Relatable with Allie Beth Stuckey

Ep 1342 | New Study: America is Biblically Illiterate. Here’s How to Change That | Carlos Campo

43 min
May 4, 202630 days ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Carlos Campo, CEO of the Museum of the Bible, discusses biblical literacy in America and the reliability of Scripture through archaeological evidence, including the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Megido Mosaic—the earliest discovered Christian worship space. The episode explores how biblical knowledge shapes Western civilization, American founding principles, and cultural identity, while presenting data showing a recent uptick in Bible reading among younger generations despite declining belief in biblical accuracy.

Insights
  • Archaeological evidence (Dead Sea Scrolls, 3rd-century manuscripts) demonstrates remarkable textual consistency between ancient biblical documents and modern translations, supporting claims of scriptural reliability over 2,000 years
  • Biblical literacy directly correlates with understanding Western civilization, American founding documents, and classical literature—gaps in biblical knowledge create gaps in cultural and historical literacy
  • Despite 15-year decline, weekly Bible reading among US adults climbed 12 points to 42% in 2024-2025, with Gen Z and millennials showing 16% increases, suggesting renewed hunger for truth amid AI and post-truth concerns
  • The distinction between 'inspiration' (musing, thinking) and 'amusement' (without musing) reflects cultural shift from contemplative engagement with enduring truths to consumption of vacuous entertainment
  • Founders' biblical worldview was so ubiquitous in colonial culture that they may not have fully recognized how uniquely Christian principles (innate human dignity, inalienable rights) shaped their revolutionary ideology
Trends
Resurgence in physical Bible sales (doubled in 5 years) despite smartphone accessibility, indicating desire for tangible, authentic artifacts in digital ageYounger generations (Gen X, millennials, Gen Z) reading Scripture more frequently but expressing lower confidence in biblical accuracy—suggests exploratory skepticism rather than inherited faithAI and deepfake proliferation driving counter-trend toward verification of ancient, unchanging texts as sources of reliable truthMuseum-as-inspiration model gaining relevance as antidote to amusement-based culture; experiential learning replacing passive consumptionBiblical illiteracy creating unintended cultural literacy gaps—inability to decode literary, political, and historical references in foundational Western textsPost-2024 shift in Bible engagement metrics contradicts 'post-truth society' narrative; suggests innate human drive for truth-seeking persists despite relativism messagingSummer 2025 (America's 250th anniversary) positioning Bible museums and faith-based heritage tourism as mainstream cultural attractions (30M+ expected DC visitors)
Companies
Museum of the Bible
Primary subject; Washington DC institution housing Dead Sea Scrolls, Megido Mosaic, and interactive exhibits on Scrip...
Ligonier Ministries
Cited for multi-year survey data on American Christian beliefs; 64% believe humans born innocent, 53% view Holy Spiri...
Barna Group
Source of 2024-2025 Bible reading statistics showing 12-point increase to 42% weekly adult readers and 16% millennial...
People
Carlos Campo
Guest discussing biblical archaeology, textual reliability, and America's biblical heritage; teaches connection betwe...
Allie Beth Stuckey
Podcast host conducting interview at Museum of the Bible; raises concerns about biblical and theological illiteracy i...
Tom Holland
Referenced for book 'Dominion'; cited regarding manuscript dating gaps between Mohammed's writings (200 years) vs New...
Martin Luther
Historical figure discussed for Bible translation work coinciding with printing press invention and literacy rate inc...
John Adams
Quoted: 'general principles on which the fathers achieved independence were the general principles of Christianity'
Thomas Jefferson
Discussed regarding Quran reference; used to argue against Christian influence on founding (host disputes this interp...
Constantine
Historical example of early Christian baptismal practice; buried in baptismal clothes after years of study and faith ...
Quotes
"We attempt the impossible because you can't do it fully. But in the trying, it's been extraordinary."
Carlos CampoEarly in interview
"The Bible is a durable book that it has shaped human lives throughout pretty much civilization through written history."
Carlos CampoMuseum founding discussion
"If men wanted to write a book, they wouldn't have written a book that makes them look so bad, you know, over and over again, we see the failures and the foibles of God's people."
Allie Beth StuckeyReliability discussion
"A great museum is literally the opposite of what our culture has traded inspiration for. Museums are places of inspiration. Now we fill ourselves with amusement, which is literally emptiness."
