PBD Podcast - A Case For Jesus Christ - Lee Strobel | PBD #770

Episode Date: April 4, 2026

Lee Strobel, former atheist and investigative journalist, joins Patrick Bet-David to break down the evidence for Jesus’ resurrection, his journey from skepticism to faith, the global decline of Chri...stianity, church scandals and their impact on believers, and the growing cultural divide around religion, free speech, and truth.------👍 LIKE AND SUBSCRIBE!Ⓜ️ MINNECT WITH LEE STROBEL: https://bit.ly/3Okei0A

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Who killed Jesus Christ? Give me a long weekend, and I can disprove the resurrection. Dead people don't come back to life. That just doesn't happen. I was an atheist. I lived a very immoral, drunken, profane, narcissistic, self-destructive in many ways kind of life. My wife comes up to me one day and gives me the worst news any atheist husband you get. She said, I've decided to become a Christian.
Starting point is 00:00:25 And honestly, first word through my mind, divorce. and I used my journalism training, my legal training, took me two years, unequivocally, that the evidence for the resurrection of Jesus Christ is so overwhelming that it compels acceptance by proof, which leaves absolutely no room for doubt. Who is benefiting the most from seeing this divide taking place today, both theologically, politically, specifically on social media and America, who benefits the most? He certainly sparked something on these college campuses. He had the courage to go in.
Starting point is 00:00:57 lost his life because he did. I've been working with the FBI for the last couple of weeks because someone's trying to kill me because of my, the stands I take. And yeah, there was a credible threat on my life. I think you want to make it. I feel I'm supposed to take sweetly. I know this life meant for me. Adam, what's your point? The future looks bright. My thing I ever size, right? I think I've ever said this before. All right, Lee Strobel, great to have you here. Thank you. Wonderful to be here. We've been looking forward to having you for a long time.
Starting point is 00:01:53 I have an interesting story with you. Oh, yeah. Before we get into it, you know, I think it's important for the audience to know for those who don't. You've sold nearly 20 million copies of your books, 40 plus books, the big one being Case for Christ, in case for church. There's a bunch of men. You have a new one that came out, seen the supernatural, which we'll get into as well. And it's funny because two weeks ago I had Scott Galloway on. I don't know if you know who he is. Professor Scott Galloway.
Starting point is 00:02:19 You know, a very good voice on the liberal side who talks about fatherhood, very successful business guy. And while we're talking, I said, so tell me about your relationship with God and faith. Look, I wish I had faith. I don't. I said, well, look, normally when I talk to somebody who is either a super logical thinker and maybe their philosophy or maybe their math or maybe hardcore logic, I'll recommend two books to them, and I recommend those two books to him.
Starting point is 00:02:46 I said, number one, you got to read Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis, which, by the way, Shadowlands, phenomenal. I don't know if you've seen it or not great, Anthony Hopkins. I said, the second book you got to read is Case for Christ by Leastroval. Yes. And my story is 20, back in 2002, 2003, when I got out of the military, I was an atheist for 25 years of my life. I lived in Iran, so it's kind of tough to be a Christian when you're in Iran war. parents get a divorce. And then I'm doing Bible study in Pasadena
Starting point is 00:03:18 every other Friday night from 6 p.m. to 2 o'clock in the morning. Wow. And your stuff would come up all the time. And then that led me to you know, studying the topics and we're doing these Bible studies and all this stuff. Anyways, but now we are sitting down talking
Starting point is 00:03:35 to such a great conversation. I got a lot of questions for you. Yeah. That's encouraging. Yes, I got a lot of questions for you. But I want to start off with, today a lot is going on in the world. We have the war going on. We have, you know, data that's coming out with what churches are growing, which ones are not, you know, there are challenges when you talk to somebody about introduce them to going back to church, they'll go back to a time where there was a massive crisis at a mega
Starting point is 00:04:00 church. There was a big falling out. And, man, I'll never trust the church again. I'll never trust the pastor again. I experienced it on myself as well. And I know you were part of one. And the pastor you were part of was one I used to study stuff very closely. He had very very, very good content. We'll talk about that as well. But the opening question, I want to start off with you. You read, write in the bookcase for Christ. Yeah. Who killed Jesus Christ?
Starting point is 00:04:23 You did. I did. We did. Ultimately, he died because he paid for the sins of humankind. He atoned for our sins. He paid the penalty we deserve for the sins that we've committed so that we could be given a free gift of forgiveness in eternal life. So when it comes right down to it, you and I are the ones who killed Jesus. Yeah, and you know, it's interesting when you say that.
Starting point is 00:04:47 If you're a Christian, that's the answer, right? Yeah. But if you're somebody that's not a Christian, say you're an atheist, say you're a, you know, if I'm talking to the 19, you know, I don't know, I think you gave your life to Christ was in 1980. I don't know what year it was. Yeah, 1981. 1981, right, when you gave your life to Christ. And you were 27, 28. Yeah, about 30.
Starting point is 00:05:11 Prior to that, you're a journalist for the Chicago Tribune. Right. Your job is to investigate everybody, so you look at things in a different way. You're an investigative journalist. How would you have answered that question when you were doing the investigation of wanting to know who killed Jesus Christ, the non-Christian? What would have answered be for the non-Christian, not the Christian? Yeah. Well, certainly the Romans had the authority to crucify someone.
Starting point is 00:05:38 And by the way, they didn't crucify Roman citizens because it... It was such a cruel, torturous death that Roman citizens were exempt. But, of course, they had to implement it. It was encouraged by the Jewish leaders of the day who were opposed to Jesus. And so they both had a role, you would say, in the actual execution of Jesus. What was Romans concerns? What was the Romans involvement? And what was the Pharisees?
Starting point is 00:06:06 Well, it's interesting. The Romans, you know, if you look at Pilate, he sort of washed. his hands, he tried to kind of distance himself from it. If you read the account, it doesn't sound like he was at into it. He seemed like he was more capitulating to the crowd. He offered to give him Barabbas, hey, you know, take, you know, let's trade out here. Or Jesus, and, of course, they chose to free Barabbas, not Jesus. So the Romans, you know, didn't like the fact that Jesus was claiming to be the unique son of God, the Messiah. Why? What would they? Because Because in those days, the emperor was considered to be divine.
Starting point is 00:06:46 Caesar. Caesar would be considered divine. So it's kind of like, we're okay if you want to worship Jesus, but not above Caesar. That's right. That's right. Exactly. And the Pharisees didn't like that Jesus was coming in and kind of thrown a monkey wrench into all the rules and regulations that they wanted people that live by.
Starting point is 00:07:04 And talking more about grace and more about what it means to be a true follower of God. and so there's a lot of conflict there. He was making divine and messianic claims about himself. At one point, Jesus got up before a group and he said, I and the Father are one. And the Greek word there for one is not masculine, it's neuter, which means he wasn't saying, I and the Father are the same person. He was saying, I and the Father are the same thing.
Starting point is 00:07:29 We're one in nature, we're one in essence. And the audience got what he was saying. They pick up stones to kill him. They said, you're just a man, and you're claiming to be God. So Jesus claimed to be God. and that did not sit well. With Jews, with the Pharisees. With the Pharisees, the religious leaders of the day.
Starting point is 00:07:45 And of course, anybody can claim to be God. You could claim to be God. I could claim to be God. But of course, that's where Easter comes in because Jesus is not only claimed to be God, but then after being crucified, three days later, he returns from the dead. And thus proves he is what we claim to be.
Starting point is 00:07:57 So it's a combination of physically Romans, verbally Pharisees. Yeah, they encouraged the crucifixion of Jesus, yes. And, okay, so then bring that interpretation to today on how that has been not miscommunicated, but misunderstood today. Because you see a lot of different arguments. You know, where there's the animosity towards,
Starting point is 00:08:23 well, let me tell you, it's really, you know, the Jews killed them, no, the Pharisees killed, no, the Romans killed them, no, we killed them. How has that misunderstanding turn into some of the challenges that we're seeing today when that debate comes up. Yeah, it's inconceivable to me that any Christian could be anti-Semitic. Jesus was Jewish. Jesus' followers were Jewish.
Starting point is 00:08:47 The Christian religion is an outflow of the Jewish religion. It is a fulfillment of the ancient prophecies that were made centuries before Jesus was born in Bethlehem that pointed toward the Messiah, and Jesus fit those prophecies just like a fingerprint. So I don't know how anybody who's a follower of Jesus could be anti-Semitic. It's not the Jewish people as a group who got together and said, let's kill Jesus. That's not what happened. There was a leadership at the time, these Pharisees and Sadducees who were upset about his teachings and so forth,
Starting point is 00:09:24 who instigated and pushed for his execution. The Romans went along with it and implemented the death penalty in his case. But when I see reports of anti-Semitism among people who claim to be Christians, I go, what are you talking about? What faith are you putting your trust in here? You know, so, yeah. Now, some of them may say, well, Lee, you know, there's two types of the old-school traditional Pharisees, the ones that were more, you know, Jews that are more about the Torah.
Starting point is 00:10:04 right, where 25% to 30% of the Old Testament is the Torah and, you know, take the other 65, 70%, 70%, 75% is, you know, the legalistic, you know, the way they would structure it together because they were thinkers. So, okay, I don't have a problem with them, Lee, but I do have a problem with the modern day Jews who created their own Talmud and, you know, whatever, the 600 plus commandments that they have and the way they wrote it. What is the difference? Because I'm really trying to understand, it's not like these people that are, you know, creating the argument against Jews and being, you know, some people labeling them anti-Semites on all this. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:42 It's not like they're dumb. These are not dumb people. These are very well-read, educated people who are going there. So what is the context for you specifically as an investigative journalist? What is the difference between the old school, the Torah-type Jews that some people look at versus the new modern day, the Talmud? Yeah, well, there were 600 some odd commandments that were added to the Jewish scripture.
Starting point is 00:11:05 By Jews. By Pharisees, by the leadership of the day, and so forth, and created this very much, worked-driven culture. And it was virtually impossible for anybody to fulfill all of these commands and to stay on the straight and narrow, given all these requirements that were added to the basic law, the Ten Commandments that God had provided for the, the Jewish people. Got it. So, okay. So then, so then if we go a little bit further,
Starting point is 00:11:35 then I know this is like a heavy topic right off to bat to get into, is who benefits from this division that you see, whether it's those who are like, what are you talking about? Jews are friends, you know, if I have to choose between Jews and, you know, Jesus was a Jew, like that argument just made earlier, I'm going to choose the Jews over known what Islam wants to do and what the Islamification of the world and Muslims, book tell them, to do. I'm going to side with these guys. Yeah. And then the other side, no, but you guys are naive. You don't even understand. Israel owns the Jews. B.B. runs the world. And you guys don't, you guys are such low level. You don't know what's going on here. What is the, what is the, you know,
Starting point is 00:12:16 who is benefiting the most from seeing this divide taking place today, both theologically, politically, specifically on social media and America, who benefits the most? Well, certainly from social media. I mean, we have some people on social media who make all kinds of allegations against the Jewish people who are making millions of dollars in doing that. Such as who are you? I don't want to name names because I'm not that. Are the names that I'm thinking about? Or some of the names? Probably. Probably. All right. And so I go, is there an incentive here? Yeah, maybe. So you think first one is profit mode? Possibly. And then honestly,
Starting point is 00:12:50 if indeed Jesus is the unique son of God who came through the Jewish line, if indeed Christianity is a fulfillment of the Jewish teachings and the Old Testament becomes fulfilled in Jesus and so forth. If you are Satan, wouldn't you love to create a divide? Wouldn't you love to attack the root of Christianity, which is Judaism? Yeah, I think you would. So I think, honestly, I just wrote this book called Seeing the Supernatural. You know, Jesus was an exorcist. Jesus believed in demons.
