Farewell to Tearfund (UK)?
“My family has supported a little girl through Tearfund for a decade or so and I have flown Tearfund’s flag and donated to it in various ways over the years. No more, however. I redirected our sponsorship from Tearfund to another Christian group which, I am told, will be able to continue to support our child in South America.…”
– Dr Lisa Severine Nolland writes about Tearfund in the UK and the importance of theology – at Anglican Mainstream. (Photo: Tearfund UK.)
GAFCON Theological Resource Group at work
Natasha Percy at SydneyAnglicans.net has posted a report on the GAFCON Theological Resource Group meeting last week.
ACL President Dr Mark Thompson has just returned from the meeting in Uganda.
– Read the article here. Related: The Jerusalem Declaration.
The Courage to be Protestant
On last weekend’s (October 5, 2008) broadcast from The White Horse Inn Dr David Wells, author of ‘The Courage to be Protestant’, and numerous other books, was the special guest.
Dr. Wells has some very helpful observations on the accommodation of churches to the surrounding culture – and some challenging words on preaching.
Hear it at The White Horse Inn. (See our earlier posts.)
The great Anglican divide
While about 20 parishioners pray under the old wooden beams of the church, most of the congregation is farther south…
Last February, most of the St. George’s congregation broke away from the umbrella of the Niagara Diocese, citing creeping liberalism in the Anglican Church of Canada… This weekend, the congregations of two more churches – one in Ottawa and one in Hamilton – voted to join the Anglican Network in Canada.
– Report from The Hamilton Spectator in Ontario. (Photo: St. George’s Lowville.)
The Lord’s Supper in Human Hands
The Australian Church Record and the Anglican Church League’s publication ‘The Lord’s Supper in Human Hands’ will be available from October 20.
The book is an attempt to summarise the course of Sydney’s journey towards lay and diaconal administration of the Lord’s Supper and has contributions from John Woodhouse, Mark Thompson, Peter Bolt, Glenn Davies, and Robert Tong.
Details on how to order your copy are now on the Church Record website. (If you are a member of Sydney Synod, you will be sent a copy of the book
courtesy of the ACR/ACL.)
Diocese of Pittsburgh Convention video
Anglican TV has made available their video of last weekend’s historic Pittsburgh Diocesan Convention.
A press conference held after the Convention starts 2 hours 43 minutes into the video.
– At Anglican TV.
Ryan Ferguson recites from Psalms
Back in May, we linked to the video of Ryan Ferguson giving memorised dramatic recitation of Hebrews 9 and 10 using the ESV.
At this year’s WorshipGod08 Conference, run by Sovereign Grace Ministries, he recited Psalm 22, Psalm 25 and Psalm 145. The video files have been posted on YouTube. (Hat tip Challies.com)
In addition, audio files of the talks and seminars from the conference are available here.
Two more Ontario parishes join Network
The congregations of St George’s in Ottawa and the Church of St Peter in Hamilton both voted with overwhelming majorities today to come under the episcopal oversight of Bishop Donald Harvey, Moderator of the Anglican Network in Canada (ANiC) and under the Primatial authority of Archbishop Gregory Venables of the Anglican Province of the Southern Cone.
The two congregations demonstrated strong unity in making these decisions. At St George’s the vote was 130 in favour and 27 opposed, while at St Peter’s, 42 voted in favour and one was opposed. Attendance at both parish vestry meetings was unexpectedly high. …
– See the full press release from the Anglican Network in Canada.
(Photo: St. Peter’s Hamilton.)
Pittsburgh leaves TEC, joins Southern Cone
“Deputies to the Episcopal Diocese of Pittsburgh’s 143rd Annual diocesan convention voted by strong margins on October 4 to join the Anglican Province of the Southern Cone.
Vote totals on the key constitutional provision that opened the way for the change were as follows. A total of 191 laity voted. 119 voted in favor. 69 voted against, 3 abstained. A total of 160 clergy voted. 121 voted in favor. 33 voted no. 3 abstained. 2 invalid ballots were cast.
