Religious liberty and Australian culture
“Roughly 40% of Australians voted No to same-sex marriage and, according to a recent Newspoll, roughly 40% also reject the legitimacy of religious protections for Australians who disagree with same-sex marriage. The debates taking place in Federal parliament regarding religious liberty are culturally significant.
The cultural reformation of the 1960s has transformed social views on sex, marriage, family, and, increasingly, gender. And yet clearly not all have gone with the tide. …”
– Dr Stephen Chavura argues that ‘religious liberty and freedom of conscience is not religious privilege”.
Related:
Calls for Macquarie University to distance themselves from Christian Academic (March 2017).
Is It Discrimination for Christian Groups to Require Christian Leaders? – Patheos.
Jesus Christ makes everything good for everyone, everywhere.
“We have to engage in cross-cultural mission respectfully, wisely and lovingly. The Bible tells us to obey the emperor and the government of the land in all things lawful and good. Christians who develop a calling or sense of urgency about the eternal salvation of any particular person or group need to be very prayerful, very wise and take lots of very good counsel.
We see a model of this in Paul’s missionary journeys through Acts. He and his team are certainly prayerful, as is the church in Antioch and elsewhere. Paul takes counsel to go or to stay in a place. He operates within the law, even when the law is used against him. He is respectful to jailers and governors, challenging them only when it comes to the claims of the Gospel itself.
Missions-minded Christians go all over the world legally, respectful of local laws and cultures and customs, breaking down every barrier in order to win the right to bear witness to Jesus. We go as humble servants of the Word. …”
– The Gospel Coalition Australia speaks with Dr Wei-Han Kuan, State Director of CMS Victoria, about the motivation of would-be missionary John Allen Chau, on North Sentinel Island in the Andamans. (Image credit: NASA / MODIS.)
Related:
Glen Scrivener speaks about criticism of John Allen Chau published in The Independent.
Tim Challies shares some thoughts:
“Suddenly the whole world is talking about Christian missions. In his own way, John Allen Chau has sparked a conversation that now rages within the church and outside of it. I’ve spent the past week gathering my thoughts about his situation, and would like to offer a few points I hope you find helpful. …”
On Earth as in Heaven
The team at Speak Life in the UK have released this video for Christmas.
“Reaching the heavens was hard enough. But Christmas reveals an even greater mission.”
Related:
The Apollo 8 crew read from Genesis chapter 1, Christmas 1968.
Meet the Nativity – the 2017 Christmas videos from Speak Life.
Some thoughts on the New Zealand response to the proposal from Sydney
“On 13 November Archbishop Donald Tamihere and Archbishop Philip Richardson replied to Archbishop Davies on behalf of the General Synod Standing Committee of ACANZP.
In their reply they note that Anglicanism in New Zealand has been shaped by a specific two hundred year history and that:
‘To be Anglican in this land requires that we, led by our Lord Jesus Christ, face into this shared history so that we can help shape a common future for all people based on peace and justice and righteousness.’ …
As they see it, it would be impossible to recognise as Anglican a body that was not bound by the ‘laws and promises and solemn commitments’ of the current ACANZP.
On this basis they say they are unable to accept Archbishop Davies’ proposal. To an outside observer, however, it is not clear why this should be the case. …”
– Anglican theologian Martin Davie devises a simple test to help understand why Archbishop Davies’ proposal (PDF) was not acceptable.
Biblical friendship (part 1): What is a friend?
“Over the past few years several studies have shown that social isolation and loneliness poses a bigger risk to our health than smoking or obesity. Loneliness has the same effects on your body as smoking 15 cigarettes a day. It increases your chances of heart disease by 29% and stroke by 32%.
Loneliness is on the rise and churches are not immune. I’ve had numerous conversations with people about how they have no friends at church and as a consequence are thinking about going elsewhere. They are craving friendship. …
Our world is a bit confused about the idea of friendship. But what is friendship according to the Bible?”
– At The Australian Church Record, Caitlin Orr shares the first in a series on biblical friendship.
150 Years of Cathedral ministry
“November 30 marks 150 years since Sydney’s Cathedral was consecrated by Bishop Barker.
St Andrew’s Day in 1868 was an occasion of celebration and dedication – not just because a building had been constructed, but that a centre for gospel ministry could prosper in the heart of the city.
The prayer was that God would call people to himself as Christ was proclaimed by those ministering at the Cathedral. …”
– Story from SydneyAnglicans.net, and a good reminder to give thanks and to pray the current ministry of the leadership and congregation of St. Andrew’s Cathedral, Sydney.
Considering Christ with your children at Christmas: An advent Top 5
“It’s not like Christmas sneaks up on you. I think my first mince pie sighting this year was in early October. By November I find I can’t resist the urge to buy more gift tags at every single check out display, in case we are gripped by a nation-wide shortage come December.