Starting point is 00:13:27 Jesus believed in Satan. He encountered Satan. Do I believe that he might have a role in terms of fanning the flames of anti-Semitism? Yeah, I think he does. Yeah. So, okay, so then let's just say if I'm sitting down with somebody who once was a Christian who supporters of, you know, Israel or Jews and didn't have the anti-Semitic positions that they have. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:13:52 And I want to go out there and serve them. them. I want to go out there and, you know, speak to them about maybe a different position to be thinking about. What angles would I take with them? Oh, golly, I always look at the affirmative side, which is what is the evidence that Christianity is true? What is the evidence that Jesus is who he claimed to be? I want to make that case because, you know, you can get into arguments about, okay, let's contrast Islam and Christianity and things like that. But ultimately, I think, as someone who started as an atheist, trained in journalism and law, I was looking for what is the evidence, what's the corroboration? How do I know this is true? So if Jesus claimed to be the Son of God,
Starting point is 00:14:36 as I mentioned earlier, he did clearly, how do I know who he proved it? I returned from the dead. What is the evidence historically that Jesus really returned from the dead? Because if that is true, then he is who he claimed to be, and I ought to put my chips in that pot, right? I ought to go all in in Christianity. And what was that moment for you? Because, you know, if you don't mind sharing your own testimony, because your wife came to you and you guys have been together since you were 18, 9 years old, I think it's good for the audience to hear from you.
Starting point is 00:15:06 Yeah, I mean, I met my wife when we were 14, and got married at 19 and 20, and I was an atheist. I lived a very immoral, drunken, profane, narcissistic, self-destructive in many ways kind of life. I was successful, went to Yale Law School, was legal editor of the Chicago Tribune, won major awards for investigative reporting. So people would look at that and think,
Starting point is 00:15:30 oh man, this guy's got it together. They didn't see the other side. I was literally drunk in the snow in an alley on Saturday night. And my wife comes up to me one day, it gives me the worst news any atheist husband could get. She said, I've decided to become a Christian. And honestly, first word through my mind, divorce. I was going to.
Starting point is 00:15:47 Oh, yeah, I was going to want to be married. Not were both of you guys married? You were atheists, both of you. No, she was agnostic. She didn't know what to believe. She's kind of spiritual neutral. She meets a neighbor who's a Christian nurse, shares Jesus with her, brings her to church, and she checks things out herself and comes and gives me the news that she's become a Christian. And I thought, what's going to happen? She's going to turn to some holier than thou person who's going to look down on me and my drinking, and she wouldn't like my friends anymore. And it's just going to be troubled. How are we going to make decisions about how we spend our money and how we spend our time?
Starting point is 00:16:19 we're going to have this divide in our marriage. So I thought, I'm just going to walk out. But then I thought, wait a minute, what if I could rescue her from this cult that she's gotten involved in? How would I do that? How would I do that? Oh, I know. All I got to do is disprove the resurrection of Jesus. Because Jesus clearly, as I said earlier, may messianic divine claims about himself.
Starting point is 00:16:41 And the resurrection proved, supposedly, that he is who he claimed to be. So I thought, you know what, give me a long weekend. and I can disprove the resurrection. Dead people don't come back to life. That just doesn't happen. So I thought, you know, I'm trained in this stuff. I can investigate the evidence. So I started to do that.
Starting point is 00:16:57 And I used my journalism training, my legal training. It took me two years to delve into the minutia of the historical data concerning the death and resurrection of Jesus until November the 8th of 1981. And I said to myself, you know, I've been doing this two years. The evidence is in. A good jury reaches a verdict. So I got all the data I gathered. Back then, this was before the Internet.
Starting point is 00:17:20 So it's a microfilm. No chat, CBT, no language-running models. No Google. No Google. So you're going to the library to do this. Oh, yeah. I remember once I requested the interlibrary loan at the Chicago Library because I was trying to find this obscure book
Starting point is 00:17:34 written by one of the founders of Harvard Law School who had become a Christian in the 1800s or whatever. And six months later, I get a phone call. We found your book. That's what it took. I mean, that's why I took me two years. about investigative. Oh, I delved into this stuff and into microfilm and libraries and museums and so forth,
Starting point is 00:17:55 interviewing scholars and experts until November the 8th of 81 when I realized any good juror reaches a verdict. And the evidence was in, I need to reach a verdict. And I looked at the data concerning the resurrection. It is fascinating. How much that. I'll tell you a little story. There was a guy named Sir Lionel Luckhu. Sir Lionel is the most successful defense attorney in the world.
Starting point is 00:18:17 He was in the Guinness Book of World Records. Why? Because he won 245 murder trials in a role. This guy right here? That's him. 245 murder trials in a road. Nobody's ever done that. As a defense attorney, either before the jury or on a appeal. And when I was a student at Yale Law School, he was my hero. Because I figured this guy must understand evidence. He's an atheist.
Starting point is 00:18:38 Well, he was a skeptic about the resurrection. He didn't believe the resurrection occurred. And I was an atheist, so I agreed with him. And he was knighted twice by Queen Elizabeth. He became a member of the Supreme Court of his country. Yeah. So, brilliant, brilliant guy. But he didn't believe in the resurrect.
Starting point is 00:18:54 So somebody came to him one day and said, Sir Lionel, you're the greatest lawyer here in the world. Have you ever taken your monumental legal skill and applied it to the historical record of the resurrection and come to an informed verdict on whether Jesus rose from the dead? He said, no, I haven't, but I will. So he spent years doing what I ended up doing, investigating the evidence.
Starting point is 00:19:12 and I'll recite to you one sentence he wrote that summarizes conclusion. He says, I say unequivocally that the evidence for the resurrection of Jesus Christ is so overwhelming that it compels acceptance by proof, which leaves absolutely no room for doubt. This is from the greatest legal mind, I think, in practical sense in his. By the way, I told that story in California. I moved to California near 2000 to be a teaching pastor to church. And a woman came up to me afterwards. She said, hey, I'm your new neighbor.
Starting point is 00:19:40 We haven't met yet, but you just bought a house down the bus. I said, oh, that's great, good to meet you. She said, yeah, one other thing. I said, I'm Sir Lionel's sister. Stop. Yes. And we know. Your neighbor is a sister. Yeah, that's true. Was she a devout Christian at that time? Oh, yeah. And she actually showed me his private papers where he had done his investigation. I know. Can you believe that? What did you find when you're going through it? It was ultimately a confirmation of what I discovered in my investigation. Can I summarize the evidence for you real quick? Four words at begin with the letter E to summarize the evidence for the resurrection. This is what brought me from atheism to faith. The E1st E stands for execution, that Jesus was truly dead
Starting point is 00:20:17 after being crucified. There is no record anywhere of anyone ever surviving a full Roman crucifixion. In fact, this is not controversial among even atheist scholars, because when you study ancient history, we're lucky if we have one good source to confirm a fact, or maybe two good sources. So if you have Alexander the Great, we believe certain things about his life. Well, dig down. How do we know Well, it turns out it's one source, maybe two sources. And yet for the death of Jesus, we not only have multiple sources in the documents of the New Testament. We've got five ancient sources outside the Bible confirming his execution. This is so well established of an historical fact.
Starting point is 00:20:57 You can get laughed out of a major academic institution if you go in and claim he somehow survived the crucifixion. In fact, get this. No less of a source in the Journal of the American Medical Association, a secular, peer-reviewed medical scientific journal, carried an investigation into the death of Jesus, and this was their conclusion, quote, clearly the weight of the historical and medical evidence indicates that Jesus was dead even before the wound to his side was inflicted.
Starting point is 00:21:27 Even the atheist historian, Garrett Ludemus, says it's indisputable that Jesus was dead. First, E, execution, he's dead. Second E, early accounts. In other words, we have early reports. that come very quickly after the crucifixion that he rose from the dead. Why is that important? Because I used to think, like a lot of skeptics, that the resurrection was a legend. And I do it took time for legend to develop in the ancient world. So I figured 100, 150, 200 years after life from Jesus, legends were invented, and that's where the idea came from. Guess what?
Starting point is 00:21:57 We have preserved for us a creed of the earliest church. The first Christians had a creedal statement based on facts that they knew to be true, based on eyewitness accounts. that summarized their convictions. And it said, Jesus died. Why? For our sins. He was buried. On the third day, he rose again, and then has the specific names of individuals
Starting point is 00:22:19 and groups of people who encountered the resurrected Jesus, including 500 people at once. Well, guess what? Historians have been able to date that creed. So, for instance, one of the great historians, James D.G. Dunn of England, one of the greatest historians of our time, dated that creed.
Starting point is 00:22:37 and he says we can be entirely confident that that creed was formulated within months of the death of Jesus, within month. That's historical goal. That's far too quick to be alleged. The great historian A.N. Sherwin White of Oxford and Cambridge said the passage of two generations of time is not even enough for legend to grow up and wipe out a solid core of historical truth. So we got a news flag. And it's not the only early report we got. We got others in Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, the Book of Acts, all that date back. so early they were circulating during the lifetimes of Jesus' contemporaries who would have
Starting point is 00:23:11 disputed the claims if they had been wrong. So that's the second E is early accounts. The third E stands for an empty. We have an empty tomb. And what's interesting about that is even the enemies of Jesus admitted the tomb was empty. Everybody conceded the tomb. How do we know? Because we know from sources inside and outside the New Testament that when the disciples began proclaiming that Jesus had risen, what the enemies of Jesus said was, oh, well, the disciples stole the body. Now think about that. They're conceding the tomb is empty. They're trying to explain how it got empty.
Starting point is 00:23:46 So everybody's conceding the tomb is empty. That's not the issue of history. The issue of history really is, how did it get empty? Romans weren't about to steal the body. They wanted Jesus dead. Religious leaders of the day weren't about to steal the body. They wanted Jesus to stay dead. The disciples weren't about to steal the body.
Starting point is 00:24:02 I found seven ancient sources, six of them outside the body. that said that the disciples live lives of deprivation and suffering as a result of their proclamation that Jesus had risen. They were willing to die for it. Why? Because they heard in Sunday school he'd risen from the dead and proved he's a son of God? No, because they were there. Of all human beings who've ever lived, they were in a position to know for a fact whether he returned from the dead or not. They touched him. They talked with him. They ate him. And knowing the truth, they were even willing to die for it. Then finally, the fourth E stands for the word, I witness. witnesses. Remember I said earlier, we're lucky in ancient history. If we have a fact, we believe to be
Starting point is 00:24:41 true, we dig down, we find one source, maybe two sources. There are nine ancient sources inside and outside the New Testament confirming and corroborating the conviction of the disciples that they encountered the risen Jesus. That is an avalanche of historical data. And so it was based on that kind of evidence that I sat as an atheist and said, wait a minute, if I'm going to be honest, if I'm going to follow the evidence wherever it points, which is what I was always taught to do, then I have to conclude that Jesus didn't just claim to be God. He backed up that claim by returning from the dead. Now, when you're saying nine-eyed witnesses, I'm assuming this is it, right? Paul, the Gospels, Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Acts of Apostles, that's what you're talking about
Starting point is 00:25:25 the nine sources. Nine sources, right. So the first one is the creed that I mentioned. By the way, the historical credentials of that creed are so strong that one of the few Jewish New Testament Scholars, Pinchis Lepid, said it may be taken as a statement of eyewitnesses. So you got the creed. You've got Paul. Paul, of course, said personally that he encountered the risen Christ. And that's how he became, he was Saul of Tarsus, a persecutor Christians. He encounters Jesus risen.
