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“There couldn’t be nothing, and then all the sudden everything,” Rogan emphasized.
Tucker joined in, asking, “What started that? What kicked that off? What snapped its fingers?”
“Exactly,” Rogan replied, nodding to the absurdity of believing such a theory without question.
Rogan didn’t stop there. With his signature wit and blunt delivery, he laid out the contrast between science and faith in a way few would expect from a man who once leaned more toward atheism.
“The difference between science and religion is that science only asks you for one miracle,” Rogan pointed out. In other words, you’re still asked to take a leap of faith—it’s just wrapped in scientific jargon rather than spiritual truth.
“That’s a good one,” Tucker responded, visibly intrigued.
Then came the moment that truly turned heads.
“It’s funny because people will be incredulous about the resurrection of Jesus Christ,” Rogan said. “But yet they’re convinced that the entire universe was smaller than the head of a pin, and for no reason that anybody’s adequately explained to me, instantaneously it became everything?”
He wasn’t buying it. Not anymore.
“I’m sticking with Jesus on that one,” Rogan concluded. “Jesus makes more sense.”
For those who’ve followed Rogan’s journey over the years, this shift isn’t sudden. While he’s spent countless hours debating with atheists, agnostics, and skeptics, Rogan has increasingly opened up to the logic and historical grounding of Christianity.
Earlier this year, Rogan welcomed Christian apologist Wesley Huff onto the podcast, and the conversation took a deeply spiritual turn. Huff dismantled the hollow appeal of moralism and presented the core message of Christianity in a fresh, compelling way.
“I actually think that Jesus condemns moralism,” Huff said. “If Jesus is nothing but a moral example, then you can save yourself, and you don’t actually need a Savior.”
He continued, explaining how humanity’s attempts to self-purify are misguided. “The law is like a mirror, it shows you how dirty you are,” Huff said. “You guys are trying to clean yourselves with a mirror. That’s stupid. If anything it’s going to make you more messy. Like, get in the shower!”
That “shower,” Huff explained, is the grace offered through Christ—not earned by good works, but accepted by faith.
“If Jesus is a moral example, it actually misses what I think Jesus actually said about what his purpose was. In that, you can’t do enough to actually live up to the standard that God holds you to, and so if you keep striving, you’re actually going to wear yourself out and be exhausted,” Huff stated.
To that, Rogan had one pointed conclusion: “Like atheists,” he said.
What’s clear is that Rogan’s journey from skeptic to seeker is gaining traction, not just among his listeners, but within the broader culture. In a world where people are starved for truth and drowning in contradictions, a mainstream voice like Rogan’s giving serious attention to the claims of Christianity is nothing short of revolutionary.
As Rogan said himself, “Jesus makes more sense.” And coming from a man who’s built his brand on cutting through nonsense—that’s saying something.



