The Dr. Josh Axe Show - Kirk Cameron Speaks Out on Hell, Demons & the Dark Side of Hollywood
Episode Date: February 5, 2026What if avoiding uncomfortable truths is actually what’s making us weaker, not kinder? Kirk Cameron joins Dr. Josh Axe to talk about hell, Hollywood, and the spiritual cost of a culture obsessed wit...h comfort. This conversation challenges everything we’ve been told about faith, fear, and formation. Watch The Dr. Josh Axe Show every Monday & Thursday on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@drjoshaxe?sub_confirmation=1 🎧 Early Access! Our podcast listeners get every episode early, and you can tune in and be a part of our exclusive listeners below → Spotify Apple Podcast Order my NEW BOOK, The Biblio Diet → https://bit.ly/4oPEP3t Watch my free training on how to naturally balance your blood sugar and reverse your symptoms → DrAxeDiabetesClass.com Discover practical steps you can take today to start healing your thyroid naturally → DrAxeThyroidClass.com If you’re ready to start feeling like yourself again and balance your hormones, take my free class → DrAxeHormoneClass.com Uncover what’s really going on in your body with advanced biomarker testing for hormones, thyroid, and metabolism— plus a 1-hour consultation with a Senior Health Advisor! → MyBloodWork.com CONNECT WITH DR. JOSH AXE Instagram Facebook TikTok X LinkedIn Website Sign up for my newsletter Ask me a question CONNECT WITH KIRK CAMERON Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kirkcameronofficial/?hl=en Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/kirkcameron/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@kirkcameron.official X: https://x.com/KirkCameron Links Shepherding Your Child’s Heart → https://a.co/d/09PVnLzP Be Thou My Vision devotional → https://a.co/d/00XrKLwp Round Table Discussion on Hell → https://youtu.be/Ds3UbUsIaQs?si=kyKpf6roYl2a-U6c Iggy and Mr. Kirk → https://www.angel.com/watch/iggy-and-mr-kirk DISCLAIMER This content is strictly the opinion of Dr. Josh Axe and is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended to provide medical advice or to take the place of medical advice or treatment from a personal physician. All viewers of this content are advised to consult their doctors or qualified health professionals regarding specific health questions. Neither Dr. Axe nor the publisher of this content takes responsibility for possible health consequences of any person or persons reading or following the information in this educational content. All viewers of this content, especially those taking prescription or over-the-counter medications, should consult their physicians before beginning any nutrition, supplement or lifestyle program. MB01J0ISV5AQH0K Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
My response to the outrage, I mean, I really caught hell talking about the afterlife with my son.
I'm like, hey, hey, hey, this is a private conversation. I'm just giving you a window into father and son stuff here.
I wanted to answer those who said, can you go deeper into this topic for us?
If we don't teach these things to our kids when they're young, no doubt.
ChatGPT and GROC and Google will teach them other things when they are young.
and they are. And the Bible will be this mysterious thing that's been buried or hidden away somewhere.
And only by the grace of God will they ever find it. We don't want that to happen.
Kirk, how did you find God in Hollywood? He said, remember this. You didn't find God. He wasn't lost.
You were. And he found you. So one of the most important things we can do today if you want to get healthy,
if you want to experience spiritual breakthroughs, is tell the truth and discuss.
us hard topics. And today I've brought on my friend Kirk Cameron. He is a really well-known
star in media. He's got a great podcast and show. He's a father of six. And today we're going to be
talking about a lot of hard truths, everything from parenting to wellness trends to farming and so
much more. And so excited to have my friend Kirk on the show today. Kirk, welcome. What's up,
my brother? Good to see you. Yeah, good to see you too. I know it was great. We got to meet recently
and talk about chickens and farming.
And you gave me great parenting advice.
In fact, you...
What's more fun than chickens and farming?
And kids.
And kids.
Yeah, not...
And faith.
I mean, you recommended a book for me.
It was on shepherding your kids' heart.
Yes.
So good.
Oh, I'm so glad that you got it.
Yeah.
I remember we were having lunch,
and I think you ordered it right there.
I did.
I did.
One for me, one for my wife, Chelsea.
And your wife's name is Chelsea too.
My wife's name is Chelsea as well.
For my wife, it's actually her stage name.
Did your wife have a stage name?
No.
Okay. She's just Chelsea. Yeah. And so my wife chose that name. So your wife probably didn't. Her mother did.
Her father did. But my wife actually loved it so much. She picked it. That's so great. It's so great. We were after an actress on Growing Pains. That's why she has a stage name. She's just not a, she's not just a strange person who picks new names for herself. But I'm so glad you got that book. That was the book that helped my wife and I when we were new, young parents. And we were losing our mind.
because our son was not sleeping through the night.
And so once we solved the sleeping problem,
then it was like, well, what do you do with the terrible twos
and the threes and the fours?
And how do we do this in a way that's going to be honoring to God?
And this book, Shepherding a Child's Heart,
was our Bible of parenting.
Our pages are stained with the tears of our gratitude.
So I'm so glad that you got it.
You know, one thing that I noticed with our first child,
our daughter, Arwin, she's five.
I've got a two-year-old named Ailan.
And one thing I noticed, I mean, just amazing what kids absorb and how something you could feel like, how this is harmless is harmful.
I'll give you an example of this.
Like our, you know, I will notice, you know, when she was really young, like two and three, we would have her watch, you know, different shows.
And so it was a mixture of things like she liked Paul Patrol.
She liked this show called Peppa Pig.
You know, we would play Veggie Tales, those things.
And she started watching the show Peppa Pig a lot.
And I started realizing after about a year, wait, like you feel like this show's harmless
because there's nothing bad necessarily happening, but the way the kids are acting, isn't that great?
What's Peppa teaching our kids?
Yeah. And so honestly, it was one of those things where it's like, wow, there's a really big
difference between this thing that I think is harmless Peppa Pig. And again, Veggie Tales or a great,
you know, Christian-based, you know, TV show. And the same goes for books. This is one of the things I
love, by the way, I started following you during COVID when you did that campfire thing.
You know, you go out there in the campfire and start trying the truth.
I thought that was you following me around. Were you in that pickup truck just following me everywhere
that I went as I broke the law in California? That's right. That's right. But I love that.
I love that you did that because, I mean, it's, you know, reaching our kids and helping kids
get healthy spiritually is same with health, but spiritually even more important. And so what kind of brought
you into, you know, doing that library tour and really focusing on, hey, hey, we got to get kids
spiritually well.
Well, I think what you're saying is absolutely true.
My wife would always tell our kids, you know, you're a whole person and you need to be healthy
in body, mind, and spirit.
And so I think that's actually true.
Sometimes it seems like when the scriptures say things like trust in the Lord with all of your
heart, lean, not in your own understanding.
in all your ways acknowledge him, and he will direct your path.
