Alight for the Lord
“With an eye to spreading the blessings God has given, CityAlight – the music ministry of St Paul’s, Castle Hill – has created a series of videos about their most popular songs.
The idea behind this is twofold, explains CityAlight’s music director Tiarne Kleyn. …”
– Encouragement from SydneyAnglicans.net.
Torn Between Two Cultures? Revoice, LGBT Identity, and Biblical Christianity
“The chaos and confusion which are the inevitable products of the Sexual Revolution continue to expand and the challenges constantly proliferate.
The LGBTQ+ revolution has long been the leading edge of the expanding chaos, and by now the genuinely revolutionary nature of the movement is fully apparent. The normalisation of the behaviours and relationships and identities included (for now) in the LGBTQ+ spectrum will require nothing less than turning the world upside down. …”
– Albert Mohler looks at how the recent ‘Revoice’ conference in the US adds confusion and an attempted rewriting of the meta-narrative of Scripture. Worth taking the time to read.
Wonderful salvation: A study in 1 Peter 1:1-12
“Peter opens his letter by contemplating the amazing character of Christian salvation. The very thought of it immediately calls forth worship and doxology. Blessed by God the giver!
Let us make what Peter wrote the subject of our own adoring meditation. Let us see what we can here learn about our wonderful salvation. …”
– The Australian Church Record has republished this encouragement from Alan Stibbs from sixty years ago.
Australian Church Leaders, Prepare your People for Persecution
“Mr Ruddock will soon hand down his recommendations – which are expected to include certain legislative protections for so-called ‘religious people’ (doesn’t everyone have a world-view?).
Laws will likely be made to guarantee certain rights to worship, to publicly communicate one’s religious beliefs, and to work and educate our children according to one’s religious convictions. I expect that many in the church will raise a cheer when such legal protections are made.
Here, however, is my prognostication, which I extrapolate from parallel events in France some four centuries ago. …”
– At The Gospel Coalition Australia, Campbell Markham has some important observations for Australian Christians.
Specials at Matthias Media
Matthias Media has some specials on offer, up until Thursday 2 August, 2018.
Worth checking out. Details here.
Australian Church Record — Winter 2018 — now online
The Winter 2018 issue of The Australian Church Record (number 1919) is now available on their website.
It’s a must-read. Be sure to download your copy – and let others know.
From this issue:
“The work that only Christians can do should have first priority for most of us.”
– Dean of Sydney, Kanishka Raffel.
The promises of God (2 Corinthians 1:20)
“For how many so ever be the promises of God, in Him is the yea: wherefore also through Him is the Amen, unto the glory of God through us” (2 Cor 1:20, R.V.)
Let us see how much we can learn from this one verse about the promises of God. …
– Encouragement from the Rev. Alan Stibbs in The Australian Church Record.
Keep Silent….or Speak Out?
“I can see as clear as day what is coming down the tracks. And I don’t want to have on my conscience the Lord’s people in a few years time saying ‘we didn’t see that one coming!’. Some of us did. And we have to speak out before it’s too late.
Whether people will listen or not – that’s not our concern. We have to speak the Word of the Lord.…”
– At The Wee Flea, David Robertson explains why he believes he must speak out.
GAFCON Jerusalem 2018 Videos
“A number of videos from GAFCON 2018 in Jerusalem are now available to view!
They have been organised in the following order:
- Full day livestreams from each of the five days (Monday 18th June 2018 – Friday 22nd June 2018).
- Bible Exposition and Plenary Teaching Sessions
- Interviews
- Miscellaneous videos including the reading of the Final Statement ‘Letter to the Churches’, a number of highlights videos summarising the conference and more.
- The conference programme so you can see what happened on each day.”
– Many thanks to the GAFCON Communications team for making these available.
(Photos: GAFCON Media.)
The night John Newton ‘attended an eclipse of the moon’
On Tuesday 30th July, 1776, John Newton observed a lunar eclipse.
The experience prompted a diary entry and a hymn!
“The moon in silver glory shone,
And not a cloud in sight,
When suddenly a shade begun
To intercept her light.How fast across her orb it spread,
How fast her light withdrew!
A circle tinged with languid red,
Was all appeared in view. …”
– Read it all at the John Newton Project. (Linked from their home page.)
If you would like to see tomorrow morning’s total lunar eclipse (Saturday 28th July 2018) – from Sydney, look to the west before sunrise.
Partial Eclipse Begins at 4:25 am AEST
Total Eclipse Begins at 5:30 am (That’s when the Moon moves fully into the Earth’s shadow)
Maximum Eclipse at 6:21 am (That’s the deepest part of the eclipse.)
Moon sets at 6:55 am – which is the same as sunrise.
Twilight will wash out any subtle colours before sunrise.
Watch, and be encouraged by John Newton’s example to draw some meditations from the experience.
(Photo: 15 April 2014 lunar eclipse over Parkes, courtesy John Sarkissian.)
How to preach to the occasion
“How do you preach at a wedding? How do you give a funeral message? How do you prepare a graduation or ordination address?
Over the last few years I’ve had opportunities to speak at these special occasions. Here are some focus areas I’ve found that help get me in the right zone, rather than accidentally preparing another Sunday sermon. …”
– At GoThereFor.com, David Martin shares some helpful thoughts.
The worst sermon on the Internet?
Tim Challies has been exploring “great sermons that have made a widespread impact and stuck around for the long haul”.
In this final entry in his series, he turns to a sermon which is not so great.
Heroes at drinking wine (aka intoxicated masculinity)
“Woe to those who are heroes at drinking wine, and valiant men in mixing strong drink, who acquit the guilty for a bribe, and deprive the innocent of his right!” (Isa 5:22-23)
The battle-lines have been dug in the conflict about Christians and alcohol, with entrenched positions generating pamphlets, sermons and even denominations.
But those trenches are now largely empty. Most of the fighting has already taken place; and the fortifications are largely abandoned with only a small cadre of hold-outs remaining, fighting for abstinence. And while I am not one of those who argues practically for this position, I do see their wisdom. The cost of new generations moving on from this discussion, is that unexamined worldliness seems to be winning. In interest of deeper healing, let’s reopen the wound…”
– Andrew Barry looks for true heroism and valour – at the Australian Church Record.
Living on prayer
“Having just returned from Jerusalem, attending the third Global Anglican Future Conference (GAFCON), I was again reminded of the history of the old city, where God’s glory was made manifest in the presence of the incarnate Jesus…”
– Archbishop Glenn Davies shares these words of encouragement at SydneyAnglicans.net.
When the church lets you down
“In the C S Lewis classic (Screwtape Letters), senior devil whispers to his apprentice: ‘one of our greatest allies at present is the church itself’.
Screwtape is aghast that Wormwood’s patient has become a Christian, but he encourages his junior devil by saying that the church is in such a mess that ‘it matters very little … your patient will quite easily believe that their religion must therefore be somehow ridiculous’.
I feel sad today, and ask: Is one of the devil’s greatest allies at present the church itself?
It’s one thing to have Australian society approve of same-sex marriage, but when a church approves – it’s disturbing … and confusing.
To be sure, not our church, but nevertheless a branch of the Christian church in Australia. …”
– Presbyterian Moderator-General John P Wilson responds to the Uniting Church of Australia’s decision about marriage last week.

