Sponsor a Bible college student
“This unique program gives Australian Christians the opportunity to sponsor an emerging leader from a developing country to receive culturally appropriate training at a trusted Bible college.
You can choose to sponsor a student as an individual, family, Bible study group, or Church.
By sponsoring a student you will enable a future pastor to be fully prepared to defend the truth of the gospel and faithfully share the good news with their nation.”
– A wonderful initiative from Anglican Aid.
See also:
A new twist on sponsorship – back a Bible student – SydneyAnglicans.net.
November 2020 issue of Southern Cross
The November issue of Southern Cross is now available at magazine.sydneyanglicans.net
Stories include –
• Rejoicing at the opening of Stanhope Gardens
• Getting the most out of church
• The War you didn’t know about.
Feature articles include –
• Discipling screen-native kids,
• The new Christian sports show
• Cranmer’s strategy for evangelism.
Archbishop Glenn Davies gives Thanksgiving prayer for the end of drought
Archbishop of Sydney, Dr. Glenn Davies, leads in prayer at the end of the drought, and also prayers for those labouring for a COVID-19 vaccine.
Thanks be to God for his many mercies.
Mask and number restrictions easing in churches
“Churches can now open to up to 300 people, subject to the 4m2rule and masks are no longer needed in services after talks with the State government on COVID safety…”
– The latest from Russell Powell at SydneyAnglicans.net.
Photo: Anglican Media Sydney.
Reflections on my expectations of Ministry Fifty years ago
“Following a year of teaching secondary school English and History, I entered Moore Theological College in 1966 (aged 21). Ordained in Sydney (deacon, 1969; presbyter, 1970), I was assistant minister at Yagoona, St Michael’s Wollongong, and then Eastwood, before undertaking a New Testament research degree at Durham University, UK. Returning to Australia in 1976, I was invited to start a new church in Wanniassa …”
– In The Australian Church Record’s 2020 Winter Journal, John G. Mason reflected on fifty years of ordained Christian ministry.
Obeying government and obeying God
“The Bible’s teaching on our relationship to human authorities is quite clear. Those who govern us are set in place by God. …”
– In his column in the October 2020 Southern Cross, Archbishop Glenn Davies considers the relationship of Christians and the government – in these ‘COVID-19’ times.
Hopeful signs
This morning, Archbishop Glenn Davies tweets,
“I met with Minister Brad Hazzard yesterday. I assured him of our prayers as we all work together to stop COVID-19. We spoke about inconsistencies in current rules and he assured me that an announcement tomorrow will help churches better serve our communities.”
Update, 21 October 2020:
“From this Friday, the number of people who can attend religious gatherings will be lifted from 100 to 300, subject to the 4–square-metre rule.”
– ABC News.
A place of hope opens in Sydney’s West
“’To the Glory of God and the growth of His Kingdom’ – so says the plaque unveiled at the official opening of Sydney’s latest Anglican church building.
The 21st-century design of the Stanhope Anglican Church was projected on the screen in the auditorium as Archbishop Glenn Davies joined the church’s pastor, Steve Reimer, members of the church and invited guests in opening the building. …”
– Good news from Russell Powell at SydneyAnglicans.net.
Jo Gibbs to be new CEO of Anglican Deaconess Ministries
“ADM is pleased to announce the appointment of Jo Gibbs as its new CEO, effective 17 November 2020.
Jo Gibbs joins ADM from St Pauls Castle Hill, where she has been the Care and Assistant Discipleship Minister. Prior to this, Jo spearheaded work in international and cross-cultural settings. …”
– Announcement from Anglican Deaconess Ministries.
See also:
Congratulations to the new CEO of Anglican Deaconess Ministries – Moore College.
“Jo is known to many of us as a godly woman and a gifted fellow-worker in the gospel.”
Sydney Archbishop: Indian MP must retract false statements about Graham Staines
“The Anglican Archbishop of Sydney Glenn Davies has demanded an apology and a retraction of statements made by an MP during a debate in the Indian Parliament which accused murdered missionary Graham Staines of child abuse. The Archbishop called the statement ‘slanderous’…”
– Story from Indian Link via SydneyAnglicans.net.
See also the Diocese of Sydney Media Release, 08 October 2020.
Anglican Church Diocese of Sydney
Media Statement
Call for retraction of false statements about murdered missionary
Archbishop Glenn Davies has called for an apology and the retraction of a slanderous accusation by an MP during debate in the Indian Parliament in which murdered missionary Graham Staines was accused of child abuse.
Mr Staines was an Australian missionary who worked tirelessly and selflessly with leprosy patients in India for more than 30 years. Along with his two sons, Timothy (aged 8) and Philip (aged 10), he was burned to death in an attack by Hindu extremists in Uttar Pradesh in 1999.
During Parliamentary debate in September, a member of the ruling BJP party and a representative of Uttar Pradesh state, Satya Pal Singh, accused Mr Staines and other Christians of molesting 30 girls belonging to local tribes in Odisha and converting them to Christianity. He cited this as the main reason for the murders and as justification for stringent amendments to the law on the basis ‘forced conversions’ are still being perpetrated by Christian missionaries.
The Archbishop of Sydney, Dr Glenn Davies called the comments ‘reprehensible’.
“The murder of Graham Staines and his sons was a stain on the history of India. The then President K.R. Narayanan was right to describe it as ‘a monumental aberration of time-tested tolerance and harmony’ and that the murders belonged to ‘the world’s inventory of black deeds’. For the MP to now use parliamentary privilege to bring such baseless accusations for political purposes deserves the strongest condemnation. A retraction and full apology should be issued for the sake of truth and as a bulwark against religious intolerance.”
The Archbishop said many Sydney Anglicans have travelled to India in recent years and been welcomed, along with the help they bring to the population. “I would like to think that the Government and others from Mr Singh’s party would not sit idly by while such comments are made. They should be repudiated in the strongest possible terms.”
Archbishop Glenn Davies
8 October 2020
Review: The Mission Before Us
“You are an Anglican from Sydney? Get this book.
Read it carefully. Read it prayerfully. If it is aimed at you, do something about it.
And it is aimed at all of us. …”
– At The Australian Church Record, former Archbishop of Sydney, Dr. Peter Jensen, commends “The Mission Before us”.
Learn how you can get your free copy.
Southern Cross magazine for October 2020 now out
The latest Southern Cross magazine (October 2020) is now available for download, or reading online.
Features include:
• Christians and sport
• Getting back to church in Sydney
• Evangelism in COVID Melbourne
• The latest Ordinations
• Persecution of Chinese Christians by rewriting John 8
South Sudan Floods appeal
“Sydney-based Reverend Samuel Majok, leader of the South Sudanese congregation at St Mark’s Oakhurst, is raising funds for many thousands of people impacted by recent severe flooding that devastated most of Jongei State, where Samuel’s family is from. …”
– Learn more at Anglican Aid. (Photo: Anglican Aid.)
See also:
The emergency you haven’t heard about – SydneyAnglicans.net
Death and starvation as floods destroy South Sudan – ABC Religion and Ethics Report.
Southern Cross — September 2020
The September 2020 issue of Anglican Media Sydneys Southern Cross magazine is now available to read online, or to download as a PDF file.
(Click on the icon at the top left of the linked page to download.)