The David Knight Show - “Case Files: Murder & Meaning” — A Gritty Graphic Novel
Episode Date: April 30, 2025J. Warner Wallace, ColdCaseChristianity.com, author of the #1 Mystery Graphic Novel in America Dive into the heart-pounding world of Cold Case Christianity’s visually stunning new graphic nov...el that blends raw, realistic crime drama with a subtle yet powerful Christian worldview. Forget preachy tales—this gritty narrative of a team of hardened detectives hunting a cunning serial killer in Los Angeles challenges secular assumptions, sparks deep conversations, and offers free resources to equip you for life-changing discussions.If you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-show Or you can send a donation through Mail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764 Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7 Money should have intrinsic value AND transactional privacy: Go to DavidKnight.gold for great deals on physical gold/silver For 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to TrendsJournal.com and enter the code KNIGHT For 10% off supplements and books, go to RNCstore.com and enter the code KNIGHTBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Joining us now is J. Warner Wallace.
As I said, I've talked to him a couple of times before about his book, Cold Case Christianity,
and he's got a new book that is put out in a very different way, and I really like this.
It's a – I'll just show you the cover here of it.
It is a graphic novel. So there's the
suspense broken right there. I gave away the secret. Thank you for joining us, Mr. Wallace.
Thank you so much. Appreciate it.
Angle to take.
That's right. Tell us a little bit about this and why you did this. And of course, you did
this in conjunction with your son. It's really professionally done.
We've got some images of it that we can show, but it's an amazing book, and it's kind of
a fun way to get the point across that you've made in some of your other books before.
Tell us a little bit about it.
Yeah, yeah.
I think most of my other books, all my other books are non-fiction books that make a case
for Christianity, either for its truthfulness or for its goodness and usefulness. So those are books that we kind of just make a straight
case. But I think there's a lot of folks who are moved more by fiction. And my son always
thinks this too, because we know that we can make a case for something, and you may agree
with that case. But we can also take you on a journey and if you are part of the journey,
you end up living the case. And so this is a graphic novel that is a fictional work about a
team of detectives that are trying to catch a serial killer in Los Angeles County. You know,
we applied all of our experience in the county. So this is going to feel, I think, pretty realistic.
If you're a police officer or detective, you're going to read this and think, oh yeah, that's
pretty much how we do it. But I also think what we're trying to do is to tell a better story,
to tell it we're going to explore an issue that most people struggle with and that is how do we
ground human value meaning and purpose. I think that most of us take our identity for granted and
then at some point we struggle because we're trying to figure out like who are we really? And if you'll notice and if you've seen like today in America there'll
be a number of homicides. It's just the sad truth. Now most of those you're not gonna
know anything about because they're never gonna make the press. But if a celebrity gets
murdered well now that's gonna make the news and suddenly it'll be a national or international
item. Well why? Do we think that celebrities somehow are more valuable than other victims?
We kind of act as though they are.
So how are we grounding human value?
What makes one person newsworthy and somebody else not?
We think from a Christian worldview that every life has value, but how do we ground it?
So what we have here is this is not a Pollyannish kind of Christian story where everyone's going to get saved in the last chapter
and this is a realistic gritty novel and it's a large comic book because it's a
graphic novel. It's kind of like you're watching a storyboarded movie involving
people who are struggling to understand who they are as they chase a serial
killer who is upping the ante every time he kills
somebody. This victim is of increasing cultural value. And what we're trying to do is challenge
the notion that people actually are of increasing value. We think that we want to be able to
ground our identity and our value in something that's transcendent. And so we're going to
make a case for this, but we're going to do it without kind of
beating you over the head.
That's great.
You know, many times I've heard people talk about animal sacrifice, you know, and one
of the first things we see after the Garden of Eden is that God gives skins to Adam and
Eve to cover up their nakedness, right?
Cover up their – now they're aware of what is going on, but he has to kill
an animal in order to make that. And so it's a consistent principle throughout Christianity
that without the shedding of blood there's no forgiveness of sin, right? And so a big
part of that is that people understand the seriousness of sin, because they see when even – you talk about the difference
in human life.
Even when we see a dead animal, we kind of stop for a moment.
If we see a broken branch or a tree or whatever, some plant that's been chopped up, you don't
necessarily think anything about it.
But if you see an animal that's been chopped up, you've got blood all over the place, even that will make an impact on you, let alone a human life.
And as you point out, all human life is valuable.
It's not just celebrities, but again, it's like all life is valuable.
