Jordan Peterson was asked a clear question in a YouTube debate titled A Christian vs 20 Atheists.
Do you believe in God? and he wouldn’t answer it. I watched his eyes move, his fingers twitch, and then he turned the question back.
I don't think that was neutrality, it felt more like evasion. And not just any kind, the kind people use when their audience is split and they don’t want to lose either side. I've seen it in business pitches, panel talks, even job interviews. It’s not rare, but it stood out here because the entire event was built on one thing: belief.
He sat in a room of atheists and couldn't give a straight answer to a belief question. The conversation never got past definitions and the moment someone tried to push it, he went abstract. It’s what happens when someone doesn’t want their answer traced back to them.
So I don't think it's whether he’s a Christian or believes in God, but that he treats both like labels to avoid, not claims to defend. I also don’t think he lost the argument, he didn't even entered it. What I saw was someone trying to keep access to every room without committing to one.