And then it talks about if we don't do those things, if we're not trusting in the Lord,
we're actually not built to be able to do that.
And when we do, it's health to our body, it's strength to our bones.
And so I think spiritual practices actually impact our physical and emotional health.
At least they do for me.
Yeah.
And so I guess early on I was always interested in physical health because my mom and dad, they were trying things like the Pritiken diet and the South Beach diet and all of the different longevity strategies.
And so we ate healthy, so to speak.
We didn't go to McDonald's every day for lunch.
And as I got older and became a Christian, I of course recognized that having a strong healthy,
body is good, but that having a strong and healthy spirit and mind to know God and to love him
and to be able to be used by him to care for others and advance his kingdom is even more important.
And so they all work together. And that's why I have always been pretty healthy-minded.
And by that, I mean I want to be healthy in body and in mind and in spirit.
Yeah, that's so good. You know, one of the things.
I remember watching you on growing pains, watching your sister on Full House. And, you know, one of the things that is sort of notorious in Hollywood is kids that kind of get into Hollywood early end up having major, major depression or going bankrupt. I mean, just, just a lot of issues. Why do you think you and your sister turned out so differently compared to what the majority of Hollywood, you know, actors and actresses that get in their young, you know, that tend.
have a lot of, you know, their lives ruined.
Well, thank you for suggesting that I turned out differently than all of these messed up kids.
But remember, I'm an actor. I could be faking the whole thing. I am so twisted inside,
but I'm, no, I'm kidding. But you don't know. The truth is you don't know.
I know you're all right because, you know, you just came here from, you know, working on your
chicken coop and you're picking up, you know, contos for, so you can't be that bad.
That's right. You could tell by the smell.
of my denim that I have been with the chickens.
Yes.
First, let's talk about why so many young teenage actors struggle and go down a road that is so dark
and dangerous.
Let's start with that.
I think it's because they don't have a moral compass that actually leads them to health
and blessing.
If you don't have the North Star of the Word of God, which actually fits perfectly with the way God made us and the way God made the world so that we can flourish in his world, we end up making decisions based on a moral standard that just feels good.
Or it's maybe what my teacher taught me, what my parents taught me, or some other false religion.
but if I'm aligning my my journey with the right compass and the right map morally, spiritually, ethically, emotionally, physically, then I've got a great shot of getting to the desired destination.
And that's the place of blessing and protection.
So for me, I can see how so many of my peers, you think of Corey Hain back in the day.
those who grew up in the 1980s and 1990s, Corey, Haim, Corey Feldman, River Phoenix,
even those who were my co-workers on Growing Pains, Andrew Koenig, are no longer here,
have gone down a road either of suicide or drugs or addiction to other things
that have really led them down a road.
And without the kind of moral compass and parental boundaries,
and people who are just on their side,
not yes men,
but people who will say,
that's not good for you,
people who can hold you up when you're down
and hold you down when you stray,
it's a very natural thing
to wind up in jail or worse.
Yeah, yeah.
And that was back in the 1980s,
in the 1990s.
Think now with AI.
Think now with all the opportunities
that we have,
particularly in success,
you now can buy what you want.
You can do whatever you want as a celebrity,
and that's why they get into so much trouble.
For me, at 17 years old, I came to faith in Jesus Christ,
and the Bible became my North Star.
And how did you come to faith?
I don't think I know the story at 17.
Well, I was an atheist.
Because it wasn't through your parents?
Not really.
Okay.
I was an atheist up until about 17, 18 years old.
I didn't believe in God, never went to church.
I just thought the idea of an invisible being who made everything hiding behind the cloud,
keeping the track of the good and the bad, kind of like a glorified Santa Claus, was silly to me.
I thought I was too smart for that.
And then I started to read books and realize that fathers of modern medicine and modern science
and astronomy and geology and all kinds of disciplines were men of deep faith and Christian biblical faith.
and not even Einstein was an atheist. In fact, he would complain that people would cite him as an atheist,
and he would say, I resent that they do that. I'm not an atheist. He just didn't understand how it all
worked, but he knew that somehow God put this together. For me, I followed a girl into church.
It wasn't like I was on a spiritual quest. I was on a quest to get the girl. And she told me I had to
meet her at church on a Sunday morning. And I sat there through a church service and heard
the gospel preached, my conscience was awakened through the preaching of God's law, and the gospel
was the answer to the sin problem and the death problem. And it was kind of this, well, it was,
it was the carrot and the stick in a way that resonated with my soul, right? Like, it was,
there is consequence for evil and pride and, and wrath and lust.
and all of the bad things.
And there was the reward that was really purchased for me by someone else who laid down their life.
And my response was to be faith and turn my heart to the God that I've ignored my whole life.
And after wrestling through a lot of questions about science and other religions and evolution
and other competing philosophies,
I became persuaded that Jesus really did rise from the grave,
and I decided to trust him as the Lord and Savior of my life.
That's how I came to faith.
Now, having said all of that,
I'm not the smartest guy in the world.
I didn't come from a spiritual background.
It didn't help my Hollywood career any
to tell people I was a Christian and believed the Bible.
but I felt compelled to this by something that I can't really explain.
It didn't conflict with the evidence or rational thinking, but I didn't just arrive there because of those things.
My pastor said this to me at my very beginning stages of being a Christian.
He said, Kirk, if anybody ever asks you, I don't think he, I don't think he,
you know who Dr. Axe was at the time.
But if he ever asks you, Kirk, how did you find God in Hollywood?
He said, remember this.
You didn't find God.
He wasn't lost.
You were.
And he found you.
Yeah.
I think that's how it happened.
Yeah.
It's so good.
Yeah, I look back in my life and I think about, you just see God pursuing you.
You know, you see God orchestrating things.
And, yeah, yeah, I like that.
That's good.
It's a phenomenal.
and you wonder how much of it is me pursuing God and how much of it is God pursuing me.
And the scriptures say some, there's enigmas in scriptures when it comes to this kind of a thing.
Because the scriptures say there's none that seek after God, not even one.
Nobody seeks.
You know, you read that in the Psalms and you see that.
And the scriptures also say that the one who seeks is the shepherd who goes.
goes after the lost sheep. The sheep that's lost, that was me or you, we're wandering out there.
The sheep is the one in desperate need of the shepherd to seek after it. And so he brings us back
home. And I think, wow, I'm not sure if I was seeking God or I know God was seeking me,
but somehow it works together and I'm home. It reminds me of something that really impacted me
positively when I was in college. And it was, I feel like there was this thing I kept hearing at
church was love God, love God, love God, love God. And so it was like me trying to love God.
And I think maybe a step before that is, and this helped me was, I heard the sermon about,
you know, first focus on how much God loves you and just absorb that, reflect on that,
let that penetrate you. And then it's just when you realize somebody loves you that much,
you can't help but love them back in a way. And so I think there's this element of us understanding
rather than trying, and we should try and love God, right?
