'm actively trying to change
so that I can kind of get out of the convincing business
as I get older.
So this is more of,
hey, this is what's been going on with me,
do with it what you will.
Shoulder shrug.
Okay, so at the end of last year,
the end of 2021, I actually told my wife, I said,
with 2021, I actually told my wife, I said,
you know, I kind of feel like I'm just,
I don't have a huge appetite for spiritual things right now. Like I just don't, maybe that's just not gonna be me.
Fast forward to the beginning of this year.
So literally just a few weeks ago
and I'm ordering a Bible on Amazon.
Okay.
So just to give you a little preview,
now that I didn't have a Bible.
The Amazon Bible, is it Jeff Bezos,
like red line edition?
What's the Amazon?
Ben Franklin Bible.
No, what's the Amazon brand for like batteries?
I don't know.
What do you call the batteries that you can get?
I would say Kirkland, that's the Walmart version.
You don't get the Amazon batteries?
Amazon Basics?
Yeah, I got the Amazon Basics Bible.
No, you didn't.
No, you'll understand why I got a Bible.
I already had plenty of Bibles,
but why I got a specific Bible. Okay. plenty of Bibles, but why I got a specific Bible.
Okay.
Just a little tease, just a little tease.
So how did I get here?
Okay, so since deconstructing and really deconverting,
I didn't just deconstruct, I deconverted,
I'm not a Christian anymore,
which has been almost a decade for me.
I have dabbled in a lot of spiritual things, right?
Spiritual in quotes, just,
but that has all kind of happened
outside of any sort of system.
You know, I haven't, like, I didn't like,
oh, I wanna see what Buddhism feels like, like officially.
You know, I've read a lot of interesting officially. I've read a lot of interesting stuff
and I've read a lot of spiritual writers.
I've been really attracted to people
who kind of take Western and Eastern philosophies
and kind of bridge them, bring them together.
People like Eckhart Tolle.
Like I've been very encouraged
and there's been some realizations that I've had
while reading spiritual writers.
I'm not gonna go into what all that has been,
but it's been significant
and it has been characterized more as realization
rather than revelation, right?
So I make that distinction
that these are more realizations than revelations
because revelation is something that feels
like you're getting something from somewhere else.
Like you're literally getting something revealed to you
by God, you know?
It hasn't been anything on that level.
It's more like epiphanies, like, oh,
never thought about that,
but that applies to something that I can only apply,
only describe as spirituality.
I know that's pretty amorphous,
only describe it as spirituality. I know that's pretty amorphous,
but I have stopped short of going too deep into anything.
Right?
Because the more structured and systematic
a spiritual system gets,
the more suspect I become of it, right?
So take for instance, you know, we live in Los Angeles.
So we're in Southern California where if there is a religion
of this region, it is New Ageism in general, right?
People who buy crystals because they think that the crystals
have specific spiritual powers or whatever
and bring certain, you know, like there's literally
like a metaphysical power to these crystals.
Like you leave it in the moonlight
to charge it with energy, right?
Lots of people, as you can imagine,
here on the West Coast believe this.
You might trip on a curb and land in a crystal shop.
Yeah, now I don't believe that, it's true.
Like, you know, it might be, but in many ways,
it begins to resemble the same sort of like
metaphysical convictions about things
that you can't really be sure about
that I ran away from when it comes to
fundamentalist Christianity or conservative Christianity.
Yeah.
And so I'm just really suspect of systems.
So I'm not about to become like,
hey, I'm the new age guy
and I've got this crystal around my neck
that's giving me this spirit of clarity.
Again, I'm not saying definitively that that's not true
because what I am saying is that I can't believe that.
You know, I am incapable of believing that
because there's something about me
that makes me incapable of buying into something
that it feels like you've taken a bridge too far.
Like you got up to a certain place,
like you followed rationality and logic to a certain place.
And then you had to make a big jump
into some metaphysical reality.
And when you make that jump, I'm kind of like, cool.
If that's good for you, that's great.
But I don't believe I can go there with you
because there's just something built into me
that causes me to get up against this wall
and I'm like, I can't go there.
Even if it seems fun, I can't do that, I can't go there.
But the interesting thing-
You thought you might,
but you determined that you can't.
Well, I kinda, I've been very wary of leaving-
I don't think you ever thought you might.
Leaving one religious system,
I didn't think that the next stage
was joining another religious system.
Yeah.
But the interesting thing is that my search for purpose,
meaning has never waned in the process.
So even though I became very unsure
about what my worldview is
in terms of how I think about spiritual things
and whether or not God exists and if God does exist,
what is the nature of God?
What is the nature of God's interaction with me as a person?
How real can it be?
How substantial can it be?
Substantive, I think is the word I was looking for.
I have never, I feel like I can't draw conclusions
about those things, but I haven't lost,
I didn't say, and none of it matters,
and I'm not interested in it. I haven't lost, I didn't say, and none of it matters
and I'm not interested in it.
What I realized is that there is what I would call
a religious disposition in my personality at the same time.
Okay.
So this is, you know, so talking about that,
my desire for purpose and meaning never really waning,
that's why I was such a serious Christian to begin with.
Right?
That's why, and I think I speak for you in this as well.
That's why I was really all about my faith in high school
when my friends started being all about partying
and sex and everything else,
that the stuff I was thinking about,
but I was really like, no man, if this is true,
if it is true that Jesus is the connection to God,
Jesus is God, and there is a spiritual reality that exists,
if that is true, that's way more important
than Friday night, you know?
That's way more important than having a good time.
And so my life has been, my religious life,
when I was spiritually a Christian
and a current conservative Christian,
you know, I took it very, very seriously.
And it's why college was characterized
by just being involved in a campus ministry
and basically my entire social life
and all my activities being centered around that,
going on staff with Campus Crusade,
with you after we graduated,
basically becoming missionaries,
training people to share Jesus throughout the world
because it was the most important thing that there was.
Yeah, it was a very simple, logical argument
that resonated with both of us.
And I think I'll end up talking about,
I know I'll end up talking about my story next week,
so I'm not gonna do that here,
but just exploring the why for me has,
starting to do that has been enlightening.
You know, I think it's, yes, it resonates
with my personality
and your personality in different ways,
but to a similar result of like being very fervent,
almost being like a zealot.
Like we were like high school zealots.
Yeah.
It was also something that was very indoctrinated
is an aggressive word,
but we were strongly educated in these,
it was drilled into us.
You know, so I wonder like,
what do you understand what it is about yourself
that like even now with more distance
that made you latch onto it?
Cause I don't know if it's the same reasons for you
as for me, like.
I don't know, I don't know.
And I'm not, I'm not.
But when it comes to ideas and it comes to like,
right and wrong is something that very much resonated
with both of us.
I just don't know if they're for the same reasons.
I think that, again, I may be deceiving.
And being right.
I may be deceiving myself, but right. I may be deceiving myself,
but the thing that I have always thought is that
whatever is true, no matter how uncomfortable it is,
I've had this inescapable draw to it.
Meaning that-
It's the principle by which you've had this instinctual
draw to it, but you've also had this logical assertion
that like, this is the principle that I'm living by.
This is the highest principle to live by.
And we definitely-
For whatever reason, something being true,
whether or not it's true,
makes all the difference in the world to me, right?
Again, I'm not saying I'm some perfect rational being.
I am a product of my environment, my circumstances,
and my genetics, just like anybody else.
But for whatever reason, that combination of factors
has led to a place where if something ends up not being true,
it becomes very difficult for me to believe
for convenient reasons.
But it also puts you on a,
it sets up a moral high ground that's like,
could potentially be like a superiority thing.
It's like, I know we both took pride in
where we're coming from.
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Keep going though.
So I've retained this religious disposition.
I've retained this, for lack of a better word, skepticism.
Right? And in fact, that skept of a better word, skepticism, right?
And in fact, that skepticism that was like,
if this is, you know, what is true
is the most important thing,
it's ultimately how seriously I took my faith
is the reason for me that I deconstructed, right?
Because I kept going back to the foundations
and I kept going back and be like, okay,
I'm really, I'm putting everything out.
I'm leveraging so much on this.
So much is rooted in this.
If this is not true, so I would go back
and I would try to make it true.
And if I was introduced to new information
that seemed like it couldn't fit,
I would find a way for it to fit
or I would find a way to push it away.
And it was this constant battle of reorganizing,
rearranging my faith, relaying that foundation,
making sure the foundation,
I was like constantly inspecting the building of my faith
and being like, oh, there's a little crack there,
let's replace those bricks, whatever.
