
Hulk Hogan Was Baptized 18 Months Before His Death and Called It the Greatest Day of His Life
Before Hulk Hogan made his final walk to the ring in this life, he stepped into a baptismal pool and gave his life to something even bigger than wrestling.
Just 18 months before his death at age 71, the wrestling icon and pop culture heavyweight shared footage of a deeply personal moment that fans didn’t expect from the man who once body-slammed Andre the Giant and reinvented himself as Hollywood Hulk Hogan. In December 2023, the man born Terry Bollea got baptized, bandana and all, at Indian Rocks Baptist Church in Florida alongside his wife, Sky Daily. And for all the belts, big entrances, and bright lights he ever had, Hogan said it was “the greatest day of my life.”
“Total surrender and dedication to Jesus is the greatest day of my life. No worries, no hate, no judgment… only love,” he wrote in a powerful message on social media.
That wasn’t just some media line. Hogan, the face of Hulkamania and one of the most recognizable figures in sports entertainment history, had been talking publicly about his faith for years. But this was different. This wasn’t Sunday school Hulk. This was a man, nearing the end of a brutal battle with injuries and surgeries, neck fusions and heartbreak, standing up to say he was done trying to carry it all himself.
“I accepted Christ as my savior at 14 years old,” he once wrote. “The training, prayers and vitamins kept me in the game. But now that I am one with God… I’m the Real Main Event that can slam any giant of any size through the power of my Lord and Savior.”
TMZ, who broke the news of Hogan’s death after a cardiac arrest at his home in Clearwater, Florida, reported that medics were dispatched early Thursday morning. Hogan was stretchered from his home and later pronounced dead at a nearby hospital.
But for the man who once said he’d been crashing and burning trying to do life on his own, the peace he found in that pool was louder than any wrestling crowd. His wife, Sky, was baptized with him. The two bowed their heads in prayer after the ceremony, a moment caught in video that quickly circulated online.
Fans who grew up flexing in their living rooms and tearing off tank tops in tribute to Hogan saw a different kind of hero emerge, one less concerned with leg drops and more focused on grace.
For all the wild chapters in Hogan’s story, from toppling the Iron Sheik in 1984 and launching WrestleMania to his heel turn with the NWO, to his messy legal battles and reality TV turns, this final stretch revealed something quieter but no less powerful. In the eyes of those who knew him best, it was the ultimate babyface comeback.
Hogan didn’t shy away from inviting others in either. “Come to Him. He’ll clean you up,” he wrote to followers, reminding people they didn’t have to have it all together to walk with Christ. For a guy whose body bore the scars of decades in the ring, that message hit harder than any clothesline.
He posted Bible verses, wore shirts with John 3:16, and spoke plainly about what mattered most to him at the end of it all. “Not that I’m leading by example, but I’ve been made an example,” he said.
And maybe that’s what makes this chapter matter so much. Hulk Hogan was always a larger-than-life character, but in those last 18 months, stripped of theatrics, he chose something real.
In the end, the man who turned pro wrestling into a global spectacle left fans with one final move, and it had nothing to do with the ring.