The life is in the blood, and that is a real – I think it's a lesson that God was trying
to give us to drive home just how serious
rebellion to Him is.
Yeah, I think as my son likes to point out, you know, as police officers, we have certain
limitations because there are rights that humans have. So for example, I can't just
kick down your door and enter your house without a warrant, without a reason to do it. But
on the other hand, if someone is screaming in your house that they're being murdered,
they're being killed, well now I can kick down the door
to save that person's life.
We actually think that the value of life,
legally, is more important than even some rights
that you have to privacy.
We recognize as police officers that humans,
human life is important.
Now what I see in culture is that you're
right, what we have a tendency to do is the secular world just sees us as
another evolved creature, another animal like all the other animals and what you
see happening is that typically other animals are now being afforded the same
dignities that we would have in the past only have afforded humans. They're in our
restaurants, they're on the plane with you, they're everywhere and they're
there because we have minimized the difference between humans and other animals.
Now, here's what's interesting. You know from scripture, if scripture is true,
we are unique in the sense that we are image bearers. We bear the image of God.
And the first thing that God does when he gives us the identity, he creates Adam in his image, and then he gives Adam
a name, an identity. And the first thing he asks Adam to do is to then turn and give an
identity to all the other animals. The Christian story is an identity story from the Old Testament
all the way through to the New Testament. And so this is something we wanted to explore.
Now look, I could easily make that gaze on paper
and make it the way I just made it to you.
Or I could tell you a story that we hope is so engaging
that by the time you're done with it,
you'll get this principle, even though in this story,
I think if you were to read this book,
you're gonna get halfway through it
before you even think to yourself,
is this a Christian book?
Because what we wanna do
is we wanna reach people with truth. And
God's truth is everyone's truth. You're stuck with it, whether you're a Christian
or not. If it's true, it's true for everyone. So we thought we could write a book in which
we could make a case that even your unbelieving friends could read and not feel like, oh,
this is so preachy. You know, this is, no, it turns out it's just describing the world
the way it really is. and this is what scripture does
It describes the world and it describes us the way we really are
So you'll see that these characters there's only one Christian character in the entire book and he's treated for the most part
The way that as a non-believing cop I treated most Christian cops I knew which I kind of marginalized them
Yeah, yeah. Yeah. Yeah, here comes the Christian view.
Okay, great.
And you'll see this is probably true and many of the people who read this book are going
to say, but you know what, this is true in my world too.
My non-Christian friends don't really take what I say seriously about this.
So we wanted to create a narrative that was very… that depicts reality the way it is
for a lot of the readers if
we're gonna read this. You're gonna recognize your own struggles trying to tell people about
Jesus, trying to tell people about what's true. And so this is a book that may not land,
every plane may not land safely at the end of the runway because life is that way. You
can share, I've got a father who's a cop, who's a detective, who's now retired, of course, and he's 85, and he is not interested in hearing about the gospel.
And as many years as I've spent trying to help him see it from the same perspective that I take
as a detective, he is willfully rejecting anything that I tell him. Well, you probably have someone
in your life like that too,
if you're a reader of this book.
So we wanna have a book that reflects that reality as well.
Well, you know what I said earlier about,
just the specialty of, what is special about life in general,
and you're right, we're created in the image of God,
and there's a huge difference between us and the animals.
And one of the things that we are seeing now,
we talk about the dignity of human life,
one of the things that we really have to be aware of,
the push that is coming against that,
and we're seeing it across the board,
it goes back to B.F. Skinner and other people talking about,
beyond freedom and dignity,
they're just going to treat human beings like animals.
And we see it more in the more contemporary writings of people like Yuval Harari, just
saying, well, you know, we're going to take away, you're not going to have any freedom
or dignity.
We're just going to control you as we would an animal.
And so I think that's a really important theme to drive home.
And it's a great way to do it in a detective novel especially because everybody loves detective novels they love you know
forensic novels and all the rest of this stuff I mean it is a it's always
captured the human imagination because it is about life and death and it is
also about a mystery and a puzzle isn't it? Yeah it is you know this this form of
novel is I always wanted to write fiction and I realized that there's a difference between writing fiction and writing nonfiction.
There's definitely a different skill set. My son is an avid growing up, he's now 36, he's been on the job 13 years.
