Word in Song Conference Sydney 2025 — 22 March
Posted on March 4, 2025
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From Emu Music:
“Are you passionate about singing that is deeply rooted in Scripture? The Word in Song Conference is a place where worship leaders, musicians, and church members come together to be equipped, inspired, and encouraged – helping you and your church grow in a gospel-centred approach to music and ministry.”
– Details here.
Christ and Creation — Two Ways News podcast
Posted on March 4, 2025
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From Phillip Jensen:
“Dear Friends,
Hello again, thanks for the feedback and encouragement. Peter and I are enjoying chatting over the great themes of the Creator and creation in Genesis 1.
So far, we have been struck by the opening words ‘In the beginning God created’, which take us to the idea of one God and one universe. But yet when we come to John chapter 1 we find that the word by which God created all, became flesh in the person of Jesus. Furthermore, in Colossians 1, the world was created not only through God’s son but also for him.
So, in this week’s Two Ways News we are exploring the place of Christ in creation. I hope you enjoy it as much as we did in making it.”
– Listen here.
Sydney’s link to Chilean ‘blockbuster’ event
Posted on March 3, 2025
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“Supporters from across the globe have travelled to the Chilean capital Santiago for a threefold ceremony that Anglican Aid CEO and former missionary to Chile, the Rev Canon Tim Swan, calls an ‘Anglican blockbuster event’.
The occasion was the retirement of Héctor (Tito) Zavala as Primate of Chile, the consecration of Juan Esteban Saravia as Bishop of Santiago, and the installation of Bishop Enrique Lago as Primate of Chile. …”
– Russell Powell reports at SydneyAnglicans.net.
More than Moralism: Reflections on The Joe Rogan Podcast with Wesley Huff
Posted on March 2, 2025
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“Until recently, I had never listened to The Joe Rogan Experience – one of the world’s most popular podcasts, hosted by American comedian Joe Rogan, who interviews an extensive variety of guests at length. I had also never heard of one of Rogan’s recent guests, Christian apologist Wesley Huff. Despite my unfamiliarity with both, I nevertheless decided to listen to all three hours of their conversation (admittedly with a few breaks).
Their discussion was wide-ranging, covering everything from Mesopotamian mathematical conventions to physics and cosmology, but I want here to reflect on one key issue that emerged at the very end of the episode: the distinction between a moralistic view of Christ and the worship of him, especially in our evangelism…”
– Andy Jansen writes at The Australian Church Record.
Who is Melchizedek?
Posted on March 1, 2025
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“Who is the greatest in the book of Genesis? Abraham? Wrong! The greatest man in Genesis is Melchizedek.
‘Who?’, you say. Even if you have been a Bible reader for a while, your knowledge of Melchizedek may be a little sketchy. Who was he? And why does he matter?
Melchizedek appears in three places in the Bible. We will take these in turn and see how they fit together.…”
– Christopher Ash, Writer-in-Residence at Tyndale House in Cambridge, begins a new series, ‘Curious characters in the Bible’, by exploring questions around the mysterious Melchizedek.
How does an election for a new Archbishop of Melbourne work?
Posted on February 28, 2025
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“Current lay and clergy members of the Diocese of Melbourne’s synod will gather at St Paul’s Cathedral on 23 and 24 May to elect a new archbishop. The meeting will be closed to the public.
The last time the two houses of synod (the House of Laity and the House of Clergy) came together to elect an archbishop was in 2006. It was a protracted and rancorous process requiring two separate meetings.
The diocese is currently without an archbishop, with Archbishop Freier retiring on his 70th birthday, as per the synod regulations, earlier this month. …”
– At The Melbourne Anglican, Penny Mulvey provides an outline for the election process.
It’d be good to uphold in prayer Melbourne Anglicans as they work through this process.
Communion Restructure Fails to Bring Renewal — GAFCON
Posted on February 28, 2025
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“To my brothers and sisters in the Gafcon family,
The recommendations of the December 2024 Report of IASCUFO (the Inter-Anglican Standing Commission on Unity, Faith and Order) will fail to bring about renewal in the Anglican Communion.
There is merit in the leadership of the Primates’ Council and the Anglican Consultative Council (ACC) being handed over from the Archbishop of Canterbury to a rotating, international chair.
But their proposed restructure of the ‘Instruments of Communion’ fails to bring genuine renewal to our Anglican Church.
The IASCUFO recommendations weaken the foundations of our common doctrine by sanctifying the revisionist theologies of provinces and dioceses that have wandered from the truth. …”
– A message from The Most Rev’d Dr Laurent Mbanda, Chairman of the Gafcon Primates Council.
Related:
Fatal Flaws in the Nairobi-Cairo Proposals – Bishop-Elect Phil Ashey at The American Anglican Council.
Praying for the Muslim world during Ramadan
Posted on February 28, 2025
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Various groups produce resources to help Christians pray gospel-focussed prayers for Muslim people during the month of Ramadan. Here is one such resource which you can purchase and download:
“30 Days of Prayer for the Muslim World has been inviting Christians to pray with love and respect for Muslim peoples around the world since 1993.”
God’s Deep Irony!
