Church Society launches The Global Anglican
During a live event this evening, Peter Jensen, Alfred Olwa and Sammy Morrison joined Lee Gatiss and Ros Clarke for the re-launch of Church Society’s theological journal.
Established as Churchman in 1879, the new journal is now known as The Global Anglican.
The launch issue may downloaded here from Church Society.
Preaching the Wisdom of Proverbs
“Having won the NRL Premiership for the second successive time in 2019, the Coach of the victorious Roosters, Trent Robinson, was asked what he would do to win three in a row in 2020.
The coach responded that he would do nothing differently because 2020 would be different, different schedule of matches, injuries and weather conditions. The prize, he said, would go to the team which adapted best to change.
None of us could have anticipated then, how different 2020 would be to 2019.
None of us can predict with certainty what a day will bring but God knows and orders all things and, a Bible reading in the morning may become exactly the word from God we need to hear for that particular day. That is why we need to pay more respect to the random nature of the book of Proverbs.
There are three ways to preach the book of Proverbs …”
– At The Expository Preaching Trust, David Cook shares some helpful tips on preaching from the Book of Proverbs.
Also on Proverbs:
When Solomon’s Fool Created a Social Media Platform – Tim Challies.
“The fool of the book of Proverbs is a vivid illustration of practical atheism, for this foolish man lives as if there is no God and as if God isn’t concerned about human behaviour. The fool may not actually deny the existence of the divine, but he practically denies it by choosing to live according to his own way rather than God’s. Though wisdom is available, personified in the form of a woman who cries aloud and begs everyone to follow, the fool chooses to go his own way instead and displays all the devastating consequences of such rebellion.
Solomon’s fool is relevant to every age, and certainly not least to this age when we have such ready access to forms of communication that in any other era would be considered the stuff of science fiction.”
Sydney Church History
“In 1965 John Stott, the Rector of All Souls Langham Place in London, visited Sydney to preach on 2 Corinthians at the CMS Summer School.
‘I heard only one of those Bible studies but I was so taken by the way he stuck to the text and stayed with it. He could show you the logic of the argument in the Scriptures, prior to that I had tended to get an idea from the passage and to leap all over the Bible supporting the idea from other parts, so that the people I taught knew the ‘idea’ but not the passage from which it came or how that passage fitted into some overall argument from the Scriptures. It is to John Stott I owe what ability I have to expound the Bible.’
Those were the words of the esteemed Sydney evangelist and preacher, the late John Chapman…”
– David Cook writes to remind us of our history, and how God works. At The Expository Preaching Trust.
(David Cook has served in parish ministry, as the Principal of SMBC, and as the Moderator-General of the Presbyterian Church of Australia.)
Locating Singleness in Genesis 2
“I would say we’re pretty well versed in what Genesis 2 says to the married person. But what does Genesis 2 say to the single person?…”
– At The Australian Church Record, Simon Flinders points out something you might not have noticed before.
Expository Preaching on the wane? — David Cook
I studied at Moore Theological College from 1973 to 1975, under the principalship of D.B.Knox.
Those who studied at Moore under Dr Knox always anticipated his Doctrine 1 lectures, held twice a week for the whole of first year.
Dr Knox would usually open the lecture making reference to our text, ‘In understanding be men’, by a former principal of Moore, T. C.Hammond.
These remarks would usually take about 10 minutes and then the rest of the lecture consisted of questions and answers.
Knox would occasionally correct Hammond, who wrote his book on an ocean liner, travelling from Ireland to take up his appointment in Sydney.
Dr Knox would say, ‘the archdeacon may have been seasick at this point’.
What impressed me was that Knox, who rarely corrected Hammond, did so on the basis not of the Anglican doctrinal standard, The 39 Articles, but on the basis of God‘s Word, the Bible.
That was Moore’s enduring legacy to me, through lecture room and chapel service, the Bible was taught and preached as the final authority in all matters of faith and practice.
I have recently been part of a committee discussing what it means to be ‘reformed’.
The 5 Solas have been referred to, but finally, I think we have come to the conclusion that the foundation of Reformed theology and conviction, is that the Bible is God’s breathed out word and is our final court of appeal.
We believe what we believe, because that is what the Bible says.
This was the core of Luther’s argument with the Roman church in the 16th Century.
When called upon to retract his writings, Luther said, ‘Unless I am convinced by the text of the Scriptures or clear reason, for I do not trust in the Pope or the Councils alone…I am bound to the Scriptures I have quoted and my conscience captive to the Word of God. I cannot and will not retract anything…’
It is the influence of the Reformers and men like D.B.Knox, which have led me to seek to have the Scriptures at the centre of my life and preaching.
Calvin referred to the Bible as a pair of spectacles, ‘which dispel the darkness and give us a clear view of God’.
