Bible Gateway removes The Passion Translation
“A Bible version designed to ‘recapture the emotion of God’s Word’ was removed from Bible Gateway last week. The Passion Translation (TPT) is listed as ‘no longer available’ among the site’s 90 English-language Bible offerings.
First released as a New Testament in 2017, The Passion Translation includes additions that do not appear in the source manuscripts, phrases meant to draw out God’s ‘tone’ and ’heart’ in each passage. …”
– Story from Christianity Today.
Related:
Burning Scripture with Passion: A Review of The Psalms (The Passion Translation) – Andrew Shead, April 2018.
“Brian Simmons has made a new translation of the Psalms (and now the whole New Testament) which aims to ‘re-introduce the passion and fire of the Bible to the English reader.’ He achieves this by abandoning all interest in textual accuracy, playing fast and loose with the original languages, and inserting so much new material into the text that it is at least 50% longer than the original.”
The Passion “Translation” of Romans: Problems and questions – Lionel Windsor, November 2017.
Dual Citizens podcast
David Ould has recently started a podcast which many will find of interest –
Dual Citizens is “a podcast analysing current affairs, informed by the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Covering various topics weekly, Dual Citizens explains how Christianity holds an important sense of relevancy in contemporary society, and how all Christians are ‘dual citizens’ belonging to two places; their country, and Jesus’ heavenly kingdom.”
Down Under Theology podcast
“Down Under Theology” is a relatively new podcast featuring two lecturers from Christ College at Burwood.
In Season 1 they explored the Westminster Confession of Faith.
Season 2 has just begun and sees them walking through each book of the Bible, “bringing out the big ideas, themes, and implications for the life and mission of the church”.
Worth checking out. Listen here.
A small step forward for religious freedom – with Bishop Michael Stead
From The Pastor’s Heart:
“Religious Freedom will be debated in the Australian Parliament this week.
Two parliamentary reports were released late on Friday afternoon. MP’s and Senators have spent the weekend reading them.
The reports show the Coalition and Labor broadly in support of introducing improved protections for people of Faith.
The reports recommendations are set to go to the party rooms on Tuesday morning, and the House of Representatives as early as Tuesday afternoon.
Anglican Bishop Michael Stead is the new chair of Freedom for Faith.”
– Watch or listen at The Pastor’s Heart.
And please pray about the expected vote this afternoon (Tuesday 8th February).
See also:
Submission to the Senate Legal Affairs Committee on the Religious Discrimination Bill – Freedom for Faith.
Men Meeting the Challenge conference online Saturday 26th March 2022
The organisers of the Men Meeting the Challenge conference on Saturday 26th March 2022 have announced that this year it will be online.
“The aim of this conference is to allow God’s mighty word to transform men from the inside out as we hear the Bible taught. Our prayer and our goal is to see men equipped for the service of God, his people and the world through knowing Jesus and understanding what it is to be a man who belongs to Him in this world. Our desire is for men to know and to proclaim the true gospel message that is faithfully recorded in the Scriptures.”
See the details and register at menforchrist.asn.au.
The Queen’s Platinum Jubilee
Today marks 70 years since Queen Elizabeth II acceeded to the throne, on the death of her father King George VI.
Her Majesty has gone on to reign longer than any other British Monarch in history, and to become a beloved figure around the world – one who is unashamed to speak of the Lord Jesus.
Whatever your view of the British Monarchy, do be encouraged to pray for her, and to give thanks for her long, stable reign. As the Apostle Paul exhorts us,
“First of all, then, I urge that supplications, prayers, intercessions, and thanksgivings be made for all people, for kings and all who are in high positions, that we may lead a peaceful and quiet life, godly and dignified in every way.
This is good, and it is pleasing in the sight of God our Saviour, who desires all people to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth.
For there is one God, and there is one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, who gave himself as a ransom for all, which is the testimony given at the proper time.” – 1 Timothy 2:1-6.
Photo:
Queen Elizabeth shakes hands with Bishop Jack Dain outside St. Andrew’s Cathedral, Sydney, on 13 March 1977. Archbishop Sir Marcus Loane is at the Queen’s side, and Bishop John Reid is at centre. At right, Dean of the Cathedral, Lance Shilton, stands with Prince Philip. Photo courtesy Ramon Williams.
In his biography of Archbishop Loane, “From Strength to Strength”, ACL Emeritus Vice-President Allan M. Blanch writes, on page 317,
At a special cathedral service on 13 March, the Archbishop preached from Revelation 21 about the City of God. He referred to Augustine of North Africa who, in the fifth century, ‘with the destroyers rapidly approaching the city … gave himself to contemplation of the City of God’.
Loane spoke of the citizens of that heavenly city: ‘They will suffer neither from poverty nor misery, from pain nor vice, from sorrow nor crying … There will be no room for a permissive society, or an alternate culture, or a wealthy elite, or a down-trodden minority; there will be no place for political intrigue, or public wrangling, or partisan interests, or power struggles’.
He concluded by saying, ‘Therefore let us pray that the Silver Jubilee of an earthly reign will enlarge our vision of all that lies beyond the frontiers of earth and time, and will strengthen our resolve to live our lives for the glory of Jesus Himself who reigns as King of kings and Lord of lords for ever and ever. Amen.’ [Emphasis added.]
