I Doth Protest public
[search 0]
Download the App!
show episodes
 
Artwork
 
“I Doth Protest” is a podcast exploring the forms of resistance people take to stand up for what they believe in -- whether that resistance takes the form of protesting on a city street, the technology you do or don’t use, or what you buy and where you buy it. Each episode, we’ll help you make sense of the ever-shifting political climate by talking to people just like you.
  continue reading
 
Loading …
show series
 
The Reclamation joins forces with Doth Protest in this week's episode. Join Michael Lewis and Brad Kafer as we hear the stories of two Episcopal priests (James Rickenbaker and Kyle Tomlin) and how they each came to gospel clarity. We also discuss the fruits of Christ centered preaching and rightly understanding Jesus' disposition toward us as belie…
  continue reading
 
You don't have to be a theology troll to be confessional. In fact, we would argue that the confessions offer us a clear picture of salvation through faith alone in Christ alone, and that we find comfort and rest in confessionalism, not theological superiority. Join Brad Kafer and Michael Lewis as we discuss cheerful confessionalism with Pastor Tony…
  continue reading
 
It can be tempting to think that we can be a Lone Ranger Christian, untethered from the church and free in the Spirit of Christ to live and grow by ourselves. The problem is, we were meant to experience the Christian life in the context of spiritual community. Join Brad Kafer and Michael Lewis as we talk about the Grace of Fellowship in this week's…
  continue reading
 
When God saves us, he doesn't merely justify us, he also gives us a new self, that desires to love and serve him. This reality has been the source of much controversy and confusion throughout church history. Join Brad Kafer and Michael Lewis as we discuss the new birth and it's implications, and why we emphasize Christ outside of us instead of Chri…
  continue reading
 
Why does progressing in our Christian lives feel like such a burden? Are we just fish swimming upstream to attain a goal that must be achieved by us, or is there more to this process than meets the eye? Join Brad Kafer, Michael Lewis, and pastor Jeffery Scott Perry of Gospelway Baptist Church as we take a look under the hood at how Sanctification i…
  continue reading
 
It's one thing to come to a personal place of gospel clarity, but what happens when a church is run in a manner consistent with Christ for you as the foundation? Join us as we discuss this very issue with pastor Jeremiah Hurt of Reforming Truth Church in Lexington Kentucky.By thereclamationpodcast
  continue reading
 
While it is important for folks to stand in solidarity with those who are on the side of the oppressed, solidarity can be a form of silence — white silence in particular. This episode of I Doth Protest examines and critiques a Minneapolis solidarity rally in response to the white supremacist demonstration in Charlottesville, Virginia. Alia Jeraj, f…
  continue reading
 
On this weeks installment, Thomas LaBlanc, a Dakota elder involved with the decision to tear down Scaffold at the Walker Art Center, will discuss the native response to that sculpture, the outcomes of the meeting with the Walker and how that experience is a metaphor for the Indigenous experience in America.Episode Cover Photo Courtesy of Cindy Kill…
  continue reading
 
Cindy Killion is a journalism professor at Winona State University in Winona, Minn. Although she is primarily a professor, she has been a fundamental force in fighting for LGBTQ rights, particularly in La Crosse, Wis., for the past 25 years. She was also one of the movers and shakers behind the annual Dakota Gathering and other issues that affect i…
  continue reading
 
This week on I Doth Protest, we dive a little deeper into why scientists left their research labs and flooded the streets on Earth Day, April 22, for the March for Science. Mark Asplen and Kate Ries, two science professors at Metropolitan State University, discuss how science plays more of an important role in our society than we might think and ho…
  continue reading
 
Loading …

Quick Reference Guide