He's always an avid comic book reader. And I think if you are an avid reader in a particular genre, well then you have a better shot at writing something in that genre. So he, this is what we had to contribute was
basically a script. It's like a movie script. You know, say a page one, he's
going to have, you know, five panels. These panels are going to be these
scenes, these dialogue, this action. Then we give it to a group of illustrators
that are really gifted illustrators.
They're the same illustrators that created
their chosen graphic novel.
So they're very gifted and they basically then
do all the rest of the heavy lifting.
If people like this book, and I hope they do,
it's largely because it was illustrated so magnificently.
I mean, we first got it back and we're watching
how they're developing the characters. Yeah, I mean, when you got it back and we're watching how you're developing the characters.
Show some pictures.
Yeah.
I mean, when you see the character development, I'm like, wow, you know, that's actually
better than I had imagined.
You know?
So I think that this partnership between writers and creative artists has been really helpful.
Yeah.
Yeah, we got a clip up there now of a couple of these different things.
And I love the graphic novels and the comic books.
And of course, I learned how to read with comic books.
My mom would take me in tow before I started school.
And this is back in the Silver Age of comics when they were a lot safer than they are now.
Yes, yes.
They've kind of, they've pandered to adult or to college kids, I should say, in terms
of what they got.
But they were pretty safe back in the late 1950s and stuff. And it was great because, like you point out,
it is like a storyboard to a film.
Yeah, you know what's interesting about that? Is that my son will say this because he found
my brother-in-law's old comic book collection from the early 1960s. And you're absolutely
right. There was far less objectionable material
in those old comic books. And what he told me as growing up as a young Christian, he got his,
of course, his marching orders from scripture, but he found that a lot of his character development
came from these comic books, especially Spider-Man, this kid who's got to save the world,
but he's getting a chance to go on this date. And of course, as soon as he gets to the point
of taking the girl out, this is when Dr. Octopus attacks
and he's got to change his, you know,
I've got to act sacrificially.
I want to do this thing, but I need to do that thing.
Well, I thought really, so you were telling me that
some of your character was developed through comic books,
but I realized that this is probably true
for a lot of our young people, that issues
that are sold to them under the ruse of fiction become the kinds of things that develop people's
character. That's why we as Christians need to be in this space, because you're right.
I agree.
What's happening, if you're reading comics or graphic novels today, you're gonna have
to turn a blind eye to a lot of offensive non-Christian
material. But can we do a story that's every bit as gripping, entertaining, gritty, but also teaches
a Christian worldview so that when character development is actually going to occur naturally
as you're reading fiction, it's the kind of character that's also consistent with the teaching
of Scripture. That's what we're trying to do with this kind of a book.
Darrell Bock That's great.
Yeah, when we go back and look at it, it's like comparing a contemporary movie, comic
books of today, graphic novels of today versus the stuff back in the 50s.
It's like a Disney movie about Davy Crockett or something versus movies that focus on a psychotic joker character for Batman.
It's now the villains have become the heroes of these things and they've become really,
really rough.
As you point out, when I was a kid, the characters would, and there was a reason for that.
When they first started out, they were pretty rough, just like films and just like they
had the Hays code for movies.
They also came up with a comic book code.
They said, if you're going to target kids with this stuff, then you're going to follow
certain rules.
And so it was kind of quasi-mandated that they would have to follow those rules.
And the characters were really straight up.
And they were good and they were honorable characters.
My son Travis is working aboard here.
I used to read him novels from G.A. Hinty.
And in those novels, even the villains,
the villains were better than our heroes today.
And I'm not joking.
They had better, higher ideals and they treated people
better than the heroes treat people today in our movies.
And so, and fiction.
So those things were there.
As a matter of fact, they'd always have the same look like a stamp and I never knew what
that was when I was a kid. That was up on the cover of the thing and that was
saying that it had been certified and was with a comic book code. It's one of
the reasons why Mad called itself a magazine because it didn't follow that
code. They were really sorry they it wasn't anything that was sexual or violent or anything
like it is in the graphic novels today, but it was sarcastic.
Yes, that's right.
A lot of satire and everything like that.
And so they were proud of the fact that they did not adhere to the code.
And so I think the code was basically you're going to present a good moral character and
in our society at that point in time. Christianity
had a lot of influence on that. And really, even if these people were not Christian, it
was the Christian influence that was influencing the art and the culture. And you're right,
we do need to take that back.
Dr. Craig Love Well, and think about this. The Christian
theology tells us that there's an enigma of man, that we are duplicit. We have the capacity
for unbelievable altruism and goodness because we have been created in the image of God. tells us that there's an enigma of man, that we are duplicit. We have the capacity for
unbelievable altruism and goodness because we have been created in the image of God.