Starting point is 00:25:51 He becomes the Apostle Paul. He becomes friends with Peter James and John and some of the other disciples. And Paul says, in 1 Corinthians, he says, whether is I or they, this is what we preach. In other words, we're all saying we encountered the resurrected Jesus. Then third, we have Peter in the book of Acts who gets up and says, this Jesus, God raised in the dead, to which we're all witnesses. And 3,000 people said, we know you're telling the truth. What do we do? They repent and the church is born. And then we have the four gospels, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, who I believe have historical credentials that give them incredible credibility. They are ancient
Starting point is 00:26:26 biographies. But then we have two sources outside the Bible. This is fascinating. we have people who sat under the teachings of the eyewitnesses themselves. So, for instance, we have Clement. Clement was ordained by Peter himself, Peter, the eyewitness. And he wrote a letter to the church in Corinth, right there in the first century. And he said, why? I'm paraphrasing, but he said, basically, why do the apostles have such courage and such conviction that Jesus? Because of the resurrection, because it happened, because they knew it happened.
Starting point is 00:26:58 And then Polycarp. Polycar was appointed by John himself to be the bishop at Smyrna. And Polycarb wrote a letter to the church in Philippi, in which he mentions the resurrection no fewer than five times. And he says that the apostles did not value this present world because God had died for them. He'd opened the door to eternity from them. Jesus returned from the dead and proved he is who he claimed to be.
Starting point is 00:27:26 So these are, this is nine ancient sources. That's a lot. It's very powerful. But not going back with you, your parents. What were your parents? Yeah, great question. My parents were Christians. They were members of a Lutheran church. But a very interesting question. I had a very difficult relationship with my dad. My parents had three kids in a row. My dad was very involved with their lives, loved it, and then they were done. And then many years passed. And oops, my mom found herself pregnant with me. And I think that was the seed.
Starting point is 00:28:02 In fact, my mom told me on her deathbed because I asked her about it. He said, yeah, it was not happy news when your dad learned that I was pregnant. And so I had a very difficult... He was kind of done with the... He wanted to go off and play golf and do all this stuff. He did the parent thing. He was kind of done. And oops, now this comes along later.
Starting point is 00:28:19 What's the age difference between the youngest, the youngest oldest of you versus you? I think it's six years. Six years. Yeah. And then the oldest? Well, the oldest, let's see, the oldest would be 10 years. 10 years older than you. Yeah, got it.
Starting point is 00:28:33 And so, but here's what's interesting. Studies have been done into the great atheists of history. So there's a guy who's a professor in New York University. He did this PhD project. He looked at the famous atheist of history, Camus, Sart, Nietzsche, Freud, Voltaire, Wells, Feuerbach, O'Hare. He looked at every single one of them had a father who died when they were young, whom had divorced their mother when they were young
Starting point is 00:28:57 or with whom they had a very difficult relationship. And Freud pointed out, the implication is if your earthly father has hurt you or disappointed you in some way, you don't want to know anything about a heavenly father. He's only going to be worse. So you have this barrier between you and God. You have excuses not to find God. So was divorced mother, died young?
Starting point is 00:29:20 What was the third one? Or terrible relationship, very difficult. relationship. So you didn't have a relationship with your dad? I had a relationship, but it was very, very difficult. I remember he told me on the eve of my high school graduation. He looked at me, we had a big argument, as usual, and he looked at me and said, I don't have enough love for you to fill my little finger. Stop it. Yeah. Stop it. So it was a very difficult. Now, mom and that are still together. Yeah, they're deceased now. But at the time they were married. That's right. So he said this to you while they're married. Yeah. Yeah. What caused him to make a statement like that?
Starting point is 00:29:52 Well, I was a rebellious kid. I pushed all his buttons, you know? I mean, I went out and did something he specifically told me not to do. What's that? Buy a motorcycle. Behind his back. I was in a motorcycle. How old were you?
Starting point is 00:30:04 I was 18. And you bought the bike? Yes, yes. 650 Triumph Bonneville. And he found out that I did it behind his back. And, of course, he was mad. I was pushing his buttons. I'd take a lot of responsibility for the difficulty in our relationship.
Starting point is 00:30:20 But it was a problem. And so interestingly, C.S. Lewis has a solution for this. Because some of your listeners may say, yeah, maybe this explains my friend, why they are so antagonistic toward the idea of God, because their dad divorced their mother when they were young or whatever. C.S. Lewis had a solution. He said, if this is the case in someone's side, I say to them, could you imagine, just imagine for a minute,
Starting point is 00:30:44 what would the perfect God, the perfect father be like? Just imagine. Oh, well, the perfect father would be loving, he'd be calm, He'd be an encourager. Your biggest cheerleader. He'd bring you up in his lap and hug you. That is a picture of your heavenly father. He's not just a magnified version of your earthly father who disappointed you or hurt you.
Starting point is 00:31:07 He is otherworldly. He is different. He is the perfect father. And I found that to be very helpful. What's your fondest memory of you and your father when you were a kid? Found this memory. Boy. You know, we did take a car trip once.
Starting point is 00:31:22 I was a teenager at the time. Took a car trip from Chicago to Phoenix, Arizona to deliver a car for my brother, who was a student at Arizona State. And that was kind of nice. I learned some things from my dad on that trip that he'd never talked about before. But it was just a very cold relationship. And again, I take a lot of the blame. Did you ever rekindle that relationship?
Starting point is 00:31:46 He died before I was able to reconcile. I had, yeah, and it's a, you know, it was funny because I was at his, the wake for my dad. And these men began to come up to me. And they would say, are you Lee? And I said, yeah. He said, oh, your dad was so proud of you. Oh, man, every time you had a front page byline in the Chicago Tribune, he would show it to everybody. And when you got promoted to legal editor, he'd cut out that picture of you in the paper and showed it to everybody.
Starting point is 00:32:19 He was so proud of you. And I was just in tears because it's like, I wish he told me. So, yeah, that's hard. That's hard. So I believe in his own way he did love me, but he had his own barriers there too. What did mom say? Was mom like, no, Lee, he loves you?
Starting point is 00:32:41 Yeah, she was always the encourager, and she was the one that would try to patch up the relationship. What was his name? Walter. Walter. Yeah. Do you have an older brother? had two older brothers, one who died of COVID and another older brother.
Starting point is 00:32:54 Any one of them, sorry to hear that with the COVID situation. And was one of them named Walter or no? No, his middle name, John Walter. Yeah, yeah. That's interesting because for me, I was an atheist because of, you know, the war in Iran. I'm like, there's no way in the world if God loves us. He's going to let innocent people die. Just keep me away.
Starting point is 00:33:13 So it was a very different situation. Yes. So did you later on feel like was there a older man who played a role of a father in your life? Like a living. Did somebody play the role of that? Were you like, you like, you know what? That's an example of somebody I want to be like, or no, was it vertical? It was vertical.
Starting point is 00:33:35 It was vertical. I wish I'd encounter someone like that. I have people in my life today who are like that for me. Now that I'm a Christian and I have good friends who I see model. fatherhood and I see model a strong devoted Christian life and it's important to have those kind of people in your life. My friend Mark Middleberg and I, we have no secrets from each other. We're best buddies since 1987 and that I learned more from him than anybody else. Very cool. So then later on, you go and I think you join a church in Chicago, right, right outside of Chicago. Yeah, I took a 60% pay cut
Starting point is 00:34:13 and joined the staff of a church, never intending to write any books. I'd written one book as an atheist. Do you remember, of course, you're much younger than I am, but do you remember the Ford Pinto controversy? Of course. I wrote a lot of the, broke a lot of the news in that case. Stop. Yeah, and I wrote.
Starting point is 00:34:30 That was massive. Oh, Milton Friedman would talk about that. Oh, you remember the whole? Oh, yeah. So did you see Milton Friedman's argument on it with Michael Moore on that? I don't think I saw that. But what I did, I got a hold of secret Ford. documents that showed that they knew that the Pinto would blow up when hit from behind in a low to
Starting point is 00:34:52 moderate impact collision. But they didn't want to spend the money, which would have been, what, five bucks a car to, according to millions of cars, to upgrade it, to protect it and so forth. So I actually broke a lot of those. I got a tip. Ford was indicted for a charge of reckless homicide because three innocent girls were burned to death and a Ford Pinto. their car was rear-ended by a Chevy van, and they burned to death. And so Ford was charged with homicide for designing a car that was unreasonably dangerous. So I'm legal editor of the Tribune, I get a tip one day. And the caller said, I knew who really.
Starting point is 00:35:30 He said, hey, go check the public file in the Ford case. Okay, so I went to Winniac, Indiana, where the case was being held, and I looked at in the file. There's a thing in law called a motion in limine, which means we don't. want this to come before the jury, so let's litigate it before the trial. So they had that motion, and they attached to it a bunch of secret Ford documents that they didn't want the jury to see, but they're attached to this motion. So I'm photocopying them. I'm just copying all these secret documents. And a Ford lawyer walked in and saw me in the courthouse and said, what are you doing? Nothing, nothing, nothing. He runs into the judge and gets an order sealing the case. So I was the only
Starting point is 00:36:13 reporter that had all these secret documents. So I did a series of articles that were headlines all over the country. And I ended up writing a book called Reckless Homicide. I saw that right now, the reckless homicide in 1980. I actually reproduced the documents in the book. Have you ever seen a movie The Genius? What's it called? Rob, can you find the movie that, the Flash of Genius? Have you seen a movie The Flash of Genius? No, it sounds interesting. Oh, you have to watch a Flash of Genius. So this movie, if you go to the Wikipedia, so I can kind of give the idea what it's about, this is the inventor of the wiper, windshield wiper, the intermittent wiper. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:36:51 And he goes against Ford Motor Company. He invents it, he shows it to them. They tell him, they say, this is nothing. You didn't invent anything. Then they don't give him the patent. He loses his wife. Wife takes the kids. Stubbornly, he ends up winning this case.
Starting point is 00:37:05 I think you would enjoy this movie. Yeah. Oh, that sounds good. I got to watch that. You would enjoy that movie. That sounds great. Is the first church you go, is that the Willow Creek? Yes, yes.
Starting point is 00:37:13 So who's the senior pastor when you go there? Bill Heuble's. It is Bill Heavis. Yes, yes. So at the time, so this is 80s. Yeah, it was the second largest church in a country at the time. Yeah, I mean, Bill Heibles is a guy that I've studied very closely because he wrote that one thing, ten different styles of leadership. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:37:30 And he would talk about the reengineering leader, the directional leader, the entrepreneurial leader, the visionary leader, the motivational leader. He was a very good teacher. Excellent. How much time did you spend with them? Oh, a lot of time. I was on the management team of the church ultimately, and he led that management team as a senior pastor. So I was quite involved with him. He was instrumental in me coming to faith, because my wife started taking me to that church, even when I was an atheist. When I walked into that church on January the 20th of 1980 as an atheist,
Starting point is 00:38:02 and I heard the message of Jesus for the first time that I understood it, from Bill Heibles. And that's what started me on my journey to see if I could disprove. prove it. And so I owe a lot to Bill. What was, what was special about the way he built this church into the second largest? Well, you know, you mentioned some leadership things. He has a leadership gift. He was a, he was a visionary leader, but a practical leader as well. He was able to take what started out as a bunch of teenagers, a student ministry at a little church in Park Ridge, Illinois, and ultimately build it into the second largest church in America. Who was the first at the time? Who was?