And then of course, you know the story,
I've already told that story.
I got to a place where I could not,
the foundation itself was made out of the wrong material
is what I thought. And I basically demolished the whole itself was made out of the wrong material is what I thought.
And I basically demolished the whole building.
I deconstructed, that's where the whole idea comes from.
You're tearing it down.
But I've realized that there's been these two parallel,
seemingly conflicting forces in my life
for a really long time.
And that is my relentless skepticism forces in my life for a really long time.
And that is my relentless skepticism and then my persistent desire for ultimate meaning.
Those two things just refuse to die, right?
And so, you know, they've been in my personality
in kind of relative conflict for a long time.
But I think the, I'll call it an epiphany,
that's probably too strong of a word,
but I'll call it an epiphany.
The thing that I've realized-
You can call it an etiphany.
This year is that, it's just asking the question,
what if I don't deny either my skepticism
or my spirituality, simplifying those terms?
What if they can inform and enhance one another?
So that, as I look at 2022,
you know, one year at a time, one step at a time,
that is the thing that I'm focusing on.
So that seems like, what do you mean by that?
So let me try to explain it.
So one of the things that I've done
in trying to figure out how these two things meet in me
and inform one another,
the skepticism and the spirituality
is looking for people who I think
are kind of riding that line,
looking for other people out there
who seem to embrace both of these things, right?
So one person that I found,
and I can't remember how I found all the stuff
I'm gonna talk about, so be it.
But one person is Maria Popova,
who runs the website, The Marginalian,
which was formerly called Brain Pickings.
She changed the name because, I mean, I guess brain pickings.
Sounds gross. Yeah, I think she I guess Brain Pickings. Sounds gross.
Yeah, I think she finally realized that.
Marginalia?
So, marginalia, the marginalia, but so,
I wasn't familiar with this term,
but marginalia is like, you've got a book
and there's margins and you're like,
it's the stuff, it's the process, it's the writing,
it's the notes, right?
That's marginalia, it's stuff that is peripheral
to the stuff that you're reading
and then kind of the connection between you
and the material that you're experiencing, right?
You know, people who write a lot of stuff in the margin.
Yeah.
I usually just make notes on my computer.
Huh, marginalia.
And let me explain how she describes her work
so you can kind of get a picture of her.
She is exploring what it means to live a decent,
inspired, substantive life of purpose and gladness.
And this is from her website.
"'Marginalia' is a record of my own becoming as a person,
intellectually, creatively, spiritually, poetically,
drawn from my extended marginalia on the search
for meaning across literature, science, art, spiritually, poetically, drawn from my extended marginalia on the search for meaning across literature, science, art, philosophy,
and the various other tendrils of human thought and feeling.
A private inquiry, I can't say that word.
Inquiry. Inquiry.
I can't say substantive or inquiry.
And she uses both of them in a very short span of time.
A private inquiry irradiated by the ultimate question,
the great quickening of wonderment that binds us all.
What is all this?
Okay.
That is some beautiful language.
First of all, she's a great writer, I love her.
So it's kind of a fun, it's heady,
but it's open-hearted.
It's a-
It's not critical.
In her inner, it is critical.
It's a, I don't believe, it is critical,
but it's not closed.
Okay. Okay?
So in her interview with Terry Gross on On Being,
she talked about the bridge between cynicism and hope.
And I felt like that's it.
This bridge has slowly been constructing itself.
Maybe it's always been there in me
as just a part of the way that my soul works, right?
My brain, whatever, works.
Is that you don't wanna go off on the side of cynicism
to the place where you're just like,
none of this matters and there is no meaning in this,
just full stop.
That is a position you could come to.
That's not a position that I want to come to, right?
It doesn't sound appealing.
It sounds depressing.
And also- It doesn't sound happy. It sounds depressing. And also-
It doesn't sound happy.
And maybe this is not the rational me speaking,
but it doesn't seem true to me either.
Like my experience with the world
is not that there is no meaning.
Regardless of how I feel about
the ultimate source of the meaning,
the idea of a world without meaning,
just it doesn't compute because things actually do mean things.
Stuff means stuff to me.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
Every day I experience a sense of purpose and meaning.
Like it's just intrinsic to who I am.
So the idea that beyond me, in a greater sense,
there is no meaning, it's kind of like, well,
there's meaning right here on my little individual level.
So it kind of makes sense that there's meaning
beyond my individual level.
I'm not a, you know, I haven't,
I'm a product of the Harnett County Public School System
and an engineering degree.
So I don't bring a lot of knowledge to any of this stuff.
This is a lot of just instinct.
So I haven't done a lot of reading to any of this stuff. This is a lot of just instinct. So I haven't done a lot of reading
from people who know about this stuff.
Just a disclaimer as I, you know,
there's no formal education that actually informs
any of the thoughts that I have.
But,
Don't worry, I'm here.
Yeah, right, thanks.
This really resonates with me,
this idea of this bridge between cynicism and hope, because you've got that one side,
the cynicism side, the skepticism side,
and then there's the hopeful side that again,
I can't just go off that side of the bridge
to the island of hope that just exists in a place
where you just live a life of faith
and none of the difficult, inconvenient facts
or truths matter.
And listen, I'm not trying to care, this is for me,
I'm not saying that people who are Christians
are on the island of hope and have no discernment.
I'm not saying that.
I'm saying for me, the reason I got off of that island
in the way that I was experiencing it
is because in order to maintain
the foundational truths of Christianity,
it became impossible for me to maintain those truths
and some other truths that I felt like
had become inescapable.
And so I find myself in this bridge between those two things.
But what I'm finding is that's a really interesting place
to live and there's a lot of people who've been living there
for a very long time, throughout history, right?
I'm talking about a couple of contemporary people.
One of the things that Maria talks about,
she's so well read and in her book,
"'Figurings," which I just started reading,
which is like, I go in terms of how long the Audible book is
versus how many pages there are, but it's 21 hours.
So this is where you buckle up buttercup,
you know what I'm saying?
It's doing a lot of figuring.
But she kind of, she traces all kinds.
It's kind of like Bill Bryson's history of everything,
but with a sort of a spiritual, not even a spiritual,
just more of like, it isn't just the information. It's sort of a spiritual, not even a spiritual, just more of like,
it isn't just the information,
it's sort of like processing and connecting information.
It's fascinating.
But she's so well-read and there's so many people
throughout time who have struggled and wrestled
with this stuff and come to really interesting conclusions
or just really interesting ways of living, right?
But the second person that I recently came across
that I want to talk about,
and I want to talk about his book,
found this book.
What was the last thing that filled you with wonder
that took you away from your desk
or your car in traffic?
Well, for us, and I'm going to guess for some of you,
that thing is...
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Show and tell, I've got books.
He's reaching for a book.
He's pulling it up.
Here it is.
Spoiler alert, this will be my wreck.
This is Richard Holloway,
Stories We Tell Ourselves.
And there on the bottom,
making meaning in a meaningless universe.
Hmm. Uh-oh.
So this dude is freaking incredible.
Let me just say that I think I found
one of my favorite people on earth.
Really? Yes.
So let me tell you about Richard Holloway.
Let me hold the book.
I'll talk about his book.
I'm just gonna see if there's a picture of him.
Yep, there it is.
Okay, he's- He's old.
He's old, he's balding, he's wearing glasses.
He's very old.
I think he's like 87 or something.
He's clean-shaven.
He was the Bishop of Edinburgh from 1986 to 2000
and the Primus of the Scottish Episcopal Church
from 1992 to 2000. Oh.
He was the Primus, huh? Primus, yeah.
Wynonna got herself a big brown beaver.
Yeah, yeah, right.
That's where Primus comes from.
And he left those roles in the year 2000,
having become agnostic.
So he was in the Episcopal church
and he was a controversial, very progressive figure.
He like secretly married a gay couple,
which means performed a wedding for a gay couple.
I was telling my kids about this.
I was like, this guy married a gay couple in 1976.
And Shepherd was like, he married a gay couple?
Like it was a throuple.
No, that means he performed the wedding
and at a time when this was not very accepted, right?
So super progressive guy who has always sort of
bucked against the system to the point where
his agnosticism made him have to leave the church, right?
All along the way, he's written all these incredible books,
such a thoughtful person,
and then he's written a bunch of books
since leaving the church.
This is the first one that I've read,
and I love finding somebody this thoughtful,
and also somebody who I feel like,
man, like if I was smarter and more experienced
and could write, then this is,
it feels like so in tune with the way that I see the world
and process the world.
