Although he could also be coated in tattoos from head to toe — fairly actually — the one factor extra apparent than comic Shayne Smith’s physique artwork these days is perhaps his newfound Catholicism.
And the previous motorbike gang member is actually in good firm.
Jim Gaffigan, Kevin James, Stephen Colbert, Tom Leopold, Russell Model, and Rob Schneider are only a few different comedians who share in the identical religion — the latter half of the boisterous bunch having transformed to Catholicism of their maturity.
The previous half has been simply as busy conserving Catholicism alive: Gaffigan lately carried out at The Sheen Heart for Thought & Tradition, at which Cardinal Timothy Dolan is a board member; Kevin James reportedly hosted a Catholic retreat earlier than the pandemic; and Stephen Colbert is understood for instructing Sunday faculty.
However what’s driving these comedians towards Catholicism?
Smith, who formally transformed final yr, gave Fox Information Digital his take — by first explaining what drew him to the age-old faith.
‘ROSARY’ BEATS ROGAN: IS FAITH-BASED MEDIA BECOMING MAINSTREAM?
“I chose Catholicism for all the rational reasons. I’m a big history guy, and I just thought… you know, if you ask Siri who founded your religion, and you’re not Catholic, she’ll say the name of just some guy. [But] if you ask her who started your church, and you’re Catholic, she’ll say, Jesus Christ. So I thought that was a pretty good start.”
“There are [also] very rational reasons outside of history. For instance, I read this book called “Dominion,” which was about a guy who set out to write a book about how religion had sort of muddled Western civilization and made the world a worse place. And he accidentally discovered that Christianity and, very specifically Catholicism, had been responsible for hospitals, the modern university system of scientific discoveries, medicine and Western civilization in general. And then he ended up becoming Christian.”
MARTIN SCORSESE SAYS HIS NEW FOX NATION SERIES ‘THE SAINTS’ WAS A STORY HE ALWAYS WANTED TO TELL
However it was in his seek for a pure clarification that Smith would uncover the supernatural:
“I had an experience where I was compelled to go into a Catholic Church for no reason, and I did not have an education about Catholicism [at the time], so I didn’t really understand the Catholic Church in general. I was discerning Christianity and sort of leaning Protestant. But I stepped into a Catholic Church one afternoon — I finally just gave in to this compulsion — and I had an experience with our heavenly mother [Mary].”
Smith went on to explain a “very brief but incredibly powerful” expertise that, on the time, he believed was a psychedelic imaginative and prescient of a girl who was “based in bright white light.”
“She reached out and touched me,” he described. “And I wept the hardest I’ve ever wept.”
Smith, who isn’t any stranger to opening up about his “trailer park” upbringing in his partly autobiographical stand-ups, has described his mostly-single mom as robust sufficient to have as soon as punched a “bad dog” unconscious. He went on to inform Fox Information Digital that his “incredibly surreal” expertise with Mom Mary immediately helped heal his relationship together with his personal mom.
“In that moment, a lot of things changed for me. I suddenly just felt like a lot of my issues with women had been healed. And I felt like my relationship with my mother had been healing, and all these other sorts of things happened.”
Smith left the church that day having made the choice to dedicate his life to Jesus.
And that began together with his discovery of Marian apparitions.
“Only then did I discover that Marian apparitions are a thing that happens to people and, in fact, are things that sometimes happen to tens of thousands of people at once,” he added. “So there are rational reasons why I became Catholic, and then the other reason would be the supernatural experience I had with Mary.”
COMEDIAN RUSSELL BRAND ANNOUNCES HE’S BAPTIZED: ‘I’M TAKING THE PLUNGE’
When asked why he believes other comedians might be trending toward Catholicism, Smith offered Fox News Digital a surprising answer: suffering.
“I think having a sense of humor…it all correlates to suffering. And Catholics are very aware of suffering. They’re not afraid to suffer,” he asserted.
“And in fact, often they invite it sometimes too much, and then we get the concept of Catholic guilt, which shouldn’t be a thing. We’re the only religion with a built-in guilt relief system. Like, go to confession, dork,” he jested. “But yeah, I think it really correlates to suffering. I think that Catholics are so tuned in to suffering and are very aware that their suffering matters and means something, and they’re not afraid of it. They sort of confront it head on. And I think that that is an essential part to having a good sense of humor.”
Smith went on to describe his comeuppance as a suffering yet successful comedian and podcast host, having begun as an atheist. He said, despite his appearance and former criminal career, the Catholic community has welcomed him with open arms — even after his public conversion resulted in the loss of tens of thousands of followers.
He told Fox News Digital that after having begun his stand-up career as a man who rejected religion, once he publicly converted to Catholicism, he was “basically canceled” by his former fan base.
“I got death threats. People mailed things to my mother, like it was crazy. And I was like, ‘okay, well, this is kind of the end of my career.’ And that is okay, as a result of religion is extra essential than cash,” he continued. “But over time, it has reversed course. And now I’m more popular than ever.”
Smith went on to say that his early-on encounters with followers throughout meet-and-greets when he first achieved reputation would give him anxiousness because of the inappropriate nature of their interactions, explaining that he was “getting touched by women” and “harassed by drunk people.”
However, since cleansing up his act, his fandom has modified dramatically.
“Now, I do meet and greets and people are asking me to pray the rosary with them. Women are so kind and gentle with me. People are giving me handwritten letters of encouragement and everything is so much more lovely and light and good, I’m, like, blown away.”
Smith hasn’t simply cleaned up his act within the proverbial sense, however set the document straight with Fox Information Digital: he’s a self-proclaimed clear comic in addition.
“Because I have Catholic sensibilities, my comedy is digestible by anyone,” he stated. “I’m a Catholic person, and that is the central part of my identity and the most important part of me. But as far as my comedy goes, I’m just a storyteller. I would like to just be as funny as possible for the most amount of people possible.”
One in all Smith’s latest performances happened in Washington, D.C. throughout SEEK ’25, an annual Catholic convention hosted by the Focus group. There, Smith carried out a stand-up routine on opening evening to a captivated crowd he described as nothing in need of “kind.”
“I might advocate SEEK to anybody of any age. It’s Comedian-Con for Catholics,” he jested. “I went to SEEK and I saw that Catholicism, while deeply personal, is also deeply communal… [God] wants us to come to him, together… He wants us to take care of and love each other and ourselves the way he loves us, which is, you know, infinitely.”
Brock Martin, the son of the Focus group’s founder, spoke to Fox Information Digital on the SEEK convention in regards to the group’s mission.
“Whenever Focus is working with people… the first experience would be an experience of God’s love and his plan for you,” Martin stated. “That’s an earth-shattering reality, that the God of the universe —the same person that made the cosmos — like, knows your name, has a plan for you, wants you to flourish, wants to spend eternity with you…”
In acknowledging God’s plan for his personal life, Smith stated he realized he could not hold his Catholicism to himself.
“I realized that, to just stay home and make my faith something personal, or to just read the Bible, or to just be Catholic and keep it to myself… was not the point. And it was not ultimately the fulfilling and rewarding experience that I needed,” the comic concluded.
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
To listen to extra from Shayne Smith, followers can try his new ‘Ghost Stories’ particular on Angel Studios’ Dry Bar Comedy.