Good news about preaching
“In the middle of last year I had an eye operation that left me unable to read for some time. Instead I began to analyse Sydney sermons, since so many churches now record the preacher and have sermons available on their websites. In just a few months I listened to about 40 sermons. …
For the sake of analysis I used the time-honoured technique of asking myself about matter, method and manner. I also checked things such as Bible passages used, length, fairness to the text and exhortation.
Here is what I have found so far …”
– Originally published in the Diocese of Sydney’s Southern Cross, Dr Peter Jensen, former Archbishop of Sydney, and now General Secretary of GAFCON, takes a look at Sydney sermons.
Expository preaching — The antidote to anaemic worship
“Though most evangelicals mention the preaching of the word as a necessary or customary part of worship, the prevailing model of worship in evangelical churches is increasingly defined by music, along with innovations such as drama and video presentations. When preaching the word retreats, a host of entertaining innovations will take its place. …”
– Albert Mohler writes about the central place of expository preaching in the life of the church.
Vine Journal: Issue 5
Vine Journal: Issue 5, February 2017, from Matthias Media, is now available for free download – or you can buy a printed copy.
It is, sadly, the final edition. Read Tony Payne’s explanation.
Check out the articles in this issue:
Are we there yet? ‘Exile’ in the Bible (Lionel Windsor)
What the Bible’s big story tells us about our true home.Does Jeremiah 29 call us to seek the welfare of the city? (Phillip Colgan)
A fresh look at a frequently quoted verse.Lessons from the Marian exiles (Mark Earngey)
What we can learn from the English Reformers who fled their homeland.The forgotten promise to Abraham (Chris Braga)
An encounter with Genesis 23 leads to a surprising discovery.Glorifying God with infertility (Michael Taylor)
Lessons learned from being a reluctant member of the ‘infertility club’.The holiness that leads to unity (Hannah Ploegstra)
Why a passion for holiness and truth should lead towards unity, not away from it.
Change of roles for Tim Keller
“Later this year, Redeemer Presbyterian will no longer be a multisite megachurch in Manhattan, and Tim Keller will no longer be its senior pastor. …
This move does not mean retirement for Manhattan’s most popular evangelical pastor and apologist; instead, Keller will work full-time teaching in a partner program with Reformed Theological Seminary and working with Redeemer’s City to City church planting network. …”
– Story from Christianity Today.
Priscilla and Aquila Conference 2017 – A ministry that builds the church
“The 2017 Priscilla and Aquila Conference was held on Monday January 30 at the College. Our annual conferences have a 2-fold aim: (i) to encourage the ministries of women, and (ii) to think more seriously and creatively about how men and women can serve better together in gospel ministry.
Although they are aimed primarily at men and women in vocational ministry, these conferences are also open to lay men and women, and many lay people attend each year.
This year just over 300 men and women came together to hear talks, encourage one another, and enjoy Christian fellowship. …”
– from the Priscilla and Aquila Centre at Moore College.
Moore College has the talks available at Vimeo –
Ministry that grows the church (Acts 20) – William Taylor
Training Christian disciples in Bible ministry – William Taylor
Portraits of faith: Mike Ovey & Marion Gabbott – Jane Tooher
Ministry amongst staff wives and women on staff – Janet Taylor
Deborah: Prophetess or judge? – Paul Williamson
Prophecy now? – Peter Orr
Partnering in practice – Jo Gibbs & Kate Snell.
Bishop of New Westminster joins in petition to prevent Franklin Graham speaking in Canada
“Bishop Melissa Skelton [of New Westminster] has added her voice to those attempting to stop Franklin Graham’s Vancouver crusade. …
I’m writing to let you know that I have signed on to a letter from a group of concerned civic leaders and clergy about the upcoming visit of Franklin Graham to Vancouver as a part of The Festival of Hope. …”
– from Anglican Samizdat. The statement can be read in full here.
Why they went to the Huaorani
Jim & Elisabeth Elliot’s daughter, Valerie Shepard, recounts the death of her father and his companions in 1956, for the BBC’s Witness.
(via Tim Challies. Photo courtesy BBC.)
T.C. Hammond: Original Sin and Condemnation
“The ninth Article introduces us to the important controversies of the sixteenth century.
Already in Article VI we have been introduced to the problem of the source of authority which was widely agitated in those days. Now we are faced with an indication of the great cleavage in doctrine which separated the Roman Catholic Church from all the churches of the Reformed faith.
Whenever a major issue like this is presented for solution it is most important to pay attention to the precise language employed. …”
– The Australian Church Record continues to republish these reflections by Archdeacon T.C. Hammond on the theology behind The Thirty Nine Articles.
Do Catholics and Protestants believe in the same God?
“Unity, motherhood and apple pie are things people are reluctant to speak against. Pope Francis recently returned from Lund, where he celebrated a joint service with a branch of the Lutheran Church to mark the beginning of celebrations for the 500th anniversary of the beginning of the Reformation. On his way Pope Francis tweeted…”
– At GoThereFor.com, Mark Gilbert asks a crucial question – Do Catholics and Protestants believe in the same God?
