The Parrhesians

By: The Parrhesians: Nathanael Devlin Peter Chace Kyle Bennett
  • Summary

  • The Greek word is parrhesia" means “forthright truth-telling.” One who speaks with parrhesia doesn’t flatter, manipulate, or use rhetorical tricks. He doesn’t massage or bend the truth, and he doesn’t hedge. He’s confident truth is on his side, and he takes moral responsibility for speaking it. Join Kyle Bennett, Peter Chace and Nate Devlin as they offer bold truth and discuss how to be the church in a world possessed by lies.

    © 2024 The Parrhesians
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Episodes
  • Infant Baptism and American Revival
    Aug 27 2024

    In this episode of The Parrhedsian Podcast, Peter, Kyle and Nate discuss how a return to the practice of infant baptism may actually be the key to Christian revival, not only in America, but also in the church and in the home.

    https://theparrhesians.com/

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    57 mins
  • Practice
    Aug 14 2024

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    As Coach Herm Edwards once said (famously)...“You play to win the game.” But you can’t win the game (with all due respect to Allen Iverson) if you don’t practice.

    Practice is important, it’s important for sports, it’s important for music, it’s important for almost every endeavor in life, including our life in Christ.

    Christians must practice their faith, and that means engaging in any number of spiritual activities, including the practice of spiritual disciplines. But practices and disciplines are not necessarily the same thing. Why is that important and what does it matter?

    Well, in this episode of the Parrhesian Podcast, we talk with our own Kyle Bennett, who wrote a book called Practices of Love, that explores Christian practices and spiritual disciplines, how they are connected, how they are different, and why they are so important for Christian living. (I’ll give you a hint, they help you win the game!)

    https://theparrhesians.com/

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    48 mins
  • The Sin of Sameness
    Jul 28 2024

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    When it comes to the church today there is too much sameness. Sameness is a real problem. But what does that mean? What is too much sameness? First, we need to clarify that sameness is not the same as conformity. Conformity isn’t a problem; the problem resides in the pattern after which the church is being conformed. Is the church today being conformed to Christ or to the pattern of this world?

    The Bible commands us to not conform to the pattern of this world but to be transformed by the renewing of our minds (Romans 12:2). But sadly, the church too often looks pretty much the same as the world.

    Dr. Robert Gagnon, professor of New Testament, and former professor at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, has been incredibly helpful in identifying the sin of sameness in his writing on Christian sexual ethics, homosexuality, and the Bible. Gagnon writes,

    The foundation of all sexual ethics according to Jesus is “male and female [God] made them” (Gen 1:27) and “For this reason a man … will become joined to his woman, and they [later: the two] shall become one flesh” (Gen 2:24). According to Jesus, the male-female prerequisite for marriage (and thus for all sexual relations) is the foundation upon which all other sexual-ethical standards are predicated, including the prohibitions of incest and homosexuality. (Incest and homosexuality are a violation of the [biblical] rejection of excessive familial and structural sameness.)

    Why is incest wrong? Why is homosexuality wrong? Too much sameness. They are not God’s pattern for the world. But the world has rejected God’s pattern, and so we end up with the opening ceremony of the 2024 Summer Olympics.

    It’s one thing for the world to reject God’s pattern, but its even worse when the church does. The church today is suffering from too much sameness, produced by following a worldly design. But we must remember Paul’s warning in 1 Corinthians 6, that if we look too much like the rest of the world, we will not inherit the kingdom of God.

    Conformity to the pattern of this world is a serious problem in the church today and so in this episode of The Parrhesian Podcast, Kyle, Peter, and Nate discuss the problem of excessive sameness in the church and how the church might break free from this destructive pattern.

    https://theparrhesians.com/

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    1 hr and 37 mins

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