Starting point is 00:38:39 It was a church in South Bend, in Hammond, Indiana. Interesting. Yeah, second Baptist church, I think, in Hammond, Indiana. So he builds the second largest church. Yeah. And he's, you know, I think John Maxwell left the church to go into leadership, but Bill never did, right? Bill stayed as a pastor.
Starting point is 00:38:57 He was best friends with John. Right. I mean, both of them are very good at what they did. So then, you know, leads to, and I know in the book, case for church, I don't know what point it was, made, but you talked about what happens when there's a fallen out in the church. And Bill's was when there was a fallen out and a mass exodus. And that seems to be, you know, it happened locally here as well at a church that I go to, that my, you know, down the street from here,
Starting point is 00:39:25 where Billy Graham's grandson went through it as well. I don't know if you follow that story when it happened a couple miles away from here. It happened at Calvary Chapel here down the street as well where the pastor was a stories came out about him having a relationship with one of the members wives and then the other pastor at the other church was he couldn't give up the party life he was a good looking guy very good speaker Armenian guy both him and his brother still preaches and he's phenomenal at the way he preached I think his brother preaches at the Calvary here but a lot of people have experienced it were you there when the church felt or you had already left no I left in the year two thousand
Starting point is 00:40:04 to become a teaching pastor with Rick Warren at Saddleback Church in California. Oh, you went through Saddleback? Yes, yes. Wow, purpose-driven life. That book sold 40 million or what it did, but Rick Warren, the Green Book, right? That was a book I read 40 days, I think it was. Yes. I didn't go through the 40.
Starting point is 00:40:20 I read it all in like a couple days. Right, right. And I heard him preach once at a Billy Graham event at Pasadena. Yeah. November of 2003, Rick Warren was there. Jack Hayford, which is a church. My sister used to go to was there. He was in Van Nuys, I believe.
Starting point is 00:40:34 Yes, I knew Jack. And then Billy Graham preached three out of the – he preached every day. I went three out of the four days. One of the days I had a business event. And then eventually, I think in Pasadena, they gave the day to Billy Graham when he preached. But Rick Warren was there as well. So you leave Willow Creek. You go to San Diego to be with Rick Warren.
Starting point is 00:40:53 When you hear about the stories, I'm sure you still have connections and relationships there. How big was the direct impact to the church? Because I read stories about how – It was huge. I mean, it broke my heart. He's a friend. I mean, it broke my heart. I mean, if you ask me who are the five people in Christendom, leaders in Christendom who are least likely to fall, Bill would be one of them. I mean, he was a man of it as far as the Bill Heibles I knew was a man of integrity, a man of principle, a man of faith, a man of a great leadership ability. He gave me opportunities. You know, the joke was, in, Here I am. I was an atheist. I come to faith, and I leave all that behind, take a 60% pay cut, and I join his staff as my role was to oversee 750 volunteers in a very second. I had no aspirations to preach, to write books, any of that. In a typical church, I would have risen to become chief usher. But he gave me opportunities. He saw something in me. me and said, you know, I think maybe God's given you a gift to communicate, to preach. And honestly,
Starting point is 00:42:11 I thought he had, but I thought I'm not going to say anything because there's too much of a risk of self-promotion. So if God is calling me to preach, to teach, to write books, he'll make it happen. I'm not going to say anything. And one day he knocked on my door and came in and said, you know, the elders were praying and we believe God's given you a gift and I want to help you develop it. He helped develop me to preach. And it's a right. And so I owe a lot to Bill. And when I left and I heard these stories about his inappropriate relationships and so forth, the first reaction I have, it broke my heart. And it almost broke the church. I mean, it was a very difficult time for the church. A lot of people left the
Starting point is 00:42:57 church. They got some new leadership in there. It's doing great now. But I mean, that's a horrible thing to have a leader of a church fall. It hurts the faith of people who say, maybe inappropriately so, because we're all sinners, we all mess up, we all have flaws and so forth. We put sometimes preachers on pedestals and maybe they don't 100% deserve to be on.
Starting point is 00:43:23 But when one of them falls, it can be devastating to people's faith. That's what breaks my heart especially, because my goal in life is a drag as many people of heaven with me as I can. And this frustrates that because of the number of people who were hurt personally by that. Yeah, but it's not, it's not a new thing. No, it's not a new thing. I used to go to a church in LA called Los Angeles Church of Christ, and their pastor eventually came out, and there was a massive scandal with that as well, but he came out and he said, look,
Starting point is 00:43:57 because their thing was, it wasn't about women with him. It was more, the only way to go to heaven is through our church, no other church, because we're the right way and all this other stuff. But you can go back and hear stories with, you know, Jimmy Swagger, that was the original one. You hear the Jim Baker story, the Ted Haggard, which was the story with a male escort. And a lot of them, even some of them right now that you look at, the one locally was Bob McCoy and recently was, I think it's a John Morris. He wrote a very good book. Is that his name from Dallas? Yes, from Dallas.
Starting point is 00:44:31 Dallas. Not John Moore. No, it's not, it's a different. Morris. Morris. Richard Morris? Robert. Robert Morris is what it is. Robert Morris. And he came out and things that came back and he accepted it. Which was a great church. I have friends who went to that church. They love the church. They love the church. And then to have that happen. It's like you got to, you know, you have to tell people, yeah, it's a tragedy. And yet it should not destroy your faith. So for me, you know, I go back and I see, okay, so I'm going to Bible study with this guy, Mono, and he tells me, says, hey, your relationship, it's a vertical relationship, not a horizontal relationship. So in your book, the case for church, you talk about one of the points you make in the book, which I love, is that scandals don't invalidate the truth, right?
Starting point is 00:45:23 Scandals don't invalidate the truth because, you know, these are human beings. They're going to fall. they're going to make mistakes. But what is your position of what these men who come in, because women are attracted to what? A pastor who builds a very big church, the way you do it is you're either very good at one-on-one, but typically you're very good in one-in-thousand, right?
Starting point is 00:45:50 Very good with one-and-thousand. So to be good in one-and-thousand, you're very good persuading, you're charming, you're charismatic, you're convincing. the conviction you're like women want a man that these are all attractive qualities right can be that get into place so you know one as the attendee how should an attendee look at that as devastating as it is yeah and not cause them to lose faith in a man upstairs yeah and two what can senior pastors do to protect themselves against this common pattern that happens to many great men in history it isn't it's unfortunate when we're mentioning their names.
Starting point is 00:46:29 I can go a list of history. Sure. And we have thousands of names that we can give with this. How do you... Well, I think first of all, for those who are, quote, unquote, victims in the sense that they're part of a church that pastor falls and so forth, how do they not lose their faith? I think, number one, is our faith is not in the pastor. Our faith is in Jesus.
Starting point is 00:46:47 Our faith is in God. And I mentioned you earlier, the reasons why I became convinced that Jesus is who he claimed to be through his resurrection from the dead. historical data. I go back to that. I go back to that. Yes, there are men of God who fall and who sin and who forfeit their pulpit because of immorality. But I go back to the evidence. I go back to the, how do I know? How do I know Christianity is true? I look at the four E's and say, yeah, Jesus did return from the debt. He did prove he's the son of God. That has nothing to do with Bill Heibles, you know. So I want to set that boundary and say, I want to rely on, you know, it's called
Starting point is 00:47:27 in Christian world apologetics, defense of the faith, reasons to believe. In terms of the pastors, there's got to be accountability. There's got to be, you know, I see a lot of churches where the, the elders of the church are employees of the church. They're, well, you can't hold the senior pastor accountable if he's your boss, right? So you're getting paid, you got a salary, so your incentive is to protect them. Exactly. So, you know, who are the elders of the church? How are they chosen? And what access do they have to the pastor? Is a pastor willing to open up his life? Are there people who he discloses to? Like my friend Mark. You know, I mean, we each, that's our accountable relationship as followers of Jesus. We want to hold each other
Starting point is 00:48:15 accountable. And if Mark ever senses that I'm kind of going astray, he'll pull me aside. And if he doesn't hit me across the face, I know he's going to tell me, hey, Strobel, listen, what you did, that's inappropriate. You need to do, you know, so there's got to be that kind of accountability. Iron sharpens iron, the Bible says. Yeah, are you, I'm assuming you're familiar with the Modesto Manifesto that Billy Graham came up with, with his crew? Yeah. What do you think about the Modesto manifesto? Is this where you are never in the presence of a woman. That's right, yeah. You know what?
Starting point is 00:48:49 1948, he sat down and he says, hey guys, it seems like he knew. And look what happened to Billy Graham. He lived a life of authenticity and effectiveness until the end. It's not easy. It's not easy. And I wonder is there a cause and effect there. They had a rule of three, right? Because he tells a story, I believe, one time where it's like, he's in a room by himself.
Starting point is 00:49:10 A real attractive girl comes in. I don't know if this is, it could have been a different pastor. Rob, fact checked me on this. if he told the story. And he runs out immediately. Yeah. Just like, I can't be in. So they would travel in threes, is what he would talk about,
Starting point is 00:49:24 because he would break down the fall, was based on four things that would cause a church to fall. One was women. One was finances, because you're not fine. One was like, it's getting to your head. And he had four things that he would talk about. Well, I personally travel with my wife, wherever I go. She's here on this trip to Fort Lauderdale.
Starting point is 00:49:44 and she comes with me mainly because we're best friends and you know, noting and says this since we were 14. So we're always together. And that's a blessing to me to have someone like that. She's not like she's a bodyguard
Starting point is 00:49:58 or she's screening things, but she's there. And I'm glad she's there. I enjoy her being there, but she also, that becomes a guard against any inappropriate actions that I might otherwise try to make. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:50:12 We're all susceptible. I mean, temptations of, you know, Satan is very clever, and he will tempt us in ways that we don't see coming. We got to be, you know, the Bible talks about put on the full armor of God. Can't do it alone, though. I mean, it's the one thing that's for sure. You can't do it alone. That's right. When you're going through it alone, it's going to be, it's going to challenge you in a big way.
Starting point is 00:50:35 So your evolution of, you know, going from the atheist to a, you know, Christian, what role did, C.S. Lewis play, you know, with mere Christianity or some of his other writings that he had. What role did he play? He played a big role. I mean, mere Christianity is a classic. And I recommend anybody read that, whether a believer or not a believer, just someone who's checking out the faith. It's just a great, great book. C.S. Lewis wrote some wonderful, wonderful stuff.
Starting point is 00:51:02 So I enjoyed him. You know, on a popular level, Josh McDowell. Remember, Josh. He's a friend now. And his son, Sean McDowell is a fantastic. He's a professor at Biola University. And my son is a professor there. He has a PhD in faith.
Starting point is 00:51:20 He's a Jonathan Edwards scholar, and he teaches spiritual formation at their seminary. But Josh wrote some popular-level books. There's a book written by a guy. Gosh, what was his name? Oh, there's several books. The Agnostic Who Dared to Search. That was an interesting book. Peter Stoner.
Starting point is 00:51:42 Peter Stoner. A great name. Yeah. Peter Stoner. Sounds like an atheist name. It doesn't it? And he was. Stoner. Peter Stoner. That's right. He was an atheist in England and became a Christian after he investigated the evidence for the resurrection. And I read that book.