Carlos CampoLate in conversation
"The general principles on which the fathers achieved independence were the general principles of Christianity as eternal and immutable as the existence and attributes of God."
John Adams (quoted by Allie Beth Stuckey)Founding principles discussion
Full Transcript
Is the Bible actually reliable? Or is it just a compilation of curated texts from fallible men over the years who may have had their own motives? Why does what we think about the reliability of Scripture matter? Why does biblical literacy matter, not just for the Church but for the future of our country? We are going to be talking about this in so much more in a fascinating discussion with the CEO of the Museum of the Bible, Carlos Campo today. He's also going to take us around the Museum just a little bit to look at the earliest archaeological evidence for the existence of the early Church. I learned so much from this conversation. You're going to, too, you're gonna love this episode of Theology Monday. It's brought to you by our friends at The Last Stand. It's going to be an epic pro-life conference in Denver, Colorado, June 5th through 6th. The last stand I will be there. Seth Gruber will be there. My friend Frank Turrick will also be there. So many more speakers. Go to TheLastStand.com. Get your tickets today. Use Code Alley for a discount, TheLastStand.com Code Alley. Mr. Campo, thanks so much for joining me. Can you just tell the audience where we are? This is not my typical set, if they haven't noticed. Well, we're at the library at the Museum of the Bible here in Washington, D.C. And what is contained in this library? You wouldn't be surprised to know lots of biblical books and studies. We could fill many, many museums with the books written about the Word of God. So we have some of those here and we use this for meetings like this, podcasts, and other activities. Tell me about, I know this is a big question that we could talk about for hours, but tell me about the Museum of the Bible. Just starting with why it was created and opened back in 2017. You know, it was created because we wanted a place that tried to tell the story and convey the kaleidoscopic power of the Bible. You know, we... Kaleidoscopic power of the Bible. Can you break that down? I love that description. Sure. Well, you know, I think so often people think the Bible is a lens that makes people myopic, but we believe the opposite. It begins to open up the kaleidoscopic of the non-contingent being that it purports to talk about. So that's one of the things we love about telling people about the Bible and saying come and see where come and see kind of a place. So we wanted to do it with excellence. And that's one of the things that you can see the building itself is one many architectural awards. But the main thing is we believe that the Bible is a durable book that it has shaped human lives throughout pretty much civilization through written history. So let's tell the story. We tell the staff every day, we attempt the impossible because you can't do it fully. But in the trying, it's been extraordinary. I first came to the Museum of the Bible. I believe the month that it opened back in 2017. This is before I had kids and a lot has changed in my life, but a lot has changed here too. It was incredible when it first opened, but you guys have added a lot in the past nine years. We have, you know, like any place we want to continuously improve, but we're sitting at a time where we literally have in the museum today, the Dead Sea Scrolls. I mean, that in and of itself is extraordinary. And some of the earliest documents, of course, that relate to scripture ever found. We also have the Mosaic Tile Floor, the first Christian worship space ever discovered. And those two elements join, you know, so many other things, including things like immersive experiences and historical texts, because we do try to look at many different approaches to tell this story. Tell me what we're looking at. We're looking at the Mosaic floor of what experts are calling the earliest Christian worship space ever discovered. We've kind of entitled it the Megido Mosaic, because that's where it was found, but it's really an incredible artifact. And where's Megido? Megido's in Israel. It's in the Jezreel Valley. A lot of your listeners might know it kind of the Armageddon connection. So that's where Megido is. It's not generally a tourist destination, but we're so incredibly grateful that this was found there. And when was this uncovered? Not long ago, about 20 years ago in the prison, so in an active prison. So incredible. But when you move dirt in Israel, you have to call the experts in. Yes. They were called in and this is what they found. And they uncovered all of this. How long did it take them? You know, it took a while. The entire excavation took weeks. And the reality is because it's a working prison, you can imagine this was the last thing they thought they would find. But now that prison is actually being evacuated. They're building a new prison to make that site a heritage site. Wow. And what does this say? Well, there are three Greek inscriptions and it says so much. I mean, do you have two hours to go? I know, we could talk about this for two hours. In essence, it tells us the name of the person who paid for it. His name was Guyannas. He was a Centurion. He's also called our brother, which could be our brother in faith. That's what we think. Could also been our brother in war. It tells us also the name of the person who laid the tiles. And that's really rare to have both a person of note and a tile layer in the same sentence. It also tells us of five women, four, whose names are here. And all we read is the word remember. And we think they were