But we also are deeply rebellious and have inherited that sinful condition from Adam.
So that's why we are these duplicit kind of beings. Now what's interesting is we went
from a point in history where we would rather, we preferred to write about what we could be
than what we really are. Now we've shifted and we, yeah, it is true that we are
duplicit. We have a capacity for both greatness and evil, but we want to focus on the greatness.
We want to say, hey, this is the ideal we ought to aspire to. But I think what
we're seeing right now, especially in comics, is that instead we're just sketching out the characters
as they really are, as dark as their nature can also be. Well, look, I get it. You're going to see
in this book that we've been very realistic with all the detectives and they have a dark side,
okay? But we want to aim at something. And you know that old saying that if you aim at nothing,
you hit it every time? That's exactly right. So we have to write at something and you know that old saying that if you aim at nothing you hit it every time
That's exactly right. So so we have to write it stories
I think that aim at something that is good
there ought to be some example in the book that is not trite and
Tribulized and stereotyped but but offers a solution to the problem that everyone else is experiencing
And and so hopefully if we do this in a way that is compelling, you're going to come away from
reading this book and you're going to have, I think it could, for number one, if you're
not a believer, I hope it'll open up your thinking to the possibility that Christianity
has something to teach you about how to live.
But if you are a believer, I hope it's going to give you much more confidence.
And also, we want to have an alternative for believers who maybe want to have some fun
in this space, this true crime graphic novel space, which right now, if you were to go online, you're
going to get a lot of stuff that you're going to have to ignore some percentage of it if
you want to hold on to your Christian worldview. We wanted something that you didn't have to
do that.
Yeah, yeah, absolutely right. Tell us a little bit about, you know, you also are encouraging
with this some deeper probing and some discussions about Christian worldview.
Tell people what you've got in association with that conversation guide that is also…
Yeah, and I do think this is a gateway book for going to be a gateway book for a lot of people.
So on the inside back cover we have a QR code that if you just hit that QR code it's going to open up
our case closed booklet, which is a case for the resurrection in about 40 pages. So it's going to open up our case closed booklet, which is a case for the resurrection in about
40 pages. So it's going to take you a step further. If you wanted to know, for example,
why this particular character in our story maybe responds a little differently to the
trauma, well, the answer is in his Christian worldview, even though we're just going to
hint at it, we're not going to make it like a punch in the face. But we wanna give you a chance to go.
Now look, if you're somebody who buys a book today
in our economy today, I feel like it's a big ask anymore
for someone to spend, you know, somewhere between $15
and $20 depending on where you buy it, a book like this.
So what we wanna do is offer something
that makes the price seem like it's reasonable.
So what we've done on our website at coldcasechristianity.com
is anyone who buys the book, yes, you have access to that digital QR code.
But also we want to send you a conversation guide that will help you
navigate the conversations that are going to flow out of someone who reads this book. Also, we want to give you our
10, our 10 and a half hour 30 session case makers course.
It's the same course I teach at Gateway Seminary here in Southern California.
And it's a course that is fully robustly illustrated.
It's all videos.
If you take this course,
you will become a much better Christian case maker.
So when someone does have a question
about the Christian worldview,
that maybe is prompted by a book like this
or anyone else's book,
you'll be able to kind of
hold your ground, to be able to make a case for why you … Here's my concern. If you really want
to know what it is you love, what it is your family loves, think about what it is they're capable
of defending, because it turns out whatever it is you're capable of defending, that is your real
God. We just came out of the football draft from college football into the NFL. And I know people who can make a robust case for why so and so should
have gotten drafted or didn't get drafted or should have gotten drafted in a different
position.
Oh yeah. I see that all the time. I kind of flip through it, but you know, I see that
they're all upset because this guy didn't go earlier or whatever.
And it's like, all right.
And there's talk shows that they only have, I mean, literally I was watching
on the sports channels where you might have six hours today of this discussion
with people debating it.
Well, okay, if that's you and you are better able to defend your pro football
team and their selections, then you are able to defend your God.
You've kind of shown your hand as to what you find worth defending. I think we need to
move into a position where we're so geeked out about what we believe about God and about Jesus
that this is the stuff we spend our discretionary timeline. This is the stuff we spend our
disposable time, our disposable income, our disposable thoughts, the stuff that we have
freedom, like you're not working right now, what are you thinking about? There's your God.
You're not engaged with your family, what are you thinking about? There's your God. You're not engaged with your family, what are you thinking about? There is your God. So I think in the end, we have to kind of align our thoughts and align our
abilities. And so we've always wanted to do this, is provide resources that'll help people.
If you do wanna do that, how do you learn? Where do you get that stuff? Yes, you can
buy a book. But what we wanna do is offer those free resources through our website that will help
you to take the next step.
Well, and I love what you do, because, you know, we always have people who will push
back on that.
And I like to have my faith challenged from one perspective or the other, because I always
found that when I get that challenge and I go back and I investigate in it, I come back much stronger.
Because it is true, and it helps me to understand that it's true, if I go back and I investigate,
which is what you did in your life, you go back and you investigate it, and it's not
a blind faith that we have.
And what it does is you find the answers, and as you dig deep,
then it becomes a passion for your life. The more you get into it, and we've been talking
about celebrities. We've had so many celebrities in the last year or so that I've seen there
in their 50s and 60s and say, �You know, I never read the Bible before, but I started
reading it. It's pretty amazing, you know?� Then they want to grab you by the lapel and
tell you about how amazing this is and what they found in it.
And we don't see that in the case of a lot of nominal Christians because they're just
not reading it.
You know, they may be a part of a club or a church or whatever, you know, but they're
not really actively involved in it.
And so if you can get something in that pulls you in, that's what I love what you do in general with a cold case Christianity, is that you answer a lot of these concerns
that other people had, concerns that you had when you first came to it.
Yeah, there's no doubt about it. I mean, I think what we want, I'm hoping to do, to
have my own kids, and as I was raising them and now my grandkids, is to help them develop
an investigative approach.
Yes.
Where, you know, this is worth taking the time to,
like church attendance is not the box you can check
and say okay I'm done.
It's just one of the many things
you're gonna find yourself doing
because you are this in love with the world view,
the Jesus of Nazareth.
So I think the reality of it is,
is how do you do this?
And here's what I love.
This is a world view you could investigate.
Think about it, if you're somebody for example,
who is a Baha'i, and you think that the writings
of Baha'u'llah are magnificent and beautiful
and spiritual, okay great, how could you test those?
How do you test proverbial statements,
even if they're Buddha, if they're Hindu statements,
whatever they may be, how do you test that?
This is not just that Jesus said smart things,
of course he did, it's that this is a claim about something that happened in history. That's very unusual if you
think about it. You don't have claims about history that can be tested in the high faith
or in Buddhist faith. This is testable in the sense that it records an event. If it didn't
happen, it's all false. Yeah.
So you can now, there's something you can point to now, which is the resurrection. Do we have
good reason to believe the resurrection occurred? If it did, then this guy's in a different category,
Jesus. He's the one wise guy who, unlike all the other ancient wise guys, rose from the grave.
We need to know, have confidence that that's the case, because otherwise he's just one ancient voice among many who also said wise things. Or
is he the voice? And by the way, because we are created in the image of this God,
we always have a shadow of his teaching in our lives. We are image bearers. We
cannot avoid it. Even when we think, do you know how many Christ figures
there are in history?
The stories that are like the Jesus story that emerge.
Now you could argue that those that come after Jesus
are simply people who are copying the Jesus story.
But there are a lot of Christ figures that are pre-Jesus.
Why? Because this is God's story.
And if you're an image bearer, which you are,
you kind of innately have God's story in your head, whether you like it or not.
Yeah, that's right.
So I think in the end, we wanna be able to use our giftedness, whatever that may be,
all of us, even those of us who are listening to this show, to be creative. And we ought to own
the arts. We have, by the way, for generations. Don't step back from the arts, continue to write,
write fiction, do Christian movies. Yes, I know, people will say, for generations. Don't step back from the arts. Continue to write. Write fiction. Do
Christian movies. Yes, I know, people will say, �Well, they're not the one I hoped
they wish they would be.� Well, that's on us. We can do a better job. So let's do that
better job so we have something to point to so our young people have an alternative that
actually is God-honoring.
I agree. Oh, yeah. And as a matter of fact, you're talking about doing the best job that
you can. That's the key. You know, When we look at the architecture, for example, in Europe, the great cathedrals and everything that were
there, and there was a multi-generational effort to show their best, to show their best
skills and all the rest of this. They poured it into that regardless of what you think.
