Dr. Stephen Chavura on the history of Western civilisation
In his latest Conversations video, John Anderson speaks with historian Dr. Stephen Chavura on the history of Western civilisation, Western thought and the historical roots of freedom, democracy and the rule of law.
Timings from the video on YouTube –
00:00 – Intro
2:02 – Why history?
4:16 – Western civilisation
12:01 – Slavery & racism
23:32 – The American Revolution
26:25 – The Enlightenment
28:34 – Nietzsche
33:57 – Created equal
49:24 – Enlightened thinking?
52:15 – Australian history.
Martyn Iles, Q and A and what it tells us about Australia today
“The Sydney Morning Herald thought this week’s Q and A was a significant cultural moment – so who are we to disagree?! They compared it with another one in 2008 where the shibboleth question for our culture, that of homosexuality, came up. It was indeed a revealing programme – telling us a great deal about where Australian culture, politics and religion are at – and where we are heading. …
It was the appearance of Martyn Iles that was too much for some people – even before he had been on the show. …”
– David Robertson writes at AP (the national Journal of the Presbyterian Church of Australia) and gives thanks for Martyn Iles.
Related:
Excerpts from the programme may be seen here. Or the whole thing on the Q and A website (9th April 2021).
Unprecedented times?
“About 10 years ago I was in the north of Nigeria, in a region dominated by the Islamic group, Boko Haram.
I was locked away in a church compound guarded by the army, training a group of local evangelists. Just down the road a bomb was set off outside another church.
These local Christians knew that by trying to share the gospel with their Muslim neighbours, they faced the very real threat of death.
Yet on my last day there they prayed for me, and for Christians in Australia.
They prayed that God would make us ready to face opposition because, they reasoned, we had never had to face any real opposition in the past and they were not at all sure that we would persevere in the faith now the tide was turning against us. It was a great and insightful prayer. …”
– At The Australian Church Record, Moore College Vice-Principal Simon Gillham helps put things in much-needed perspective.
When the Bible turns into Instagram
“Our daughter is in middle school, and recently she deleted the Bible app from her phone. I was glad.
She didn’t make this decision because she no longer wants to read the Bible. (In fact, she’s more engaged in Bible study now than before.) And she didn’t delete the app out of frustration with how poorly it works. …”
– At The Gospel Coalition, Trevin Wax has some thoughtful comments on how and where you read the Bible.
Why I love the Apostle Paul
“The apostle Paul has been hated for 2000 years by many men and women, with endless papers, books and talks about how awful he was and how he got things so wrong.
But that’s not the whole story. There are also many of us – including many women – who love him. …”
– Jane Tooher writes at The Australian Church Record.
The significance of sex — can it be recovered through consent alone?
“Responding adequately to the sad news of the Kambala sexual assault petition — the latest spotlight on the sexual assault epidemic — is a sobering challenge for us all. Leading educators in our secondary schools, depressed by the recent revelations and struggling to find solutions, are themselves revisiting calls for better “consent training” for students. But, as others have argued, “consent training” is bound to be an inadequate response on its own.
Why is “consent training” not enough to combat the toxicity of what we are seeing in relations between the sexes? Why have so many young women been hurt, and why are so many young men insensitive to the seriousness of sexual assault? The answer to these questions will require some preparedness to challenge a number of deeply held and culturally popular assumptions about the nature of sex itself. …”
– At ABC Religion and Ethics, Dr. Emma Wood provides a very helpful (secular) engagement with the ‘consent’ approach to sexual assault. Worth reading.
Also see:
Do we have a boy problem? – Marshall Ballantine-Jones writes at SydneyAnglicans.net.
Not Gathering with the Church Hurts You Spiritually
“Some will think this is insensitive, some will think it’s overdue, but I want to make sure it’s said: not physically gathering with the church hurts you spiritually.
So, pandemic-weary Christian, work to gather again with your church, even if your church continues to offer a virtual option.
Likewise, pandemic-weary pastor, gently encourage your pandemic-weary congregation to gather as soon as they can. …”
– Timely words from Jonathan Leeman at 9Marks.
What will you do when the Culture demands that you Pivot?
In his The Briefing for 2nd March 2021, Albert Mohler again warned Christians to be ready for the inevitable challenge to forsake Christ to appease the culture.
He has now expanded his comments into a must read essay:
Pivoting to Surrender: A Warning for All Christians – 4th March 2021.
“Every Christian and every Christian ministry will come to a reckoning – we must all decide here and now where we stand.
Will we pivot or will we hold fast to faithfulness and the hope of the gospel?”