likely early Christian martyrs and then a fifth woman who paid for what is called the memorial table. But she also makes this extraordinary declaration because she says that she's dedicating that to God, Jesus Christ. All of these are in Greek, but this reference to the deity of Christ is the earliest form in archaeology ever discovered. Well, that answers my next question, which was going to be, how do we know that this was a Christian place of worship? But it's because it says so. It says so. I mean, it's funny. I hear the folks who discovered this, the archaeologists who are Israeli found it and said, Oh, and these Christians see that the word Jesus is in this floor. They're going to be all over it. Yes. I really can't decide which exhibit is my favorite. And I don't think I've seen all of them. You said that it takes nine, eight hour days to get through every exhibit, and that's probably not even including reading every single description and really interacting with every single artifact. That I think, I don't know, that might take years. It's true. It's one of the things that people say is I have to come back. I just couldn't get to it all. And so the average guest stays for four hours and it's not enough, but it is one of those places we hope you can come back to time and time again, like any great museum and find something else that inspires you. What really just blows me away is when I look at the exhibit, it's such a large exhibit of all the different translations and some of the earliest manuscripts that we have of, for example, First Peter of Jonah. We're talking early centuries after the church was established and the congruence between those earliest translations and then the Bible that we have today. So this is from the book of Jonah. Right. It's amazing because it's from a folio that's called the Crosby Scorian Codex. It's just a word for a book, really. But it's not just from Jonah. What we're looking at is the earliest copy of Jonah ever found. And so one of the things that you might know, but a lot of folks didn't know initially, was the connection between Jonah and Easter. You know, the three days in the belly of the fish, right? It makes sense. And so making that connection, this entire folio kind of is an Easter celebration and Jonah being just a part of it. And tell us what a folio is. You said it's just like a book. It is. I mean, Codex is really the name for a book. Remembering the earliest things you would find would be scrolls. But when you wanted something more portable, you began working with what we would call as a Codex or the plural codices. But I think what's extraordinary about this text, I mean, here we are, even in this low light. This is a text that tells the story of an ancient culture that is already making the connection between this Nazarene, we know as Jesus and the Hebrew scriptures. And how old is this? This is third century. So it's, you know, they dated at about 250, but it's the earliest Jonah yet to be found. And we have something from 1 Peter as well, right? We do. 1 Peter. And I love telling people that it's so early that the text doesn't say 1 Peter at all. It's just a letter of Peter. You know, later we define it as 1 Peter. But again, it's found in that same grouping, the earliest text related to Peter, this disciple that we've come to know so well. And yet to think that we have this text in the museum is just extraordinary. And this is the section of what we call 1 Peter, where he encourages everyone to act humbly, tells them to respect their elders. And so we just read this and we matched it to the Bible and we said, Oh my goodness, this is one of the first copies. It's incredibly consonant. And it's one of the things that we try to show at the museum. It's one of, you know, the myths that is often purported about scripture. And that it's not reliable. Right. Texts like this show, it's not only reliable, but we can take it back to some really early days. That is something that you hear a lot that a bunch of men put this together in the, I don't know, 19th century to try to push their agenda. But that's just actually inaccurate. It is. And it's one of the things we welcome people to do is to really dig deeper. The creation of the Bible was into phone game. Right. Like that at all. And so very carefully copied. First an oral translation, right? An oral tradition. And then a written one that is quite clear and really profound. Amazing. Yeah. Okay, y'all. Father's Day is coming up, which means you need to give your father, your father-in-law, your husband, the gift of good ranchers who doesn't want all American meat in their freezer at all times. You should go ahead and subscribe. Don't just get the box of meat once that's great, but you want to be able to rely on that subscription, not have to think about going to the grocery store and the quality of meat there, whether it's really from cattle in the U S or not, because most of the beef here is actually from abroad. You want to make sure that you are voting with your dollar, that you are supporting American farms and ranches, especially in America's 250th year. It's just a patriotic thing to do to make sure you're buying from an American company, family owned. They love God. They love farmers and ranchers. And to make sure that you are supporting this American industry, which really has been the backbone of the American economy for so many centuries now, it's just a win all around. Plus, this is a truly thoughtful, unique gift to give the father in your life that they're going to love and use for years to come. Go to good ranchers.com. Use code, Ali. When you do, you will save $40, plus you'll save $100 on your first three orders. When you subscribe, go to good ranchers.com slash