Joe Rogan’s Spiritual Journey Takes a Turn Toward Regularly Attending Church

Christian apologist Wesley Huff, who is the Central Canada director for Apologetics Canada, recently shared that prominent podcaster Joe Rogan has been attending church on a consistent basis.
Huff, who went viral after appearing on Rogan's podcast in January, made a guest appearance this week on Sola Media's podcast, "Know What You Believe with Michael Horton."
He explained that he and Rogan have had "on-and-off communication" since their discussion on "The Joe Rogan Experience."
"And I can tell you for a fact that he is attending a church, and that has been a consistent thing, and so things are happening, and he's a very inquisitive individual, and I think for the better, in that, he's communicating with me and other people in his life who are influences that can speak to into these issues."
He also noted how more young people have expressed their desire to buy Bibles because "all my friends are reading this thing."
"We had someone who reached out to us recently at Apologetics Canada, who is probably the last bricks-and-mortar Christian bookstore that I've ever heard of. But they said, 'We have people walking through our doors asking, young people, teenagers saying, I want a Bible. All my friends are reading this thing.' So the Bible is, you know, becoming popular with teenagers. Then yeah, something is happening, and the Lord is moving," Huff said.
As reported by The Christian Post, Rogan was born and raised Catholic but has considered himself agnostic. Nevertheless, he has often had discussions surrounding Christianity on his podcast.
Earlier this month, Rogan told comedy podcast host Cody Tucker that he is "sticking with Jesus" over the Big Bang Theory.
"It's funny, because people will be incredulous about the Resurrection of Jesus Christ, but yet, they're convinced that the entire universe was smaller than a head of a pin and that for no reason that anyone has adequately explained to me, instantaneously became everything? OK," Rogan said on a May 7th episode.
In the conversation, which centered on the origin of the universe, Rogan asked whether the notion of the existence of "nothing" was logical.
"Wouldn't it be crazy if there wasn't something at one point in time?" he asked. "That seems even crazier than there has always been something. … There couldn't be nothing, and then all of a sudden, everything."
After Tucker's suggestion that an outside force created the universe, Rogan cited McKenna's famous line from his book that "modern science is based on the principle: 'Give us one free miracle and we'll explain the rest,'" as quoted in Rupert Sheldrake's book Morphic Resonance.
"That's McKenna's great line," Rogan said. "The difference between science and religion is that science only asks you to believe in one miracle — the Big Bang."
"I'm sticking with Jesus on that one," he continued. "Jesus makes more sense. People have come back to life."
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Originally published May 23, 2025.