Obviously this guy comes from a different time and place,
but rarely do you run into somebody, you're like,
oh man, like the way that you think about this is like
so resonant with the way that I think about truth.
Okay, and I'm gonna ask a question
that you don't have to answer right now.
I just wanna hang it out there
because you've got a plan of how you wanna go through this.
But the question on my mind is,
and before you brought up this book, I was thinking it.
And so I guess we are headed in the same direction here.
My question is, what's the difference
between searching for meaning and searching for truth?
And when you say there's a tension between,
or the last author you mentioned,
there was cynicism and meaning, right?
It's like, okay, is-
Well, it was cynicism and hope.
Cynicism and hope.
And then you talked about like the search for truth.
How is that different than a search for meaning?
But that's what I'm curious.
To me, the meaning is on the bridge between the two.
State is simply, the meaning is not on one side. The meaning is on the bridge between the two. State it simply, the meaning is not on one side.
The meaning is on the bridge between the two.
Meaning is as the truth and the hope,
as I interact with things that are true,
and truth exists, you know, technically,
objectively apart from me,
but hope is a very personal thing.
It's my sort of what I want to be true
and what I want my life to be like
and how I want to experience things.
But I can only, I personally can only do that
in the context of those things that are true.
So being on that bridge for me
is where the meaning takes place, right?
Because truth can be something like
the wood that makes this table is poplar.
Okay, I don't know if that's true or not, by the way.
That might be fake news.
It might be oak.
I don't know a lot about wood,
even though it's part of my brand. I don't know a lot about wood, even though it's part of my brand.
I don't know a lot about it.
I'd like to think that I could smell it
and know what it was.
Is that truth meaningful to me?
Well, it would be meaningful to me
if it was directly related to my experience.
In other words, if I had to make a table
and I wanted it to look like this,
then what kind of wood this was would mean something to me
as I apply it in my experience.
So you're saying there's not a,
you're not making a choice between,
I'm gonna give up on a search for truth
and I'm gonna now embark on a search for meaning.
Cause I do think that our experience has been,
you've been convinced that things were true in the past,
that now you believe aren't true,
but you know, you based your life and your meaning
on what you believe to be true.
So I think-
I'm gonna answer this question directly.
Okay, yeah.
Because I'm gonna talk about what it means to me
and what the pursuit of truth looks like and why.
I'm gonna get to that.
So I'm gonna answer that question.
The thing that is so fascinating about this guy,
besides just, oh, the things that have influenced him
to the point where he's gotten, or so similar and relatable to the things that have gotten him to the point where he's gotten are so similar and relatable
to the things that have gotten me to where I am,
just on a less deep and educated degree compared to him.
Is he talks a lot about,
so this idea of stories we tell ourselves,
this is essentially thinking about the human condition
and then re-examining the Bible itself
as a story that people told themselves.
So essentially, our experience with the world,
every single thing that we experience,
the colors that we see, the sounds that we hear,
the things that we feel,
none of it is as it actually is, right?
You know, colors don't actually exist.
The colors only exist in our mind
because this is certain wavelengths of light
that are reflecting off of different things
at different frequencies,
and our brain is making sense of it
by creating a color palette in our brains, right?
Okay, yeah.
Same thing is true of the sounds
that are coming into my ear, right?
My brain is making,
I am making meaning from my environment right now.
Every single thing that I experience
only makes sense from my perspective
because I'm here to experience it, right?
And the point he is making is that
as people experience things,
like in the case of the Bible
and specifically the Old Testament,
you've got the Jews who are experiencing
all kinds of crazy shit, right?
And there's all kinds of persecution
and there's all kinds of hardship that they're going through.
Yeah.
And at the time that they're writing the Bible
and they're writing, you know,
it wasn't written at the time that it represents.
It's not like, you know, the Torah, which represents,
you know, which the tradition holds that Moses wrote it,
which is almost assuredly not true.
And Moses probably didn't exist,
but setting that aside for a second,
it was the idea that it was written in a certain time,
but it was written about the past.
It was writing about the past,
but it was really also writing about
what they were currently experiencing, right? So like looking, he talks about the past, but it was really also writing about what they were currently experiencing, right?
So like looking, he talks about the story of Daniel
and how it related to what the Jews were going through
at the time under Roman rule,
wasn't necessarily so much about what was happening
in Daniel's time.
Okay, so more as a parable written as history.
And then even he talks about,
you know, talks about the creation story,
but also talks about Jesus himself, right?
Which again, we don't really know,
we don't actually know definitively too much
about the historical figure of Jesus.
Or some people believe he didn't even exist.
I think he did exist.
But I think that the Jesus that we have in the Bible
is a sort of idealized figure that was a story
that was told because it was the story
that the people who were telling it needed at the time.
Right?
And this is true of every religious writing
and really everything that we,
every story we tell ourselves, right?
And so he looks at the Bible,
which is like, if you know the historical context
of what the writers were going through at the time,
if you know the cultural context in which it was written,
it takes on a, it illuminates the text in a way.
And I'm not talking about like back in the day,
like Kay Arthur would come to Campus Crusade's
Christmas conference and talk to us about, you know, like back in the day, like Kay Arthur would come to Campus Crusades Christmas Conference
and talk to us about her study Bible and how,
because that's bringing an ideological framework
and applying it to the Bible from the outside and saying,
I'm coming to this understanding
that this is God's inerrant word
and I'm applying that framework to it
and then I'm drawing conclusions from it.
And then sometimes it'd be like,
oh, and here's a little cultural context
if it helps with our ideology, right?
If it reinforces what we're already thinking.
I'm talking about taking the ideology,
taking any preconceived commitment to what this is,
throwing it out the window and exploring it
on a really critical way,
not to just tear it apart for the sake of tearing it apart,
but to actually figure out why they wrote it that way.
And it becomes this thing that becomes incredibly
informative to me.
And this is where I'm gonna get to answering your question.
So that's my rec.
I think, I mean, I just think it's a great read.
I don't, I mean, I don't know if you're a Christian
or a former Christian who thinks about these things,
read Holloway's Stories We Tell Ourselves.
We'll just leave it at that.
But you know, there, cause there is a spectrum.
Okay, let me get, let me get,
there's so much going on in my mind right now,
but let me get to why I bought a Bible.
Okay.
So after reading, and interestingly,
the conclusion that he comes to at the end,
which I don't think is any sort of surprise,
is that after about 20 years of being outside of the church,
he's beginning to call himself a Christian again.
Really?
Yes.
So that's part of the story of this book?
Yeah. Okay.
Now, does that mean he believes in God?
Probably not.
Does that mean that he has changed
what he thinks about the truth of the Bible?
Like he has shifted his framework
back to believing that it's God's word?
No. It means it's God's word, no.
It means it's a recognition that he wants to identify
with a story, specifically the story of Jesus,
because he feels like that story
is what he needs in his life.
Again, because I'm not trying to demean,
I know this is uncomfortable for anybody who,
this would have been very uncomfortable for me to hear
as a Christian.
I'm not saying that Jesus is essentially Frodo,
but I am kind of saying Jesus is essentially Frodo.
So I don't mean that,
mean that he's just a total fictional character
and that's it.
But I'm saying that like, conceivably,
if I today said I'm starting a cult
and our writings are just the Lord of the Rings, that's it.
Yeah. Okay?
The trilogy, all three, even the Hobbit.
Yeah, yeah, let's put the Hobbit in.
The Hobbit's kind of like the Talmud, okay?
But we can get that as well.
I think you're gonna have to throw in the Cimmerillion.
Cimmerillion is like the apocryphal writings.
That's like the gospel of Thomas.
So the son was involved.
We don't really understand.
The son had to finish it because he died.
I think it's more of just the commentary.
I think it, I haven't read it.
Don't make that face again.
No one will read it.
What's the face? That face, it makes you look really old. Really? Yeah, yeah. You Don't make that face again. No one will read it. What's the face?
That face, that makes you look really old.
Really? Yeah, yeah.
You don't wanna do that.
You're getting too old to actually look that old.
I look old? Yeah.
So, but if I told you,
and I have been accused by many
of potentially being a cult leader.
No one will read that book,
but it can be part of it.
Everybody can just refer to it,
but no one ever reads it. If I told you
I was starting a religion and our scriptures
were the Lord of the Rings
and various other writings.
You could probably piece something together.
I could have a pretty awesome religion.
Yeah.
Because there's meaning in it.
Just because Middle Earth doesn't exist,
doesn't mean it's not meaningful as a story and impactful
and actually life altering and life changing.