Starting point is 00:51:57 There was a famous guy who made Harvard Law School what it is, which is the second greatest law school after Yale. But back in the 1800s who investigated faith and became a believer and wrote a wonderful book on the reliability of the Gospels. There's a lot of great stuff out there. Josh McDowell, did he, Josh McDowell write a book called Tolerance? No, he wrote a book called The Evidence and Demands a Verdict and More Than a Carpenter on a real popular level. Yep, yep. Great guy, still alive. As Sean, as I say, his son is doing great work. He has a wonderful podcast that he does. So he's carrying on. There's some wonderful.
Starting point is 00:52:33 There's a bunch of them. Wayne Cordero. One day my pastor walks me in. Oh, Wayne's a great guy. I used to speak at his church. Yeah, Wayne, from Hawaii. Yes. My pastor brings me in. He says, I want to have breakfast with you. Pastor Dudley Rutherford. I don't know if you know who he is. He's in L.A. Big Church, 20 plus thousand members. And he introduces me to one of Wayne's book called Leading on Empty. I think it's called. Leading on empty. It says what men go through when they're in their 40s, you know, it's kind of like, man, I'm carrying the weight. I'm doing this. I'm doing that. You kind of need to go and to re-energize yourself for the next phase because sometimes at that age, if you go through that phase by yourself, you could do something dumb. You could do something dumb. could do something, you know. And that was also a big book. Hi, I'm Lee Strobel. Atheist turned Christian, author of several books, including the case for Christ and
Starting point is 00:53:21 seeing the supernatural. You might have questions about faith, about how we know that Jesus is who we claim to be, and that there really is a realm beyond what we can see and touch and put in a test tube. So I'd love to chat with you about that. Just go to Mnacht, and then we can connect and talk about these matters of faith that are so important to our lives. But when it comes on to C.S. Lewis, for him to be the, he was more from the philosopher's side, right, that he went there. Chronicles of Narnia.
Starting point is 00:53:53 He's written a lot of things that you would think. But he did talk about those three things, the argument that kind of got me. What role did that play where he says, Jesus is either, what is it, the liar, the lunatic, or the Lord, right? I would add a fourth one, a legend. You could have been a legend. I like that because you said that earlier. Yes, yes. And that's a popular objection these days.
Starting point is 00:54:13 Oh, it was legendary. Over the time he gets bigger and big, and he was eight feet tall. Yeah, right, right, right. So, yeah, is he a liar? Well, could have been, could have been. Is he a legend? Or is he Lord or a lunatic, but he'd even be crazy? He interviewed a psychologist about Jesus.
Starting point is 00:54:33 Could he have been crazy? And he set me straight on that. What do you say? He said, no, he said, first of all, the teachings of Jesus. He ever read the sermon on the Mount in Matthew chapter 5, the beatitudes, and most brilliant insights in human nature. Just, these are not the words of a crazy guy. And besides which, the way in which we document his identity of being the Son of God is through the resurrection.
Starting point is 00:54:57 And that's irrelevant. You know, his mental health is, you know, not relevant at the time of that. But so, yeah, you go through those options and you see that Jesus is who, he claimed to be. That was my conclusion. It was not something I was seeking. I wanted to rescue my wife from this cult. But you know what? I'm from the old school of journalism. I can't speak about contemporary journalism. Back in my day, I got a degree in journalism from the University of Missouri, which was the first and I believe the best journalism school. And we were taught to try to tell both sides to be objective as possible. When I was an atheist at the Chicago Tribune,
Starting point is 00:55:40 I was very pro-abortion. I, as an atheist, I helped arrange an abortion for a young woman I knew as a friend at the University of Missouri who got pregnant, and she came to me and said, Lee, what do I do? I'm pregnant. I said, don't worry about it. Abortion is legal in New York. I'll take care of it. We'll get the money together. I'll set it up.
Starting point is 00:55:59 So, no, babies are in your way. You get rid of it. Wow. Yeah. But you know what? Even though at that time I was very pro-abortion. I covered a lot of court cases involving the abortion issue. It goes Supreme Court back and forth through those years.
Starting point is 00:56:15 If you read any of my articles, you would not know where I stood. Because I was taught you tell both sides. You quote both sides. You present both arguments. That's my role as a journalist. Today, you get a lot of people, you say, why are you going to journalism? I want to change the world. No, that's not your job to change the war.
Starting point is 00:56:33 Your job is to tell the truth, is to tell both sides, to report what's going on. Who does that today? Who does that today? Who do you go to? Like, is there any source you go to any source? You know what I do? I try to go to multiple sources, figuring I'm going to kind of reach a mean that'll, you know. So I like the Wall Street Journal.
Starting point is 00:56:51 They're pretty good. You too. It's my number one. Yeah, that's me my number one. I bounce back and forth on television between CNN and Fox News. I'll listen a little here and a little there and try to, had something. I subscribe to the Washington Post and the New York Times, not because I trust them, but because I want to know what they're saying. I don't trust them. I guess I don't trust them
Starting point is 00:57:15 anymore. They have become advocates. They become people who are trying to promote a cause. And that's not what I'm interested. I'm interested in somebody telling me what is going on. Give me both sides. Tell me the truth. Yeah, it's tough. I mean, listen, today it's not easy to sit there and, you know, see who to trust what they're going to be saying. It's such a great time for propaganda and confusion. You know, they say the fog of war. It's like the fog of everything today. That's a very good point.
Starting point is 00:57:44 You're absolutely right. It's the fog of everything. And it, you know, now, haven't been trained in journalism and law, I have some skills that I can kind of cut through some of the. You know, well, you know, it's because I was there. So I know how to, if you want to, if you want to, if you want to tell a story to present one side, I can pretty much spot it. You know what I mean? There was an article in the Denver newspaper recently, or on television, and it was about transgenders in women's sports. And they
Starting point is 00:58:16 interview this one guy who was very, he was a coach, and he was very in favor of having men in women's sports. And I thought, huh, that's interesting. I wonder who that guy really is. And as you dig down, which was not disclosed at the time, when you dig down, you find that, oh, he's part of an advocacy group that promotes transgender is involved in women's sports. That's not hard to. So you go a little bit deeper to see what the writer is about, what their background is about. Yeah, you look at who the writer is. You look at, are they telling you something that your antenna go up and say, wait a second. Is that kind of unusual that a coach would say, oh, I have no problem with men coming into my women's sports and playing. Really? Who is this
Starting point is 00:58:58 guy. So, you know, you try to discern, you try to cut through the stuff. It's not always successful. Did you see the story about this NBA player, Jaden Ivy? Did you see this story in the last couple days? No. So Jaden Ivy is this, I'll let you, Rob, if you want to play this clip, he plays for the Chicago Bulls. He used to be with the Pistons. He was the back court in the Pistons, pretty strong guy. He had a good season last year, 17 points, 4 assists, 4 rebounds, had a bad injury, goes to the Bulls, you know, becomes a critical. Christian, even more devout. He starts openly talking about it. And he makes this video just a couple of days ago. Yeah. And shares this about LGBTQ, the fact that NBA supports it. The next day, the bulls drop.
Starting point is 00:59:43 And, Rob, if you want to play this clip, go forward. The world can proclaim LGBTQ, right? They have, they have, they proclaim Pride Month and the NBA. They proclaim it. They show it to the world. They say come, come join us for pride, for pride month to celebrate unrighteousness. They proclaim it. They proclaim it on the billboards. They proclaim it in the streets.
Starting point is 01:00:31 Unrighteousness. So how is it that one can't speak righteousness? How is it one that, how are they to say that, you? You, you, man, this man is crazy. Because of this, he gets fired. The bullseller. I had not heard that. That is unbelievable.
Starting point is 01:00:50 You know, in law school, my specialty was First Amendment law. Okay. I used to teach First Amendment law at Roosevelt University. First Amendment is foundational in our nation, absolutely foundational. And what are we seeing? We're seeing censorship, whether it's overt or covert. We're seeing people whose opinions like his, that's a legitimate opinion. to have as a follower of Jesus that this is not biblical and so forth, he should be allowed
Starting point is 01:01:18 to express that without consequence in this country. Not anymore. There's these attacks on people. I've been working with the FBI for the last couple of weeks because someone's trying to kill me, because of the stands I take. And yeah, there was a credible threat on my life. And so we've been working together and I think the time has passed. I think it's over. But do you know who the individual is? No, they never caught them. But they provided protection for me at various events because the threat was they were going to shoot me at my next speaking event. Oh, they made it clear. Oh, yeah, made it clear when and where. Was it in an email? Was it in a message? It was a message through my website. Unfortunately, my website is pretty rudimentary, and I don't, I can't capture, I don't capture the whole
Starting point is 01:02:02 IP address because I'm cheap and I didn't want to spend the money on a nice website. And so they tracked them down a little bit, but they've not identified them. But I got extra security when I was speaking. But I mean, what am I saying? Am I saying something outrageous? No, I'm saying the evidence points toward Jesus being the unique son of God. Here's what I said that I think got me in trouble. The Quran, you have the Quran and you have the Bible. I read the Quran. I read the Quran when I was a spiritual seeker. I want to know maybe Islam is the way. And I saw three things in there that contradict Christianity very clearly. Number one, it says in Surah 4 157, Jesus didn't die on the cross. Well, if he didn't die in the cross, there's no resurrection.
Starting point is 01:02:47 Secondly, the Quran says, no one can bear the sins of another. Well, that takes away the atonement, which is the foundation of Christianity. And third, it says God does not have a son. So, okay, they're allowed to believe that and proclaim that and preach that. But if those three things are true,
Starting point is 01:03:04 the Bible is false. So either both books are false or one of them is true, but they cannot both be true at the same time. That's all I said. that I think triggered this whole thing. And so the individual that came to you, did they know if he was Muslim or not?
Starting point is 01:03:19 They don't know for a fake, but it was right after I expressed this on a podcast. I got it. Who knows? It could have been an atheist. They get mad that I left the... Yeah, and I want to go to that. It's a perfect transition into that,
Starting point is 01:03:29 but just to get past this. Yeah. The criticism for this story about Jaden Ivy is that there's another NBA player called Kevin Porter. Now, Kevin Porter gets charged with assaults, a girl, strangulation, I believe, if I'm not mistaken, Rob.
Starting point is 01:03:48 Can you fact, yeah, strangulation. Wow. And he pleaded guilty, just pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor assault. And when he did this, this was just two years ago. Yeah. The NBA just gave a four-game suspension. Four games. That's it.
Starting point is 01:04:02 The NBA game of four-game suspension. Unbelievable. And this other guy, he's questioning why. Yeah, just raising. And he gets five. So this is where the criticism comes, and this is why I believe the NBA is the worst. worst product. Oh my goodness. Out of all the force force that we have. You know, what have we got in
Starting point is 01:04:17 England these days? I mean, you talk about the law. Now, they don't have a First Amendment. They don't have a First Amendment in England. It's important to understand. They claim they do. They definitely do. You and I both know they don't. That's right. And it is dangerous now to have an opinion that violates the standard viewpoint of the culture. It's just unbelievable to me where that nation has gone. And there's places in Europe that are similar. I want to read this to you. I want to read some stats to you. I wonder how you're going to answer this. Ten countries where Christianity is declining. Australia has the largest drop of any country studied. It went from 67.1% in 2010 to 10 years later, 46.8%.
Starting point is 01:05:03 This is a 20-point decline in only 10 years. And it's even lower today. UK went from 62.4% during that same period to 49.4. Losing its Christian majority, Church of England, closing 20 churches per year. France, Catholic share fell from 81% in 1986 to 47% almost a 40% decline from 86 to 2020, lost Christian majority among the eight countries projected to lose Christian majority by 2050. Uruguay shifted to a majority unaffiliated, 52 nuns, versus 44 Christian used to be 61% Christian in 2010. Netherlands transitioned to a religiously unaffiliated majority by 2020.
