Draw Near

Many believers live carefully with God. They love Him, but they are cautious. They pray with restraint. They worship with filters. They approach Scripture like they’re being graded. Underneath their devotion is a subtle anxiety. Am I praying the right way? Am I hearing Him correctly? Am I sincere enough? This insecurity doesn’t come from rebellion. It comes from wanting to honor God while quietly fearing disapproval.

The Greek word parrēsia is often translated as “boldness” or “confidence,” but those words don’t capture its force. Parrēsia literally means free and open speech in the presence of authority. It describes the right to speak without fear of punishment, rejection, or consequence. In ancient culture, only those with secure standing were allowed parrēsia before a king. Scripture uses this word to describe how believers are meant to relate to God.

Hebrews 4:16 says, “Let us then with confidence draw near to the throne of grace” (ESV). The word confidence there is parrēsia. This is not emotional bravery. It is relational security. The false belief parrēsia dismantles is the idea that you must approach God correctly in order to be accepted. That belief turns prayer into performance and faith into a fragile transaction. But parrēsia reveals that acceptance is the starting point, not the reward.

When parrēsia is misunderstood, believers self-censor in God’s presence. They hide doubts. They soften honesty. They avoid coming close when they feel messy or unsure. But Scripture says something radical. Because of Jesus, you are invited to come freely, openly, honestly, without rehearsing, without posturing, without fear. God is not offended by your weakness. He is not threatened by your questions. He is not measuring your approach. He is welcoming your presence.

Understanding parrēsia changes how you pray. You stop trying to sound spiritual and start being real. You stop wondering if you’re allowed to ask. You stop fearing that one wrong move will create distance. Confidence stops being something you manufacture and becomes something you receive. Grace stops feeling fragile. And God stops feeling like someone you must approach carefully.

This is why Scripture ties parrēsia to the finished work of Jesus. Hebrews 10:19 says we have parrēsia to enter the holy places by the blood of Jesus. That means your access is not based on spiritual correctness. It is based on Christ’s sacrifice. You are not speaking out of turn when you speak to God. You are speaking from belonging.

You are not insecure in God’s presence.

You are invited there.

And because the work is finished, you are free to speak, ask, and come close without fear.

Brian Romero

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *