Early this month Larry Sanger announced that he had come to Christ. We should rejoice when anyone becomes a Christian, but this conversion is especially interesting. Sanger, the co-founder of Wikipedia, is another in a notable line of skeptics who have recently become believers, or are well on their way to.
Sanger’s background makes him a seemingly unlikely convert. As he put it when describing his testimony:
Throughout my adult life, I have been a devotee of rationality, methodological skepticism, and a somewhat hard-nosed and no-nonsense (but always open-minded) rigor. I have a Ph.D. in philosophy, my training being in analytic philosophy, a field dominated by atheists and agnostics. Once, I slummed about the fringes of the Ayn Rand community, which is also heavily atheist. So, old friends and colleagues who lost touch might be surprised.
Sanger’s full story is worth reading. It is that of a highly intelligent man coming to terms with Truth after years of wandering through academia, famously penning skeptical blogs and essays about morality, good, evil, the West, and God. At one time, Sanger decided to start reading the Bible, not to find God, but because he was “trained as a close reader of difficult texts,” and he wanted to “understand it properly.”
Like C.S. Lewis, another reluctant convert, Sanger found that the Bible could sustain the interrogation of all his critical questions. He slowly began experimenting with “talking to God,” and reading through apologetic works that put God the Creator in the middle of even the more complex realities of the cosmos and science.
Though Sanger is a prominent figure with a mind like an Oxford mathematician the likes of John Lennox, his conversion is a familiar one. He grew up in a Christian home where church attendance and prayer were a normal part of life. Like any kid, he had questions about his faith. He looked at the lives of the people around him, and they didn’t always live up to their claims. He brought concerns to a church leader, and instead of engaging with the young man, the teacher dismissed him. So many journeys away from Christianity begin with a similar dismissal.
So, Sanger’s questions resolved into strong doubts. He never embraced fully-fledged atheism, and he frankly found many atheistic arguments uncompelling. But he did become agnostic, on the logic that since at least the type of Christianity he’d been taught didn’t provide the answers to the questions he thought mattered, skepticism seemed a better way than faith.
Yet, over the years, various life experiences like marriage and fatherhood (he even had his children reading the same Bible he did not believe in as a “book” to study), as well as his own innate curiosity, led him back to where he’d begun. One of the most helpful things for him was the apologetics website, GotQuestions.org, a great resource for anyone on that same path as Sanger. He was genuinely surprised to find that there were Christians out there who’d been sharing answers for centuries.
In honest engagement with arguments for belief in God, but most of all a straightforward reading of the Bible for himself, he came to see that Christianity really did have good and sufficient reasons behind it. Better reasons, in fact, than the doubt he’d depended on for years.
Testimonies like this are inspiring. They remind us that no one is too far gone for God to bring back. They’re also a reminder of the value of apologetics, which is not meant to be practiced only by a few brainy podcasters and theologians. It is, in fact, a great tool that God uses to bring His people in and to nourish them once they’ve arrived.
Sanger’s story, that of a young believer-turned skeptic-turned agnostic-turned believer again, underscores the importance of ministries like Summit, Worldview Academy, and GotQuestions.org. These groups are great resources for parents and grandparents when kids have questions about Christianity. Curious, skeptical, and even cynical questions need teachers—apologists—who not only can respond with biblical truth, but who can offer confidence to live as Christians.
Read Sanger’s conversion announcement, listen to his conversation story with Sean McDowell, and check out these ministries. Despite what the world around says, we really do have reason to believe.
Photo Courtesy: ©YouTube/American Thought Leaders-The Epoch Times
Published Date: February 26, 2025
The views expressed in this commentary do not necessarily reflect those of CrosswalkHeadlines.
BreakPoint is a program of the Colson Center for Christian Worldview. BreakPoint commentaries offer incisive content people can't find anywhere else; content that cuts through the fog of relativism and the news cycle with truth and compassion. Founded by Chuck Colson (1931 – 2012) in 1991 as a daily radio broadcast, BreakPoint provides a Christian perspective on today's news and trends. Today, you can get it in written and a variety of audio formats: on the web, the radio, or your favorite podcast app on the go.