But I think there's this element of first knowing how much God loves us and then that kind of leading us towards loving him in return.
And that's so smart.
And that's exactly what I read when I'm reading the scriptures that say, we love God because he first loved us.
And so if I didn't hear about the love of God, I don't think I ever would have loved God.
Because the descriptions of God that come from a culture that mocks God are, he's this megalomania.
tyrant hiding in the clouds waiting to throw lightning bolts down on people who don't go to church.
Why would you love a God like that? But if I hear about a God who himself is the personification of love,
who willingly went to sacrifice his life so that I could be rescued from death and the punishment of my
sin, well, that's a hero to me. That's somebody I could never repay. And so I wanted to
vote my life to them. One of the biggest health problems I see isn't diet or supplements,
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starter kit. What's your advice for people in order to using their talents for the greatest good?
And what I mean by this is that, you know, for a lot of people, I think they've kind of separated their
Christian life's over here and their maybe business lives over here, even parenting.
I mean, kind of, you know, their faith is completely separate from their life versus for you,
it's been like this. Why have you decided or what made you think, no, it needs to be like this.
It needs to be intertwined together. And how do people use those talents for the greatest good
and what God's called them to? That question really makes me think. And to the degree that I am actually
integrating my parenting and faith and work and chicken farming. I'm really, really thankful.
I want to be a person of integrity. And I think that's what integrity actually means if you look
up with the dictionary, is that all the parts are touching. That's what integrity is, as opposed to
if you don't have integrity, things are separate, broken apart, they're disconnected, and it's not
it's not integral to the whole. And I think sometimes we do that, myself included, in my weaker
moments. I want to say, you know, I'm good at this over here, but I'm not so good at this over here.
I'm, for example, I'm really good at math and analyzing problems and solving them. I'm a guy. I like to
solve problems, but I'm not so good at being patient and listening to my life when she just wants
me to walk through something with her. I'm just wanting to solve it. Or maybe I'm not so good at
this element of parenting because it frustrates me or it calls my worth into question. But I'm really
good at doing a podcast. And so I'll just camp out over here in the places that I get lots of
of boys and high fives and I feel good and I'll kind of neglect these areas over here. It's easy to do
that because we want to feel successful. I want to be winning, not losing. If I feel like I'm
failing at home, I'll just stay at work where everybody does what I say and says you're awesome.
It's so easy to fall into that. But my wife and I talk about this all the time. I think that
God sees us as a whole person. And that's why true faith doesn't
just make me a better actor or podcaster. It doesn't just make me a better parent. It actually
transforms my heart, which is then supposed to pump its life into all of these areas,
so that now I have a Christian way of parenting and being a husband and being a podcaster
and being an actor. So I think that little reminders, like, I'm, I'm, I,
I'm never a better person than I am a listener.
I'm never a better person than I am a smiler.
I'm never a better person than I am a servant.
I'm never a better person than I am,
whatever it is that God's called me to do,
I have to focus on all of those things
because I think we've got to have integrity.
And as for the other half of your question,
which was about talents
and how do you use those for the greatest good?
I've had to ask other people what my talents are, what my gifts are.
I'm not sure if talents and gifts are the same thing.
Maybe they are, maybe they're different.
Yeah.
But sort of like special abilities that you have.
It doesn't really matter what I want to do if that's not what God has equipped me and called me to do.
I could say, Josh, I really want to be in the NBA.
But look at me.
It ain't going to happen.
I just, I don't have the equipment for it.
But there are things that I can do uniquely that I think God's equipped and called me to do.
And so I think having other people in your life who are honest with you to say that, like, Josh, you're really, you're really good at articulating things and relating to people.
You can take the intellectual horsepower that you have on all these subjects, health and nutrition and all of these things.
And then you can communicate it because that,
that's part of your talents and your gifts.
And you can do a show and be on camera and all that kind of stuff.
I think sometimes we need others to help us recognize some of those things.
You know, I was just reading through the, through Proverbs.
And one of the, one of my favorite sort of phrases from Proverbs is this idea around, you know,
wisdom is seeking wise counsel.
And I thought it was one time in Proverbs.
And this last time I read it, it was in there four times.
I mean, there's certain things he's just really repetitive on Solomon.
And it was in there four times.
Like, hey, if you want to be successful, he was like, you know, these are the things to do to be successful.
Seek wise counsel, you know, setting the counsel of the wise constantly.
And that's, you know, that's what you're saying there.
I mean, we have to have those people around us who, and, you know, I think we're living in a society today where, I don't think COVID helped us either.
But it's just there's, it's so isolated.
And I even know, you know, when you read old hymns, most of the hymns were a congregation, a whole group of people, praising and speaking to God together holistically.
And today, all of the Christian music is, it's all separate, you know, so I think there's maybe something there too.
Yeah. Man, I love the old hymns. Be thou my vision. Come thou found of every blessing to my heart to sing thy praise.
I mean, like, these, this is melodic theology.
That's what these hymns are.
They formed their theology from the Word of God,
and then they turned it into a song.
That's right.
And then everybody would sing it,
and they'd been singing them for thousands of years.
Yeah.
Right?
Like, I mean, we all love some Hillsong here and there,
but I'm not sure we're going to be singing a Hillsong song in a thousand years,
maybe we will, but these hymns have stood the test of time when we didn't even have recording
abilities, right? I mean, we're still singing the same songs because we've been passing them
on verbally, generation every generation. And you've just got deep, rich, thick, dense theology
of confession, of sin, of praise, of judgment, of victory and glory in these four-verse hymns.
And many of them, we only know one.
one verse of the whole hymn, you know?
Yeah.
Joy to the world.
Joy to the world, the Lord is coming.
And we only sing that at Christmas time.
But there's four verses that get into such great theology.
I love the hymns.
It's so good.
You know, I listened to Eric Metaxes has this great biography on Martin Luther.
And I was blown away at how many hymns Martin Luther wrote.
Yeah.
Like I had no idea.
No idea.
A lot of these ancient saints and they were a lot of the people that actually wrote the hymns.
Yeah.
So.
Yeah.
You know, the old dead guys.
are ones to pay attention to.
There's a reason we keep going back to them.
You know, some church traditions recite the Apostles' Creed,
recite the Nicene Creed, or the Athanasian Creed.
And the reason that we have these old, old, old,
I mean, these are over a thousand years old.
These are very, very old,
is so that we don't forget who we are and whose we are.
and we don't forget who runs the universe and what reality is framed by.
Because right now, reality is being reframed by ChatGPT, Siri, Alexa, the drag queens,
and people making up belief systems that completely twist and distort reality for a young generation of kids.
