How Wes Huff Got The Bible Wrong on Joe Rogan
By Anthony F. Sanchez, Author & UFO Researcher
For UFO Currents
I thought I’d share this: "How Wes Huff Got The Bible Wrong on Joe Rogan."
I like Billy Carson. Like Joe Rogan says, his videos are fun, and his take on history is a fascinating alternative to many mainstream narratives. Perhaps I think he’s getting a bad rap. Wesley Huff made an inaccurate claim that the Great Isaiah Scroll (part of the Dead Sea Scrolls discovery) was an exact copy—word for word—of the Book of Isaiah from the Masoretic Text (the authoritative Hebrew and Aramaic version of the Hebrew Bible).
This claim is incorrect. There are over 2,600 differences between the two texts, ranging from word variants and single-letter differences to entire verse discrepancies.
The attack on Billy Carson seemed deliberately aimed at undermining him. His recent rise to prominence, based on his own claims, stands in stark contrast to the beliefs of the religious groups that have challenged him.
Now, let me be clear: I believe in God. I also believe in the existence of angels and demons. However, my beliefs stem from my cultural upbringing, and despite my secular stance and reliance on scientific arguments, I do not believe in tearing others down to push claims about unfounded or unprovable histories. I believe in Jesus, though I acknowledge that some argue He never existed. Yet, we have credible evidence to consider. Flavius Josephus (A.D. 37–c. 100), a historian who lived closest to the time of Jesus, provided written accounts. Additionally, Roman records, such as a passage in the Annals of Imperial Rome by the historian Tacitus, also reference Jesus.
Are all the stories in the Bible true? Did events occur exactly as modern churches and theologians tell us? We cannot be entirely certain. From an academic perspective, the likely answer is no. This doesn’t diminish the ongoing debates or the need for further research.
Billy Carson has his beliefs, just as Wesley Huff has his. But no one should make it their mission to embarrass or humiliate another, especially when they themselves are prone to egregious errors.
Wesley Huff either knowingly misled Joe Rogan or made a serious miscalculation regarding the differences between the Great Isaiah Scroll and the Masoretic Text. These differences—spanning word variants, single letters, and entire verses—are not trivial.
Just as Ryan McBeth recently apologized (with integrity) to Sean Ryan for his incorrect claim regarding Shoemaker and the Cybertruck email incident, I believe, perhaps, Billy Carson is owed an apology.
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Anthony is the author of the books ‘UFO Nexus‘, ‘UFO Highway 2.0‘, and ‘The Modern UFO/UAP Researcher’s Handbook‘ available in paperback or eBook @ https://StrangeLightsPublishing.com
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Citations:
O'Connor, A. (n.d.). *How Wes Huff got the Bible wrong on Joe Rogan* [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I0qzvDSmKi4
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Explore the untold connections between alien realms, advanced technology, and humanity’s hidden history in Anthony F. Sanchez’s latest books—where cosmic secrets meet government cover-ups.
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