The troubled conscience

the-troubled-conscience“Does God speak through our conscience? Does changing your mind really change your behaviour? Should we follow our head or our heart?

At our next [Moore College] Centre for Christian Living (CCL) event Tony Payne and Peter Bolt will explore two concepts that shape the Bible’s teaching about these matters: ‘conscience’ and ‘mind’.”

Tuesday 26 May at Toongabbie Anglican.

GAFCON Chairman’s Pentecost Letter 2015

Archbishop Eliud Wabukala“One of the great lessons of the East African Revival was that a genuine movement of the Spirit will impress on our hearts that the Scriptures really are the inspired and authoritative Word of God.

We cannot separate the Spirit from the Spirit-inspired Scriptures. The gift of the Holy Spirit is given to enable Christians to grow in biblical holiness and to equip them with gifts to build up the church in a hostile world.

It is therefore a tragedy when Christian leaders whose minds have been captured by the spirit of the age commend the values of the world to the Church and claim they are led by the Spirit of God. …”

– Read the full letter from Archbishop Eliud Wabukala here.
(Photo: Diocese of Kenya.)

Stories you may have missed — 23 May 2015

Dr Stuart PigginHere are a few stories you may have missed:

Dr Stuart Piggin spoke on revival in rural Australia at a conference at Goulburn Cathedral. (Link to audio.)

Anglican Priests ‘beaten to stupor’ by agents of the state government in Enugu State, Nigeria, over a land dispute.

Canon Phil Ashey of the American Anglican Council remembers growing up at St. James’ Newport Beach in California and reflects on reports the site is to be sold for $15 million.

Christians flee Aleppo in their thousands after fresh fighting in Syria, and Iraq’s Christians wonder where to flee after Islamic State militants take Ramadi city – reports from Barnabas Fund.

Reaching Islam (Part 1 & 2)

reaching-islam-1-and-2In the latest training videos from St. Helen’s Bishopsgate, Rob Scott speaks about understanding and loving our Muslim neighbours.

Church of England launches ‘GraveTalk’

gravetalk“The Church of England is launching a new national resource to help churches get people talking about death and dying.

GraveTalk, provides resources for a café space in which churches provide a relaxed environment for people to explore questions about death and dying, funerals and loss…”

– Report from the Anglican Communion News Service.

The accompanying website mentions the Lord Jesus, though the main message seems to be how flexible Church of England funeral services can be. You can also light a virtual candle.

Related: ‘All you need to know about christening’ — without mentioning…

‘Our mother church has tragically left the family home’

David CookModerator-General of the Presbyterian Church of Australia, David Cook, reports on fruitful ministry in the United Kingdom – and why he was unable to attend this year’s General Assembly of the Church of Scotland. (h/t Gary Ware.)

Related: Kirk sidelines Bible to ‘play for the team’.

Book ban Reversed

3-books“A ban on two Anglican resources used in Special Religious Education (SRE) has been reversed after talks between Archbishop Glenn Davies and the Education Minister Adrian Piccoli…”

– Story from SydneyAnglicans.net.

More: Minister for Education lifts Christian book ban. Earlier: Schools, Scripture and Book Banning in NSW.

Newport Beach Episcopal church to be sold

bp-bruno-rec-la“The Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles is nearing the end of negotiations to sell St. James the Great Episcopal Church in Newport Beach to real estate developers.

Bishop J. Jon Bruno announced the sale to congregants Sunday, Diocese spokesman Robert Williams said. The sale of the church could bring in roughly $15 million …

A majority of congregants in 2004 voted to disaffiliate with the Episcopal Church for theological and ideological reasons and later aligned with the Anglican Church.”

– See the full report from The Orange County Register. Earlier related stories.

(Photo: J. J. Bruno, Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles.)

Kirk sidelines Bible to ‘play for the team’

church-of-scotland-sscv“The Church of Scotland has voted in favour of allowing people in same sex civil partnerships to be called as ministers and deacons.

The historic decision was made by the General Assembly on the Mound in Edinburgh today, where the motion was passed by 309 votes in favour and 182 against. …

309-to-182In a speech later today the outgoing Moderator Very Rev John Chalmers is expected to say: ‘There’s something else that we have to learn as a Church and that is the power of harmony. …  It’s time to play for the team.’ …

Because the debate predates the legalisation of gay marriage the proposed change mentions only civil partnerships, not same-sex marriages. The Assembly will be asked on Thursday to consider amending today’s new Church law to include ministers in same-sex marriages.”

– Press release from The Church of Scotland. (Images: Church of Scotland.)

Kanishka Raffel to be new Dean of Sydney

kanishka-raffel-preaching-matters-2“The Rev Kanishka Raffel has been appointed the new Dean of Sydney, the first person from a non-European background to hold the position.

‘I’m delighted Kanishka has accepted my appointment, which was unanimously agreed to by the Chapter, to become the next Dean of Sydney,’ said Archbishop Glenn Davies…”

– full story from SydneyAnglicans.net. (Image: St. Helen’s Bishopsgate.)

Charles Simeon and his enduring influence on Australia

Charles SimeonThis year’s Moore College Library Day looks at the influence of Charles Simeon. It’s on Saturday 23rd May. Read the details and register for the day.

Is Christianity dying?

Russell Moore“Bible Belt near-Christianity is teetering. I say let it fall.

For much of the twentieth century, especially in the South and parts of the Midwest, one had to at least claim to be a Christian to be ‘normal.’ During the Cold War, that meant distinguishing oneself from atheistic Communism. At other times, it has meant seeing churchgoing as a way to be seen as a good parent, a good neighbor, and a regular person.

It took courage to be an atheist, because explicit unbelief meant social marginalization. Rising rates of secularization, along with individualism, means that those days are over—and good riddance to them.…”

– Russell Moore, president of the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention responds to a recent study on church attendance in the USA. (h/t Justin Taylor.)

ACL News March 2001Related: Back in 2000, Peter Jensen (then Principal of Moore College) spoke at the ACL Synod Dinner and made these observations about Sydney –

“The 1950s saw large church and Sunday School attendances. The churches seemed to be flourishing. But an acute observer would have been very worried even then. The Christianity of the people was not evangelical. It was a sort of ‘common Christianity’, a ‘lowest common denominator’ Christianity. It had a strong moral emphasis; Christianity was about behaviour not belief; parents sent their children to Sunday School in the hope that they would grow up decent citizens rather than committed Christians. To be born once was enough; to be born again was excessive. The ranks of church-goers were swollen with the unsaved. The real religion was materialism.”

– Read it all in the ACL News of March 2001 – PDF file. (Text-only version here.)

Christians and other religious minorities mentioned in Pakistan school textbooks for first time

pakistan“In a landmark triumph for the country’s religious minorities, Pakistan’s history school textbooks will include the role of Christians, Hindus and Sikhs in the formation of the country in the years following independence…”

– Report from Barnabas Fund.

Schools, Scripture and Book Banning in NSW

3-books-2“There has been quite some concern in Christian circles in my home State of NSW over the last few days, over bureaucratic action to ‘ban’ some books from being used in Special Religious Education classes.

While events are still unfolding (the relevant Department has so far made no general public comment on the matter, which seems to be promised for the coming week), it seems worthwhile to set some of this dispute in legal context…”

– Neil Foster shares some much-needed background to SRE in schools at Law & Religion Australia.

Thank God for William Tyndale

thank-god-for-william-tyndalePotted history from Adam Ford.

Thank God for William Tyndale.

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