It's like going to the fun house and you go into the mirror room and everything's all.
wonky and twisted and you're too too you're not proportional anymore and the hymns and the creeds
and the scriptures reframe everything for us so that we can get back to reality i remember uh listening to
a sermon by tim keller and he said something like you know we are being programmed constantly he said
the biggest things that are programming us today are stories songs and slogans
those are three things, these things that are kind of repetitively training us.
And, you know, and of course one of those things as songs, my wife, Chelsea and I were having this conversation recently, we're saying, you know, when do we feel like we're the most spiritually fit and healthy and growing?
And we said there are certain things going on in our lives when those are happening.
One, we're part of growth groups.
We're like really iron sharpens iron with other Christian couples and that type of thing and engaging.
in church. Another big one was, what's the music we're listening to and just feeding ourselves
day after day after day. And so I think, you know, these habits, you know, these habits are
big. I agree. What are some of your spiritual habits, the things you're like, this is non-negotiable
or just whether it's not negotiable, here's some things that you're really trying to apply. You've
tried to apply over maybe in the past, you know, 20 years for, you know, forming your faith.
Yeah. I want to be a man of routine.
and habit and have schedules and strategies that are going to accomplish my goals.
And I love when people can stick to those things and really accomplish them.
I struggle, though, throughout the days because things come up that I want to do or things
come up that people that need my help, and I want to be available to be spontaneous and do those
things.
So I'm trying to find what is the balance there so that I'm not just distracted and dominated by
the urgency of the moment and yet not so rigid that I can't have some margin to say,
hey, son, let's go have a, let's go have a burger, sit down and talk about what's going
on with your girlfriend.
I want to be able to do that.
So for me, I have recognized that if I don't have some spiritual disciplines set in place
at the beginning of the day, I'm just already, my rifle is pointed in the wrong direction.
Right.
and I'm going to
even if I've got a good attitude
I'm focused on the wrong target
and so I want the first
voice inside of my head to be
the voice of the Lord and so
that means I need to go to scripture so what I like to do
is wake up
kind of have a built-in
biological alarm clock that gets me up at about
six o'clock every morning
and I
turn on the pot of coffee
and I sit down
with my Bible and
the devotional that I've come to love. I've got to get you a copy of it. It's called Be Thou
My Vision by Jonathan Gibson. He's a professor at Oxford. Okay, I'd love it. He's also a professor
of Old Testament of the Old Testament at the Westminster Seminary in Philadelphia. And it's this
liturgy of daily worship. And so it's a daily devotional that takes you through essentially
an ancient Christian church service structure every morning.
So it's the call to worship.
Hear God's will for your life as heard through his law.
Then it's a confession of faith.
And it takes you through the creeds and the catechisms along with scripture.
And so by the time you're finished with this 45-minute structure of liturgy,
you've read through the ancient church fathers of Ignatius and Justin Martyr,
and you've gone through Iranians,
and then the reformers,
Knox and Luther and Calvin and the others,
and then even some more modern scholars.
And you just see the depth and the breadth
of historic Christianity,
and it's just put in your lap every morning.
I've come to love it
because it's so different than Jesus calling, for example,
or something that you'd be familiar with.
It sounds a lot like today's modern worship music.
It is the devotional equivalent
of the ancient hymns in their writings.
I love it.
I got to get you a copy.
Cool.
That's powerful.
And that roots me deeply.
And it gets me to just to be thoughtful about the day and recalibrate my priorities
and remind me that God doesn't need me.
I'm so very grateful to be alive and that he has chosen to use me for good things.
And I want more than anything to learn how to be a better listener.
and to learn how to serve and care for people.
That's so good.
You know, I notice the same pattern.
I'm sure everybody who has done this notice is the same pattern.
There's something about doing it first thing in the morning.
I mean, right when you wake up, it's the first thing you do, spending time with the Lord.
Because if not, it's that, you know, it's that parable of a sewer.
It's like, you know, the weeds, things start to choke out, you know, the busyness.
Right.
Just, you know, so I notice the same thing.
Like, my demeanor and my character.
is much, much greater and improved if I'm spending time with God in the morning versus if I don't.
Yeah, I think so too. And you mentioned the importance of songs. What did you say that Keller said
it was? It was songs, slogans, and stories. Yeah, that's right. I was reading this morning that
that Jesus didn't speak to the crowds without using parables and illustrations.
Jesus used stories, perhaps because he was, he was behaving based off the same truth that Timothy
Keller understood.
And that is stories shape people.
And he told stories.
And in Matthew chapter 13, there's like four or five different parables in there.
And it was the parables about farming, about food, parables about,
retail merchant sales and a couple of other ones.
And these stories got me thinking about,
when's the last time I spoke to someone
who had no knowledge of the kingdom of God
in the form of a story or a riddle
that would require some questions
in order for them to understand it?
I thought this could be a good evangelism method.
That is good.
You know, like, do you like riddles?
Do you like mindbenders and mind twisters?
Do you like, do you like?
You know, I guess I haven't done a lot of riddles for, well, I haven't done a whole lot of riddles.
So maybe.
Yeah.
So I like to ask people a little, you know, the riddle of the sphinx and all kinds of other fun, interesting ones.
And I thought, you know, I should follow up a good riddle with somebody who's into puzzles and, you know, mind teasers with, let me tell you a story.
Once upon a time, there was a farmer who had a field and he sowed some good seed into this field.
But then in the middle of the night, someone came in and put a bunch of weed seeds in that field.
And when they grew up, the servants came and said, master, master, there's weeds all infested in your field.
And he says, the enemy has done this.
He said, you want to take the weeds out?
He's like, no, don't take them out.
Because if you do, you might pull out some of the wheat.
Wait a little it grows up.
And in time of harvest, I'll send the harvesters.
And I'll tell them, gather up all the wheat, tie them in a bundle, throw them in the furnace, and then take my wheat and put it in the barn.
Do you know what this means?
What a great setup for sharing of the gospel.
It's so good.
You know? Yeah. And Jesus told stories because everybody loves a good story.
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Unfortunately, Hollywood's not as good as telling stories anymore. Yeah, I was actually,
I brought this up on my podcast. This is probably, I don't know, a few months or maybe even a year ago.
One of the things that I loved about, I grew up in the 90s, is I loved when I was watching, again,
Growing Pains, Full House, Fresh Prince of Bel Air, saved by the bow.
Come on. That's it. That was real TV.
It was so good. You know, Family Matters, all of these shows had a moral of the story.
Right. They weren't even Christian shows.
No.
But they had a moral of the story today. It's the anti-moral, you know, story for the most part.
And so I tried to figure out, it was like, right around, it was literally right when the 90s ended.
Something happened where all the sudden...
It's because growing pens went off the air.
Once growing pains went off the air, the whole thing just went off the cliff.
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
No, I think you're right.
Actually, I tried to think about this and tie it back to, you know, you had in the 60s, you know, when the, you know, when God was taken out of school and maybe there's a certain age group or whatever, but something happened.
No more 10 commandments, no more prayer.
Yeah, you know, I also watched this thing where Jordan Peterson said this.
he said, when he started his career teaching at Harvard and University of Toronto,
probably 80% of people, whether they were Christian or not, knew the biblical stories.
Yeah.
He said, by the time he left, this is 30 years later, only 10 to 20% of kids going to public college,
new stories of the Bible.
He said, they didn't even know what Jonah was.
They never even heard the story before.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I heard some people, I think there's even.
Some people were even saying that on a multiple choice question, when high school students were asked recently, who was Noah's wife?
Some of them actually selected Joan of Arc.
Joan of Arc.
Right?
They had no clue.
They had no idea.
I mean, that's funny and scary.
Yeah.
And like you said, the moral compass pointed toward the scriptures.
as true north.
The fruit of the spirit, love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, gentleness, faithfulness, self-control.
These are the kinds of values that you saw on growing pains.
These are the kind of values that Mr. Rogers was teaching the kids.
Davy and Goliath, Gumby and Poki, all of these shows from way back up and through the 80s a little bit, still were pointing toward the scriptures because America
which is where these shows are coming from,
Hollywood, California,
Disney and all that,
they're rooted in ideas
that have come from the Bible,
from the form of our government
to the moral and ethical fabric
of our society.
The Bible built America.
And as we've pushed the Bible away,
we then start to ask questions,
well, what is it to be good?
What is it to be evil?
Does evil even exist?
And now it's not that we don't have a morality in TV.
It's that, like you said, an anti-morality.
It's the new morality, which is calling good evil.
And it calls evil good.
And we're paying the consequence for it.
Just look around our society.
Children have a huge identity problem.
Children are filled with anxiety and depression.
Oh, yeah.
They're being isolated.
Parents are acting like children.
men are acting like women, women are acting like men.
Adults are acting like children, and nobody knows what in the world's going on.
And they're desperately looking for answers.
You know, the number one thing that I, the number one reason why I think people have chronic illness today, the number one reason is not their diet.
I think for a lot of people, they have emotional trauma from their past.
They're dealing with, they don't know how to deal with their emotions healthily.
And they don't have a purpose.
And so I think all of these things sort of pile up and create anxiety, depression, and worry, illness, fear.
And this is the number one thing more than diet making people sick today, especially with autoimmune disease, with cancer, with a lot of these conditions.
And like we talked about before, I think they're all connected, don't you?
Yeah, absolutely.
If I'm filled with anxiety, I don't care what you say, Dr. Josh.
I'm getting a crispy cream.
because it makes me feel better.
Eventually those emotions will overwhelm you to the point where you will break.
100%.
If I can't sleep at night because of my panic attacks and trauma that I've experienced
and things that are happening to me because of choices I'm making,
well, I'm just going to load up on sleeping pills and other types of things that are going to help me to sleep.
I mean, the amount of girls in high school in college on prosa antidepressants and anxiety drugs, of course, birth control, it's crazy, yeah.
Yeah, somebody asked me once, this was a young man. He said, well, what kind of medications do you say? I eat in a kind of a unique way.
I try to eat things that are not inflammatory and a very low-carb diet and all this. And he's like, well, yeah, I can tell you know, you're,
You're not heavy and overweight, you don't look like you're the kind of guy who's going to be, like, obese, you know, all that.
And he said, well, what kind of medications you're on?
And I was like, I don't take any medications.
He's like, well, what do you mean?
Nothing?
Like, and this is a young man in his 20s who's on medications.
And they're the kinds of medications that I, I'm not a doctor, so I don't know if he needs to be taking these medications.
But sometimes I just wonder how much of this is spiritually, emotionally, and just,
stinking thinking rooted, resulting in anxiety and fear and sleeplessness and restlessness,
and that if you address some of these spiritual, emotional, mental issues,
these things would go away naturally and you wouldn't be a guy addicted to drugs.
Yeah. Yeah, absolutely. So one of the questions I just have to ask you as, you know,
I was on YouTube, you came up because you were having a conversation with your son,
sharing some of your views on hell.
And I was blown away at the amount of people that just had to say something
and the amount of criticism that you got on this view of hell.
And it seemed to me like it wasn't even, you can clarify it, I'm wrong.
It didn't seem like you were saying, this is my 100% belief,
but hey, I might lean this way after reading some of these saints and theologians
who have shared their view on hell.
So would you mind clarifying that a little bit and sharing a little bit,
kind of your thoughts and what happened there?
Sure.
So first of all, I didn't go on my show to talk about my views of hell.
My son had some views of hell that he was questioning and asking me about.
And I always told him, we can talk about whatever you want.
I promise I'll be honest with you.
Just remember that millions of people are watching.
So, you know, let's just,
use wisdom in our discussions and he said, you know, I've learned that there's some differing
views of the nature of God's punishment in hell. Yeah. And really is stemmed from questions that
he had in discussing with his friends, what kind of God preserves unbelievers for all of eternity
in torment and suffering? Yeah.
is that consistent with a God of love and mercy?
And I think this is at the bottom of the deep end of the theological swimming pool.
And to try to lift that rock off the bottom of the pool and, you know, examine it is like,
wow, Jesus had really strong words to say about this.
And so did Paul in the book of Revelation and others.
And the wrath of God is so severe.
And yet his mercy and his love has swallowed up.
up wrath and judgment in the gospel for those who believe. And so where do we go with this? And he said
there's a view called conditional immortality, which most people have never heard of. What is that?
What do you mean conditional immortality? And then there's the traditional view that is also
known as eternal conscious torment, which is just, you know, it's on the face of it. It's just a very,
very, you know, impactful title of the view. And so we discussed both of these views and the fact
that this has been a debate that has been going on for 2,000 years. Church fathers believed in
annihilationism or conditionalism. And then others like Augustine really popularized and made the mainstream
view be the traditional view today. And I told him that once
I heard about this other view, I began to look into it, and I found the arguments very compelling,
very persuasive. In fact, the more I've looked at it on this, you know, in terms of like scriptures
that weigh in the favor of one or the other, I thought it was going to be a no-brainer for the
traditional view. And I found it slowly going like this to where I think this conditionalism
view is, it's just a better position, scripturally.
not just an emotional thing.
However, I can be totally wrong.
Who am I?
To talk to Jonathan Edwards
about the nature of hell
or Martin Luther.
Luther actually leaned toward conditionalism,
interestingly,
as did many of the church fathers.
But I wanted to just
be honest with my son and say,
let's look into it.
You have an open conversation on your show.
And do you know what I love about that conversation, Josh,
is just this.
It's not about who's right or wrong.
The truth is not in jeopardy.
