Following his widely discussed interview on “The Joe Rogan Experience,” Christian apologist Wesley Huff published a short video “debunking” false statements he made during the conversation.
“It’s been just under a week since my podcast with Joe Rogan dropped, and it’s been quite the week,” Huff said in a video posted to X Tuesday, Jan. 14. “I did want to come on here, though, and say a few things.”
“My time with Rogan was amazing,” said Huff, “but both myself and others have caught things I said that weren’t correct. And so in light of that, I’m going to be making a response video to myself.”
I debunk… myself. pic.twitter.com/HawppbaJkw
— WesleyHuff (@WesleyLHuff) January 14, 2025
Wesley Huff Responds to Errors He Made in Interview With Joe Rogan
Wesley Huff’s conversation with Joe Rogan, who hosts one of the most popular podcasts in the world, released on Tuesday, Jan. 7, and has nearly 5 million views on YouTube as of this writing.
Joe Rogan is a comedian, UFC color commentator, and the host of “The Joe Rogan Experience.” Wesley Huff is the Central Canada director for Apologetics Canada, according to his website.
He has a B.A. in sociology from York University, a Masters of Theological Studies from Tyndale University, and is currently working on a Ph.D. in New Testament at the University of Toronto’s Wycliffe College.
During their discussion, which ran more than three hours, Rogan asked Huff questions about the possibility of miracles, the evidence for the resurrection, whether it is possible that Jesus did not die, and why Huff believes that Jesus was not merely a moral teacher.
Huff has gone viral for the articulate and balanced way he presented evidence for the Christian faith to Rogan, who is not a Christian and whose audience is massive. In fact, it was how Huff shared his views in a controversial debate with 4BiddenKnowledge Inc. founder and CEO Billy Carson last fall that caused Rogan to become aware of the apologist in the first place.
In his video responding to his interview with Rogan, Huff quickly ticked off several corrections, including that Huff had cited the 10th article of the LDS church when he had actually meant the 8th, had said “pantheon” instead of “Parthenon,” and had referenced 1 Corinthians 15 as saying 400 people saw Jesus after his resurrection when it actually says that 500 did.