Collision of laws: the impact of Commonwealth law on the Victorian CSP law
“The Victorian Change or Suppression (Conversion) Practices Prohibition Bill 2020 (Vic) (which I will call the “CSP” law for short) passed the Upper House on 4 Feb, 2021. As I write it seems not to have yet received the Royal Assent and become an ‘Act’ but that will no doubt happen soon. The government has signalled that the legislation will not come into operation for another 12 months (see the final sentence in this article.)
My previous posts (see here for the most recent) have expressed grave concerns about the effect of the law on religious freedom and specifically on the freedom of parents and others to encourage children to live in accordance with Biblical standards of sexual behaviour. It is astonishing that the Bill was rushed through Parliament in the face of concerns also being expressed by the Law Institute of Victoria, the Australian Medical Association (AMA) and the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists (RANZCP). (See this excellent post from Murray Campbell noting these issues.)
There are, it seems, very few legal avenues available to challenge the many problems created by this law. But in this post I want to suggest one which may be available…”
– Associate Professor in Law Neil Foster writes at Law and Religion Australia.
Abortion – The Central Sacrament of the Political Left
“This past Friday, January 22, 2021 marked the forty-eighth anniversary of one of the darkest days in the history of the United States. Forty-eight years ago, the Supreme Court handed down the decision known as Roe v. Wade, and abortion on demand was effectively legalized throughout the nation.
Since that time, it is estimated that more than 62,000,000 unborn babies have died from abortions. When Roe turns fifty in 2023, those numbers will be even higher. It is hard to think of numbers on this scale, especially when we are talking about the loss of human life …
the last forty-eight years have also revealed that abortion has become the central sacrament of the political left in the United States. This is evident in a tweet issued by President Joseph Biden on the forty-eighth anniversary of Roe. He stated: ‘As we mark the forty-eighth anniversary of Roe v. Wade, now is the time to rededicate ourselves to the work ahead…’ ”
– Albert Mohler comments. Read it all.
‘In some instances … feticide is undertaken’
“I wrote in November about the Liberal Bill before the parliament here in Adelaide which seeks to make lawful the killing of a foetus right up to the time, and immediately after, his or her birth. The upper house has already passed it. The lower house will vote on the February 3.
Since I first wrote of the bill, an anonymous someone in the Attorney-General’s Department or Health Department has distributed to MPs a document explaining how the Bill the department has drafted will operate.
This is question and answer #5 in that government publication:
Q: What happens in later term abortions?…”
– Retired Federal Circuit Court Judge Stuart Lindsay writes in Quadrant Online about a vile abortion bill. Important, though distressing, reading.
Also read the earlier article with its challenge to the churches.
(Photo: Stand for Life rally, Sydney, September 2019.)
Related:
‘Catholic’ Biden marks Roe v. Wade anniversary with pledge to make abortion available for ‘everyone’ – LifeSiteNews.
Child Safety and Religious Freedom
“The NSW Government is currently inviting comment on draft legislation entitled the Children’s Guardian Amendment (Child Safe Scheme) Bill 2020.
The legislation has been drawn up in response to the work of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, and as well as governing “secular” agencies caring for children, it will mandate a new scheme for child protection covering “religious bodies” (see cl 8AA definition of “child safe organisation”, para (c)).
The Bill is generally a good idea, but I want to suggest one amendment which will be needed for it to properly protect religious freedom. …”
– Neil Foster writes at Law and Religion Australia.
Albert Mohler’s The Briefing — 21 January 2021
In his The Briefing for 21 January 2021, SBTS President Albert Mohler takes a close look at the image and the reality of the incoming US Administration.
It’s a preview of the huge cultural and moral shifts coming to the US – and certain to influence Australia.
Albert Mohler on the Georgia elections
In the first of his Briefings for 2021, Albert Mohler explains why the Georgia Senate Runoff Elections on Tuesday are key to what happens in the U.S. Government.
What happens in the US has a major influence world wide, and so should be a matter for prayer (1 Timothy 2:1-4.).
Lawlessness Everywhere
“Our country is at a crucial crossing point. In the past, even though there were extraordinarily damaging disputes such as the Civil War, the country survived them by adhering to its founding fathers’ principle that ours was ‘a country of laws, not men.’ In other words, the Constitution was worth protecting at all costs, lest we descend into some form of tyranny — which, by definition, is government by man (or men), not by law. The tyrant, not the Constitution, defines in that case what the law is.
As evidenced by the recent presidential election, it is now an open question whether ours may still be said to be a country of laws. This question is brought into sharpest focus by the recent lawsuit filed by the State of Texas in the United States Supreme Court …”
– For those praying for the outcome of the Presidential election (1 Timothy 2:1-6.), this background briefing by Christian lawyer A. S. Haley may be helpful in understanding the latest legal moves.