Rogan continued:
It’s a great line, because it really is true. And it’s funny because people would be incredulous about the resurrection of Jesus Christ, 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 that makes sense, instantaneously became everything?
After Tucker said, “I can’t buy that,” Rogan said, “I’m sticking with Jesus on that one. Like Jesus makes more sense.”
Then Rogan shifted to resurrection, noting, “People have come back to life.” He referenced a video Tucker has shared about a woman once convicted of witchcraft. After being prepared for burial, she apparently woke up and recovered.
“She came back from the dead; you telling me Jesus can’t?” Rogan asked. When Tucker replied, “Well, Jesus was after three days,” Rogan said, “People were tougher back then, bro. Two thousand years ago, people had some gumption to them.”
Tucker added, “Jesus went through some stuff by the time he hit 33,” stating that life was about “survival of the fittest” during biblical times.
Joe Rogan: Creation and the Big Bang Might Be Compatible
Joe Rogan and Cody Tucker also talked about common themes throughout the Bible and different cultures, including giants and a Flood narrative. “It was just their version of trying to tell you a story,” said Rogan. He continued:
I think this is the echo of this historical depiction of probably something real that went down. Like the Noah and the Ark story. I think that’s a historical…depiction of that flood that we saw that wiped out Atlantis. And I think when you apply that to all the other stories too, you should probably assume that it wasn’t fiction. It might not be accurate because of…people, but it’s probably the echoes of a real story.
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