Starting point is 01:05:47 Roman Catholics went from 39% in 1971 to 23%. Average of eight churches closing every year. U.S. 78.3 to 64%, 14% decline during this same period. Canada, 67 to 53. Chile, 86 to 68, almost 20%. Germany, 48% Christian in 2024. fewer than half belong to two large churches. New Zealand, 51% unaffiliated. South Korea, no clear religious majority. In 41 countries, the Christians share changed by five plus
Starting point is 01:06:20 percentage points from 2010 to 2020. And 40 of those 41, the change was a decline. Only one was a positive. The sole exception was Mozambique. That's increased. That was the only one out of all of them. Why is this happening? Why is the decline happening across the world? I think there's a lot of explanations for that, a lot of factors that go into that. Number one, I don't trust the stats because back when, in 1966, when I met my wife, we were 14 years old, 95% of Americans would say they're Christians. Do you think we were a nation that reflected that back then? I don't think so. And so how to... What do you mean about reflected? Like, you live? Yeah, do we live as if we're 91% followers of Jesus Christ? No.
Starting point is 01:07:07 So people will claim in the past, if you're a business guy and you wanted a bunch of clients, you know, you want to go to a big church in your community and become a member of that church and so forth. So you have an incentive to present yourself as being a Christian. Are you truly born again? Are you truly have a relationship with God? I think those are two different things, though, right? To me, at that time, you know, there wasn't social media. There wasn't the accessibility of the video.
Starting point is 01:07:36 And those are other factors. There was a Billy Graham. We did have a massive. Billy Graham would be on Johnny Carson. He was on the Woody Allen show. He would go over us. At least they would still invite nowadays. You know, when's the last time you saw, you know,
Starting point is 01:07:49 Jimmy Fallon or Jimmy Kim or Bringay, Charlie Kirk or Bringay, any of these guys, the late Great Charlie Kirk. They don't do that. So we were living in a different era. So we were kind of like, we're Christian nation. So maybe TV, social media, changed. We're a Christian nation, but are we Christians?
Starting point is 01:08:05 Are we truly? born again. Have we received Jesus as our forgiver and leader in our lives? What percentage is really born again, though? It's a very small percentage, right? But those are the two Christians. I agree. And so I think you're right. All these factors, social media, the mass media, and so forth, those are all factors. I mean, I remember when Billy Graham was on the Johnny Carson show. That's right. I mean, are you kidding me? Great show. Could you imagine Franklin Graham being on Jimmy Kimmel? I don't think so. Yeah. So, yeah. So we did have those those, those positive. positive influences. We have a rise in Islam in some places that has created a culture where
Starting point is 01:08:41 it's uncomfortable for people to publicly defend their faith. Just to give you that number, during that same period, 2010 to 2020, fastest-grown major religion plus 347 million is Muslim. Now 25.6% of the world versus Christians 28.8, projected to be the majority by 2050 is what they're looking. And you look at the birth rate among Muslims versus a birth rate among eventually evangelical Christians. It's night and day. So there are various factors that are involved. However, I see pockets of good news. I see outbreaks where God is doing amazing things among young people in our country. The recent statistics show that young people are reading the Bible more
Starting point is 01:09:26 than previous generations. You're right, Rob. Can you pull up that Gen Z stat? You're absolutely right. It's just amazing. Yeah. And so I, and you saw what happened. The chart that Conor sent, Rob. In Asbury, at Asbury College and Seminary, where you had an outbreak of the Holy Spirit. You had people coming to faith right and left. I see some positive things going on. But you know, I want to stay on this. I want to push you, challenge you a little bit, go a little bit deeper because I think what people want to know is, I get all the positive.
Starting point is 01:09:54 And we're going to go to it. Because the next thing I'm going to show is where my enthusiasm comes for Gen Z specifically. Their level of interest in wanting to become Christians, wanting to learn about the Bible. you know, and we see that. But the question I want to go to is these countries, Australia was a Christian majority, UK was a Christian majority, France was, Uruguay was, Netherlands was, Canada, a lot of these countries were.
Starting point is 01:10:18 What did the leaders, what did that country do? What did they look away? What did they do for them to all of a sudden be like, oh, let's just be tolerant, it's okay. I'll give an example. Please. The Church of England, which is totally woke. and has become soft on the gospel, has become just, in many people's view, it's kind of a theological joke.
Starting point is 01:10:42 And that's a state-run church. I think state-run churches are a mistake. That's not how the church ought to be flourishing. But that's one example that I think is influencing England. But again, I like to, you know, the factors that would encourage someone, today to be an outspoken Christian are not what they were back in the 50s, 60s and 70s. Back then, it was socially acceptable to be a Christian. Nowadays, you may run into some professional headwinds if you're an outspoken Christian.
Starting point is 01:11:21 Depending on where you work and what you do, it may not be the smartest thing to proclaim it. Charlie Kirk was the modern day Billy Graham meets who was the big Rush Limb. I've always said, Charlie's the combination of Rush and Billy, and they killed them. They killed them for it. That's right. So there's all these negative headwinds that are, and I think it's a pruning process where the people today who are proclaiming that they're followers of Jesus probably really are followers of Jesus.
Starting point is 01:11:53 You know, George Barna, who does a lot of surveys and so forth, did a study one. He came up with five questions to try to determine, is someone a legitimate Christian? five theological questions. Do you agree this, this, this, this, this, and we can't tell him, God knows a heart. But five questions to try to discern. Then he went to various denominations to try to figure out how many people in that church meet those five criteria and are true Christians. What's his outcome? What's he trying to solve for? He's trying to figure out, you may have a thousand people at church. How many are really Christians? And so he went to Baptist churches. You know what he found out? About 29%. That's my recollection. It was like 29%.
Starting point is 01:12:30 Can you pull this up, Rob? Naphtas, 29% from tracking. Catholic, about the same. Not much different. I can't remember this came out a number of years ago, so I can't remember all the other ones. But my point is he was trying to get beyond what people say versus who they are. The incentive to be a Christian today is not what it used to be.
Starting point is 01:12:54 I'm getting death threats. Who am I? The risk of being a Christian today? Yeah. versus what it was back then. You were safer back then? That's right. It was more popular.
Starting point is 01:13:04 So then the question, again, the question becomes, Lee, why? Well, what changed? I think it's a social media. I think it's mass media. As you said, a guy like Billy Graham's not going to get the exposure today that he got back in the 60s. I think it's, in many ways, the rise of Islam and a squelching of Christian beliefs, people expressing them, Well, look at this reporter, or this NBA player you mentioned, who lost his opportunity because he was outspoken saying something that an average Christian would probably agree with,
Starting point is 01:13:42 that there's an unrighteousness to certain behaviors that culture says are fine, and we ought to celebrate and be prideful of. So there's a squelching of Christian belief in that way that I think makes it uncomfortable. comfortable for some people to say, oh, yeah, I'm a Christian, because now a sudden you go, oh, well, are you, you don't believe in choice. You don't believe in, in abortion as being opportunity. It's women's health issue. You want to come out against that, really? You know, and you're likely to get challenged today where you wouldn't be challenged back in the 60s. You'd be celebrated. I mean, that was, everybody claimed to be a Christian, regardless of how many
Starting point is 01:14:23 truly were. Yeah, it's, it's interesting when you see that. Now, while we're talking over here collectively with a couple of my teammates, conversation came about a barrier to entry. Because, you know, sometimes, you know, different denominations or sects will say, well, let me tell you, you know, it's very hard to be a Catholic. You know, try out, you know, the whole nine months starts in September, and then you have to do this, and you have to be committed to do this to be a Catholic. You can't just come and become a Catholic overnight.
Starting point is 01:14:55 Yeah. Right? or if you want to be a Jew, it's not like Jews are going around saying, just accept, you know, and you're going to be fine based on the Talmud, no, it's going to take a year to two years to be a Jew. You know, to become a Muslim seconds, to become a non-denominational Christian seconds. What do you say to people that, you know,
Starting point is 01:15:13 make the argument of the barrier to entry, you've made it so easy to become an non-denominational Christian that people are actually not valuing it versus the reason why 2025 Catholic Church grew something, much and out a very big growth year and they're expecting to have even a bigger year this year is they don't just allow you to join you. Do you have to do certain things to be part of that church? What do you say to that? Well, certainly in the earliest days of Christianity before a person was baptized, they would catechism, go through a catechism with them in a sense. They would
Starting point is 01:15:44 educate them. What is the faith about? Cause a discipleship. Yeah, cause of discipleship, things like that. And, you know, I think where the American church has fallen down is in the area of discipleship in the area of people understanding of what it really entails to be a follower of Jesus. But having said that, I certainly don't want to add to what the Bible says in terms of what it takes to become a true follower of Jesus. You know, the Bible is 700,000 words plus. It's a big book. It's 66 books. It can be very complicated to go through and to try to figure out, you know, exactly what's the central message. I like to, I say, you know what, give me 21 words. You know what? give me 21 words.
Starting point is 01:16:24 One verse to me sums up everything. Romans 623 says, for the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life through Christ Jesus, our Lord. So the wage of sin is death. What we deserve, what we earn, the consequences of living a life,
Starting point is 01:16:41 opposing God, failing to follow his teachings and so forth, the consequence of that is death, which means eternal separation from God. Nobody wants that. That's what hell is. but the free gift of God, not something we have to earn. We don't have to go through a process of education and so forth.
Starting point is 01:17:01 The free gift of God is eternal life. How? Through Christ Jesus, our Lord. In other words, he went to the cross. He paid the penalty we deserve for the sins that we've committed, and he offers forgiveness and eternal life as a free gift of his grace. So I don't want to lose the fact that so often in history, we've added things to that and we've made it, oh yeah, but you've got to do this and you've got to do that and you got to do this.
Starting point is 01:17:27 No, you want to receive Jesus as your forgiver and leader. You want to receive this free gift of forgiveness and eternal life. It is a prayer like I prayed on November the 8th of 1981 of repentance and faith that took me from an atheist to a believer, took me from someone who's rebellion in rebellion against God to now a son of God forever, took me from someone who was headed for hell to someone who someday will spend eternity with God forever in heaven. So I don't want to lose the beauty of the gospel, the beauty of God's grace.
Starting point is 01:18:02 I was talking to one of your staff members who has kind of had a tough background, you know, and knows a lot of people who, you know, tough folks. And he said the beauty to me of Christianity is to see these hell's angels, become devoted powers of Jesus. And that is done through this gospel. Through this, you know, what happens after you do that
Starting point is 01:18:29 is our values begin to change. Our character begins to change. Our morality begins to change. Our worldview, even our politics begin to change after that. I mean, when I was an atheist, the ugly truth about me was when I came home from work, If my little daughter was just a little toddler playing with some toys in the living room
Starting point is 01:18:52 and she heard me come home from work, she would just gather her toys and go into a room and shut the door. Why? So I was going to be drunk again. So I was going to be yelling and screaming and literally kicking holes in the walls out of anger and frustration. That's who I was. And then, after I had an investigation of years, came to faith, prayed that prayer of receiving this free gift of God's grace. he began to change my values and my character, my morality, and my parenting and so forth, to the point where my little girl, she was five years old when I came to faith,
Starting point is 01:19:24 she was watching, God has changed, something's different with my dad, something's changing with my dad, something's new with my dad. She's five, she can't articulate it, but she, and it took about four or five months, and then one Sunday morning she came up to my wife and she said, Mommy, I want God to do for me what he's done for daddy. And she prayed a simple prayer like that. She became a follower of Jesus. Today, she's 50 years old.