That was their desire to do something in some way that honored
God. And everything that we do, I think as Christians, ought to be done to a standard
that people would say, �Oh, I want to know more about this guy, what motivates him, you know,
to do something of that quality.� But as you were saying, it all comes back to the resurrection
of Jesus, and we�re just a week away from Resurrection Sunday.
And you've got Case Closed that is also there at your website and you have a link to that
as part of � people get this graphic novel � it's a link to that.
Tell us a little bit about that.
Yeah, Case Closed was really something we wanted to do a long time ago.
We've done a couple of different versions of what we would hope to be a case,
quick case of the resurrection.
Because I do think this is the one most important
piece of evidence that is in the Christian worldview.
Paul says, if the resurrection didn't occur,
then number one, we have been false witnesses.
So we've been lying to you.
So that ought to discredit pretty much
everything else we've said.
But also, you have no hope of your own resurrection.
This is all in 1 Corinthians 15.
So if you look at this,
this is the key thing that I knew I had to investigate first. Do I have good reason to
believe that this resurrection thing occurred? Because that puts him in a different category
altogether and that category is the difference between any other ancient sage and Jesus of
Nazareth. So this is like a 30 or 40 page, very small booklet. It's the quickest version I can give you of why I think the
resurrection is the most reasonable inference from the historical evidence.
Now look, some of you are going to say, well I can't believe that because it
includes something supernatural. You know, it turns out that that supernatural thing
is what's keeping most people out. Here's what I mean. If we had an ancient set of documents
that just described Jesus of Nazareth
as a simple teaching rabbi in the first century,
that's all he is.
He said some wise things, but never worked a miracle,
never rose from the grave, never walked on water,
was not born of a virgin.
He's just a guy, just an ancient guy who was smart.
There wouldn't be a single skeptic on planet Earth
who would deny the historicity
of Jesus of Nazareth. Based on the manuscript evidence we have, it's so strong. There
is no ancient who is better attested than Jesus. But if you insert one miracle into
those same ancient manuscripts, suddenly skepticism is at a high. None of it can be true. Why?
That just tells you that the skepticism
is not based on the strength of the manuscript evidence.
It's not, it's based on a presuppositional bias
against the supernatural.
Because trust me, take out the supernatural elements
and everyone loves it.
But they, so that is really about us having to examine.
Do we have really good reason to reject anything
outside of space, time, matter,
physics, and chemistry? I actually think there's good reason to believe there is something beyond
space, time, matter, physics, and chemistry just from the science of those who study the universe.
Yes. I think we're stuck with that. The only question is, is that thing outside of space,
time, matter, science, and chemistry and physics, is that thing outside of space, time, matter, science and physics,
is chemistry and physics, is that thing personal?
Is it a personal being?
If there is a personal being that starts the universe, well then I suspect you could do
anything you want once the universe has been started.
So there's no big deal miracle in the pages of the New Testament.
The biggest miracle of all is in Genesis 1.
Everything from nothing. That's big. If you can do that, you can probably walk on water. So that
helped me to at least navigate my bias against the supernatural. I was somebody who believed in Big
Bang cosmology. That's still the standard cosmological model of the astrophysicists who
are working today as secularists.
Well, they believe that there's something outside of space time and matter that begins all space time and matter. Well, what is that?
Mm-hmm. What kind of force could it be? Is it an impersonal force?
Or is it a personal force? Why would we think, for example,
it's an impersonal force and be stuck on that? If it's a personal force, we at least have to have a
hypothesis that includes God as a creator. I'm not saying you all have to do
this, you have to jump in that direction, but can you at least allow that as a
hypothesis? Because I'll tell you what, if you do, you're gonna find that it has
much better explanatory power for a lot of other things in the universe. So I
think in the end that was what had to open the door for me. Yeah, yeah, if there
was ever a time, as people have said, if there was ever a time when there
was literally no thing, then there still would be nothing that's out there.
And you know, we even talk about the word supernatural.
There must be something that organizes this that is above nature.
And we've seen a lot of materialistic scientists say that.
We looked at Crick and Watson who discovered DNA.
They could no longer deny an intelligent design, but instead they created in their imagination
and said, well, we'll call it panspermia.
It must have been aliens who came here and did this.
But they will not.
Then you take it to the next step.
