Dr Peter Adam to resign as Ridley Principal
“Canon Dr Peter Adam will resign as Principal of Ridley Melbourne at the end of study and long service leave in January 2012.
In announcing his decision, Board Chair, Claire Rogers, reflected on Dr Adam’s service to Ridley: ‘Peter has exercised significant biblical and theological leadership across Australia and internationally. His distinguished service of the College over several decades includes Board Member, Adjunct Lecturer and most recently as Principal.’…”
– from the Board of Ridley College, Melbourne. (h/t Wayne Schuller.)
The Sydney Family Album — 6
“Thomas Moore came to Australia from England at the age of thirty. Until recently, little was known of Moore’s origins.…”
– In a guest post at Theological Theology, Peter Bolt introduces us to Thomas Moore, after whom Moore College is named.
Hearing the voice of Satan
“The Bible clearly teaches of the devil, but referring to Satan in polite society is prone to miscommunication. The community’s level of confusion about spiritual realities is so great that any casual reference to Satan is doomed to misunderstanding…”
– Dean of Sydney, Phillip Jensen, reminds us of the reality and the tactics of Satan – and the best response to him. Via SydneyAnglicans.net.
May 2011 Australian Church Record
The latest issue of The Australian Church Record has been released on their website.
It’s available as an 820kb PDF file.
Request: Help for the church in Broome
Bishop of North West Australia, David Mulready, is urgently seeking help for the church in Broome. Opportunities abound, but finance is lacking –
“We urgently need generous partners who might catch the vision to have a significant and specialist Indigenous ministry in Broome.”
Read all the details in this PDF file.
Foundations journal now online
Foundations is the journal of evangelical theology published twice a year by Affinity (formerly The British Evangelical Council).
It has now become an online journal, and the first digital issue (1.4MB PDF file) is online with articles by Carl Trueman Greg Beale and others. (h/t Reformation21)
‘The key to Postmodern Evangelism’
“The key to evangelizing our postmodern generation is forming relationships and faithfully proclaiming the gospel. We can not wait for people to come to us; we must take the gospel out to them.
The course called Christianity Explored began when Chris Hobbs, former curate at All Souls Church in London, England, brought Michael Bennett’s Christianity Explained course to England in 1990. …”
– Rico Tice introduces Christianity Explored to the (mainly American) readers of the White Horse Inn’s Modern Reformation magazine.
And Michael Horton at the White Horse blog is enthusiastic about the updated version of Christianity Explored –
“‘Christianity Explored” – especially with this newly revised edition – is exactly what we’ve needed for a long time. My prayer is that churches faithful to getting the gospel right will become just as known for getting the gospel out. And ‘Christianity Explored’ is the best supporting resource I know of for helping us to do that.”
(The Christianity Explored course materials are available in Australia via The Good Book Company.)
The Father-in-law I never knew: Alec Simpson
“His epitaph could have been, ‘his deeds follow him ’ (Rev 14:13). Fifty-five years later Alexander Simpson’s deeds do follow him, ‘embodied’ in the older Brazilian believers converted through him and the younger ones converted through them.
Alec was forty when he died 1950 in Uberaba in the interior of Brazil having come there as a missionary from Scotland with his wife Janet in the late thirties. …”
– Bishop Paul Barnett shares this story about a life not wasted.
The story of Harold Camping
Robert Godfrey, President of Westminster Seminary California writes:
“If you were to drive the freeways of southern California, you would see from time to time billboards proclaiming the Judgment Day on May 21, 2011 and declaring that the Bible guarantees it. To understand these signs we must know something of the history as well as the theology of Harold Camping.
I am in a somewhat distinctive position to write on this subject since I first met Camping in the late 1950s. I learned a great deal from him then, and so I find what follows a very sad story. I pray for him that the Lord will deliver him from the serious errors into which he has fallen.…”
He sketches out Harold Camping’s drift from orthodox Christianity in a series of five articles on the Westminster Seminary California website. (Reflection on this background may prove useful in conversations this week.)
Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5. (h/t Todd Pruitt at 1517.)