Posted on February 27, 2025
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“HG Wells, historian and author of The Time Machine and The War of the Worlds responded to a request from The American Magazine in July 1922, to identify the six most influential people in history.
‘I am an historian,’ he said. ‘I am not a believer, but I must confess as a historian that this penniless preacher from Nazareth is irrevocably the very center of history. Jesus Christ is easily the most dominant figure in all history’.
Why then was HG Wells, and many like him, not a believer? Perhaps it has something to do with what we might call, God’s deep irony. …”
– John Mason writes in this week’s Word on Wednesday from The Anglican Connection.
Fatal Flaws in the Nairobi-Cairo Proposals
Posted on February 26, 2025
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From by Bishop-Elect Phil Ashey at The American Anglican Council:
“In December 2024, the Inter-Anglican Standing Commission on Unity, Faith and Order (IASCUFO) offered a new take on the divisions within the Anglican Communion. The IASCUFO Nairobi-Cairo (2024) proposals are the official statements of the Canterbury-led and TEC-funded Anglican Communion. These IASCUFO proposals call for a ‘reset’ of the Anglican Communion on the basis of mutual loyalty to a common faith, doctrine, and order.
So far so good. But in the process they proposed significant amendments to Resolution 49 of the 1930 Lambeth Conference, which describes the requirements for following Jesus in the Anglican way and therefore membership within the Anglican Communion.
It is these changes proposed by the IASCUFO Nairobi-Cairo (2024) proposals that simply fail to bring about the Communion—much less ‘the highest level of communion possible’—within the global communion of Anglican Churches on the basis of a mutual loyalty to biblical and apostolic faith and order. …
But why would any of us want to be included in a Communion of Anglican Churches that are held together by conversations rather than a common faith, order, and mission?…”
– Read it all here. (Bold added in first paragraph.)
Creator, King and Country — The importance of the first five words
Posted on February 26, 2025
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From Phillip Jensen:
Citizenship is a wonderful thing. To be part of something larger than yourself gives meaning purpose and identity. Peter and I grew up in the British Empire having been born before the granting of Australian citizenship. It was for the Empire that our parents and grandparents generation went to the world wars. Today that is almost unimaginable, for now people find their identity in being Australians.
However, when we read Genesis 1 we are confronted with a ruler who is over and above every empire and nation because he is the Creator of all things. In this episode of Two Ways News we look at the meaning and implications of the opening words of Genesis 1.
– Listen here.
J. D. Vance on Scotland – Some Lessons for Australia
Posted on February 26, 2025
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“The US vice-president, JD Vance, recently caused quite a stir in the circles of the European and UK elites. His explosive speech in Munich may well turn out to be one of the most significant political speeches for decades. He has been accused of everything from being a fascist to a Trump stooge, but his speech deserves much more careful consideration, other than name calling and partisan abuse.
I want to fact check one claim he made in the speech concerning my native country, Scotland. This is also relevant to Australia because the same tactics used in Scotland are being used here – to undermine the pro-life stance and portray those who are opposed to abortion as extremists. …”
– At AP, the Presbyterian journal, ‘Scot-in-exile’ David Robertson fact checks the fact checkers.
Rob Smith: The body and the gendered self
Posted on February 25, 2025
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From The Pastor’s Heart:
“As pastors we’re expressing leadership in our churches on gender and sexuality. We want to help our people think biblically – and yet with the culture moving so fast – it is an area that we feel ill equipped.
On today’s Pastor’s Heart we benefit from the hard work of Sydney Missionary and Bible College Theology and Ethics lecturer Rob Smith who has just published a reworked version of his PhD under the title ‘The body God gives’.
As transgender visibility reaches new heights, we explore its historical and philosophical roots, noting the pivotal cultural shifts since the ‘Transgender Tipping Point’ in 2013.
We outline the biblical stance on the sex and gender binary while engaging with contemporary philosophical debates.
We dissect the relationship between second-wave feminism and the transgender movement.
Our discussion ventures into the diverse theories surrounding sex and gender, distinguishing between non-trans, soft trans, hard trans, and queer perspectives.”
“Rob has done us a great service with this book.” – Dominic Steele.
Church of England General Synod summary — Church Society Podcast
Posted on February 24, 2025
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Confused about what happened at the Church of England’s General Synod meeting this month?
From Church Society: “In this double-length episode of the podcast, Michael Hayden and Ros Clarke discuss the February 2025 meeting of General Synod, what happened, what didn’t, and the differences watching online and in person.”
– Listen here.
Mainstream media pays little attention to reports of massacre in eastern DR Congo
Posted on February 24, 2025
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“On 12 February 2025, Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) militants entered the village of Mayba in Lubero Territory, North Kivu, Democratic Republic of the Congo and abducted at least 70 Christian civilians.
The captives were subsequently taken to a Protestant church in Kasanga, North Kivu, Democratic Republic of the Congo, where they were executed by beheading via machetes. Their bodies were discovered on February 14. …”
– This Wikipedia article includes references to a number of reports of a massacre in a church in eastern DR Congo.
Update (25 February) – SydneyAnglicans.net has this story: