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The Bryan Maples Podcast

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Insightful Apologist Addressing Current Events and Issues and Having Relevant Discussion for a Prosperous Life

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32 episodios

episode Shepherds or Hirelings? Brian Maples on Pastors, Politics, and Moral Courage artwork

Shepherds or Hirelings? Brian Maples on Pastors, Politics, and Moral Courage

On the February 6, 2026 episode of the Brian Maples Podcast, host Brian Maples opens with a recent controversy: a video shared via President Trump’s account that auto-scrolled into a follow-up clip whose opening image depicted former President Barack Obama and former First Lady Michelle Obama as apes. Maples walks listeners through the facts as he sees them — that the offensive clip originated with its creator and that the White House has said a young staffer mistakenly shared it — and responds to the wave of public and religious condemnation that followed. Maples reviews the broader context: the polarized media environment, AI-manipulated imagery and false claims already circulating about public figures, and how quick accusation cycles shape public perception. He references reactions from public and religious voices, including Pastor Mark Burns and Jeremiah Johnson, and notes how political activists such as Laura Loomer helped surface the provenance of the clip. From that incident, Maples pivots to a longer, passionate critique of modern church leadership. Drawing on biblical imagery (John 10, Paul’s confrontation of Peter, and Old Testament shepherding), he argues that many pastors have become "hirelings" rather than true shepherds — too comfortable, too concerned with income and image, and too hesitant to confront falsehood and moral evil. He contrasts the gentle, domesticated caricature of pastoral care with the biblical model of leaders willing to defend the flock, expose hypocrisy, and risk reputation and comfort for truth. Key points include a defense of rigorous accountability in the church, a warning against equating unity with unquestioning acceptance of error, and a call for pastors to emulate the courage and discernment of the biblical shepherds. Maples emphasizes that calling out wrongdoing is not division for its own sake but a necessary step toward doctrinal clarity and spiritual protection. The episode blends contemporary political controversy with a broader theological challenge: how should Christian leaders engage public life, confront falsehood, and safeguard their communities?

6 de feb de 2026 - 16 min
episode Marjorie Traitor Green? The MAGA Split and Trump’s Strategic Retaliation artwork

Marjorie Traitor Green? The MAGA Split and Trump’s Strategic Retaliation

Host Bryan Maples returns after technical losses of earlier episodes to tackle growing infighting on the right, arguing that MAGA is not dead but fracturing as self-interested figures try to build rival movements. He focuses on Marjorie Taylor Greene — newly branded by Trump as “Marjorie Traitor Green” — and lays out why he believes her recent moves amount to an attempted usurpation of Trump-appointed leadership, political extortion tied to the Epstein files, and general incompetence for higher office. Bryan walks listeners through key players mentioned in the episode — Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Tucker Carlson, Alex Jones, Steve Bannon, the Hodge twins and others — and explains how their actions are reshaping conservative dynamics early in Trump’s term. He defends Trump as the current leader of the right, praises his execution and strategy, and warns against internal rebellion that could fracture momentum. The episode also delves into cultural and spiritual themes: a critique of "woke Christianity," support for Israel, the dangers of unconditional or "suicidal empathy," and a call for political and spiritual discipline. Bryan discusses how failures in church leadership have made the nation vulnerable to poor policy choices and why revival or reform — not resignation — remains possible. Key talking points: why Greene’s Epstein-related posturing is problematic; how political discipline looks in practice (public rebukes and loss of endorsements); the difference between criticizing a leader and launching a rebellion; the practical limits of idealistic solutions without execution; and a pastoral concern for the future of American faith, family, and national strength. No outside guests — Brian Maples presents a candid solo analysis, combining political commentary with theological reflection and practical concerns for families and the church. Listeners can expect direct opinions, specific names and incidents discussed, and a clear argument for why unity and competence matter for the conservative movement going forward.

16 de nov de 2025 - 25 min
episode Replacement Theology Debate: Is Israel Still God’s People? artwork

Replacement Theology Debate: Is Israel Still God’s People?

