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Christian apologist Wes Huff

Midwestern Seminary announces partnership with Wes Huff

January 1, 2026 By Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary

by Brett Fredenberg/MBTS

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (MBTS) – Midwestern Seminary is pleased to announce a new partnership with apologist Wes Huff, aimed at bringing thoughtful, academically rich conversations to a broad and growing audience hungry for clarity, confidence, and depth in Christian belief.

“I am excited about Midwestern Seminary’s new partnership with Wes Huff,” said President Jason Allen. “Wes’s online presence and influence for Christ is encouraging, and I’m grateful to see how the Lord is using him to advance His kingdom. I’m also grateful that some of our professors will get to join Huff in seeking to make the truth of Christ known in the church and beyond.”

The partnership will feature a series of interviews between Huff and members of the Midwestern Seminary faculty, exploring topics ranging from biblical studies and theology to church history and textual criticism. These conversations will be released through Huff’s YouTube channel and will also include exclusive giveaways for his listeners, providing added opportunities for engagement with trusted theological resources.

This collaboration reflects a shared commitment between Midwestern Seminary and Huff to communicate serious scholarship with clarity and conviction, without sacrificing depth or accessibility.

Huff has built a growing audience by addressing questions of Christian theology, apologetics, and biblical reliability with both intellectual honesty and pastoral concern. Central to his appreciation for Midwestern Seminary is the way its faculty model scholarly excellence that serves the Church rather than remaining isolated in the academy.

Speaking of two faculty members who will be featured on his channel, Huff said, “John Meade and Peter Gurry communicate exemplary academic depth while still being engagingly understandable. I take pride in my ability to be a popularizer of relatively complex ideas to a more general audience, and the clarity that Drs. Meade and Gurry communicate with is a great example of how those in Christian apologetics don’t need to compromise depth for simplicity.”

Huff pointed specifically to Scribes and Scripture, co-authored by Meade and Gurry, as a model for this kind of communication. “It’s a test case in how material that could easily become overly technical is instead made accessible,” he said.

The Midwestern Seminary faculty interviews to be featured on the Wes Huff channel will highlight precisely this kind of work, helping listeners understand why disciplines such as biblical studies and textual criticism matter for everyday Christian faith. Huff emphasized that these conversations come at a moment of renewed interest in Christian theology and Scripture.

“We find ourselves in a particularly noteworthy time where people seem to be hungry and excited about Christian topics,” Huff said. “The need for biblical studies and theology to gain a more general audience is so needed right now. I’m looking forward to chatting with the excellent faculty at Midwestern Seminary on a variety of issues—from theology to history and philosophy—that more and more people are genuinely looking for answers on.”

One of the central themes of the partnership will be the importance of textual criticism for the life of the Church. While often viewed as a narrow or highly specialized field, Huff noted that its significance reaches far beyond the academy.

“Textual criticism can feel like a very specialist discipline—probably because it is,” he said. “But its presence is vital for the foundation of having a text of the Bible to begin with.”

Huff explained that the work of textual critics undergirds every other aspect of biblical interpretation and application. “It is by virtue of the leg-work done by the textual critic that the biblical scholar can explicate the text, the exegete can bring out the author’s intention, the theologian can elucidate biblical wisdom, the historian can comment on context, the pastor can stand before the congregation, and the average faithful believer can apply Scripture practically to their life.”

By illuminating the history of the biblical text—from ancient manuscripts and devoted scribes to modern translations—these conversations aim to strengthen confidence in Scripture and deepen appreciation for God’s providential preservation of His Word.

Through this partnership, Midwestern Seminary continues its mission to serve the Church by bringing faithful scholarship into public conversation. Listeners can expect thoughtful dialogue, trusted voices, and resources designed to equip Christians to think clearly, believe confidently, and live faithfully.

Speaking to the value of this new partnership, Peter Gurry, associate professor of New Testament at Midwestern Seminary, said, “I hope listeners gain more appreciation for the Bible and its rich history. I hope they see it not as a book of outdated myths and fables but a living Word from God that confronts us as sinners.”

He continued, “My hope is that this series with Wes Huff is an encouragement to those who already love the Bible and provides that final push to actually pick up the Bible and read it for those who are curious about it.”

Details about upcoming interviews and exclusive giveaways will be announced through Wes Huff’s channels and Midwestern Seminary’s communications.

To watch Wes Huff’s first conversation with Midwestern Seminary professor John Meade, visit https://www.youtube.com/@WesHuff/videos.

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