Voddie Baucham’s journey to Christianity began in college, where he was introduced to the gospel for the first time, having been raised in a non-Christian, single-parent home by a Buddhist mother. He described his conversion as a deeply intellectual process, not rooted in tradition or emotional experience, but in a careful examination of the Bible. He was led to faith by a college friend who, instead of presenting a pre-packaged evangelistic message, started with the Bible itself and spent three and a half weeks answering his questions, teaching him how to investigate Christianity for himself. This experience shaped his approach, allowing him to speak to skeptics in a way few Bible teachers can.

Baucham emphasizes that his belief in Christianity is not based on being raised in a Christian home, as he was not, nor on personal experience alone, such as saying the Bible “works for me”. He argues that experience can be deceptive and that a faith built solely on personal benefit creates a logical flaw, as other belief systems can also claim to “work” for their adherents. Instead, he grounds his faith in the reliability of the Bible as a collection of historical documents written by eyewitnesses during the lifetime of other eyewitnesses. He points to 2 Peter 1:16-21, where the apostles affirm they were eyewitnesses of Christ’s majesty and that their message is not based on “cleverly devised tales” but on divine revelation. He believes the Bible’s claims of divine origin, its reporting of supernatural events fulfilled in prophecy, and its historical reliability are the foundation of his belief.