Ali code, Ali, good ranchers.com slash Ali code, Ali. I just saw an interview between Tom Holland and Peter Williams, you know, Tom Holland, who wrote Dominion, an incredible book, right? You know the text, but he said, you know, let's just compare Mohammed's earliest writings, right, to the text that we currently have. They're about a 200 year separation. It's one of the extraordinary things about the New Testament. You know, we're talking about 50 years is what most scholars would say, maybe even a little bit less. That distance, as it were, matters. And so that's one of the many reasons why we think this text is so reliable, but there are many others as well. And gosh, the diligence of the human beings that have taken pains to translate the Bible. Like, you know, I even think about Martin Luther and his dedication that, you know, according to God's sovereignty coincided with the invention of the printing press and skyrocketing literacy rates. But since then, the normal average human beings who have just said, it is so important for me to translate God's word into this language, into unwritten languages. That just, that just strikes me as something that has to be spirit empowered, because according to our own flashlight, we just want to do what we want to do and we want to take shortcuts. That to me is evidence enough that the Holy Spirit is in this process. I am with you. I mean, what motivates a person to do anything, right? But to translate scripture and to learn to read. Matter of fact, you touched upon it, but, you know, Ali Beth, the if you just check literacy rates, take that trending across time and across culture, almost always is driven by one thing. And that's because people wanted to read the scriptures. And yes, Luther and others, you know, there were many who gave their lives, literally knew that simply by translating the scriptures, they were in defiance of the church. And some of them were martyred as a result, but they knew that their higher calling was to make the word of God accessible to all mankind. So how exciting. There have been attempts throughout history for people to say, this book shouldn't be in the canon or this book should be in the canon or to try to translate in accordance with their own ideology or their own whim. But the fact of the matter is, is that those efforts have not succeeded. And that's one reason we can trust the trustworthiness of the biblical canon we have today. Yes, it's one of the things that we spoke of just before we came on air. And that is people should dig into it. This idea that, oh, you don't want to look behind the curtain. That's not true of the Bible. Look behind the curtain, dig into it. And you're going to find that the way the canon was formed, the Bible that we have today, its reliability, the care that people took in both the oral transmission and then the written was extraordinary. It's going to boost and strengthen your faith. Just even the sheer fact that if men wanted to write a book, they wouldn't have written a book that makes them look so bad, you know, over and over again, we see the failures and the foibles of God's people and their rebellion. And if this were just a book written by people who wanted to tell the history of a particular group, they wouldn't include all of this stuff that proves that it's really God who's powerful and people who time and time again we sin, we fail. We do really embarrassing, humiliating, deceitful things. If someone were to conspire together to try to build a manmade ideology just for power, it wouldn't have been the Bible. Oh my goodness, you're so right. I mean, it's true. But it's one of the reasons I'm so proud to say I'm a person of this faith because it doesn't try to hide our past. It doesn't try to say, look, we serve only perfect people. I mean, when a heal catcher, truly a deceiver becomes, you know, one of the patriarchs of the faith, that tells you we're all human and despite our sin, God loves us and he has a story of reconciliation to tell us. And do you have non-Christians? I don't know if you have this data, but do you have non-Christians who come through the museum and are interested in the history of the Bible? We do. Actually, I just, I met not long ago a woman from France whose English was better than my French, but we spoke for just a moment and she said, you know what, this book in my own country is something, it's not studied in depth and certainly there's no place like this in France. So I came because I wanted to know more and Alibeth, I encountered her again about three hours later and she was just bubbling with excitement. She said, I need to study this book more. I've been so impressed by the way this place lays out the Bible and I want to know more. So we know that many, many come with that same idea and there are skeptics who come, who come to say, you know what, this, this has got to be wrong. So let me just take a few hours and prove that to be true. So we, we love it. We invite all people to come. That's another beautiful thing about Christianity is that it invites the skeptics like poke and prod and ask and dig in and we'll dig in with you. We might not have all the answers, but God does and that is one distinction between occults and Christianity is that we, I mean, we have the God who's one of his names is logos. He is the source of logic. So we're like, you can't out reason him. Come on, let's ask some questions and figure this out. Yes, it's always frustrating to hear somebody talk about blind faith and I know what they mean when they say that, but faith isn't that it isn't, it is durable. And I think that's one of the things and even with answers, I think we do have all the answers. Now, all the answers are not satisfying. I think that is