Starting point is 01:19:54 She's the mother or two of my two oldest grandchildren. We're the best of friends. We write books together. And same thing with my son. My son saw the difference in his sister and his mom and his dad. And he came to faith in a young age too, but he took an academic route and ended up getting a PhD in theology. And now as a seminary professor,
Starting point is 01:20:14 teaching young people about Jesus Christ and future pastors about Jesus Christ. And at Talbot Seminary at Biola University. And then 13 years ago, his wife gave birth to our first grandson. And he named him after me. Wow. So God healed our family. Wow. God changed our family.
Starting point is 01:20:35 God changed my children. That's amazing. So I say, you know, it sounds too simple. It sounds too easy. but that's the gospel it's free now on the other side of that you know john 112 says but as many has received him to them he gave the right to become children of god even to those who believe in his name and i notice that forms an equation of what it means to become a true Christian believe plus receive equals become so i have to believe certain things like jesus is who he claimed
Starting point is 01:21:08 to be proved by returning from the dead so you believe but that then you have to receive. And that's what you do through a simple prayer of repentance and faith. And you become a child of God. And then your life begins to change. And if there's no evidence of that, if your life doesn't begin to change, you have to question whether your initial prayer was really heartfelt. So, you know, what a great testimony you're sharing with the family,
Starting point is 01:21:33 and especially for your son to name 13 years ago grandson after you. It is granted a middle name, but to me that's enough. That's okay. that's plenty. You know, even, you know, your father followed the same thing, right? Walter Middle name one of the boys. Right. But, you know, you'll sit there and you'll talk to those who maybe, not mock Christianity, but maybe take some shots at it, and they'll say, give me a break. Like maybe some, we have a guy on our podcast who's Jewish. Yeah. And say, Tom will say, once you go to a church, Jews for Jesus, right? He'll say, I think that's what it's called.
Starting point is 01:22:09 You know, so why don't you go see their testimony, what happened with them, right? and they'll say, stop it. You mean to tell me, Lee, that a, you know, a girl, Lily Phillips, who slept with, you know, a thousand men in 24 hours, if she accept Jesus Christ as her savior, she saved? You mean to tell me the other day had Joey Morlino on the, you know, the current, FBI says, the current boss of the Philadelphia crime family. This guy's been documented, but, you know, they weren't able to get him on. that maybe he's taking out seven guys.
Starting point is 01:22:43 Yeah. And we had a great conversation about a lot of different mobsers on, and he said, you know, you want me to believe that Sammy De Bo Gravano, who was tied to 19 different murders excepted Jesus Christ
Starting point is 01:22:53 and now he's going to heaven? You want me to believe that? You want me to believe that a Hitler that killed all these different people if he except Jesus Christ is going to go to heaven? You know, that's the problem with Christianity. The fact that you guys...
Starting point is 01:23:03 You know what? I want to say to them, yes. That's exactly right. My father-in-law was an atheist. And after I became a Christian, he said, don't ever bring up the name Jesus to me. Okay, he was a nice guy, but he was a strong atheist. And I finally led him in a prayer to receive Jesus in the final conversation before he died. And I believe he'll be in heaven and we'll spend eternity together.
Starting point is 01:23:32 And I think that is the power and the beauty of the Christian message. I wrote a book called The Case for Grace. and every chapter is a story about someone who is the most unlikely candidate for conversion. And yet God intersected with their life. They gave their life to Christ. They received this free gift of forgiveness and eternal life. They follow Jesus as their leader. And they've been radically, radically revolutionized,
Starting point is 01:23:58 including the guy who ran the torture center for the Cameroos in Cambodia, who's now life in prison and telling everybody he meets about Jesus, God's changed his life. That is the radical truth of Christianity. And when we add things to it and say, well, you got to do X, Y, and Z to kind of earn your way or show that you're good enough. No, none of us is good enough. We've all fallen short, the Bible says. And the consequence of that, unless we receive this gift of forgiveness in eternal life, is not anything we want to find out for ourselves. So that becomes the argument, right, to say, you want me to tell, you want me to believe that these guys are going to believe? And you want them. I want them to believe because I've seen it. I've seen the, I'll tell you a story. You got a minute? Yeah, of course. Okay. So there was a guy named Robert. Robert was the biggest narcissist you probably ever meet. Very successful business guy, multimillionaire, had a woman in every city, drunk, gambler, gambled away millions of dollars. He had two corporate business. jets that he bought, and he had his name painted on the tails of both of them.
Starting point is 01:25:13 Very humble. Yes. Well, sometimes he'd take both of them up, and he'd be sitting in one just so we could watch his name fly through the clouds of the other jet. That's a narcissist, right there. That is a narcissist. He's qualified. That's right. So one day, toward the end of his life, he's on the beach here in Florida, and God speaks to him. Talk about the supernatural. God spoke to him on the inside, not through his ears. And God said, Robert, I've saved you more times you'll ever know. Now you need to come to me through my son, Jesus. He was rocked by, what was that?
Starting point is 01:25:48 So he called the only guy he knew who was a Christian. Gifford, the sportscaster, Frank Gifford. Remember Frank Gifford? He calls Frank Gifford. Frank, you're a Christian. I just had this experience. Who's Jesus? And Frank said, read that book, Case for Christ, by least Rob.
Starting point is 01:26:02 That'll explain it. So anyway, this guy, Robert becomes a radical born again. person. His life is transformed. When he gave his, he was going to be baptized. Would we know this individual or not? I'll tell you the punchline in a minute who he is. Robert gets up at his baptism and he tells his story and he says, I was running away from God. I hated the idea of God. And then he spoke to me. And then he looked at people in the Congress. Have you met him? Has he changed your life? Do you know him? And the pastor ripped up his sermon. He said, you've heard the gospel. Anyone, and this church had never had an altar call in their whole, anyone who wants to
Starting point is 01:26:42 come forward right now, receive Jesus and be baptized, come forward. And this guy got up from the second row and came forward. And another two people over there. 700 people came forward in two services. 700 people. And so Robert and I became friends. He called me to thank me for writing the book. we became friends, and then he died about a couple years later. And at his request, on his tombstone, thousands of people came to his funeral. Matthew McConaughey gave the eulogy. And on his tombstone, it just says, believe in Jesus Christ. Now, as you said, who is this guy?
Starting point is 01:27:22 Why did thousands of people come, why did Matthew McConaughey give his eulogy and so forth? Who is this guy? Evil caneval. Wow. The motorcycle daredevil rider who had the most broken. bones of anybody according to the Guinness Book of World Records. Evil caneval became a born again follower of Jesus. We became good friends and he was absolutely sold out to Jesus. And that was right at the end of his life. And yet God through that one prayer that he prayed.
Starting point is 01:27:55 At one point he just said, God, he said, Satan, get out of my life. Get out of my life. I want to receive Jesus as my Lord and Savior. And God grew something in his. heart and changed his values and character. He could not stop talking about Jesus. There was a men's magazine. They wanted to do a profile of him, and they didn't know about his conversion. So they went to interview him. He didn't want to talk about all those girlfriends. He didn't want to talk about all the things he had been invited. He wanted to talk about Jesus. And so the writer said, what do I do here? So he writes this article based on all this old stuff. And at the end, he just said, and so I talked to him, and all he wanted to talk about is Jesus. And that was it.
Starting point is 01:28:33 So that is the power of the gospel to transform a life to say I don't have to fulfill 18 requirements. I don't have to try to be something. I can't be on my own. I need the power of God to live a godly life. I couldn't have. I mean, I was heading down a dark alley before I was a Christian. and if I had not come to faith, I don't know what would happen. And God rescued me because of a prayer and just said, God, I'm throwing yourself on your mercy because you're a merciful God.
Starting point is 01:29:18 And I am a sinner. I know. That's no mystery about that. And I just want to receive this free gift. You tell me it's free? Okay. I'm going to take it your word. It's a free gift.
Starting point is 01:29:30 forgiveness, eternal life. That's amazing. It's a great story. Evil Cuneville. I didn't know where you were going with Robert. Yeah. That was just a given name. That was his given name.
Starting point is 01:29:41 You know, when he died, just before he died, he was shopping for a new motorcycle. And he said, Lee, I'm going to take you for a ride. And I thought, I don't want to be on the back of Evil Cinevelover's motorcycle. And so when he died, I thought, well, now at least in heaven, it'll be safe. We'll have a motorcycle. He's not going to crash on clouds. That's right.
Starting point is 01:29:59 It's going to be fine. It's going to be small crows. That's right. But let me, your, you've read the Quran. You obviously read the Bible many times and you've gone through the studies, the researches that you've done. What is your impression of, you know,
Starting point is 01:30:13 the religion of Islam and Prophet Muhammad? When you read about him and you read the stories, you know, one asks, what caused this religion to get as popular as it is that in the world today, one out of four person living today is a Muslim? How did that happen? What was so special about Prophet Muhammad? Yeah. Well, you know, Islam was spread by the sword in the early days.
Starting point is 01:30:37 It was a conquest religion to conquer other peoples. And, you know, I look at the life of Jesus and how he lived and what he taught, the beatitudes, the sermon on the Mount, his beautiful, wonderful, life-changing sermons and teachings that he gave his parables. And then I can contrast that with Muhammad and say, golly, he consummated his marriage with a nine-year-old. I mean, seriously? And, you know, I have friends.
Starting point is 01:31:12 Nabil Qureshi was my good friend, who was a doctor, a medical doctor, who wrote a book called Seeking Allah, Finding Jesus. And it's a powerful book about how he did the search and investigated Christianity as a Muslim and became a devout Christian. and we became very good friends. He died of cancer. I was at his bedside shortly before he passed.
Starting point is 01:31:34 And he did what few people do, which is to say, I'm going to investigate it. I'm going to check it out. I'm going to look at what is the evidence for the truth of Islam versus what is the evidence for the truth of Christianity. I just encourage anybody to do that. Be as objective as possible.
Starting point is 01:31:50 I'll tell you, I have a good friend who's a Muslim, and he came over to my house for dinner, and we're grilling in the backyard, And I said, you know, let's set aside religion. It's just set aside religion. I said, let's just look at history. Let's look at facts. I've got all of this evidence that Jesus did die on the cross,
Starting point is 01:32:09 these things we talked about earlier. I've got these four E's that point to not only the death of Jesus, but his resurrection from the dead. I said, these are first century sources. This goes right back to the beginning. And then I said, what have you got? You've got a book 600 years later by a guy who said, an angel in a cave told him it isn't true.
Starting point is 01:32:29 Sur 4 verse 157, Jesus didn't really die in the cross. I said, let's just look at, let's just weigh the historical data. Where does that come out? And he looked at me and said, I choose to believe the Quran. Okay, you have that freedom to do it, but I'm asking, where's the evidence? Where are the facts? Where's the data? And I believe it points toward the truth of Christianity.
Starting point is 01:32:56 So, you know, we're facing a very interesting time with the rise of Islam around the world. And some of the values that seem to be clashing with American values and so forth. So I'm going on 75 years old. And I'm kind of happy that I'm going to be checking out before too long. I'm not sure I want to be around for the next 20 years. Because of what could happen by 2050? Yeah, I mean. What's the worst thing that could happen?
Starting point is 01:33:25 because like... Well, in the end, Christianity wins. In the end, Jesus wins. In the end, God wins. That's not to say there's not going to be some great tribulation and difficulty in the interim. And I think there will be. I think we're seeing that around the world. My goodness, what happened to the ability of people in free countries like Australia,
Starting point is 01:33:45 like England and so forth, in Scotland, to freely express their faith? And it's being squelched. And what's the consequence? It's consequences people are reluctant to... to share Jesus, reluctant to proclaim themselves as being Christians. Yeah, I mean, you, again, going through the numbers, I have the numbers here. Which countries went from a majority Christian to majority Muslim, right? Turkey, one of them, you know that, where they were at before.
Starting point is 01:34:12 Yeah, now 99% Muslim. You got Egypt, Christian, you know, one of the earliest Christian centers, Coptic Christianity, Muslim conquest in the 7th century, 90% Muslim. Syria, early Christian hub, majority. Muslim. Iraq. Same thing. Strong early Christian presence. Assyrians. My father's an Assyrian. Now we know where they're at. Northern Africa. You hear the stories with Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco, almost entirely Muslim. Lebanon. Yeah. Look at the slaughter is going on in Nigeria right now. But the part with this is, if one were to look and say, you know, this is growing.
Starting point is 01:34:51 And a lot of different, it's coming to Europe. And it's not coming to U.S. It's grown aggressively in U.S. as well. That's right. Now we've got people politically that are involved who, you know, our Muslim, our biggest city, the financial capital of the world is being ran by a socialist. Some even categorically call him a communist Muslim. Yeah. Who was sitting there praying and, you know. And his wife had tweets in which he was endorsing the massacre that took place, which is, to me, unconscionable. But how do we get here in the greatest country in the world and a country that was a Christian majority. I mean, my hope is there's a turning point coming. My hope is that when people see this, like the mayor of New York and others, that this will be a kind of a turning point in our country
Starting point is 01:35:35 to say, wait a minute, we need to get back to the values that our country was founded on. And it's not values of violence and so forth. It's values of free speech, but it's also values, moral values that sync up with Christianity. Yeah, hopefully. But you know, I My best friend in college was a Muslim from Turkey. And I led him to the Lord, Jesus Christ, because he was willing to listen to the evidence. So I'm a little bit naive in the sense that I think Christianity has a truth on its side. And I think ultimately truth ought to prevail.
Starting point is 01:36:16 There's a lot of barriers. There's a lot of issues. And it's tough. And I think it's going to be a lot of conflict in the coming years. I mean, our brothers and sisters in Nigeria being slaughtered. Slaughter. And nobody cares. 53K in the last, I don't know what the number is.
Starting point is 01:36:31 And nobody's talking about it. No, what politician is, you know, speaking out on this issue. So, you know, we've gone down this path far enough, and I'm hoping that there will be a turning point, but I'm just not sure. I just have my faith that Jesus is going to come back. It's good to be there because the one data, Rob, if you want to go to the Gen Z data that we had,
Starting point is 01:36:52 This Gen Z data that just came out this year, this is a U.S. Protestant senior pastors from January 29 to 2026, that were showing that over the past year, if you look at Gen Z, a rise in next-gen engagement, higher engagement in Gen Z ages 13 to 26 years old, 45 percent. Millennials, 27 to 41, 42 percent. Gen X gets lower to 31. Boomers. lower engagement at 25, men 36% versus 31 with women. Ages 18 to 35 women, 40, that's a massive. So when you see this, this gives you hope. It does.
Starting point is 01:37:34 Right? This gives you hope. And how much of this you think could have also been a direct impact of what Charlie was doing, the late grade Charlie was doing? How much you think this impact could be him as well? He certainly sparked something on these college campuses. He had the courage to go in. He lost his life because he did it.
Starting point is 01:37:49 He had the courage to go in and defend the Christian world. view in front of often hostile audiences. And I think it made an impact. I think people said, wait a minute, what did he say? Maybe I should think about that. Could there be truth to that? And so I think he sparked a lot of this stuff. And it's encouraging to me. Now, you know, you can cite all kinds of numbers as you have legitimately showing the people who claim to be Christians has gone down significantly. Sure. But I'm seeing people engaging with the more and more among young people. That, that to me is a very positive sign.
Starting point is 01:38:29 But there's a lot of work to be done. After 19 years, they're back. Frankie Munis, Brian Cranston, and the rest of the family reunite in Malcolm in the middle, life's still unfair. After 10 years avoiding them, how in lowest demand Malcolm be at their anniversary party, pulling him straight back into their chaos. Malcolm in the middle, life's still unfair. A special four-part event.
Starting point is 01:38:51 streaming April 10th on Hulu on Disney Plus. There's no question. There's a lot of work to be done. By the way, how do you view President Trump's relationship with God? How do you process that? Because you've heard some of the things he said. I'm curious how you view it. I do not know.
Starting point is 01:39:11 I just honestly do not know. There's a man that got up and said, I never say I'm sorry. Whereas Christianity involves confessing our sins, turning from those, receiving grace through Jesus Christ and so forth. I don't know him personally. And so I hate to venture any kind of conclusion. But, you know, and I see certain things he does that kind of make me go,
Starting point is 01:39:34 hmm, that doesn't sound like Jesus to me. And I see other things. And I go, yeah, that's, so it's a mixed bag to me. And I don't know what to conclude. Do you think God uses people like that at times like this? Do you think God sometimes uses the most interesting characters that you may look at and say, you're going to use him? You're going to use her?
Starting point is 01:39:52 Yes, look through the Bible. Look through the people God is used in the past. Look at David. I mean, an adulter who killed this guy and so forth. God uses all kinds of people to accomplish his will. So, yeah. Okay. Last thing before we wrap up, your recent book. Yeah. Seen the supernatural. Yes. What can you tell us about it? Well, I was, as I say, a skeptic about a lot of things. And I wanted to look at what is the evidence and what is the corroboration?
Starting point is 01:40:22 that there really is a reality beyond what we can see in touch and put in a test tube. So I looked at things like near-death experiences, deathbed visions, well-documented miracles, personal interventions of God,
Starting point is 01:40:36 like evil can evil and so forth, to try to look at what is the evidence that there is a realm beyond what we can see and touch. And I think the evidence is strong. I think it's powerful. I mean, you've probably heard about the dreams taking place among Muslims
Starting point is 01:40:48 around the Middle East. Can you talk on that? Yes, I have a whole chapter on it. It's, it's, and it's corroborated. This is what's important. More Muslims have become Christians in the last few decades than in 1,400 years since Muhammad. And 25 to 35% of them have had a Jesus dream, a supernatural dream before they converted. Now, what is not happening is they're not going to sleep, having a dream about Jesus waking up as a Christian.
Starting point is 01:41:17 That's generally not happening. What's happening is they're going to sleep. They're having a dream unlike any dream they've ever had, and it's pointing them towards something external that leads them to faith in Jesus. So I give you an example. There's a woman named Nor, mother of eight Muslim in Cairo. She has a Jesus dream. Jesus is walking with her along a lakeshore.
Starting point is 01:41:37 She feels the love and the grace. And she said, for the first time in my life, I didn't feel shame. And she said, Jesus, why do you come to me? I'm just a poor Muslim mother of eight children. And Jesus said, because I love you, Nor. I died for you. and he said, my friend will tell you more about me tomorrow. She said, who's your friend?
Starting point is 01:41:55 And he gestures toward a man. She didn't even realize I was walking with them along the lakeshore because she was so mesmerized by Jesus. Jesus said, my friend will tell you. The next day, she goes to the crowded marketplace in Cairo's Friday afternoon, and she sees that man from her dream. And she goes up to you're the one. He's the one.
Starting point is 01:42:12 You're the guy. Same face, same glasses, same clothes. You're the one. He said, did you ever dream about Jesus last night? He said, yes. He was an underground church planter. He didn't want to go to the crowded marketplace in Cairo on Friday afternoon. It's a chaotic.
Starting point is 01:42:26 He went that day because he felt like God had an assignment for him. So he said, let me do this. He pulls her aside and he opens the Bible and spends three hours explaining the gospel of Jesus to her. That's what's happening. So this is not just something being conjured in people's imaginations because it points towards something external that corroborates her encounter with this missionary. And those are the kind of stories I document in the book. You know, it's so common in the Middle East.
Starting point is 01:42:59 Sometimes in Cairo you can pick up the newspaper and you'll see an ad. And the ad says, call this number and we'll tell you about the man in white you met in your dream last night. And people just call up. He said, met Jesus. The guy I interview about this is the world's leading expert on this topic. And he said, Lee, I could pick up the phone right now. I'll call Kuwait. I'll call Saudi Arabia. I'll call Iran. I'll call Afghanistan. I'll give you five more
Starting point is 01:43:23 stories right now. This is a worldwide phenomenon that God, because he loves people. Some of these countries are closed to the gospel, as you know. And, you know, it's a crime for someone to convert from Islam into Christianity in some places. And it's as if God says, you think that's going to stop me? Watch this. And he rolls up his sleeves and begins. begins to bring these mystical dreams. It's a beautiful thing. It's a beautiful thing that's happening. By the way, I know you like stats a lot.
Starting point is 01:43:55 I'm going to give you one that you're going to like. House church movements in Iran. Oh, yeah. Estimated at 300,000 to a million converts up from 2,000 to 5,000 20 years ago, figures from advocacy organizations not independently verified. So Iran is having a massive movement right now. Absolutely. With converts, and you're talking about Iran, which right now has a ton of challenges they're dealing with.
Starting point is 01:44:25 You're seeing the same thing happening right now with Philippines. 146, 143 million Christians projected by 2050, 40% growth, approximately 80% Christians. Ethiopia, 85 million Christians. You're seeing the growth happen in many places as well. Yes, yes. specifically in Iran. Yes. And that's somewhere I lived for 11 years.
Starting point is 01:44:49 So I know what that life is like to see Christians growing there. I remember going to a Christian church. We'd go every Sunday with my Friday because in Iran, the Sunday is Friday. We don't have Sundays off. We have Fridays off. And it was, hey, you know, when you go everywhere, just be careful because if you're too proud, it could take you. They could do this.
Starting point is 01:45:05 They could do this. It's amazing the courage you're seeing around a lot of, as unsafe as we are here, speaking on our faith. Yeah. It is a thousand times more unsafe in Nigeria, in Iran, and a lot of these other places for these folks that have the courage to do that. And Lee, I got a lot of respect for you for what you've done. You've changed a lot of people's lives through the books that you've written, including mine, because Case for Christ was a very big book for me at a time where I was logical, a friend of mine whose name is Armand. No one in school would have ever thought that we would have became Christian, the two of us, specifically.
Starting point is 01:45:42 unlikely candidates. Unlakely candidates. And for the audience that's watching this, if you enjoy the message, you probably have three or four books to order, especially the new one that we have, seeing the supernatural case for Christ, maybe case for grace,
Starting point is 01:45:56 maybe case for church. Maybe all four of them, you've got to go order. And if you got a question for Lee, you can also get a hold of them on Menact as well. We're going to put the link below with the QR code. But Lee, with that being said, it's been a pleasure having you all.
Starting point is 01:46:08 Thank you so much for coming out. I enjoyed it. Great conversation. Really enjoyed it. We're going to put the link. Thanks to all of his books below as well. Take you, everybody. God bless. Bye bye, bye, bye. Hi, I'm Lee Strobel. Atheist turned Christian, author of several books, including The Case for Christ and Seeing the Supernatural. You might have questions about faith, about how we know that Jesus is who we claim
Starting point is 01:46:27 to be, and that there really is a realm beyond what we can see and touch and put in a test tube. So I'd love to chat with you about that. Just go to Mnacht, and then we can connect and talk about these matters of faith that are so important to our lives.

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