God knows he'll tell me when I'm wrong.
He'll tell you when you're wrong.
There's no threat here to the truth.
But the beauty of this was a father and a son were engaging over scriptural truth.
Don't you want that with your kids?
Whether he's right or I'm right, I don't care.
I care for the honor of God and the sake of the lost because I want to speak truthfully.
But if I get it wrong or I'm on my way to getting it right and I need other people to help me, that's wonderful.
I think there's something beautiful in the wrestling.
There's something beautiful in the not knowing
and the hiddenness of certain elements of the truth
that we've got to dig to discover
and we do that when we engage with one another.
That's what I see so many people missed about this.
I absolutely agree.
I think this is how you grow.
This is this quote that Solomon talks about iron,
sharpens iron.
You have difficult conversations.
And this is why, you know,
the Bible uses,
We're like wrestling, wrestling with God.
I mean, you wrestle with some of these difficult things.
Don't you want your kids to ask those questions?
Of course.
I would love having these deep conversations.
But you know what happened to me?
I had some people that came out and it was just the full fury of their wrath.
Right?
I mean, they just went full scorched earth.
Like, take out the napalm and just blast Kirk Cameron in the face with it.
You are a heretic.
This is cult rhetoric.
You have left the faith.
You're done.
And I even.
Linusy, yeah.
Well, yeah.
or heresy, according to them, because I wasn't just lining up with the traditional position.
But remember, I'm a Protestant.
Yeah.
We schism.
We protest.
We question church tradition.
Yeah.
We go back to a guy named Martin Luther and others.
And so it's not to tear apart tradition because there's a very important role that tradition has.
That's why we have the Nicene Creed and the Apostles Creed and catechisms.
but we should, I think, always be looking to scripture and saying,
do we understand it correctly?
Or do we need to simply bow to tradition just because we've always believed this?
We've always thought this.
And I even had a church, an institutional church leader who I looked up to,
and I still look up to him.
He's a hero of heroes today in the church world.
who had a public video and article written about this,
and he characterized my discussion with my son,
questioning the traditional view as sad, as dangerous,
and a fatal error,
and that this is characteristic of those going down the road of liberal theology.
And so my son's response was always gracious,
but it was also indignant.
And it goes like this.
You don't want me to ask questions,
but I really am wrestling with this.
And if someone's struggling with understanding
the character of God based on your view of Scripture,
and you want to tell me to just shut up,
be quiet, this is what the church believes,
you're going to lose my generation.
We want people who will engage with us
and give us the respect of a conversation.
and if you can't do that, we're not interested in hearing from you anymore.
You're the old guard and you're leaving.
If you want this to perpetuate, you've got to invest in the young generation and answer their
questions because a lot of their questions are going to be nuanced to their generation
and their struggles based on the stories and the songs and the slogans they're hearing.
And what you're saying doesn't feel like it fits.
So help me.
One of the things I appreciate it, I appreciate it, I appreciate it West Hub.
weighing in and sharing some things there too. And I want to read this too because I,
because you know what? I appreciate it. It made me go and start reading and looking. And so
here are some of the people that hold the view of, of annihilationism, Justin Martyr,
Arranius, William Tyndale, John Stott, Edward Fudge. I mean, there's a lot of others,
possibly, you know, Lutherly in that way. I mean, a lot of people, a lot of Christian
scholars. So these are Christian positions, traditionalism, conditionalism. This is not heresy outside
orthodoxy. This is all a Christian position. And there's even a third position that some will talk about.
I will tell you, I went to a, I went to a church that was Presbyterian. They were very, very, very Calvinistic for a period of time.
And I really like John Calvin. In fact, I own the institutes. I read a lot of them. And, you know, back in my
and thought those were gray and listened to a lot of reform pastors.
But, you know, one of the pastors there was like, oh, if you're Armenianism or a Methodist,
you're going to have. I mean, there are some people out there that really aren't.
Are more Calvinistic than Calvin.
That's right.
Yeah.
That happens.
Yeah.
Yeah, I found that with a lot of brilliant thinkers, whether they're in politics or in religion
or even in the health space.
Maybe you could even cite some of these people who they themselves,
had strong but balanced ideas,
but some of their followers
take their ideas
to an exaggerated extreme
and become whackadoodle.
Yeah.
To where if their heroes were alive today,
they'd go back and go,
bro, bro, bro, bro, rain it in.
I never said that.
You're taking this so far.
I'm not with you.
So imagine if Calvin
were to go to all the reformed churches today,
what would he say about the Calvinism
that they're preaching?
Well, one, I don't even think he'd like the term.
I mean, if you're, if you have any form of humility,
no, it's a derogatory term.
Because, you know, it reminds me of, you know, when Paul is going to, I'm trying
to remember which church it is, but he's going and he's saying, listen, you know, don't follow
Paul or Apollos or this person, you know, follow Jesus.
Yeah.
But just so, you know, I'm excited to hear.
I know you're having a conversation with, with this whole group of, of theologians and pastors.
And so.
Yeah.
So my response to the outrage, I mean, I really caught hell talking about the afterlife with my son.
I'm like, hey, hey, hey, this is a private conversation. I'm just giving you a window into father and son stuff here.
And so I wanted to answer those who said, can you go deeper into this topic for us?
Because I had a lot of people who actually agreed with what I was saying and say, Kirk, you're on the right track.
keep going. I know pastors who have held a different position on the subject of hell for decades,
but said they've never had the courage to speak about it publicly. Now, this isn't about denying the existence of hell.
I believe hell is real. I believe sin is serious. The wrath of God should be avoided at all cost.
Jesus said, it'd be better for your hand to be cut off and have one hand and get to heaven,
then have both your hands and be cast into hell where the flame is never quenched and the worm never dies.
Hell, I believe, is real, and it is an eternal punishment.
But there have been different understandings of that.
And so I promise to hold a roundtable discussion with four of the brightest and most trusted minds in the Christian world who have specific knowledge on this topic, including two guys who are writing a brand new book on the two Christian views of hell with a forward being written by Wes Huff.
That book is going to be coming out.
and they're both in my roundtable, along with two other guys.
And we just recorded it.
I believe by the time this is airing, it has come out.
And you can see the full three-hour discussion,
or you can see some of the highlights that my son and I talk about.
That's great.
And I want to be clear about something.
And I'll just have let you answer this as well,
is that, again, I think my position is very much not on, you know,
is hell are people living in hell eternally,
whether it's actually an actual fire,
which some people believe, whether it's sort of this sort of mental, spiritual state,
or whether it's, you know, they're there for a time and it ends.
I think that having the conversation and digging in and having talks about this,
it reminds me to a degree about, well, of course, a lot of theological topics, is eschatology.
Are you pre-mill or post-mill?
Well, I'm, you know.
Or a mill or perterist.
And there's a billion more.