If you say, listen, in my friendship, I need to be a Sam.
Yeah. You know what I'm saying?
I need to, I can aspire to be,
to learn from flawed characters who embrace their weaknesses.
And I'm not trying, listen,
I'm not saying that the Bible is the equivalent of,
I understand that there's history, I'm not saying that the Bible is the equivalent of, I understand that there's history,
there's real history in the Bible.
I understand that Jesus was almost most likely
a historical figure and that he said some of the things
that are in there, but there's fictional elements of it.
But what I'm saying, it doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter how, to me,
if you believe that Jesus died and rose from the dead
for your sins and all, then it's all gotta be true,
at least really big parts of it have to be true.
I'm saying for me, it doesn't have to be true
to be meaningful and impactful.
And here's-
And I don't think it's that offensive to a Christian
because as a Christian, I was like, well, that's what's true of the Book of Mormon.
That's just made up by somebody.
That's what we thought, yes.
That's what we believed and that's what, you know,
many Christians currently believe.
But no Christian reads the Book of Mormon for edification
because it's such an infringement
on the true Orthodox Christianity.
But they have to acknowledge that other people do,
an entire other religion.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Although much of it is just like copies
straight from the Bible, right?
I don't know much about it.
I can, you know, I'm not gonna talk about Mormonism today.
That is how I'm looking at the Bible
because using the Lord of the Rings as an example,
let's say I was raised in a tradition,
I was raised in that cult, the Lord of the Rings cult,
the fellowship is what we called it.
Oh, cool.
Which is a good name.
And we all had rings, you know,
like there's so many awesome things
that you could do with this, right?
And I was raised in that and I developed,
I went through puberty in that context.
Not Lembus again.
I came to age and into young adulthood
and then became a father and became married,
all in the context of the fellowship.
And then one day I was like, oh shit,
this is just a made up thing that some dude wrote.
Oh gosh.
And so then I have a choice.
I could leave it and say,
I never wanna read anything about that again.
I don't even wanna watch the movies.
I don't even wanna watch a movie with Elijah Wood in it.
Or.
Your loss.
Or I could say, hold on, hold on, okay.
I don't think it's true.
Yes, some dude with three syllables for a name wrote it.
But you know what?
It is the way it is.
Or really if you include the team.
It is why I am who I am.
So can't I go back and read it again?
Can I go back and read it again over and over again
from a different perspective and not just be like,
oh, Frodo's a real guy and I've got my own ring
and I gotta be like, why did he even write this like guy and I've got my own ring and I gotta, but be like,
why did he even write this like this?
Like, why did he make these choices?
Because this is, my DNA has been probably literally impacted
by being saturated with this.
Yeah. So I'm gonna go back
and I'm not just gonna abandon it.
I wanna go back and examine it in a new light
with the new way that I think about this.
That's why I got a study Bible.
And I got the Harper Collins Study Bible,
which is definitely not gonna be recommended
in your churches unless you go to maybe a mainline church,
because it's the sort of like-
Harper Collins is a publisher.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So-
But it's not like the Zondervan Study Bible
is what I mean.
It's like a secular critical,
you know, like dudes at the liberal divinity schools,
Harvard and Yale, et cetera,
are the ones doing the commentary.
It's not, the people who are writing the comment,
my understanding is the people who are doing the commentary
and the insights are not,
they don't come to this with the idea
that this is the revealed word of God.
So there's not that level of respect.
They're just like,
this is exactly what we think was being said.
This is why these two texts are not the same.
This is why this part's here.
So you're getting full unabashed
sort of like critical application of the scripture.
Because I've already gone through all the other,
I've done, I've got all the study Bibles
where they come at it with a conservative view
to begin with.
I've got those on my shelf in my house.
So this is my first one that's like, okay,
all the information that would have made me squirm
in the past and made me question things.
So that's just part of the deal here.
Okay.
And so the Holloway book,
is that what ignited your appetite to go back to it?
So because you're actually excited about it, it sounds like.
I am, well, so Maria Popova,
she ignited, she gave me the framework
for thinking about the bridge between cynicism and hope
and realizing that, oh, I've been going back and forth
and like live in the confusion, right?
Live on the bridge and be like embracing both of these
things at the same time, that's exciting.
That's where the meaning comes from.
Then you find this guy from my exact tradition,
not exact tradition, he's Episcopal,
but exact disposition and appreciation of these stories,
but also come to a lot of the same conclusions
that I've come to in terms of agnosticism.
And then he's basically like, oh, and by the way,
cause he's like, these are the stories that people live by.
And then at the end, he's like the story I live by.
And he basically says,
I live according to the story of Jesus and here's why.
And it's a great chapter.
It's not gonna be as, it doesn't,
nothing is as definitive
and like neatly tied up as we
as former religious conservatives are gonna be okay with.
You know what I'm saying?
Like we're still learning to live in the tension.
But yeah, that was where I was like, I gotta get this.
And he also, he references like some really good scholars.
And I looked up those scholars
and then those scholars had written stuff about,
he, I think he actually,
he actually references maybe the study Bible in the book.
Anyway, that's how I got to getting the Bible.
And you told me that you just got the Bible.
So I assume you haven't. Well, it took like five weeks
because apparently study Bibles are,
especially like critical study Bible,
not in too high demand.
It's written used.
By atheist scribes.
And they begin writing the moment you order
the Amazon Basics Bible.
And they're kind of just, it doesn't really matter to them.
They're just kind of going off of memory
and they're looking at the last one,
but they're not, I don't really care.
Right, yeah.
They're not trying, there's nothing really to preserve.
One of the things that I kind of skipped over a little bit
that I want to go back to,
one of the big, the middle section of this book,
he talks a lot about William James,
who is really like the father of modern psychology
in a lot of ways.
I've heard a number of people mention him.
Michael Pollan talks about William James
in his, not his most recent book,
but the previous book, Your Mind, what is it?
I can't remember.
Not the most recent one, but the previous one.
How to Change Your Mind?
How to Change Your Mind.
He talks about William James
and he had an experience when he was,
and Michael Pollan, like I think when he did mushrooms,
he had an experience where he quoted William James
as he was trying to sort of quantify his experience
where he said, I don't know what I think about anything,
metaphysical and the world and all that stuff
beyond my own experience.
But as William James said,
this experience has caused me to,
it has caused me to,
I'm forbidding myself to settle my accounts with reality.
This whole idea of closing your accounts
or settling your accounts with reality,
resisting that urge.
Because it is the human disposition to be like,
can I just get all this stuff wrapped up,
this philosophical shit, can I just get it wrapped up,
boxed up and set it in my garage and just be like,
that's what I think about that.
And I don't want to keep going back to it
because it's tiresome.
And whether you're an atheist, you know, and you say,
I don't believe in anything beyond the natural world
and all these religious people
are just fantasy thinkers or whatever,
case closed, I'm done,
that's what I think for the rest of my life.
Or whether you're just like,
I subscribe to the religion of my youth and that's it
and don't confuse me with any information
that's gonna make this difficult.
There's two extremes.
He's basically saying,
don't settle your accounts with reality.
And the way that he's doing that is by
leaning into the story of Jesus and saying,
listen, I'm not trying to say that this isn't true
or is it true.
I'm letting its meaning permeate me as I study it,
as I read it.
You know what, if there's a God,
maybe a God will work through that.
You know, I mean, I'm sure there are Christians out there
who'll be like, well, at least he's reading the Bible again.
God can work through that.
And maybe they're right.
What, what?
I'm not trying to say that they're not.
Yeah, let's talk about your plans.
You finally got in the Bible.
Is it leather bound?
Is it hardback?
It's hardback.
Okay, nice.
Is it got nice margins for you to write in?
It doesn't have my name on it.
Because this is, I mean, this is a study exercise.
This is not reading a book or listening to an audio book.
You know, this is a study Bible.
You actually anticipate that you're gonna sit down
and have a quiet time?
Well, that would be probably
not the greatest way to describe it
because a quiet time or a devotional is more like a,
is more meditative.
Having said that word in such a long time.
And more like, it's like a prayer kind of thing.
No, I'm not going to,
I'm not saying I'm reading the Bible.
What are you gonna do?
I haven't exactly figured out.
I think you're not, I cut you off.
You said I'm not reading the Bible as a communion with God.
Yeah, I'm not doing that.
Right, okay.
So you're doing it as a-
But I'm not not doing that.
Okay, what I'm saying is like-
Right.
That's not, I'm trying to, I'm not going in.
