The Parrhesians

The Parrhesians: Nathanael Devlin, Peter Chace, Kyle Bennett

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.

  1. Who's Afraid of Christian Nationalism?

    NOV 7

    Who's Afraid of Christian Nationalism?

    Send us a text Martin Bucer was a sixteenth century German Dominican monk who converted to Protestantism. He was a mentor to John Calvin and helped Calvin in his efforts to reform the city of Geneva. In his essay, Instruction in Christian Love, he had this to say:  Civil officials must govern according to the Word of God and, in the measure of their power, help the success of the divine Word.  For as there is no power which is not from God, and everywhere the present powers are established by Him (Romans 13:1), it certainly follows that this power must be exercised according to the order and will of God. Only so will this power at last procure the real welfare of its subjects and thus stimulate them to recognize, praise, and glorify God as the Lord of all lords and the King of all kings.  “Citizens are not governed for their good and for the true glory of the supreme King when the secular authorities do not rule according to the divine Law and are not set to observe it themselves. For where God is not recognized and obedience to Him is not required before all things, there peace is not peace, justice is not justice, and that which should be profitable brings injury instead. We call ourselves Christians and consider ourselves the people of God, and yet our officials who have the power have fallen into the error of believing that the divine Law does not concern them, that they must judge and make regulations more according to the pagan imperial law and other human sentences than according to the sentence of God. But we cannot pride ourselves on being communities of God and the people of God, if we respect, accept, and keep all sorts of laws, ordinances, and regulations other than God's. Only His Law can make us live.  Bucer raises a few uncomfortable, but necessary, questions. Is a Christian nation good for our neighbor? Is vying for a Christian nation a way of loving our neighbor? What does it mean to love our neighbor if it doesn’t mean tangibly taking them straight to the throne of Christ? Are we really Christians if we leave politics to the pagans?  In this episode of The Parrhesians, Pastor Nate, Peter, and Kyle tackle the thorny issue of Christian Nationalism. How separated are the Church and the State? How separated should they be? What does it mean to be a Christian nationalist? If no law or policy is neutral, who, or what, is the Christian giving the nation over to if they don’t advocate for Christian laws? Welcome to another episode of The Parrhesians Podcast! https://theparrhesians.com/

    1h 33m
  2. Overseeing Souls in Negative World: An Interview with Joe Rigney on Eldership

    APR 18

    Overseeing Souls in Negative World: An Interview with Joe Rigney on Eldership

    Send us a text Three rogue elders walk into a Session meeting and slap a folder down. “We have concerns.” They leave it to Session to deal with it.  Time passes, and they grow impatient. They escalate their “concerns” to a higher authority and call in reinforcements.  They enlist the Presbytery to do something about it. The Presbytery nominates a few guys with good “intentions.”  Those intentions take on a life of their own. They grow an ill-will, and the next thing you know, those intentions birth bullies.  It all goes nuclear.   What do you do with bullies who call you a bully? What do you do with abusers who claim you’re the abuser?  According to Joe Rigney, you fight them. Tooth and nail. Like a real elder.  Elders aren’t fragile.  Elders aren’t afraid of drama.  Elders are quick to point out that “I’m hurt, therefore, you sinned” isn’t a syllogism.  Elders brush the progressive gaze off their shoulder and put up “no admittance” signs.  Elders redirect the soft hearted who are afraid to lose people and tell them to not be like Lot’s wife.  Elders are not afraid to drive a bus with only a few passengers on it if it keeps the church on mission.  Listen to our Session’s conversation with Joe Rigney on what it takes to be a church and lead in Negative World  (Previously unreleased: Recorded on June 27, 2024).  https://theparrhesians.com/

    1h 22m

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
5 Ratings

About

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.