News from the Top End
The latest issue of Top Centre, the newsletter for the Diocese of the Northern Territory, February 2017, is up on their website.
Please be encouraged to use it to inform your prayers.
GAFCON Statement on C of E General Synod’s rejection of Report
“Canterbury can no longer be the defining centre, but through the Gafcon movement a growing number of faithful Anglicans are now recovering their true identity in the gospel itself…”
Read the full statement:
“The Church of England is in turmoil following the General Synod’s rejection of a report by the House of Bishops recommending that there should be no change in the Church‘s traditional teaching on marriage and sexuality.
Even though the report held out the possibility of change and signalled a permissive approach in practice, it was abruptly rejected by an almost unprecedented vote against a motion to ‘take note’ of the report, usually just an uncontroversial preliminary to further debate.
After the vote, the Archbishop of Canterbury repeated his call for ‘a radical new Christian inclusion’ and it seems likely that this is a watershed moment with the Church of England now set on the same path as the Episcopal Church of the United States (TEC) and other Provinces that have taken it upon themselves to reinvent fundamental Christian doctrine.
Gafcon UK have already commented that ‘The confusion created by the General Synod vote on 15th February makes it abundantly clear that a new vision is now needed of what Anglican Christianity in England can and should be.’
It is also increasingly clear that a new vision is needed for the Anglican Communion as a whole. Despite its enduring historical symbolism, Canterbury can no longer be the defining centre, but through the Gafcon movement a growing number of faithful Anglicans are now recovering their true identity in the gospel itself as the Bible is restored to its rightful place at the heart of the Communion.”
– Source, GAFCON.
The radical call to ‘go the wrong way’ — Archbishop Welby’s charge to General Synod
“At the end of the recent General Synod, when an alliance of orthodox Christians and pro-gay progressives defeated the Bishops’ report on Marriage and Sexuality, the Archbishop of Canterbury issued a rallying cry to a perturbed and divided Synod and whatever part of the wider Church was listening in.
It had three elements:
1. “We need a radical new Christian inclusion in the Church.
2. “It must be based on good, healthy, flourishing relationships, and in a proper 21st century understanding of being human and of being sexual.”
3. “The way forward needs to be about love, joy and celebration of our humanity; of our creation in the image of God, of our belonging to Christ – all of us, without exception, without exclusion.”
The problem these words present, is that they involve a distortion of Christianity. …”
– Gavin Ashenden evaluates Archbishop Justin Welby’s call to the Church of England General Synod.
Background:
This is what the concerns are about – Archbishop Welby’s statement – Wednesday 15th February 2017.
Statement from Archbishop Justin Welby following the General Synod’s vote “not to take note” of a Report by the House of Bishops on the report earlier today on Marriage and Same-Sex Relationships.
“No person is a problem, or an issue. People are made in the image of God. All of us, without exception, are loved and called in Christ. There are no ‘problems’, there are simply people.
How we deal with the real and profound disagreement – put so passionately and so clearly by many at the Church of England’s General Synod debate on marriage and same-sex relationships today – is the challenge we face as people who all belong to Christ.
To deal with that disagreement, to find ways forward, we need a radical new Christian inclusion in the Church. This must be founded in scripture, in reason, in tradition, in theology; it must be based on good, healthy, flourishing relationships, and in a proper 21st century understanding of being human and of being sexual.
We need to work together – not just the bishops but the whole Church, not excluding anyone – to move forward with confidence.
The vote today is not the end of the story, nor was it intended to be. As bishops we will think again and go on thinking, and we will seek to do better. We could hardly fail to do so in the light of what was said this afternoon.
The way forward needs to be about love, joy and celebration of our humanity; of our creation in the image of God, of our belonging to Christ – all of us, without exception, without exclusion.”
New Deacons for Sydney
SydneyAnglicans.net has published a list of those ordained as deacons on Saturday, 18th February, 2017. Good to pray for them all.
Update: Photo of the Ordination, courtesy of SydneyAnglicans.net.
Dr Peter Adam – sermons on Colossians
Late last year, Dr Peter Adam spoke at the Tasmanian Christian Convention from the Letter to the Colossians.
You can hear his talks at their website.
The pernicious evil of the prosperity gospel and the theology of the cross
“Several years ago now I was travelling down a road in Nigeria on which, at almost every corner, there stood a church with a name that promised their members, and all who would join them, success, victory, wealth and happiness. …
Of course the prosperity gospel is not just a feature of aspirational Christianity in the majority world. It is alive and well and destroying lives in Western countries too. In fact there are very large churches which, in one way or another, are making similar promises right here in Australia. …
The prosperity gospel sees God’s glory and God’s blessing in all the wrong places and in so doing it draws attention away from what matters most and the reason why Jesus came, and lived and taught, and died and rose again, and is ruling now. …”
– Dr Mark Thompson, Principal of Moore Theological College, and a Vice President of the ACL, writes at Theological Theology. Read it all there.