I have found that not being afraid
of whatever's around the corner is the best way to live.
Okay. Okay?
Every time I start getting like,
building, what's around that corner?
That's no fun and it just keeps you
from going around the corner.
Just go around the damn corner.
What's the worst that could happen?
Somebody just punches you right in the face,
you get shot, yeah, okay.
So describe that corner.
Like there's a study Bible on the corner.
To me, there is no corner.
So what I'm saying,
I'm trying to eliminate the corners in my life, right?
And so what I'm saying is that I think I want to develop
some kind of plan with it so that there is,
there's a path, right?
But I think the path is loosely read through
the entire Bible.
Oh, wow.
From beginning to end.
No, don't, that's not a good plan.
It doesn't, I'm not talking about the Bible in a year,
which I've done that, I'm not talking about that plan.
I'm not talking about like the Bible in a year
where it's just like, oh, I'm talking about like,
there's a bookmark in this Bible and it moves when I read it.
It's gonna get to Leviticus pretty quick.
Yeah, yeah, I understand that,
but what I'm gonna be most interested in,
and this may disappoint some of the Christians listening,
is gonna be what they say about it, right?
I've read Leviticus.
I have slogged through it.
And I'm not saying I'm not going to, but I'm going,
I think that it's actually,
when you believe that the Bible is God's word
and you get to Leviticus, you're like, really God?
You know what I'm saying?
Like if you bring that perspective to it, you're like,
what, you said these things?
Like, oh, I want to melt my face off.
I just didn't know what you were gonna say,
but I didn't think you were gonna say,
I'm gonna read through the Bible.
I thought maybe you'd say, I'm gonna, you know,
I'm gonna do something, I'm gonna start with Jesus.
And then I might skip around, I might do a little Job.
I might get a new perspective on creation.
Yeah, well, here's what I'm saying.
I think I'm gonna start with Genesis because,
not just because it's first,
but I've always been fascinated with it.
And it is my difficulties with trying to reconcile it.
That makes sense to me.
And then when I get to that, I might be like,
hey, let's go, I'm gonna go to the New Testament.
I'm just, what I'm getting at is,
I want to go through the whole thing,
at least book by book.
And it might be, oh, I'm gonna do some old,
then do some new, whatever.
I'm not saying it has to be straight through in order.
What I'm saying is that the only plan is that I have
the Bible and I will read it.
And I may go long periods of time without reading it,
but because I'm not doing it out of a religious conviction,
it doesn't matter.
Yeah, so I just want to let you off the hook here.
That's like, you're not making a commitment
to read through the entire Bible.
What I'm saying is-
To yourself, to me, or to anybody listening.
A year from now, if my update might be,
hey, I'm still in Genesis.
I'm not setting up an obligation.
I'm just saying, oh, the epiphany that has happened
is that there still is a way to experience this book
that was so formative for me.
There's a new way to engage it that can be exciting.
Because the thing is, is that when I hear people start,
when he got to that section of the book
and he started talking about what the guy who,
I mean, it was probably a guy just because it was so long
ago and that's patriarchy, who wrote Genesis,
like, you know, which was probably an adaptation
of an oral tradition.
So you go back to the first time the guy started
like telling the story around the fire about,
you know where we come from?
Well, in the beginning, you know, it's like, it's-
Dramatic pause.
And so-
As I have what, make this up?
As I make, as I tell myself a story
that we're gonna tell ourselves.
That's the interesting thing he says, as I tell myself a story that we're gonna tell ourselves.
That's the interesting thing he says,
isn't it kind of, this is the implication,
isn't it kind of awesome to think about it
being a campfire story that a guy was just kind of just like,
I see the way things are
and I'm gonna just kind of try to make sense of it.
Like that's powerful.
It's the same way that if I was like,
I've gotten really interested in this ancient tribe
that has this incredible tradition
and they've got these scriptures
and I'm interested in that anthropological kind of stuff.
Okay.
So reading it in that way.
So there's a, yeah.
Because it's so applicable to me personally,
my background, there's this, I don't know,
there's a lot of motivation right now.
Who knows what will happen in a month.
But there's a historical and critical analysis
that I assume that the commentators
who are making this a study Bible,
they're actually writing little snippets
and giving their commentary on these passages that they're,
do you know yet if their main goal
is to illuminate meaning for the reader
or if it's to provide critical analysis?
So what's your approach there?
It's definitely not to,
again, I think a lot of these questions that you're asking,
and I understand what you're asking,
are coming from the framework that we bring
to any of this type of thinking about things, right?
Well, I'm also just thinking practically,
once you get this study Bible
from a totally different perspective,
that it could be a temptation
to latch onto the criticism of it and to tear it down
versus define meaning in it from a different vantage point.
Well, again, I still think that's coming
from your old framework, but here's what I'm gonna say.
Because what we always assumed is that the guys
who were quote unquote being critical about the Bible
didn't respect it or outright didn't believe it.
Yes.
So we're so binary in our thinking,
you're either all in or you're an atheist.
And that's just not how many people at all
actually operate, right?
So I think that these, you take, you know,
most what we would have called liberal scholars,
which I would just call critical academic scholars,
you don't make the decision to be like,
what am I gonna do for a living?
I'm gonna be a Bible scholar if you hate it.
That's the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard in my life,
that you would decide to devote your entire life.
They'd be like, I'm a biologist, but damn it,
I hate animals.
You know what I'm saying?
It's like, it doesn't make any sense.
It's people who are fascinated with religious thinking,
religious tradition, and they're probably fascinated by it
because that's their own disposition as well.
I think the term literary criticism is ringing in my ears
and I might just have,
because of the reasons that you stated,
I'm applying the wrong definition of the word criticism
to whether it's just ripping something down.
But I am curious in these Bible snippets,
is there like edifying?
No, of course not.
Think about this.
But then that's gonna be your task, right?
Cause you said that's,
you're doing it to get some meaning from it, right?
Well, I'm not, no.
I'm not taking any agenda into it.
Okay.
What I'm saying is that leaning further into the truth
with the only intention to be to get further
and closer to the truth, the meaning will happen.
I don't have to make it happen. I don't have to make it happen.
I don't have to seek it.
What I'm saying, and I'm gonna talk, I'm gonna get there.
I guess I wonder, is that an academic meaning
or a spiritual meaning?
Like, what are you looking for here?
I'm saying that there's no difference.
I'm saying that you've created a dichotomy in your own mind
and I have too, and most people have as well,
that there's two types of truth.
There's truth that is somehow not spiritual,
and there is truth that is spiritual.
All truth is spiritual.
My definition of spirituality is all encompassing, right?
It is anything that enriches and enhances
and deepens my human experience.
And that may include metaphysical things
that I can't quite nail down.
I am open to that, but it may just include
learning a fact about this table.
And so I'm trying to break down that dichotomy
between what, and I'm gonna take a little sidebar here
to talk about another book that I know you're familiar with
and then come back at the end to talk specifically
about that, the idea of what leaning in the truth looks like
beyond the Bible.
Because I don't believe that, you know,
I'm leaning into truth about the Bible, right?
Because I don't see the Bible as true in this,
in any particular sense,
any particular like religious dogmatic sense.
But I'm like, oh, but I can learn this historical thing
about the Jews who wrote it at this point
or the guys in the New Testament who wrote this.
You know what I'm gonna,
but let's talk, this is, I should have teased this because.
It's so tease worthy.
It's another book I want to talk about
and then I'll bring it all back together at the end.
This book, Before You Lose Your Faith,
Deconstructing Doubt in the Church is a book,
it is a compilation all about deconstruction
from different authors.
A couple of months ago,
we saw Mythical Beasts tweet this at us
and I had not heard about it until then.
And there's a reason that they tweeted us
about this particular book.
But it had been published for almost a year.
It was published-
I'm surprised that we hadn't heard about it until-
It was published like the middle of 2021, I think.
Okay.
By the Gospel Coalition.
So we heard about it weeks ago.
Gospel Coalition is a group of,
is a, you know, they're the reform tradition,
pastors and churches, kind of a network.
They publish things, there's a website,
they comment on things.
There's articles at the website.
I think when we went public with our deconstruction,
they talked about us a little bit.
They're very, very much evangelical.
Yeah, yeah, and very reformed,
which both our background is reformed evangelical,
so we're very familiar with this way of thinking.
But in the introduction.
The first thing written in the book.
This is the guy who edited it, Ivan Mesa.
I think I'm saying that right.
The first sentence in the introduction.
"'I had never heard of Rhett and Link.'"
I have, that's me.