Yeah, there are so many.
And so, but, but, you know, like when I read, I read through, you know,
the Wayne Grimm's systematic theology book.
And I remember when I was reading through that...
It's not a light read.
No, now this is bad.
You know, I try anyways.
So, but I like that sort of thing.
So I, but I remember reading through it and thinking, you know what?
I don't know.
But I'm glad I read it because there's a level of I'm understanding now more consequences.
And understanding more about some other things about the heart of God and to be looking out for certain things more.
I feel like I'm growing in wisdom because I know, I know some of these things.
See, that's healthy.
That's so wise.
And every year that God gives us to live, shouldn't we do that more and more?
Shouldn't we gain wisdom and knowledge?
Shouldn't we look to improve so that we can be better servants?
I'm wanting to just change the way that I look at how many years I have left on this earth.
I'm 55 years old now, and I'm thinking, man, I probably got most of my years behind me,
unless I lived to be over 110, which I probably won't.
But I think...
I mean, you've got your own chickens at home.
Yeah, so I know.
I got a head start on most people because I got my own chickens.
By the way, if you've never tried backyard chickens and their eggs, they're so.
They're so good. Especially if you let them like forage around, bugs, worms and grass. Those yokes are orange. They're not yellow.
Yellow yokes. I want orange yolks. They're delicious. Exactly. I start to think about, I want to be, I want to look forward to death. I want to live a long time because I love life. I don't love death. I love life. But I have eternal life in Christ. And so I also got to keep framing my things.
thinking with, it's not that the sand is running out of the hourglass. It's that I'm one step
closer to entering into full glory. And what's better than crossing the finish line at the end of a race
and winning or being part of the winning team? And I want to be able to look forward to those
kinds of things. So I want to be healthy. I want to live a long time or however long the Lord
wants me to, but I don't want to be sad that this life is coming to a close. I want to be excited
that I'm approaching life that is truly life in heaven. That's so good. It's so good.
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podcast worldwide. And this is part of the question that earlier. It's like, how do you,
you know, how do we go about living our best life, taking those talents and using them for good?
And that's something, again, I think about this impact you've had on Hollywood. And I'm encouraged
because, you know, there's more now than when you were, I feel like maybe in Hollywood.
You know, people are coming to mind like, you know, Chris Pratton's example and other people now
being more outspoken about their faith. And so I think, I mean, there's,
you know, sometimes it just takes one person speaking out on their faith, and it's like this domino effect of what starts to happen.
You know, one other, just a couple more questions I had for you.
You know, I've started to see more and more, I feel like, revival happening in colleges.
And even I've been so encouraged about some of the celebrities, somebody who's kind of semi in the health space, Russell Brand, you know, his conversion has been so incredible, saying, you know, what happens there.
and I was having this conversation with somebody else saying,
you know, Russell Brand going from where he was to where he is now,
nothing else could do that but Christ.
There's no other thing, stoicism, whatever,
nothing could do that except for faith in Jesus Christ.
I get excited just like you do when we see people evidently coming to faith in Christ.
Now, sometimes it turns out to be a shallow ground hearer
or a thorny ground hearer where
they end up falling away
not too long ago, right?
Like, you know, sometimes
you get excited about Kanye
and they're like,
oh, hey, what's going on?
We've got to this big worship album
and then like,
now we're not so sure
and what's happening.
We've got people like Ravi Zacharias
who were just like,
oh my gosh, a pillar of the faith.
I mean, a John Oak tree of the faith.
And then we're like, what?
Yeah, it happened a little bit.
And so I feel like
I don't really know
who's the real deal
and who's not the real deal.
Jesus says you'll know them by their fruit.
And I think that
sometimes people just hang fruit
on their own tree. You know, they're out there in the night, just hanging apples and peaches on the
tree to try to look like a good Christian, but inside, they're ravenous wolves. They're dressed in
sheep's clothing. So I really don't know, but I don't think I have to with certainty because the
Lord knows, and he's working all things together for good. But I do get excited, and I do believe
that the kingdom is growing. It's not shrinking. I believe that the gospel is advancing and it's
converting people's hearts. And so I hope that Russell Brand and
and Kanye and other,
I hope this is all the work of the Holy Spirit.
And I think one of the reasons
that people come to the Lord
that is happening
concurrently with the spirit
just straight up drawing them
because I think at the end of the day
God finds us.
We're lost, he's not,
he finds us, and he draws us to himself,
is that people recognize
the lie
of false gospels
and the emptiness
of false political systems
that make all of these big swelling promises
and never deliver.
They're like clouds with no rain.
Oh, follow us,
follow this religion
or follow this political party
or just do this
and you're going to be happy,
healthy and wealthy and wise
and they realize
I've got no morals.
I've lost my identity.
I have no purpose.
My kids are screwed up.
I'm on my eighth marriage
and I don't really believe in any absolute rights or wrongs.
And so if we're just going to make this whole thing up,
well, then who the hell cares?
I just might as well, go kill myself.
I mean, you're having more and more people think like this.
And then some people are waking up.
It's like they just got red-pilled.
They've snapped out of it.
And they realize this whole thing is this stupid,
made-up matrix. This isn't even reality. And they're saying, what is reality? And they're searching
for the source of truth and of goodness and of beauty. And as they follow those things upstream,
they find this has to come from God. And so you see a lot of young people coming back to church
now, coming back to faith now. Many of them back to the old traditions of
Roman Catholicism, Eastern Orthodoxy,
because there's some historical integrity there,
not just the religious circus show
that we see in a lot of wackadoodle churches.
And this is all indicative, I think,
of young people going,
we've been sold a load of horse manure.
That's right, yeah.
And we want something that's actually nutritious
for our souls and has mental intellectual integrity.
And so they're going back to C.S. Lewis.
They're going back to Thomas Aquinas.
They're going back to the thinkers who rooted their thinking in the scriptures and in God.
Yeah.
It's so powerful.
Yeah, I think people want to know the truth.
Well, some people want to know the truth.
But I think if you're truly going to be happy, you need to know the truth.
Because if not, it's like, you know, I think about this.
with health. It's like if you think, okay, this is the diet, I've got cancer, eating a
diet of processed foods, that will be healthy or eating a lot of soy or canola oil. Well, that's not
going to help you. You think it is versus if you know the truth, more fruits, more vegetables,
more, you know, omega-3s, whatever it is, this is going to, and then, you know, it's that old
saying, you know, the truth will set you free. And so I think, and that's a big part of our conversation
today is this is why the Bible is so powerful. Whether you need help with your marriage,
you need to help with parenting, you need help with building wealth and success, you need help
with your health, the Bible has answers to all of those. That's one thing I love about the Bible,
too. You were talking about the parables, and so many of them are food-related, diet-related.
You know, I wrote a book on what the Bible has to say about health. What was that book I wrote?
