Avery Austin runs GodLogic, a ministry he started after a pastor's kid upbringing left him feeling unequipped to answer people of other faiths. He streams live apologetics debates several times a week, most often engaging Muslim callers on the deity of Christ, the crucifixion, and the reliability of the Bible. His approach is bold and unscripted, meeting skeptics where they are and walking through the evidence in real time. GodLogic's style is more of polemics, where the evidence is used as a sword rather than a shield.
About This Voice
Top 5 Areas of Focus
- 1Islam & Christianity: Debating Islamic objections to the deity, death, and resurrection of Jesus.
- 2Reliability of the Bible: Defending the textual and historical trustworthiness of Scripture against common challenges.
- 3The Deity of Christ: Making the case from the Gospels that Jesus is God, not merely a prophet.
- 4Christian Doctrine: Showing the logic and soundness behind the Trinity - Father, Son, Holy Spirit.
- 5Live Dialogue: Engaging skeptics and callers unscripted, modeling how to think on your feet.
Popular Videos
Watch GodLogic
The Trinity in the Old Testament
GodLogic walks through Old Testament passages that point to God's triune nature, showing how the doctrine of the Trinity is rooted in Hebrew Scripture long before the New Testament.
Muslim Challenges GodLogic Face-to-Face On Jesus Being God
A street conversation at Speaker's Corner where a Muslim presses GodLogic on the deity of Christ, and he answers from the Gospels in real time.
Muslim Fan Presses and Challenges Me On The Trinity
GodLogic fields pointed questions about the Trinity from a Muslim viewer, working through the objections calmly and explaining how one God exists in three persons.
GodLogic & Mike Winger | Cults, Islam & Learning Tactics
GodLogic sits down with Bible teacher Mike Winger to talk through engaging cults and Islam, and the practical tactics that keep apologetics conversations productive.
There Are 2 Billion Muslims And None Of Them Believe In The Quran
GodLogic argues that the way the Quran is read and applied today departs from its own text, making the case that few actually follow what it says.