Okay, yeah, so you're starting with like a backhanded,
that's not even backhanded.
Well, it gets worse.
So like, who are these?
No, I don't know if you can pick up on something else.
I never heard of Rhett and Link,
the duo behind Good Mythical Morning,
their daily YouTube show with more than 16 million
subscribers and Ear Biscuits, hey, we're doing it right now,
their podcast, until I learned of their
public deconstruction story.
The two of them, who as of December 2020,
are the fourth highest YouTube earners
making 20 million a year with a little footnote here,
shared about how they moved from crew staffers
and missionaries to unbelievers
or as Rhett now describes himself, a hopeful agnostic.
Okay.
Never heard of these guys, but they're rich.
Well, but not only that,
if you look at the footnote next to
how much money we make a year,
it says, Rupert Neat, Ryan, oh, Rupert Neat,
I guess is who wrote it.
Ryan Kaji, nine, earns 29.5 million a year.
Ah, and so, so I don't know if this was the implication,
but it was almost like to put things in perspective,
a nine year old makes more money than they do.
You know, it's like.
Yeah, why was that the footnote?
I don't know.
It feels a little like a backhanded thing,
but I'm gonna give you the benefit of the doubt
and say that it wasn't, that it was just for context.
I don't know.
You know what?
This book is, I've read,
I'm actually in three quarters of the way through.
I wanted to get completely done before this.
We actually talked about doing like a whole episode
that was just about this,
but I just think that that's kind of boring
and a little too insider.
I have a copy and I'm gonna talk about this next week.
Okay, so Gospel Coalition,
we've sent you guys some money.
We bought two copies.
A little reluctantly,
but here's the fascinating thing about this book to me.
But we're so rich, Rhett.
Yeah, so rich.
I mean, we're not as rich as that nine year old, but.
I wish I could be as rich as Ryan, but here's the thing.
Ryan Toy review.
This was such a fascinating book to me.
Again, every chapter is by a different author.
But he goes on to say, I mean,
you should finish the introduction.
Well, the comedians have for years
been a staple in many homes with children and young adults
with videos ranging from epic rap battles
to testing the world's hottest peppers
to getting shot with Nerf guns.
So it wasn't surprising that their public announcement
unsettled the faith of many.
And then he goes on to talk about other people
who've deconstructed Jen Hatmaker, Joshua Harris.
What is deconstruction?
Kind of setting a little bit.
The book kind of takes every element of deconstruction,
whether that be, and first of all, let me say,
there's a lot that I kind of agree with.
I don't agree with the conclusions,
but I agree with some of the observations, right?
And the fascinating thing for me was,
this is a book that in an alternate universe,
I have written a chapter in.
Maybe I'm giving myself a little too much credit
and they wouldn't have accepted me,
but in an alternate universe, we never left the church.
And of course we did what we always do.
And we try to just succeed as hard as we can
in whatever we're doing.
I definitely thought that in the parts that I've read
that, you know,
cause each chapter is written by a different person.
It's basically an essay that where they choose every angle
they can come up with to undermine
the whole process of spiritual deconstruction.
And in the world where we never left staff with crew
and you know our ministry developed
into like directly combating deconstruction in this culture
because we were always about being on the front lines.
What's the biggest thing that young people are dealing with?
Let's take that, let's take them out of the knees.
You know, that was the way that we thought about this stuff.
And so it was fascinating to be like,
well, that's what I would have said.
Well, that's exactly what I would have said.
That's exactly how I would have said that.
Now, the parts that I agree with when it talks about,
you know, there's a chapter that talks about
disinculturation, just the idea that,
did you deconstruct Christianity
or did you deconstruct the cultural context
for your Christianity?
And so, yes, there's a lot of negative stuff
about evangelical culture.
You can be critical of that and you can deconstruct that,
but don't throw the baby out with the bathwater,
the baby being Jesus, and he was a baby.
Yeah.
And Ricky Bobby prayed directly to him.
And so, hey, listen, I agree with that.
I agree with that.
Now, my conclusion is not any different.
I'd rather attend a Talladega Knights cult
than a Lord of the Rings cult,
as much as I love Lord of the Rings.
And the movie is the material
and maybe the director's commentary.
But I agree with that.
And the reason it doesn't change my mind
is because that's not why I deconstructed.
For me, the problem was the foundational truths of scripture.
I just, I failed to believe them.
But there's a chapter about the tendency for people
to move from one fundamentalism to another fundamentalism.
Very, very common in deconstructing
is that you leave sort of a fundamentalist
Christian mindset and you move
into a progressive Christian mindset.
And a lot of times the progressive Christian mindset
and the progressive left in general
can have the same sort of inflexible fundamentalist thinking
that you have on the right.
I completely agree with that.
I don't like ideological thinking.
I don't like group think. I don't like group think.
I don't like policing the way people think about things
and the way people talk about things.
And you see that on the left,
just as much as you see it on the right.
So-
I will say this entire thing,
I believe is written to people who are not deconstructing.
It is written to give to people who you're afraid might
to bolster them against ever considering
spiritual deconstruction, it bolsters that.
I mean, yeah, it's for people who haven't gone
over the edge yet, really.
You know, there's one about race, which talks about,
yes, acknowledges racism in the church, but says,
"'Hey, listen, just because people have abused
"'and misused Christianity in the name of evil and racism doesn't mean
that you should deconstruct.
I agree with all that, but the one thing-
Heading people off the pass.
He also talks about how scientism is the word they use,
but basically science can't explain morality,
which I think that there's great natural explanations
for morality that they kind of just gloss over.
But anyway, I agree with some, I disagree with some,
obviously I disagree with the main conclusion of the book,
but the thing I wanted to talk about
and then bring it back to how it relates
to kind of how I'm moving forward in 2022
is the first chapter, which is written by a guy named-
Trevin Wax. Trevin Wax.
These names- Doubt your way back to truth.
Ivan Mesa and Trevin Wax.
It got cool names.
This is coming from two guys with cool names.
So congrats for that.
I will cite chapter three,
Deconversion is not as counter-cultural as you think.
So, hey, this isn't the cool thing to do.
Yeah, so let, which I agree.
I agree with that.
Yeah, don't.
Don't do it because it's cool.
Don't do it for those reasons.
So in the first chapter,
deconstruction is characterized
as essentially a selfish act, right?
Rather than a thoughtful reconsideration of one's faith.
Let me just, I'm gonna read some quotes.
I'll just put the book down
cause I've written them down here.
What if you are not the dispassionate pursuer
of facts you perceive yourself to be,
but instead are shaped by assumptions and presuppositions
that you've never challenged?
Another quote.
I don't believe you are faithless.
Your faith has merely shifted away from God and his word
and towards yourself and the story you've crafted
in which you now find meaning and significance
or which you've crafted in which you now find meaning
and significance.
And finally, you are no longer sure
about the God of Christianity.
Are you sure of the self you place at the center
of your deconversion story?
Are you sure of the self you place at the center of your deconversion story?
This is a very common way of seeing people
who are deconstructing.
This is how I saw people who were deconstructing
before I could deconstruct it.
When we had friends who started to waver,
we would say, listen, man, you're making God
in your own image rather than realizing
that you're made in his image. You're picking and choosing, you're making God in your own image rather than realizing that you're made in his image.
You're picking and choosing, you're making a religion,
you're becoming your own God.
And that's what deconstruction ultimately is, right?
I understand why you believe that,
but I find this to be pretty ironic for a number of reasons.
So first thing is this is a very effective strategy
for people who are deconstructing
or people who are thinking about deconstructing.
Because in my experience, deconstructing people
tend to be very thoughtful and questioning of themselves.
I had this exact same concern for years.
But I find that most deconstructing Christians
have a lot of doubt in their own reasoning.
And that's precisely what led them to where they are.
They began to take a critical look,
not simply at Christianity itself,
but also to their adherence to it.
So in other words, the deconstruction process
began as self-doubt, or at least that was a part of it.
So when you begin to think, I remember writing,
and I've talked about this in my deconstruction story.
I specifically wrote that I did not just want
to become my own God.
I did not want to replace,
I didn't want to make God in my own image.
I didn't want to make a God that I was comfortable with.
Deconstructing people are very conscious of this.
And that's why when you tap into that,
it is a very effective strategy to get them
to come back into the fold
because they're very conscious of being self-centered
and relying on their own instincts
because that's the thing that they begin questioning
that even begins the process to begin with.
Yeah, and you know what that effective strategy is?
Shame.
It's one word, it is shame.
Yeah. Slathered on.