There are so many things to plan and prepare, and so many reminders of them every time I enter the shops, that the logistics of Christmas celebrations can consume my thoughts for months. But how do I go at filling my thoughts with the one whose birth we are celebrating? And as a parent, how do I go at helping fix the thoughts of our children on the wonder of the incarnation?…”
– At The Australian Church Record, Jocelyn Loane has some helpful advice.
Related: Videos for Your Christmas Services (2018 Edition) – Communicate Jesus.
Christmas gift ideas from Anglican Aid
The Archbishop of Sydney’s Anglican Aid has some terrific ways you can give hope to others this Christmas.
“White” on the new black-list
“A popular wedding magazine called ‘White’ has announced today that it is closing down. The reason? The Christian publishers had been asked to carry articles featuring same sex weddings, and had politely declined to do so.
The backlash on social media led to a number of advertisers withdrawing their custom, and some customers refusing to buy the magazine any more. In this post I want to comment on the legal issues around this incident, and another episode highlighted in the press today.
A report in The Australian today notes the close of White magazine, and also the other episode involving someone in the ‘wedding industry’:
Christian wedding photographer Jason Tey was taken to the West Australian Equal Opportunity Commission after he agreed to photograph the children of a same-sex couple but disclosed a conflict of belief, in case they felt more comfortable hiring someone else. …”
– Associate Professor Neil Foster comments on a story in today’s The Weekend Australian.
Review: They Shall See His Face
“You may never have heard of Amy Oxley Wilkinson (1868–1949), although it’s possible you know of her great grandfather, Rowland Hassall – one of the first missionaries to come to Australia after fleeing trouble in Tahiti – or his son Thomas, who started the first Sunday School in Australia at Parramatta in 1813, and went on to be an Anglican minister in the rural south of Sydney, who earned himself the moniker ‘the galloping parson’ for visiting his far-flung flock on horseback.
If not them, you will surely know of the Rev. Samuel Marsden, chaplain, missionary and farmer, whose eldest daughter Anne married Thomas. Amy was their granddaughter, the eighth child of John Norton Oxley and Harriet Jane Hassall…”
– At The Gospel Coalition Australia, Dr. Claire Smith reviews They Shall See His Face, by Linda and Robert Banks. It’s about the most widely known female Australian missionary in China and the West in the early 20th century.
The book is available from a number of retailers, including from The Wandering Bookseller.
Reformed Preaching by Joel Beeke
Reformers Bookshop in Stanmore has Reformed Preaching: Proclaiming God’s Word from the Heart of the Preacher to the Heart of His People by Joel Beeke on special until November 17th.
Review of ‘American Gospel’
“The haunting question left with me after watching this documentary was: why is it so easy for Christians to overlook Jesus? …
The first phase of the documentary highlights the dangers of an approach to life which assumes we are good enough for God. …
But we discover that this is not the final destination of the documentary, but merely the opening gambit. After this sweeping introduction to the less culturally specific sins of moralism, or perhaps nominalism, which focus on self-righteousness, the real agenda of the film is unveiled: how Americans have come to believe in and preach the prosperity Gospel. The editing is genius …
The documentary is great viewing and would be useful as an event at a church or in small group.”
– At The Gospel Coalition Australia, Ridley College’s Rhys Bezzant reviews “American Gospel”.
A Greater Peace
“Sergeant Philip Ball is an Australian soldier buried in Villers-Bretonneux Military Cemetery in France.
He was 21 years old when he was killed in action on 28 March 1918. He was a brave soldier, who was awarded the Military Medal in July 1917.
After the war his parents chose an unusual epitaph for his headstone in Villers-Bretonneux Military Cemetery:
I FOUGHT AND DIED IN THE GREAT WAR
THE WAR TO END ALL WARS,
HAVE I DIED IN VAIN?
I have not found a similar inscription in the thousands of epitaphs I have collected from Australian war graves of the First World War. But it is a question that challenges any reader …”
– Moore College Historian Dr. Colin Bale writes at The Gospel Coalition Australia.
Related: Bells to ring for Armistice Centenary – SydneyAnglicans.net.
GAFCON Fuel for Prayer — 8th November 2018 update
Here are the latest praise and prayer points from GAFCON.
How to Pray about Your Life
“Our lives and ministries are often combinations: encouragements and discouragements, joys and frustrations, pleasures and pains, successes and failures, sanctification and sin, health and sickness, abundance and want, joys and suffering, support and opposition.
This may be the case in our personal or family life; in our own ministry; in the immediate context of our ministry; or in the broader context of our ministry.
Negotiating all this complexity requires wisdom, patience, and hope. It requires godly contentment and godly discontentment. I often think of Reinhold Niebuhr’s prayer …”
– Encouragement from Peter Adam, at the Gospel Coalition Australia.