‘We deeply value our shared heritage and years of friendship with those still within that denomination, but this diocese could not in good conscience continue down the road away from mainstream Christianity that the leadership of The Episcopal Church is so determined to follow,’ said the Rev. Peter Frank, director of communications for the diocese.
The passage of the vote by the diocesan convention, the diocese’s highest governing authority, means that the entire Episcopal Diocese of Pittsburgh, including all of its congregations and clergy, is now part of the Anglican Province of the Southern Cone. The diocese expects a small group of 210 clergy and a minority of its 70 parishes to withdraw from the diocese and reorganize under the authority of The Episcopal Church. The diocese is committed to making such decisions of conscience as easy as possible for all those involved. …”
– Press release continued at the Diocese of Pittsburgh.
See also: Diocese Begins Process to Recall Bishop Duncan.
Presiding Bishop appeals for unity
In the face of more dioceses, parishes and individuals leaving The Episcopal Church, Presiding Bishop Katherine Jefferts Schori has gone on camera to appeal for unity.
Speaking from Savannah, Georgia, she said that if people are led away by their leaders (even bishops!), the TEC will ‘leave the porch light on’ – and that there is ‘room for all’.
She also said “it’s time to get the gay issue behind us”.
Watch the 5 minute 37 second video on the Episcopal Church home page.
Pittsburgh vote tonight
The 143rd Convention of the Episcopal Diocese of Pittsburgh will convene tonight, Sydney time, to vote on resolutions to realign the Diocese out of the Episcopal Church and into the Anglican Province of the Southern Cone. The Coalition for Realignment plans to post live results on their website.
Doubtless, the delegates would be grateful for your prayers as they meet.
Why Anglican? – Phillip Jensen
It is a strange phenomenon when your friends and enemies agree about you. But Sydney Anglicans enjoy this peculiarity. Neither friends nor enemies think we believe in Anglicanism. …
Anglican Christians have never believed in the sociological Anglicanism. We have always been Confessional Anglicans. We are Anglicans because we profess the Anglican beliefs of the Book of Common Prayer and the 39 Articles of Religion. These include the great creeds of the ancient worldwide church (the Apostles, Nicene and Athanasian Creeds). …
– Phillip Jensen, Dean of Sydney, writes in this weekend’s Cathedral newsletter.
An idea for your church?
Wayne Grudem’s Systematic Theology read by 800 members of one church.
Hunter Street Baptist Church in Hoover, Alabama is the largest Baptist church in its state, averaging 4,500 attendees each weekend. Six years ago pastor Buddy Gray started a theology reading group with nine other men and chose Dr. Wayne Grudem’s Systematic Theology as their beginning text. …
– Story from Koinonia.
Repentance and the Church of England
Lee Gatiss, co-ordinator of Reform London, spoke at a joint Reform London – London Diocesan Evangelical Fellowship meeting on Wednesday:
I’ve been preaching on Hebrews for the last month or so, and it’s struck me how penetrating some of the application of this book is for us today in the Church of England.
So a few weeks ago we looked on a Sunday morning at the great warning in chapter 2 verse 1 that “we must pay more careful attention to what we have heard (from Christ) lest we drift away from it.” For if we do drift, we will not escape God’s judgment. How shall we escape if we neglect such a great salvation?…
God spoke on all the issues we’ll be discussing tonight, everything facing the Church of England, but we didn’t listen. And so the deceitfulness of sin has led us further and further away from the living God.
That probably means that it won’t be long before simple superstition takes over in the upper echelons on our Church. Anglican bishops will be going on pilgrimages to Lourdes and praying to Mary or something daft like that next.”
– Read the full talk at Reform London.
Statements by the Presiding Bishop and other TEC Leaders on Christian Theology
Peter Frank, Director of Communications of the Episcopal Diocese of Pittsburgh, has assembled chilling quotes from TEC leaders – read the PDF file (direct link) at the Coalition for Realignment’s website.
While many of these quotes have been previously circulated, it’s yet another reminder that one can never assume the gospel, but that in every generation there is a need “to contend for the faith that was once for all delivered to the saints” (Jude 3).
(Photo: Episcopal News Service.)