true. Right. So let me give you an answer. You want to know why do humans suffer? Why did God create things that are bad? You know, all the things that have been eternal questions, we have answers. Of course, the allotians have answers. All the, are they all satisfying? No, of course not. Can we fully explain what the virgin birth is all about? We can tell you what the word says, but we do have answers. They may not all be satisfying, but when you put it all together, Alibeth, I think this is the thing for me. What is the theory of everything? What does hold it together? What is this idea of the universal? I think that's one of the things about scripture that it begins in the beginning and then it talks about a potential apocalypse that really ends life as we know it and transmutes it into something else. I don't know any other text that does it with this kind of power and truth. Yeah. That story that you told of the woman from France, like it's so beautiful, but at the same time, it's very sad. I agree. Because whether or not someone is a Christian or whether or not they go to a Christian school, I had the blessing of being able to go to a Christian school where we talked about the gospel and learn scripture outright. But so many people that don't have that education are not told about the Bible at all, even from the perspective of, Hey, this is a really important book in the shaping of Western civilization and our country. Like you really can't understand the history of America or even our most popular literature in Western civilization without understanding the Bible because there are so many references to scripture in these documents. And so I'm worried about what theological illiteracy and biblical illiteracy means for historic cultural literacy. Of course, what it means for morality, but even just being able to orient ourselves as part of Western civilization and Americans. Oh my goodness, you open up these Pandora's boxes of topics, but you're so right. I taught English for many, many years and that was the same kind of thing because I'm in a class and I'm teaching, let's just say Hamlet, right? So you teach Hamlet and one of his lines is that there is a special providence in the fall of a sparrow. Well, you're a Bible reader, you know what Hamlet's referencing there. And Shakespeare thought all of his audience members, no matter what their training or background was, they knew what Hamlet was referencing there. Now, the average student that I had in my class said, what's he talking about? What is it, what providence? Fall of a sparrow? So now you almost have to go back and teach biblical literacy to place that in context, but that's one of many examples. Next sponsor is Legacy Box. 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They send you a cardboard box, you put in all of the pictures, the videos that you want to digitize, you send it to them and they send you back the digital file as well as the hard copies of all of your stuff. And so then you have it forever. So if you go to legacybox.com and you use my code, Ali, or use my link, legacybox.com slash Ali, you get 60% off. That's an incredible deal going on just right now, legacybox.com slash Ali for 60% off. And what do you think the reason is for, yes, of course, you know, and we could relitigate all of this, the decision to remove prayer from schools and Bible reading from schools. But again, you would think that teachers of history and teachers of American civilization would want to give a holistic view of what led the founders and what forged Western civilization. But there's almost like a fear or a disdain. And I think that is a really big disservice to students. Agreed. I mean, one of the things I often encourage people to do is to go back and read the transcripts from the dissenting judges, actually the judges that carried the day, the Supreme Court judges, who took prayer and Bible reading. Remember, this wasn't just prayer. They read scripture every single day. That was what happened in public schools. But even those judges that said they felt it was unconstitutional, they said Bible reading should take place daily, shouldn't happen here. But they all, to a person, were lauding the power of scripture. So how quickly we have changed in our appreciation of scripture and its power to transform an individual life, marriage, community, nation, it was lost so quickly. And I'm hopeful that we can regain that. I'm curious your perspective on our founding. This is another big debate. I saw someone the other day, this was actually a legislator who said Christianity had nothing to do with America's founding. In fact, Thomas Jefferson referenced the Quran. I mean, not to mention that referencing something isn't putting it in our founding documents. But is that true? What we hear that all of the founders were just deists, that they didn't really have any faith in viewed in our founding documents? Well, as you might imagine here at the museum, we've been thinking about this a lot, especially with this year. And we are doing an exhibit on the founding of America and the role of the Bible. And can we say that every founder was an Orthodox Christian? No, and we wouldn't say that. See, we have a mandate, unlike other places that we have to tell the story fully and faithfully. But if we could only exhume the bodies of these men and talk to them again, I don't think we can even fully understand how the Bible was truly part of the air that they breathed. And so that's one of the things we're trying to show. And even as we look at the different versions of the declaration, right, this was a text they worked on together, and that they added the word creator with a capital C, that in and of itself tells us perhaps in many