The point of these remarks for preaching is that we preach the way we do because of what we believe about the Bible and how God reveals himself. J.I.Packer said, ‘the text of the Bible is God preaching to us’.
The faithful preacher will be God’s mouthpiece, by explaining, expounding, declaring the Bible.
How foolish to have a word from the mouth of God and to displace it with our own thoughts and inclinations!
Does your preaching show your respect for God, your desire to honour him, by faithfully and engagingly proclaiming the Bible?
Is this consistently true, every time you take the pulpit?
My current screen saver is a quote from the late R.C.Sproul:
‘I think the greatest weakness in the church today is that almost no one believes that God invests his power in the Bible. Everyone is looking for power in a programme, in a methodology, in a technique, in anything and everything but that in which God has placed it, His Word!’
David Cook.
A Thin Gruel For The Soul
“The great Christian philosopher and theologian, Dallas Willard, once wrote that every compelling and coherent worldview must address four questions:
What is reality?
What is the good life?
What is a good person?
How does one become a good person?
Christianity, including the Anglican way of following Jesus, has answers to these questions. Reality is the unshakeable Kingdom of God (Hebrews 12:18-29). The good life is not about consumption, but rather righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit (Romans 14:17). The one who is blessed by Jesus (in every counter-intuitive and counter-cultural way he names in Matthew 5:1-12) is the good person. And one becomes such a person, a “disciple” according to Jesus, by denying oneself, taking up one’s cross, and following Jesus Christ (Matthew 16:24).
Sadly, you will find no answers to these questions in What do Anglicans Believe: A Study Guide to Christian Doctrine from Anglican and Ecumenical Statements, published by the Anglican Consultative Council (ACC) last week …”
– The American Anglican Council’s Canon Phil Ashey points to a better way than a new book which has just been published.
ACR Winter 2020 Journal
The Australian Church Record’s Winter 2020 Journal is now up on their website.
Grab your copy for plenty of stimulating reading. And pass on the link to others!
The doctrine of God in Ephesians
Recently, Lionel Windsor at Moore College, posted the key reflections on the topic of The doctrine of God in Ephesians in his series Lift Your Eyes: Reflections on Ephesians.
What is your heart’s desire?
“We all have them. They may be wishes on a wish list. Or we call them dreams and talk about ‘my dream holiday’ or ‘our dream home’. The poet Longfellow wrote of ‘longings wild and vain’. The Bible speaks in Psalm 37 about ‘the desires of our hearts’.
Some people have clearly defined ambitions. CS Lewis splendidly described the ambition to get inside what he called ‘The Inner Ring’, to be accepted into a particular group, an outsider no longer.
Can you identify your heart’s desires – the things that rank as priorities in your life? …”
– Encouragement from Allan Blanch at The Australian Church Record.
An Evening Conversation with J. I. Packer – A 1999 Interview by Mark Dever
In October 1999, Mark Dever interviewed Dr J. I. Packer in an event at Capitol Hill Baptist Church.
The 59 minute video from 9Marks is a very worthwhile use of your time.
Glory of Christ – Part 2
“In the second of these short reflections on the glory of Christ, I want to draw attention specifically to the constitution of his person in two natures, fully divine, and fully human. As a truth it is something that can be stated with relative ease. …”
– Andrew Leslie continues his series on the Glory of Christ – at The Australian Church Record.
We Preach Christ Crucified — J. I. Packer at the 1978 Moore College Lectures
The Donald Robinson Library at Moore College has digitised and made available the videotapes of Dr. J. I. Packer’s 1978 Moore College Lectures.
His topic? “We Preach Christ Crucified.”
Forgiveness in Three Images
“Christians always want to understand the world better than it understands itself in order that we can comment on it with light and understanding.
However, we are members of another kingdom (Phil.3:20-21) ruled by a king who is not from our earthly world (John 18:36-37).
For sinners, one of our first issues must be that of forgiveness – which is probably not first on the list of world priorities.…”
– Encouragement from Psalm 103, and the Rev. Dr Peter Barnes, Moderator-General of the Presbyterian Church of Australia.
Psalm 136 and The bread and butter Christian
“How much is thankfulness part of your life as a follower of Jesus? How much, in our current situation, are you tempted to grumble? How much do you focus on the negative and lose sight of the positive?
These questions are significant because giving thanks to God is the mark of a follower of Jesus. Or conversely, the mark of a pagan mind is a lack of thankfulness. See what Paul says in Romans 1:21a: ‘For although they knew God, they did not honour him as God or give thanks to him….’
It is for this reason that I think Psalm 136 is such important teaching in our current climate…”
– Encouragement from Ben George at The Australian Church Record.
GAFCON devotions with Bp Michael Nazir Ali
For the month of July 2020, Bishop Michael Nazir-Ali is writing and recording daily devotions (“Lift up your hearts”) for GAFCON.