St. Andrew’s Cathedral in Sydney is marking the anniversary at its services today.
Three Reasons to Read the Letters of John Newton
“Over the course of 2021, I slowly worked my way through Letters of John Newton. Some of us may know that name, and if not the name, most of us will know the lyrics he penned in the song Amazing Grace.
As the near year begins, I would like to encourage you to read the Letters of John Newton. Here are three reasons I would commend the letters of this brother of old to you. …”
– Here’s some encouragement from Sean Sheeran at The Gospel Coalition, Canadian edition.
Related: The John Newton Project.
Advance Australia Fair?
“Watching the Australia Day celebrations whilst on holiday was much more interesting and revealing than I had anticipated. Normally I am bored to tears by these kinds of events however I have to say that I was impressed, and I learned a great deal. It was like a cross between the BBC’s Children in Need, celebrating the good that charities and volunteers do, and BBC Scotland’s Hogmanay show – a bit kitsch and cliched, but nonetheless something that makes you glad to be Scottish – or in this case, Australian.
The wonderful work done by Australians throughout the country was highlighted and the music was… not bad.The fireworks and setting in Sydney harbour (as well as the 12 Apostles and other spectacular Aussie scenery) made one thankful to be an Australian – or in the case of yours truly – a guest in this wonderful country.
But the whole show also revealed something deeply disturbing. …”
– Sometimes it takes a visitor to our country to point out what we might otherwise miss. David Robertson writes at AP.
‘Red light’ ministry conversations – the who, when and how?
From The Pastor’s Heart –
“How to have the hard conversation with someone who is enthusiastic about why they shouldn’t go into professional Christian ministry?
How do you make the decision to raise a ‘Red light’ or an ‘Orange light’?”
– Paul Grimmond and Rowan Kemp discuss with Dominic Steele questions of discernment and wisdom.
Southern Cross magazine, February 2022
Anglican Media Sydney has just released Southern Cross magazine for February 2022.
Printed copies will be available in parishes from this weekend, but you can download a PDF version now at magazine.sydneyanglicans.net.
How the Black Summer of 2019/2020 prepared me for the pandemic
“It was October, November, and I was anxious. I was trying to do several things at the same time – plan my move to Sydney for College, finish up a ministry apprenticeship, hand over my ministry responsibilities and begin to think about saying goodbye well, and several times an hour, I’d open the Fires Near Me NSW app to tell me where the fire had spread to.
I lived in Newcastle, but the place I grew up in was burning. Crowdy Head was alight, and the Lake Innes fire, which had begun near Port Macquarie, was starting to make its way south. …”
– At The Australian Church Record, Brooke Hazelgrove reminds us where our trust must be.
Performance & Conflict Management and Servant Leadership – with Vikki Napier
This week on The Pastor’s Heart:
“We address the big HR questions faced by senior pastors in leading our ministry teams?
How can we do performance management best among our varied team members?
What is the difference between conflict and bullying and abuse?
Is it possible for a senior minister to be too conflict averse and not give needed ‘tough love’? Conversely where do senior ministers get this wrong?
What difference does it make if one is an ‘office holder’ vs a ‘fair work employee’?
What does Jesus’ teaching on servant leadership mean for staff management?
Vikki Napier is the Sydney Anglican Human Resources Parish Partner. She advises senior pastors and parish councils on how to manage clergy and other ministry staff.”
‘The divide between two different Christianities’
“One of the most influential books in the 20th Century Church was J Gresham Machen’s Christianity and Liberalism.
Machen was prophetic in his analysis of the crisis facing the Church in the US in the first half of the century – some would argue that it was because of his (and others’) stance that the US Church did not go down the path of decline that Churches in most other Western countries did.
In his prophetic book he warned:
‘A terrible crisis unquestionably has arisen in the Church. In the ministry of evangelical churches are to be found hosts of those who reject the gospel of Christ. By the equivocal use of traditional phrases, by the representation of differences of opinion as though they were only differences about the interpretation of the Bible, entrance into the Church was secured for those who are hostile to the very foundations of the faith.’
These words came to mind as I listened to the latest debate on conversion therapy on Premier’s Unbelievable, between Jayne Ozanne, the chair of Ban Conversion Therapy, and Peter Lynas of the Evangelical Alliance. …”
– At The Wee Flea, David Robertson reposts an article he wrote for Christian Today.
Richard Johnson to the inhabitants of New South Wales
In 1792, Chaplain to the Colony, the Rev. Richard Johnson, penned an evangelistic booklet which was thus addressed –
“To the British and other European Inhabitants of NEW SOUTH WALES and NORFOLK ISLAND.
My Beloved, I do not think it necessary to make an apology for putting this Address into your hands; or to enter into a long detail of the reasons which induced me to write it.
One reason may suffice. I find I cannot express my regard for you, so often, or so fully, as I wish, in any other way.
On our first arrival in this distant part of the world, and for some time afterwards, our numbers were comparatively small; and while they resided nearly upon one spot, I could not only preach to them on the Lord’s day, but also converse with them, and admonish them, more privately.
But since that period, we have gradually increased in number every year…”
– Read it all here (PDF file).
(Photo: Richard Johnson’s Address – copy held by Moore College.)
World Watch List for 2022
Open Doors has released their list of the countries where it is most dangerous to be a Christian.