Yeah, the Bibliot Diet. And in the book, I mean, I had so much fun writing that with Jordan because
it was like taken, you know, wow, the Bible, like, even though I'd read the Bible quite a few times
going through and just saying, what does the Bible say about health? The same thing would happen.
If you said, what does the Bible say about marriage? Wow. You know, it's just, it's just
transformational and it's so countercultural. Yeah, that's right. And discovering the truth about
anything today is so much more difficult than it used to be. And the reason I say that is because
I could pull up a video right now on my phone
and show you an Instagram video
and you'd say,
oh my gosh, I need to run home and be with my family
because Trump just started a war with Russia or with China.
And then I can show you, nah, just kidding it.
It's an AI generated video.
He didn't even say that.
Even though you saw it with your own eyes,
you heard it with your own.
Discovering the truth today is like,
it's like trying to, to me,
walking into a candy store and trying to find nutrition. It's like you can't find it. I don't know
what's true anymore. Where is it? Because people are making up their own truth. They're literally
creating their own reality. Literally, I've seen brides having wedding ceremonies and marrying
their AI chatbot groom. Literally, like this isn't a joke. I hadn't heard of that.
There is Tesla robots now that are walking around the house.
doing your chores for you and have full personalities programmed just the way you want them to.
So if you want a wife that doesn't talk back to you and just cleans the floor and cooks your
food, you can have one. If you want a husband who will, you know, honor you and respect you
and listen to you and all of the things that you want, you can have one because reality is now
what you want it to be. And truth is very hard to find.
mind. So the Bible is more crucial and critical now than ever before. And it's crucial and
critical for kids to understand these principles earlier and earlier and earlier on too. Yeah.
Yeah. That's right. Where the Bible was always seen as the obvious place where you could find
the truth. Now, you could reject the truth if you didn't like it, you didn't want it. But you knew
what was true and it was the good book. Yeah. There's a book that God wrote.
This is the golden rule, we call it.
Doesn't get better than the golden rule.
Yeah.
But if we don't teach these things to our kids when they're young, no doubt,
chat GPT and GROC and Google will teach them other things when they are young.
And they are.
And the Bible will be this mysterious thing that's been buried or hidden away somewhere.
And only by the grace of God will they ever find it.
We don't want that to happen.
Hey, I'm going to ask you this, and you're going to laugh because I don't even know how to how to say this.
So, well, you're doing kids books, right?
And then I think I saw something online.
I think this was quick with you with a, I mean, I thought it was a frog, but maybe it's not a frog.
It's probably AI.
I don't hang out with frogs.
Oh, you're talking about Iggy.
It's like a mupa.
It's like, you're talking about the iguana named Iggy.
Oh, okay, it's an iguana.
Yeah.
Sorry.
Yeah.
Tell me about that.
What are you doing there?
So I've been writing children's books of Christian Virtue with a book publishing company
called Brave Books. They're awesome. And I've been reading them in public libraries, Contra the
Drag Queen's Story Hours. And that's been going on for a couple of years. And we started out being
banned from public libraries from the American Library Association and others who didn't want us
there in these very woke cities to now being invited by the Library of Congress to read these
stories publicly in the nation's capital, which is a wonderful tournament.
Oh, so cool. Well, we realize that kids are spending more.
time on their screens than they are reading paper books. And so we decided to make a children's
television show. And we're calling it this generation's Mr. Rogers neighborhood. We had Mr.
Rogers back in the day. And he taught us all the good things because many people don't know this.
He was a Presbyterian minister. And while he didn't talk about God on the show, he taught the values
that really led to kids' blessing and their protection and the building of families. So we have this
little show called Iggy and Mr. Kirk.
And it's kind of like Mr. Rogers
meets Sesame Street. So we don't have
Kermit the Frog. We have Iggy the iguana
and I'm raising him as a little
five-year-old in my backyard
tree house and he's got to learn all the lessons
that today's five-year-olds have to learn.
And he's got
a computer and he's
got a deal with friends. Some tell the truth.
Some don't. Like there's
one character who is a vulture
named Culture who's
always lying to Iggy.
and he's got to ask his mom and dad for biblical wisdom,
learn how to trust God and pray.
And he also has access to a non-woke supercomputer named Maple,
who will also tell him the truth.
So he's learning about the sanctity of life.
He's learning about the priority of family,
about overcoming your fears and telling the truth.
And it's great.
You can watch it on Angel,
which is the network that gives us The Chosen.
You can also watch it on Brave Plus,
which is a new streaming platform
that has old classics like Davian Goliath and has Bob the Builder and Strawberry Shortcake,
biblical values, parents approved, and new originals like Iggy and Mr. Kirk.
I'm so excited to watch it.
Yeah, kids absolutely love it.
That's great.
Yeah, we had Dallas Jenkins on the show here, too.
Those were great conversations.
I love that, you know, Christian TV now is, there's an, there's an excellence undertone to it.
You know, I think that there's, and I'm excited to watch the show with my girls.
They're going to love it.
Yeah, I think you can watch the first three episodes for free.
If you just go to Brave Plus, you can watch a few to see if you like it.
And then you can sign up for the whole thing.
The best deal, I think, is if you've got Angel, you can just watch it for free.
If you don't, if you sign up for the Brave Book of the Month Club, you get a new Brave book delivered to your house every single month.
plus you get full access to all three seasons of Iggy and Mr. Kirk,
and you get all of this other stuff.
And it comes with maps and stickers and games and family puzzles and challenges and conversation starters
so that you can turn your book or your TV show episode into a core family memory
and conversations with your kids about important stuff.
That's so incredible.
Awesome.
Well, thanks so much for coming on, Kirk.
This was great.
Oh, thank you.
Thanks for having me.
Yeah, again, I just appreciated, you know, ever since you were, you know, growing pains and just, you know, standing out for your faith post that, you know, left behind. I mean, you know, so is that where you met, did you meet your wife on left behind or did, no, you met her with growing pains. I met my wife on growing pains. But you did left behind, right, she was in the movie. She played the anti-Christ's girlfriend. That's right. What was I thinking, marrying her?
That's so great. She turned out to be an angel. Yeah, she's just acting. That's so great. Awesome. Well, thanks so much for coming on.
today and just want to say, hey, everybody, thanks for watching here, the Dr. Josh Jack Show.
Remember each and each and every week, we are diving deep into the science and principles of how
you can heal physically, mentally, spiritually, and take your health and your life to the next level.
If you're watching on YouTube, let me know what is one of the biggest things that Kirk shared today
that you're going to walk away with.
We would love to hear your thoughts.
I also want to encourage you to go over, watch his podcast, watch his show on YouTube,
and the discussion on hell there as well.
and want to say, hey, thanks so much for sharing.
Thanks so much for subscribing.
And we'll see you on the next episode.