Yeah, I agree with that.
But maybe this is a little bit more dismissive.
I don't just agree with it.
I feel it. No, no, no.
I completely, I'm moving to the next point.
But yeah.
I'll talk about it more next time.
My other issue with this is it assumes
that the non-deconstructing Christian
is the more selfless person, right?
That they are not following their own instincts,
but rather submitting to and following God.
Now, as someone who doesn't,
who no longer believes that that's how the world works,
and I don't actually believe that you as a Christian
have the spirit of God in you in a way that I don't,
and you have discernment from him that I don't.
I actually think that we're both doing the same thing,
which could be characterized as selfish,
if that's the word you want to use for it.
And that is, we as a product of our environment,
our circumstances, and our genetics, all factors,
we are making a decision about pretty much everything
that we think is the best for us, right?
That's what humans do.
We take all the information that we have
and all the instincts that we have,
and we just make a decision
that we feel is best for us at the time.
Now, Christians, and specifically the guys
who wrote this book, are basically farming that out,
which I believe is a decision that they've made
to make a decision to say that they believe
the Bible is an errant word of God,
that they're gonna be Christians,
that this is what they're gonna believe,
that they're gonna be reformed, whatever it is.
And then they're saying that this is God,
this is me submitting to God.
It's sort of a Jedi mind trick of farming out
their own choices to an entity that is God.
That's how I see that, right?
I think I'm doing the same thing.
I'm just not farming it out.
I am saying, yeah, I am making this decision.
And I know that a lot of this may not even be decisions
that I have control over because I don't even know
how I feel about free will and determinism
and all that stuff.
Am I just a victim of my own circumstances and genetics?
I don't know, maybe, but it doesn't feel that way.
But so I take issue with that fundamentally
that they are somehow different, but also again,
it's sort of broadly categorizing people who deconstruct
as people who are selfish and self-centered.
That's the implication.
It's also kind of just explicitly said here.
But the most interesting thing about this to me
is that for me personally,
the thing that was the most difficult process,
a difficult element of my deconstruction process
was the decentering of myself.
Let me explain that.
Decentering myself from the story of the universe, right?
Now, this is an old story.
This is how Christianity has interacted with new facts
for a very long time, right?
The church is always the last people to get on board
with unsettling facts that challenge their perspective.
with unsettling facts that challenge their perspective.
The heliocentric view of the world, meaning that the sun or the view of the solar system,
meaning that the sun is the center of our solar system
versus the geocentric view,
which is that the earth is in the middle
and everything's rotating around it.
Of course, for many generations,
everyone believed that the earth was central
because of course, this is what we see.
This is from our perspective, we're the middle of this.
That's what the Bible taught very clearly.
And it's what the church believed for a really long time.
And the reason that it took them hundreds of years
to accept it and people were killed because of this
is fundamentally because it's taking humans off of the center,
off of the throne of the universe.
And it's saying, no, no, no,
you're not as special as you thought you were.
You might just be a lucky branch on the evolutionary tree.
Right?
Because that's the second piece of it is evolution,
which the church has still not accepted.
Right?
Some Christians do believe it, right?
And to me, this is so significant
because believing in evolution
was the first card to fall for me.
Now disclaimer, I know that there's lots of Christians
who believe in evolution.
However, most don't.
And many of the ones that do,
I don't really think have followed it
to its logical conclusion and what it actually means
and how it relates to the creation story
and that kind of thing.
But, you know, this was so difficult for me
because as a Christian, everything exists for you, right?
Now, yes, and God, right?
But God set you apart as special.
You're not related to the animals.
You're a special creation.
The animals exist for your pleasure, God's pleasure,
but yeah, but your pleasure.
I mean, that's what Genesis talks about.
The earth was made for Adam and then,
oh, Adam, these animals are not good enough.
Let me give you one that you can actually have sex with.
Here's a woman.
And so all these things are not good enough. Let me give you one that you can actually have sex with. Here's a woman. And so all these things are created
so you can have dominion over them.
And then everything, the entire sort of
ancient Near Eastern view of the world
and the cosmos of it being very, very small
and it being this disc of an earth with a dome over it
and the waters below and the waters above
and the firmament in between,
it brought everything down and very, very close.
They looked at the dome
and they saw the stars hanging from it.
And it was just, I don't know,
that's just right up there.
If I had a, if I was strong enough,
I could throw a rock and hit it.
You know what I'm saying?
It was small and you were big.
And with every successive scientific revelation,
we get smaller and smaller and more insignificant
in the scheme of things.
And that is very uncomfortable for a Christian mindset.
You know, Christians, many Christians don't want to believe,
are very resistant to the idea of aliens.
Not because we haven't necessarily seen any,
which is the reason that I don't know if they exist,
but because what does that mean about,
did they have another Jesus?
Did Jesus go to them?
Is that the other sheep
that they're talking about in the Bible?
I have other sheep, oh, it must be aliens.
You know?
You gotta fit it into your worldview.
So I think what I'm saying is that
the traditional Christian perspective
is actually more self-centered than a perspective
that sees humans as another part of the universe.
Now I'm not talking about individuals.
I'm not saying that Christians are more selfish
than non-Christians.
I'm not saying that non-Christians
are more selfish than Christians.
I think that your level of selfishness
is largely unrelated to your religious convictions and conclusions.
There's a lot of selfish assholes inside
and outside of the church.
And there's lots of reasons that contribute
to people being selfish assholes, right?
But I'm saying that the philosophy of Christianity
is a more human-centered philosophy
than a naturalistic worldview.
The naturalistic worldview puts you in concert,
puts you in connection,
interconnection with everything else.
There was a big bang at the beginning
and matter has organized itself
or was organized by some entity
that I can't really identify into what it is now,
but we are stardust and so was the elephant
and the earth isn't really any more mine
than it is the elephants, right?
And just because I'm smarter and just because I have more self-awareness than the elephant and the earth isn't really any more mine than it is the elephants, right? And just because I'm smarter
and just because I have more self-awareness
than the elephant, I should be able to do whatever I want to?
No.
So the philosophy is more selfish
and it just feels like there's a complete failure
to see that in this accusation that the person who begins to break away
from that traditional orthodox way of seeing the world,
Christian way of seeing the world is somehow selfish.
And I'm like, hey man,
the most difficult part of this process for me
was realizing that I wasn't as special as I thought I was.
So it kind of, so that specific accusation rings very, very hollow to me
and is pretty dismissive along the way.
But I wanna bring it back.
Bring it back.
To what I was talking about earlier.
And that is this idea that leaning into uncomfortable truths
rather than recoiling from them is always more illuminating
and ultimately more spiritual.
And I wanna use evolution as an example again.
You know, when I was a Christian
and before I started believing in evolution,
I saw evolution as first a desperate attempt
to explain the universe apart from God, right?
It was like, you gotta come up with something.
So maybe they just happened spontaneously
and everything's related and well, I don't know,
making stuff up, right?
I also saw it as a direct threat
to the way that I understood the world.
Right.
I saw it as a direct threat
in terms of the veracity of scripture,
but also a direct threat in terms of my place
in the universe as this is for me.
The world is about, you know,
God created humans to be in relationship with him
and everything else that is under that is for us.
And I, first of all, I never really understood it.
I never honestly considered it, right?
And then when I finally did honestly consider it,
it was the first card, everything began to fall apart.
But on the other side of it, that truth, that truth of the interconnectedness
of all things, of every single thing that I can touch
and see in the world, literally being related to me,
every animal that I can see, literally being my cousin,
that's a life-changing truth.
That's a life-changing truth.
That sense of interconnectedness changes the way
that you interact with other people.
It changes the way that you interact with the environment,
the world, it changes the way you see yourself.
It changes the way that you see the responsibility
that we have to maintain this whole thing
that we've got going and the fragility of it, right?
So I think what I'm saying is that you were saying,
what is this leaning into the truth?
Are you leaning into the truth for meaning?
What I'm saying is that leaning into the truth
for whatever reason,
there's going to be meaning that comes from that.
Especially if that's just your disposition
is to find meaning in things, right?
We're meaning makers, we can't help it.
From the very beginning of our consciousness,
we've had this, we went from thinking that there was
something moving in the bushes to, you know,
ascribing agency to things.
Like we were like, okay, it didn't rain today.
Well, God must be upset with us.
Let's dance.
Let's pray.
Oh, it rained.
It must've been because we danced.
It must've become because we prayed.
This is what we do. We can't help it. We can must've been because we danced. It must've become because we prayed. This is what we do.
We can't help it.