I'm going to, I'm still going to, I'm the God of the Bible, even if I see the inevitability
and the impossibility of this happening without
intelligent design. So there's always that there. But that's the other thing I like about
Christianity. It's always about critical thinking. It encourages, it invites critical thinking,
and that's what you do with cold case Christianity. You invite critical thinking, and you have
answers for that. And it's important for us, we can't really go, it's a vital life skill
for us to be able to have critical thinking. And so that's something that we tried to really
stress with our children when we were homeschooling them, was the critical thinking aspect. And
so we would look at creation versus evolution, and we would look at all the biology and,
you know, here's your set of facts and everybody's got the same set
of facts. How do we interpret these set of facts and why would we interpret it this way
or that way? Yeah.
Well and think about this, this is a worldview that I hope when people even when they read
our books whether it's this book or you know fiction or nonfiction, I think this is a very
different worldview. Paul tells us in Romans 12 too that you cannot be conformed to this
crazy world, but you
need to be transformed.
And he had a number of ways he could have said it.
Remember, when I listen to a suspect, I'm listening to all the things and thinking to
myself, he chose to say it a certain way.
Why did he choose to say it this way when there were about six or seven other ways he
could have said it?
Because how you choose to say it matters.
And Paul says in Romans 12, 2, that we are to be
transformed not by the renewal of our will or our hearts or our emotion or our experiences,
like what is it that's gonna make a difference? What's gonna transform your life? Well, it turns
out it's the renewal of your mind. It's about rethinking. This is a thinking person's worldview.
And I know that we've got a generation,
we've got so many different strands of Christianity
in which what's really emphasized is the experience.
What you've experienced.
Share your testimony.
What they're really saying is don't share
the way you thought about this,
the way you rethought all the facts.
What most people are about to share then
is what experience they had, that from that they
interpreted that God was real.
I get it.
God is a God of experiences for sure.
And if you've had an experience, you may be able to attest it to God, but you need to
kind of evaluate it based on the evidence.
It's not just your experience.
Your experience alone will get you into all kinds of trouble.
I have six brothers and sisters who were raised LDS by my stepmother, and they largely will tell you
that they had an experience that confirmed for them
that the Book of Mormon was true, and that Joseph Smith
was a prophet of God.
Well look, your experiences can't be trusted.
They have to be tested against the facts.
And once they're tested against the facts,
you can know if that experience is,
if you've properly interpreted it.
Well, I think we have a worldview that encourages us to not just enjoy the experience of God's
presence, but to test it to make sure it actually is God's presence you're feeling.
Because I believe there's a spiritual realm, but not every spiritual experience you have
will necessarily be from God.
And we have to test the Spirit to see.
So we need to test those experiences.
Yeah, exactly.
We've got to see if that is from God.
And He calls us to worship Him in spirit and in truth.
And we don't want to throw away either one of those because it's an ant.
That's right.
It's not ore, you know.
It's ants.
That's right.
That's a bulls-eye.
And so then He says, �Come, let us reason together.� He says, �They're your sins
being as scarlet, I'll make them white as snow.� So he invites us to use the minds that he gave us, and that is a wonderful thing.
And then he does come with experiences as well.
And so all of that has to be a part of it.
So it is a complete package, and I think a lot of people are missing that.
This is one of the reasons too, David, but I'm thinking this is why we wanted to do fiction.
I have a sense that we can make a case
that you can assent to intellectually.
But fiction takes you along as part of the experience
of the chase for this killer, for example, in this book.
And so it's combining both, what is the case for this,
and two, like I want you to experience something
and my son always says it that yes he learns a lot from non-fiction but it feels like when
he's reading fiction he's drawn into the story and it becomes an experience and I think that's
true for a movie if you watch a movie for those two hours you're kind of transported into that
realm. Well graphic novels are basically just movies
that have been put on paper because they're just
storyboarded movies.
And so we hope that when you open this up,
and even if you're not somebody who likes to read a novel,
graphic novels are so visual, you're just watching a movie.
And so you can take it anywhere you wanna go.
So the idea is to draw people into that experience
because I think this, you're right, this is not an either or.
I would never suggest that you develop
your entire Christian worldview from fiction.
That's like saying experiences are all that matter.
At the same time though, you gotta be careful
not to draw all your Christian, robust Christian life
simply from reading non-fictional case books basically,
that are theology or whatever they may be,
because it's gonna be be kind of dry.
That's right.
Like you need to have a heart and head kind of experienced together.
And I think that non-fiction often affects your head, fiction often affects your heart.
So that combination we think we have, especially what I always say is we're trying to bite
the apple from both sides.
Well, it combines the spirit and the truth in a way, you know, when you have that there.
And you know, it reminds me of music, for example, right?
When we have music, if you've got good lyrics, that's great.