ways, all we need to know. And one of the things we have done is we've taken the language and bent it a bit. And we say that we hold these truths are not self evident. They are not. I mean, my father was born in Cuba. Go there, alleybeth and see if they are evident, those truths evident there that all men are created equal. I mean, all of those truths we think have their roots primarily in scripture. Was the Bible the only influence for those men? No, we wouldn't argue that. Was it the primary one? We think so. But we'll hold that loosely and see what people judge for themselves. Yeah, you're so right that we are certainly seeing that it's not general common revelation that gives people the understanding of innate rights, the right to life and liberty. That is actually more of a special revelation that you only understand if you understand scripture and whether or not Thomas Jefferson really believed in the gospel. I think no one really knows or at least I don't really know. But I think that's such a good point that it was so ubiquitous in their culture that they that was one fault that they had that they just didn't realize how special and unique it was that it was the principles not just of the Amago day, but of the gospel that said, okay, everyone's equally dead and sent apart from Christ. Everyone can be equally made alive in Christ that filled them with this really radical and revolutionary idea that your rights don't come from a monarch. They don't come from a dictator. They come from you being a human being. And that's a little bit of a shame. But of course, I think through the Holy Spirit, they did put some of those principles into our founding, which is amazing. No question. It's to me, when you talk about, are we an exceptional nation? Just look, look across the globe for our constitution. Even 250 years doesn't sound that long. And a lot of historians talk about that we're still in our infancy and they're right. But that document has been durable. And I believe that it's the biblical principles that undergird it that make it such a durable text. Yeah, I happen to have this quote from John Adams that I read the other day where he said, the general principles on which the fathers achieved independence were the general principles of Christianity as eternal and immutable as the existence and attributes of God. So I don't think anyone who studies the founding of our country could say, well, yeah, they were just kind of agnostic. They had a relativistic moral worldview. That's clearly not true. And I think everyone in America loves the fruits of this worldview. And they think that they kind of think like, you know, that they're self-evident. That, yeah, of course, we believe in not murdering and not stealing because that's bad because it harms people. But if you dig a little bit deeper and say, why is that your property? Why is it wrong to harm someone? Why is it wrong to abuse someone? Why is it wrong to murder someone? Where does that right come from? And who gets to decide if they want to take it away? That's, I think, where the agnostic or atheistic worldview really falls apart when you keep asking why. Well, you're touching on something that I don't think we understand the gravity of not knowing these things and what it means for a culture. And I mean this very seriously. I believe that what we're talking about is not just kind of important. It is the bedrock of what makes for a great civilization. And if you were to be that person in the street, honestly, it depresses me. People laugh about these things. But when someone's got a microphone and says, hey, you know, name a country that starts with you and they say you go to Slavia and they're sitting in the United States and you think to yourself, oh, that's a funny thing. It's not funny to me. And that's just one example. But if you don't understand what makes for a great nation, what are the things that you will include and disclude in your family, in your nation? What are the things you would say this far but no further? What is it that defines you as an American? If you think it's just individual, oh, just up to you, it's your truth and all of these kinds of things, we will allow our nation to slip away. And what we would say is the true community of Americans and what are the things that we hold together and say, no, this is who we are and we won't relinquish them. I don't think this is a small matter. And I think it's really important that we hold on to them with the tenacity of our founders. Yeah, it is interesting as we've gotten theologically dumber. We've also gotten just intellectually dumber. And those two things seem somehow to go hand in hand. Unfortunately, it's true. I know we spoke a bit about Socrates saying he was the smartest man on earth because he knew nothing. But Socrates didn't sit in his ignorance. He made it clear that his life's journey was to continue to ask questions and continue to learn. And I hope that more and more young people and people of all ages will take seriously the incredible gift of intellect that God has given us and reason, right? If we are made in his image, it can't be the way that we look. It must be the way that we behave. It must be the way that we think, the way we rationalize something deeper, even beyond the matter that we see every day. And so it's what God calls us to. So I hope people will take it seriously. We love every life diapers and wipes in our home. And I love their changing lives club. 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Go to everylife.com, use code ALI10, you'll get 10% off your order. Everylife.com code ALI10. There is some bad news according to the according to data. And there's some good news too. There's some hopeful news. There's a study by Ligonier ministries every few years. They ask American professing Christians what they believe about the Aladir, what they believe about God. And it's really stunning how many people just kind of who call themselves Christians just kind of don't know the basics of Christianity. 64% according to Ligonier believe that everyone is born innocent. 53% agree that most people are good by nature. 53% believe that the Holy Spirit is some kind of force rather than a personal being. 54% Christian said Christians should not allow their religious beliefs to influence their political decisions at all. And so there's a lot of confusion. I think it comes from just not reading the Bible, maybe not being plugged into a local church, not having wiser people disciple us, that we don't even realize sometimes as Christians how infused our worldview is with secular ways of thinking, even about the trying God himself, which is troubling. You're so right. I know that it's one of the things that we've lost is sort of an awe for the things of God. And the early church wasn't that way. And I hope we can return to that when we think that, you know, we know that people who were novitiates of sorts, they were seekers, they would spend a year or more in study, you know, Constantine himself was buried in his baptismal clothes. A lot of Christians don't know that he had been a Christian for a long time. But you see, you didn't walk into baptism mindlessly. Matter of fact, there was a tradition that lingered for many, many years that you any sin that you committed after, after baptism was far worse, because you understood the gravity of what Jesus is death and resurrection really meant. And so when you were baptized into faith, any sin that you took on had to be graver. And so that's just one example to think you had to study for years to have the honor to call yourself a little Christ or a Christian. And today we have lost that. And I hope we can regain it. And some of these statistics can be a little bit disheartening. Yes. But there are some encouraging things, according to Barna, weekly Bible reading among US adults has climbed to 42%. This is up 12 points. 12 points is a lot. That's a lot. After a 15 year low in 2024. So just one year, 12 point climb nearly half of Gen Z and millennials now engage in scripture weekly. Millennials, that's my generation saw a 16% increase in weekly Bible readers from 2024 to 2025. Now, Gen X, millennials and Gen Z all lag behind in their belief that the Bible is totally accurate. So it's interesting. If you look at baby boomers and even the silent generation, more of them will say, Yeah, the Bible is totally accurate, but I don't read it every week. But then you have the skeptics and the millennials and Gen Z and Gen X who aren't totally sure if it's reliable, but apparently they're reading it more. Like, what do we make of this? And I really don't know the answer. Well, I do think this idea that we're in a post truth society is one of the biggest lies that's been purported to the mass audience. And here's why it can't be true. It can't be true. There's something deep within us that wants to know, what do you mean? Is this true or not true? A search for truth is deep within the heart of every human being. That's what I believe. And that's why I think people are coming back to scripture. They've seen the other faux gods. They've seen these things purport to be great truth. And could scripture be telling me something that I really need to know? And so I'm encouraged by this. I really think, look at Bible sales. I mean, Bible sales in five years have more than doubled. And these are print Bibles when most people have them on their phones. So I do think that we're up to something here, that people are up to something. I hope that it is good for the museum here of the Bible, where people will come here and also dig deeper into what this book is all about. But I am encouraged, I think faith, if you look at it through a long lens, is cyclical. You know, it's one of the things that scripture tells us is people wax and wane in terms of their own belief in God. And I think that's what we're seeing is the pendulum is swinging back. And that's an exciting day, I think. Yeah, another reason I think that this museum is so important is actually because of the increase on the reliance of AI, artificial intelligence, I think that is also driving a hunger for what is old, what is true, what is real, what is reliable, because it's really hard to tell between what is artificial and what is organic, I would consider myself internet savvy and still on the young side of things, I get duped by things online. And then also I just see the outsource of our own intelligence and our own efforts to AI, we don't want to research anymore, we don't want to ask questions, we don't want to write speeches, we don't want to dig into things. So we just allow chat GBT or grok to do that. And, you know, there's going to be a contingency of society that goes there and just wants the convenience of that. And then there's going to be another group, I think, who is like, okay, I don't want to outsource part of like the Mago day to a robot. I want what is real, what is true. And that is one of the things that you get here. You get real human intelligence, human diligence, holy spirit empowered congruence throughout history. And that it's like it's very, very refreshing to walk through here and just remember that there's something both very natural about the Bible and very supernatural. And I appreciate the way you put that, you know, to us, we are trying to convey the hope that is part of scripture. You know, very often people see the Bible as a book of thou shalt not, right? It's the thing that's trying to dictate the way