
Nate unpacks Larry Sanger’s journey from skeptic to believer
Skeptical Philosopher Christian | Ask A Christian Podcast
Focus Keyphrase: skeptical philosopher Christian
Ever wonder how a Wikipedia co-founder and skeptical philosopher Christian ends up kneeling at the cross after decades of doubt? Nate Cunningham unravels Larry Sanger’s 50-page testimony of intellectual surrender to Christ, proving even PhD-level skeptics cannot out-argue Old Testament prophecy. Then we pivot to Nigeria’s silent genocide of Christians, Trump’s Monroe Doctrine flex, and a raw Q&A on soul ties, cohabitation, and whether you can evangelize your boyfriend into salvation. Spoiler: God does the saving; you just stop sinning while you wait. All with first-century fire, zero chill, and a coffee mug that’s seen too many comment sections.
Skeptical Philosopher Christian: The Biblical Bottom Line
Larry Sanger, co-founder of Wikipedia and trained analytic philosopher, spent 35 years as a methodological skeptic—until the cumulative case for God broke him. Contingency demands a necessary being; causality traces matter to a First Cause; fine-tuning screams design; natural law reveals a holy Creator. But the clincher? Hundreds of Messianic prophecies—birth in Bethlehem, pierced hands, resurrection on the third day—fulfilled in Jesus with historical precision. As Sanger notes, they are “impenetrable until revealed, obvious in hindsight.” Salvation is not earned by works, evangelizing partners, or moral perfection. Scripture is clear: “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved” (Romans 10:13). Repent, believe the gospel, receive eternal life freely—because grace alone makes skeptical philosopher Christian testimonies possible. For more biblical deep dives, explore our Theology Unpacked category.
Meanwhile, Nate Regains His Website Like Moses Parting the Red Sea
After months in the digital wilderness—locked out, two-factor-less, and nigh unto despair—Nate finally reclaimed askachristianpodcast.com with one desperate password guess. Cue angelic choir, confetti, and a humble reminder: enable 2FA, friends. Also, he begged for YouTube subs like a street preacher with a megaphone made of guilt. “We won’t be the worst thing you hear today—probably.” Classic Nate: turning tech support into a salvation metaphor while dodging X-ratio demons.

Grab Nate’s book—because even a skeptical philosopher Christian needs backup against preening atheists.