Date: November 3, 2025 — In this episode the host, a Bible apologist and expert, tackles the heated online debate about Jews, Israel, MAGA/America First movements, and the rising clash between political loyalties and theological claims about whether the Church has replaced Israel. The conversation moves quickly from current social media rhetoric into Scripture: Romans 3, 9, 10 and 11 are examined closely as the anchor passages. The host walks listeners through Paul’s argument that not all physical descendants of Israel are ’true’ Israel, explains the distinction between children of the flesh and children of promise, and highlights key verses (e.g., Romans 9:6–13, 10:1–12, 11:1–11, 25–32) showing Paul’s concern for a Jewish remnant and the inclusion of Gentiles by faith. To provide historical and theological background, the episode sketches a concise biblical genealogy — Adam, Noah, Shem to Abraham — and the Abrahamic family drama (Hagar/Ishmael, Sarah/Isaac, and the twins Jacob and Esau). These stories are used to explain how God’s promises passed through Isaac and Jacob and why divine election and human failure have always coexisted in Israel’s history. The host explains Jesus’ Jewish identity and mission to Israel, how early Jewish rejection and acceptance affected the spread of the gospel, and how the Gentile church was grafted into the olive root (Romans 11). Paul’s warnings about pride, boasting over broken branches, and the call to humility and reverence are emphasized as corrective to both anti‑Jewish hostility and uncritical political alignment. Practical applications and key takeaways include: don’t reduce the debate to partisan soundbites; distinguish between criticizing specific Israeli policies and endorsing anti‑Jewish rhetoric; continue preaching the gospel to all, including Jews; and hold a posture of prayerful correction rather than cynical rejection. The host argues that genuine love can include frank correction and that blessing or cursing Israel has biblical consequences. Listeners will hear a theological roadmap for navigating contemporary controversies: an explanation of the ‘‘partial hardening until the full number of the Gentiles has come in’’ (Romans 11), the certainty of a future for Israel, and the biblical reason to avoid arrogance while engaging the topic. The episode closes with a call to pray for Israel, to oppose evil without affirming wrongdoing, and to trust Scripture’s promises about God’s ongoing plans for both Jews and Gentiles.

3 de nov de 2025 - 36 min
episode Speak It, Believe It: Using Scripture to Break Habits and Create Your World artwork

Speak It, Believe It: Using Scripture to Break Habits and Create Your World

In this solo episode the speaker explores how biblical principles and spiritual laws operate alongside physical laws, and how believers can harness God’s Word to create lasting change in their lives. Topics include the nature of spiritual authority and free will (illustrated by the Garden of Eden), how Satan leverages lawful processes, and why principles used by the world are often rooted in God-ordained truths. The host explains how authority and dominion were given to humanity and how words carry faith—capable of persuading, protecting, and bringing transformation. Scriptural anchors and references woven throughout the message include Proverbs 10:22, Deuteronomy 28, Psalm 91, John 6:63, John 8:31–32, Ephesians 1:3 and 2:6, 2 Corinthians 8–9, and Hebrews 9–10. The episode applies these passages to practical areas of life such as overcoming pornography and addiction, healing from depression and trauma, improving relationships and sexual confidence, addressing health concerns, and pursuing biblical wealth. Key points and practical steps include: recognizing that words carry faith and can be used to persuade your mind; replacing destructive thoughts by speaking truth aloud; repetitively declaring Scripture and positive declarations to develop new habits; treating the Word as both shield and sword—building faith and then using it to command change; and maintaining a daily discipline of speaking and continuing in the Word so truth becomes lived reality. The host shares a personal testimony of family trauma and loss, emphasizing how speaking God’s truth sustained them and prevented despair. Listeners will leave with a three-step process—hear, believe, and act on Scripture—plus specific examples of declarations to use for freedom from sin, protection from sickness, financial provision, and renewed hope. This episode is a practical, faith-forward guide for anyone wanting to learn how to intentionally shape their inner life and outer circumstances through the Word of God.

1 de nov de 2025 - 24 min
episode When Good Origins Go Bad: Desire, Pornography, and the Church artwork

When Good Origins Go Bad: Desire, Pornography, and the Church

In this solo, hard-hitting episode the host confronts a taboo many churches avoid: the tension between God-given desire and the destructive habits that can grow from it. Using the Garden of Eden as a starting point, he argues that many sinful patterns (especially sexual struggles and pornography) have a good origin that becomes harmful when separated from God’s design and relationship. The episode covers how Satan is not the creator of our desires, the role of shame and condemnation in perpetuating addiction, and why the church’s default response—shaming and suppression—has often failed. The host cites troubling statistics and scandals across denominations to highlight how secrecy and punitive approaches contribute to widespread brokenness in marriages and congregations. Key topics include the psychology behind pornography use, how sexual desire can begin from a genuine longing for pleasure and connection, and why many men and women end up seeking satisfaction outside their marriages. The host argues that condemnation traps people, while a gospel of grace and the repeated work of faith (hearing and confessing truth) can rebuild identity and break habits. Practical insights offered in the episode include: replace shame with persistent truth-telling about who you are in Christ, create new spiritual habits of speaking faith, open honest communication in marriage, and understand the difference between confronting sin and destroying the sinner with condemnation. The speaker also wrestles with difficult Proverbs passages, cultural influences (including science and education), and the complex roots of sexual abuse and trauma. This is a raw, pastoral call to rethink how churches address sexual sin—moving from punitive reaction to repeated, faith-filled persuasion that believers are "new creations" with no condemnation. Listeners should expect candid language, biblical exposition, personal reflections, and a consistent invitation to truth, grace, and practical change. Guests: none — this is a solo message from the host. Key takeaways: recognize the good origin of desires, reject condemnation as a tool for change, adopt faith-based repetition and honest communication, and pursue restoration and freedom in community rather than isolation.

1 de nov de 2025 - 36 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
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