And if it moves you emotionally through the music, and then you add the lyrics if they
teach you something that's valuable, that's a great thing as well.
And again, going back to the graphic novels, they are so much like movies.
That was the thing that used to always fascinate me because I can't draw anything.
I can't draw stick figures.
And the fact that somebody could, as they do in your book, you can draw things and there's
a certain kind of kinetic, you can almost see things moving when you look at it because
it is like a storyboard, but a good graphic artist can make it really come alive,
like you're kind of seeing the movement there.
You can see the movement from one panel to the next,
or from the character, what they're doing,
you can imagine it there.
Yes, my son always says that what we contributed
is we contributed the movie's script, or the screenwriters.
And in that screenplay, you're going to have some direction about like who's gonna put the movement should be
What the scene is gonna look like what the characters are gonna say for sure what the action you're writing all of that into the screenplay
but
The artist in a graphic novel is every other person in the movie
He's the director because he's going to direct the action. He is all of the actors.
He's even telling the actors what expressions to take. He is the wardrobe guy. He is the set designer.
He's the lighting person. I mean the artists basically play the role of every other important
person in a movie project. All we do is submit the screenplay and that and we've also given them
liberty the same way a screenwriter was going to give liberty to a director to submit the screenplay. And we've also given them liberty. The same way a screenwriter was gonna give liberty
to a director to direct his screenplay however he sees fit.
You hire the right person, right?
Because you know that you're gonna have to give him
that liberty.
Well, the same is true with this kind of a project.
We had to give the artists the liberty.
We developed the characters, we developed the storyline,
we give them the storyline.
Then they bring it to life.
And we weren't even sure, we had some ideas.
They gave us the rough sketches back
on the different characters.
There's like six major characters here.
And we had some ideas about those characters
and we had some input, of course.
But in the end, I was impressed with what they thought
the character should look like.
And so as, and I think this is awesome, right?
You know, maybe I wouldn't have cast that actor
for that role, but here they thought of something just,
and by the way, they're not just,
they're thinking of it just from their imagination.
It's really an amazing process to go through.
But I think in the end, when you see it,
I think most people don't think of comic books
as being that thoughtful,
but there is so much that's happening behind the scenes.
For example, we started this project two and a half years ago
and we were ready to go.
We could have, I mean, we could have had this, if we could just snap your fingers and produce 160 pages of art,
we could have been ready in a day.
It took two and a half years for us to get from concept to published work and that's
largely because it's a collective effort and it's like making a movie.
Well it certainly does show. And just like that last panel that you had up there, Travis,
that there's one at the bottom where a guy comes up behind and hits somebody from the back and you
see crack and you see the cap flying. I mean, there's just such kinetic energy in these graphic
novels. That's what I really enjoy out of it because you can really see it come alive. And
as you point out, you know, they create the characters and they're doing the direction
and the action in it.
So it is a great collaboration and it looks really interesting.
I've seen some of it, haven't had time to go through all of it yet, but it is really
well done.
Again, it is, you can go to ColcaseCrescandy.com.
That's where the people can find it and buy it, right?
I guess they can also get it on Amazon, but if they get it, once they get it, then there
is a code in the back that's going to give them supplemental material, and it is a great
outreach, a great conversation starter with people, I think.
Yeah, I hope it is. I hope it's a gateway book. I think it's the kind of thing that
you can give somebody, and then the conversation begins. Now the question is, are you ready for the conversation? And
that's what we really, I think, our whole ministry is about. If this is a tool that
helps you get active and get ready for the conversation, then we've accomplished our
goal.
That's right. And you know, that's the wonderful thing about it. We used to have a Bible study
in our home back in North Carolina, and when something is coming up like that, you have to – and
it wasn't that I was leading it or anything, but I knew what we were going to be covering.
And so I would look at it and I would study it for a while, and it's that preparation
that is really the benefit to you.
That's right.
And so if somebody goes into this and somebody looks at this and focuses on it, it just gives
them a focus. It gives them something to do. We always ought to be engaged in some way or the other, doing something
that is positive. And so this gives you some direction. It gives you something to contemplate,
to think about critically, and it's really going to build you. And it might help you
to pass that on to somebody else.
Yeah, no, absolutely. It's a catalyst that we've done our job.
Yeah, that's great.
ColcaseChristianity.com. Thank you so much, Jay Warner Wallace, always a
pleasure talking to you. Hey, thanks so much for having me. I really appreciate it.
Thank you.