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The Jason DeMars Podcast

The Jason DeMars Podcast

De: Jason DeMars
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The purpose of the Jason DeMars Podcast is to reveal the hidden mysteries of the Bible as uncovered through the ministry of Malachi 4 fulfilled in the life of William Branham. This incredible ministry restored the true church to the original doctrine of the apostles. After this ministry, we are told that another ministry will rise. It will not be a one-man ministry but instead will be a five-fold ministry in a many-membered body. "These men, if they pick up This and goes out with It, they can make more sense to It, see, to bring It to a place you would. I just want to lay this Seed, then hope they make It come to Life." He speaks of the teaching ministry in this way, "Only one Thing to lead us, that’s the Holy Spirit. And we believe that the Holy Spirit leads through our leaders. If God set a—a…Holy Spirit set a teacher in the church, then if the Holy Spirit wants the church to know something, He’ll speak through the teacher. For the Holy Spirit…That’s what the teacher is ordained to do. Is that right? It’s ordained. That gift is in the church as a teacher and we should all listen to it until that gift goes to proving something that isn’t right in the Bible, then we have a right to question it." I take the Bible as my Absolute, and my purpose is to show the reality of the end-time message through its pages. We will take what has been revealed and apply it back to the Bible and our present time. This podcast is designed for the purpose to help you increase your revelation of the Word and, in so doing, cause you to grow in your walk with Christ because we are living in the hour that the Bride of Christ is coming to full maturity in a fully manifested Word. © 2026 The Jason DeMars Podcast Ciencias Sociales Cristianismo Espiritualidad Filosofía Ministerio y Evangelismo
Episodios
  • Making Womanhood Great Again
    Apr 10 2026

    The home is either being built or quietly torn down, and Proverbs 14:1 refuses to let us stay neutral. I pick up our series on biblical womanhood with a direct claim: God is not demoting women, He is restoring them to their throne in the home, where faith, peace, and character are formed. We work through what Scripture actually says about womanhood, Christian marriage, modesty, and why a wise woman’s work is central to the strength of a family and the stability of a culture.

    I also trace a biblical critique of the feminist movement and the long trail of changes it celebrates: breaking the oneness of the household, erasing gender roles, normalising immodesty, and weakening permanence through divorce culture and sexual autonomy. I connect that cultural story to the Bible’s warnings about the contentious spirit, the desire to control, and the way rebellion inside the home doesn’t stay private but shapes sons and daughters for the next generation.

    From there we turn to a constructive vision grounded in Proverbs 31: a virtuous wife who works hard, plans ahead, manages resources, teaches with kindness, and fears the Lord. I talk about practical, home-centred ways a woman can be industrious without surrendering her primary stewardship of children and household life, including modern options for a home business. If you care about biblical womanhood, Christian family values, and restoring God’s order in the end time message lens I preach from, this is a focused place to start.

    Subscribe for more Bible teaching, share this with someone who wants a stronger home, and leave a review on Apple Podcasts so more people can find the show.

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    45 m
  • Restoring Biblical Womanhood
    Apr 3 2026

    A culture can’t redefine womanhood without redefining everything downstream of it: marriage, children, church life, and even how a nation thinks about justice. We take a direct, Scripture-first look at what the Bible says was lost as feminism rose, and why “restoring womanhood” starts by going back to Genesis instead of trying to baptise modern assumptions.

    We walk through the creation order in Genesis 1 and 2, the purpose of dominion and multiplication, and why headship is more than a vague idea of “servant leadership.” From 1 Peter 3 we talk about winning a husband without preaching at him, and from 1 Timothy 2 we deal with the hard lines about women teaching and authority over men. We also connect modesty, long hair as a covering, and the “meek and quiet spirit” to a deeper theme: God’s design is not about weakness, it’s about spiritual order that protects the home.

    Then we zoom out to society and ask controversial questions about leadership, empathy, and justice. Romans 13 describes civil rulers bearing the sword, and we explore why a nurturing, compassionate disposition that blesses motherhood can become dangerous when it governs doctrine or law. Finally we bring it back into the living room: the duty of a husband to provide and not neglect, the sin of resentment and nagging, and Proverbs’ picture of the virtuous woman as a crown and a source of peace.

    If you found this challenging or clarifying, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review. What single verse or claim do you most want us to unpack next?

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    1 h y 22 m
  • The Sacred Trust: The Forgotten Shame of Fornication
    Mar 27 2026

    A single viral post on X exposed a fault line in modern Christianity: we say we believe in forgiveness, but do we still believe in shame, modesty, and the value of virginity before marriage? I read the post, walk through the reactions, and then slow the whole conversation down to something sturdier than internet heat: Scripture, church order, and what a Christian culture should actually reward.

    We hold two truths at the same time. Jesus Christ truly saves sinners, including fornicators, and repentance can be real and radical. But the Bible still treats fornication as serious sin, and it still calls God’s people to purity, discretion, and wise boundaries. I move from 1 Corinthians 6 and 1 Corinthians 5 into the purpose of church discipline, why “testimony culture” can become careless with dignity, and why public celebration of a promiscuous past can create a trickle-down effect that damages young people trying to live clean.

    From there, I connect the discussion to the end time message lens of Malachi 4 and Revelation 10:7, then bring in quotes from William Branham on modesty, deception, and the “sacred trust” committed to women. We also get practical with Titus 2: older women training younger women in chastity, discretion, and home life, and fathers taking responsibility to lead, protect, and set a standard that makes purity normal again.

    If you care about biblical marriage, Christian purity, and raising sons and daughters with backbone, you will want this one. Subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review with your honest take on where the church should draw the line.

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    1 h
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