life should be. But I think you point to a passage in the scripture that to me is one of the most striking and it's really where John the Baptist, Jesus' own cousin has come to this low point where he has his people go to Jesus and ask the question, are you the one? Are you the one? Now I think it's one of the questions that resounds through the ages and even in the hallways of this place. We want people to ask that question. Is there a central figure in the Bible? And what I love is, you know, we believe that Jesus was not just man, he's God. So he's the omniscient God. And instead of berating his cousin or giving him all of these reasons, he just says to the people who have come, go tell John the things that you've seen. He doesn't try to make a case for himself. He just says, you reason it out and see for yourself. And then goes on actually to berate a generation that wants to be amused. And I'll just say this, Alli Beth, that a great museum, and we hope to be that a great museum is literally the opposite of what our culture has traded inspiration for. Museums are places of inspiration. Now we fill ourselves with amusement. We've taken that word A, right? So that that's against, right? So we now are filled with amusement, which is literally emptiness. It's the most vacuousness. I've never thought, sorry to interrupt you, but I've never thought of the word amusement like that, like without musing, without thinking, right? Without inspiration. I mean, the muses at their very root, that's what they were intended to do, right? Provide inspiration for all humankind. And now too often we conflate the word mausoleum, I think with museum. It's not a place where old things come to die. It's a place where things, as you said, that are unchanging, that are evergreen, that are powerful, that have a story to tell, that are infused with a spirit and a power that goes beyond the artifact or the thing itself, that make you that make you literally say the word God, that I know some people would take offense to even say the word, but it's an exclamation. It's a prayer. It's that there must be something beyond me because I've never seen anything like this or felt anything like this because this has inspired me to believe there's something beyond myself. 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Okay, this might be a tough question, but if the family is listening to this and they're like, okay, I'm gay, I'm coming to Washington DC and I want to take a tour. And they only have one day. What would you recommend they start with? I'm sure it depends on the age and all different, all different things, but let's just assume they've got middle school kids and they want to come see the museum of the Bible. What's the schedule for the day? Great. Well, here you are. Now I am choosing between my children because we have a floor that's dedicated to the impact of the Bible, one that's dedicated to its history, one that's dedicated to its narrative. And that's probably where I would take the kids is to the narrative part, because not only will they walk through a village that has living history interpreters that won't know what an iPhone is, but you'll also see what it might have been like in Jesus' day. So that's one, because you also get to walk through the Red Sea and see the burning bush. And so it's very interactive and kids love that third floor. So that might be the first place to go. But we also have a children's experience for the younger kids as well. My kids love that. Did they love that one? Oh yeah, they loved it. It really is so fun. So if you do have little kids, there are things for little kids. I will say some of the interactive immersive experiences, they're intense because the Bible is intense. And so there's some discretion there for the little, little ones, but especially as you get older, like those immersive experiences are really cool. It's true. We even have a ride that folks get on, you get a little wet, very little wet, but you get a little wet and get to see what many people don't know. And that is that scripture is truly embedded right here in Washington, D.C. So you get to take a flight around Washington and find these places, including in the Washington Monument, that have scriptures or references to God in them. Okay, would this summer be an especially good time to come because it's the 250th? Oh my goodness, the whole town is red, white, and blue. So if you have any hint of patriotism in you, it's the right time to come and try not to be overwhelmed, not just with the museum of the Bible, but with everything. It's so much, but this really is, they're expecting over 30 million visitors to this. 30 million. I thought you were going to say 30,000, but 30 million sounds right. It's just crazy. Isn't that crazy? So it's an exciting time. I mean, they're so much planned. If you think you know, you probably don't. So go on the White House website, go on the website for the Smithsonian's, go on our website and see all the events that are planned because it's going to be an extraordinary summer here in D.C. Amazing. Well, thank you so much. And I really do genuinely just encourage everyone to come here. I've gotten to come a few times and every time I learn something new. So thank you so much for all you do and how seriously you take this role. And most of all, seriously, how seriously you take the word of God. So thank you so much. Thank you to appreciate you and how you are standing strong for what you believe. But also, you're a little bit provocative, which I like as well. You're willing to push a little bit because you know that the word is durable and hard conversations are ones we have to have. So thank you for your work. The truth can be provocative. Thank you. Thanks.