We can't help but be meaning makers.
It's in our blood, it's in our DNA, it's who we are.
And so what I'm saying is that I want to learn more
and lean more into truth.
And not because I'm looking for meaning,
but because truth is interesting to me, right?
Knowing more about something
and having it more accurately described
and not being scared of where it's leading
has only been a positive thing for me.
And I use that finally accepting evolution
and then being like, okay, well, what's next?
My whole process of deconstruction was kind of like
a card would fall and I would be like, oh shit.
And I'd be like, okay, well, God, you're in control.
You have the power to stop this at any point,
but I'm gonna turn over the other card, you know?
And I would just keep going and keep going.
On the back end of that, what I found is that
the process of deconstructing and the truths
that I now hold to have been some of the most beautiful
and life altering.
Are they as orienting as Christianity was?
No, they're not as orienting
because that's what a religious system does
is it orients your thinking
and it systematizes your thinking
in a way that brings a certain level of comfort and control.
You don't get that when you step outside
of a religious framework.
I'm very willing to admit that.
But again, being on that bridge between hope and cynicism,
I think that's where the meaning happens.
And now, whereas I've accepted the interconnectedness
of all things, I've accepted that I am a, you know,
I am a lucky branch
on the evolutionary tree.
Couple of things could have gone a little bit differently
and we could be a couple of Neanderthals
sitting here talking, right?
It was a matter of circumstance and that's okay.
That doesn't make, that actually makes, in my mind,
that makes this even more significant.
I'm like, well, damn, it's like, we got to this point.
Like we're here at the end of all this crazy shit
that's been going on.
We're here right now experiencing life,
being able to consider it and look back on it.
Like that's significant and that is meaningful.
And as it relates to the Bible, it's like, okay, well, hey,
I'm not going at this thinking that I've got to,
maybe I'll find God in the words of the Bible.
Well, maybe I will.
I'm not saying, I don't want to be close
to either side.
But what I'm saying is that there's a whole layer of truth
to the Bible that I never considered because I was afraid of it.
If you started talking about critical shit about the Bible,
it was, so, and so I just,
and then when I finally deconstructed,
I was like, that stuff is triggering.
I can't read the Bible without getting triggered
and getting uncomfortable.
So I'm just gonna put it on the shelf
and not read it for a few years.
And now I'm saying, no, I'm going back
and I'm saying, I'm not afraid of any, And now I'm saying, no, I'm going back
and I'm saying, I'm not afraid of any,
I'm not afraid, I'm just going and I'm just looking at it
and I'm looking at everything you can know about it.
And I, the truth is gonna, will appear, you know,
and the meaning will come.
I don't have to control it.
I don't have to come in with this preconceived idea.
And last thing I'll say is I understand that this is a,
this whole process, this whole conversation,
it's incredibly privileged viewpoint, right?
You know, that's one of the things that you read about
when you think about the Jewish people who wrote the Bible
and what they were going through,
they were going through a bunch of shit, man.
Like it's, and this is true of basically anybody
who's putting together a religious tradition,
it was usually out of necessity
and out of trying to somehow get through
what they were going through.
And I mean, and also you think about
African-American spirituality, right?
And you think about how there's this really ironic thing
that happened where, you know,
African slaves took on the religion of their oppressors
in many different ways.
And there's black Christian spirituality now.
And they have a tradition kind of all,
and actually talks a little bit about this in this book,
but a tradition of their own that considering that
and like sitting there and deconstructing that,
that's a position of extreme privilege
for a couple of guys who are number four
on the Forbes money list, just under that nine year old.
I have the ability to just sit here and be like,
I don't have hardship in my life.
And this is a philosophical exercise for me.
I recognize that.
It's not one in which I'm going through
this incredibly difficult thing personally,
where I'm crying out to God, right?
Right now, I live in such a position of privilege
and excess that I can explore these things
like a college professor.
And so I'm not saying that this is something
that I am trying to apply to everybody
and everybody should do.
Like, some people are going through something so difficult
and the way that they see and understand Jesus
has been indispensable for them,
I'm not trying to take that away from them.
I'm not interested in taking that away from them.
Just like I'm not interested in changing the minds
of the Christians that I'm still friends with.
They wanna hear what I have to say about that
or what I think about some conclusion they come to,
I'm happy to discuss it,
but this isn't designed to deconstruct other people's faith.
I'm just saying, this is how it happened for me.
This is how it continues to happen for me.
And I recognize that I'm able to do this just simply
because I'm in a very specific privileged position.
Yeah, I think people,
very specific privileged position.
Yeah, I think people,
some people may write you off and say, okay, you're basically saying
you don't have any need for Jesus,
like as a personal savior.
So like, I don't expect Rhett to get anything
from him going back to the Bible,
especially that version of the Bible.
But you know what? It's, especially that version of the Bible. But you know what?
It's less about the version of the Bible
and more about like what his needs are
and is he open to having those met,
I think is the criticism that, you know,
that's the story that people will tell
from one vantage point.
And I'll go back to what I said before,
when the accusation of this is just a self-centered pursuit.
I know for a fact that this conversation
is only going to reinforce that perspective
if that's what you think.
My perspective is that we're all doing that.
We're all synthesizing and making personal decisions.
And there's lots of different factors.
It's very complicated and it's very muddy.
And I'm not gonna fault you for coming.
And I have done that.
I'll stand up and say, I have faulted people for coming.
The thing I will say is if you subscribe to a system
or you actively are discriminating against
or belittling marginalized people,
I'm gonna stand up for those marginalized people, right?
That's one place that I'm not gonna compromise.
But when it comes to your personal choices
about what you end up thinking about the Bible
and what you think about Jesus, it's just like,
I know that you can't make someone believe,
you can't make me believe something,
I can't make someone believe, you can't make me believe something, I can't make you believe something.
Beliefs are things that happen spontaneously
based on circumstances, you know?
Which, you know, I think is ironic in one sense
because this is all, you know,
this whole thing is being written
from the Reformed perspective
and the very introduction talks about the parable
of the sower being a framework for understanding this.
And it's just like, there's a part of me that's just like,
hey, if you really are reformed
and you believe that there are some people
who are elected to be children of God
and some people who are not, by the way,
the vast majority of people,
well, why write this book at all?
Why not just say that in like a tweet?
You know, but I digress.
Well, and I'll share next week.
Yeah, you've given me, there's a number of things
I wanna springboard off of that you talked about.
You gonna buy a Bible?
You should buy it, you should order it now.
It's gonna take a month and a half to get here.
You can photocopy mine,
but that would probably take you a few weeks.
I have a few.
I have a few at home still, thank you.
And thanks for sharing.
I think this is good.
You didn't give me enough answers
to know what I'm gonna do
with the rest of my spiritual life.
Cause all I do is just whatever you tell me.
That's what people say about me.
Well, but here's the thing.
I'm coming up with things that I know you're not gonna do.
That's true.
That is absolutely true.
You're not gonna read the Bible.
You're not gonna read the Bible.
I'm not buying this Bible.
I am not.
So you're on your own now.
Oh yeah.
Yeah, I love it.
My rec is Richard Holloway's
stories we tell ourselves.
Love this guy.
Check out Marginalia as well.
I think it's themarginalian.com.
And listen, read this book, you know,
send the gospel, well, maybe find a way to steal something.
No, I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I think that if you are,
this before you lose your faith
is sort of a fascinating study of the way
that the evangelical church is trying to process
what's happening.
And like I said, I think this is about the best attempt
that can be made right now to attack this thing
from every single angle,
but it's kind of amazing how ineffective it is
for me personally.
I'm sure it's gonna be very effective for some people.
I'm just saying that like,
if you're at a place that I'm at right now,
it's just like, oh, wow.
Well, again, it's not after you've lost your fate.
It's before you lose your fate.
Yeah, I agree.
And so if you- Before you fall backwards into something
that you're probably gonna hit your head on,
read this book.
That's what the cover says.
Yeah, and listen, I'm not making light
of the people who wrote this book
because, like I said, for a fact,
I don't know what I think about the multiple universes,
but multiple worlds theory,
whatever you call it, but there is a Rhett who tried to,
maybe got rejected, but tried to contribute to this book.
Definitely.
In another universe.
Absolutely.
And so I do not fault you for,
this is exactly what I would be doing
if I had not left my faith.
I'd be trying like crazy to justify the way I think about it
and trying to keep the youth from thinking differently.
And that's what this is.
Hashtag Ear Biscuits.
Let us know what resonated with you from Rhett's update.
Thanks, man.