Nexus Conference 2020 postponed
Here’s an e-mail from the organisers of the Nexus Conference:
Dear Nexus friends
It will perhaps not come as a surprise to you that we have decided to postpone next Monday’s Nexus Conference (set down for March 23).
Our committee has been talking and praying about the issue over the past week, and keeping a close eye on the developing situation. In view of the government’s latest advice and requirements about non-essential gatherings, we feel that postponing the conference is the best way forward in the circumstances.
We have tentatively rescheduled the 2020 Nexus conference for Monday, September 14 or 21. We are still working to finalise the exact date, timing and venue, and will be back in touch very soon with those details.
For those who have already registered for Nexus20, there are two options available:
- You can do nothing, and your current registration will remain valid for the rescheduled conference in September. In the weeks leading up to the rescheduled conference, we will email you to remind you of your registration. If you wish (for any reason) to pull out at that point, or if the conference is unable to go ahead, you will receive a full refund.
- If you wish to receive a refund on your tickets now or anytime over the coming months, just let us know … and we will make that happen.
We are disappointed of course not to be able to proceed with Nexus next Monday, as I’m sure you are. But we are only engaged in gospel ministry (including running conferences like this) because we believe in the infinite goodness and power of God, and in his unstoppable purposes in Jesus Christ. We know he will work for the good of those who love him in all things, including the current chaotic circumstances.
With warmest regards in Christ
The Nexus Committee
(Tony Payne, Adrian Russell, Sarah Vigar, Dominic Steele, Carl Matthei, Chris Braga)
Men Meeting the Challenge Conference postponed
Richard Bolton, Convenor of the Men Meeting the Challenge Conference, has announced the postponement of this year’s conference –
“As you will be aware the Prime Minister and the Chief Medical Officer have made announcements regarding responses to the COVID19 pandemic.
In response, the Men Meeting the Challenge conference committee has met this afternoon, and following prayerful consideration, and out of loving Christian concern for our community, we have made the difficult decision to not proceed with the Men Meeting the Challenge Conference as scheduled for 28 March 2020.
We wanted to get this information to you as soon as possible. We will make a further announcement next week about rescheduling and refund requests for pre purchased tickets.”
In the meantime, talks from previous years are available on their website.
Australian Primate’s Election Deadlocked — report
David Ould reports that the electors for the new Australian Primate were unable to reach a consensus.
“The electoral panel adjourned and agreed to meet again before 30 June 2020.”
Coronavirus Update on large gatherings — Archbishop Glenn Davies
Statement from Archbishop Davies regarding the Prime Minister’s announcement on Coronavirus:
“We accept the Commonwealth Government’s health advice that gatherings above 500 people should be restricted from next week.
We are in contact with the NSW Health Department and will pass on their advice to ministers of churches where decisions will be made locally.
We expect smaller gatherings to go ahead with the safeguards already advised, including precautions relating to personal contact, holy communion and food service.
I call on Christians to continue to trust in God’s goodness and mercy, to pray that the global spread of this disease may slow, and to show Christ’s love to those affected.
13 March, 2020.”
– Source: SydneyAnglicans.net.
Australian Bishops in ‘Tense’ Meeting as Signs of Division Grow
“The Australian House of Bishops have been gathered over the past few days for their annual meeting. Their time together climaxes with the election of a new Primate tomorrow (where they will be joined by 24 lay and clergy electors).
davidould.net has been in contact with a number of those present and, while we cannot provide any direct quotes, it is now quite clear that there is a real division within the House of Bishops over the question of sexual ethics and, particularly, whether same-sex marriage ought to be blessed in one way or another. …”
– David Ould shares his understanding of what’s happening as the Australian Bishops meet. Good to pray about this.
(Graphic adapted from the Anglican Church of Australia website.)
An invitation to hear about ministry opportunities in Tasmania
“Come and sample some of the tastes of Tasmania and hear about what God is doing in the Diocese of Tasmania.
The Bishop of Tasmania, Richard Condie, will be sharing some of the highlights and challenges of ministry on the Apple Isle, and talking about ministry opportunities for youth and children’s ministry, church planters, assistant ministers and rectors.
If you’re interested in Tassie, or wondering if God might be calling you to ‘come over and help us’, or just want to sample some Tassie produce, then come along and join us.”
– Bishop Condie will be in Melbourne and Sydney in mid-April.
Thanksgiving Service for Bishop Ivan Lee planned for Saturday 28th March
It’s been announced that a Thanksgiving Service for Bishop Ivan Lee will be held at St. Andrew’s Cathedral in Sydney on Saturday 28th March 2020 at 10:00am, followed by refreshments.
Bishop Lee was called home to be with the Lord on Wednesday evening.
(2015 photo courtesy Anglican Media Sydney.)
Coronavirus precautions for churches updated
“Archbishop Glenn Davies has issued new recommendations for the Diocese of Sydney on procedures for ministry in the light of the spread of Coronavirus (COVID-19).
The advice updates the initial circular to churches in late January. It covers Holy Communion, Children’s ministry and food service, as well as general advice for personal interactions at church. …”
– The latest from SydneyAnglicans.net.
With thanksgiving for Bishop Ivan Lee. ACL President’s tribute
The Anglican Church League notes with sadness the passing of Bishop Ivan Lee last night and will continue to uphold Virginia and the family in prayer for the consolation that can only come from our great shepherd Jesus in this difficult time.
Ivan was elected an Emeritus Vice President of the ACL due to his longstanding commitment to gospel work and the Evangelical cause within the Diocese of Sydney. His passion for reaching out to the lost, including his willingness to try new means of connecting with those outside the churches, was evident in every conversation with him.
Personally, having served on a number of committees with Ivan, I can testify that he could always be relied on to bring a considered and unique perspective to any issue, a perspective that caused us to reflect upon whether we had understood the challenges correctly and whether there were other more creative options open to us to progress the task at hand.
Ivan’s commitment to ‘be at work in his Master’s field’ during the difficult times of his illness was a great encouragement to those who worked with him, and was a reflection of his passion for the gospel and indeed the network of the Diocese of Sydney as a key and effective means of reaching the lost for Christ.
He will be greatly missed – but he is with our Lord, which is better by far.
Andrew Bruce
President of the Anglican Church League.
(Photo: Bishop Ivan Lee at Sydney Synod, October 2019. Courtesy Anglican Media Sydney.)
“We have lost a great champion for the gospel”
“Long-serving Sydney Bishop, Ivan Lee, has passed away more than four years after being diagnosed with Pancreatic Cancer.
Bishop Lee died last night (4th March) at Greenwich Hospital, where he had been receiving palliative care. …”
– Members of the Anglican Church League (of which Bishop Lee was a Vice-President) are deeply saddened to receive this news, but rejoice that Ivan is now with Christ.
Archbishop Glenn Davies writes:
“Our hearts ache for Virginia and her three daughters in their grief. They have cared for him so well and for so long, and since he entered hospital at the end of January, he has never been alone. May God comfort them in their sorrow.”
And in an e-mail today, Archbishop Davies writes,
“Sad news, yet we do not grieve as others do, who have no hope.
Ps 116:15.”
There will be a private funeral next week, followed by a public memorial service at St Andrew’s Cathedral on a date to be announced.
Lent in the Diocese of Bathurst – The Road to Calvary
Bishop of Bathurst, Mark Calder, has invited the Rev Mike Raiter to record a series of Lenten Studies to be used in parishes across the diocese this Lent.
The studies, “The Road to Calvary”, are based on chapters 26 and 27 of the Gospel According to Matthew.
The first Study is available here – and the rest will be available on Bishop Calder’s Youtube Channel. Pray that they will be a great blessing to many.
Related:
Bishop Calder has been in Forbes where the Anglican Church is looking for a minister “to teach them God’s Word, partner with them in ministry, and help reach Forbes with the Good News of the Lord Jesus Christ”. He’s posted a 19 second video on Facebook.
What Future for the Anglican Church of Australia?
“We’re in the middle of what I think is best described as a tentative ceasefire. Of course, with any ceasefire there’s opportunities for both sides to position themselves for the conflict that is yet to come.
If you think all this language sounds combative then you’d be absolutely right. Both sides recognise that this is exactly what it is – a battle for the soul of the Anglican Church of Australia. There are clearly defined positions; one that seeks to uphold the orthodox view on human sexuality (but sees that as part of a wider issue – the authority of Jesus in the church through the Scriptures) and the other side that sees a liberalising of sexual ethics as a gospel imperative. …”
– David Ould shares his thoughts on what may happen in 2020 in the Anglican Church of Australia.
(Image adapted from the website of the Anglican Church of Australia.)
An Appreciation of Archbishop Glenn Davies
“In his recent and final Presidential address to the third ordinary session of the 51st Synod of the Diocese of Sydney, Archbishop Glenn Davies remarked that his primary responsibility was to be a guardian of “the faith that was delivered once for all to the saints” (Jude 3).
The Australian Church Record wishes to thank Glenn Davies for faithfully serving in this, and myriad other ways – especially through the proclamation of the gospel and prayer for gospel ministry – over the past seven years. …”
– Many will echo the words of this appreciation which was first published in the Australian Church Record’s Journal for Summer 2019.
Ordinations in Sydney
Twenty-two men and women were ordained as deacons at St. Andrew’s Cathedral in Sydney today.
“The ordinands will disperse to ministries all over Sydney including parish postings, multicultural work and Hospital, Defence Force and School Chaplaincy. …”
– Russell Powell has this story at SydneyAnglicans.net.
(Photo: Archbishop Glenn Davies, The Rev Stephen Gibbons, and Archdeacon Kevin Russell.)
‘Few Anglicans back blessing gay marriages’
“Only a small number of submissions to an Anglican tribunal examining a push to allow the blessing of same-sex marriages say the move is legitimate under church law.
The Victorian Diocese of Wangaratta in August passed a resolution providing for the blessing of same-sex couples who married under the Commonwealth Marriage Act. …“
– Report from The Canberra Times.