Southern Cross November-December 2025
Posted on November 15, 2025
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The latest copy of Southern Cross magazine from the Diocese of Sydney is now available.
If you don’t see a copy in your local church, you can read it online.
State Funeral for John Laws
Posted on November 15, 2025
Filed under for your prayers, People, Sydney Diocese Comments Off on State Funeral for John Laws
The State Funeral for John Laws CBE will be held at St. Andrew’s Cathedral on Wednesday 19th November at 1:30pm.
Good to keep all involved in your prayers.
Living and Speaking of Christ in a Secular Age
Posted on November 14, 2025
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From Moore College:
“If you have ever felt like your life is a set of non-overlapping bubbles, work here, sport there, church on Sundays, neighbours somewhere else, you are not alone. Josh and Susannah Apieczonek reflected that this kind of compartmentalisation has become sadly normal in Western life. It is not how we were made to live, but it has quietly shaped how we see the world. This is one reason many Christians feel held back from sharing the gospel: our worlds rarely intersect, our schedules are full, and our instincts are shaped by a culture that prizes the here and now over the eternal. …”
– Sarah Bingham shares highlights from a talk by Josh & Susannah Apieczonek.
She explains,
“Josh and Susannah Apieczonek have long been connected to Moore College. Josh, now the incoming Head of Mission and Lecturer in Mission, completed a Bachelor of Divinity and Diploma of Ministry in 2004, and Susannah studied at the College in 2008. Before moving to France, Josh taught Christian Studies and served as a chaplain at St Andrew’s Cathedral School, Sydney.
Together, they have spent the past decade serving with CMS in Lyon, France, in student and church ministry, particularly among university students and in church planting. …”
J. C. Ryle, “the Prince of Tract Writers”
Posted on November 13, 2025
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“John Charles Ryle (1816–1900) was one of the most popular theological writers of the Victorian period, and the most prominent evangelical clergyman in the Church of England.
His ministry almost exactly spanned the reign of Queen Victoria – he was converted to Christ in 1837, just a few months after the young Queen’s accession to the British throne, and died at the dawn of the new century in 1900, just a few months before the monarch’s own death. …”
– Crossway has published this article adapted from Andrew Atherstone’s Ryle on the Christian Life: Growing in Grace.
Riding the young adult revival
Posted on November 12, 2025
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From The Pastor’s heart –
“Something is happening. In England the data shows a quiet revival. In France a new evangelical church is opening every ten days. But what about here in Australia?
Among young adults we’re hearing stories of renewed interest in Jesus, fresh conversions and surprising openness. Is this a cultural phenomenon or is it something deeper? And how do we ride the wave?
We talk about ground level experiences, the big picture, the influence of politics, and the five percent conversion growth goal for Sydney Anglican churches.
We’re joined by three frontline evangelists:
• Dave Jensen from Sydney Anglican Evangelism and New Churches
• Sam Mahdavi from Wollongong Baptist Church
• Pre Shunmugam from MBM Rooty Hill in multicultural Western Sydney.”
– Watch here.
Very helpful discussion, including opinions on how much the church should link into politics and current events, such as the murder of Charlie Kirk. Take the time to listen.
Related:
Alive. Not an Event. A Rescue Mission.
Reflecting Christ’s Love
Posted on November 12, 2025
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“Here at Moore, we want to be as helpful as we can in preparing students who are married to love their spouses well and to invest in their marriages—for the good of their families and for the good of the church. This love needs to be nurtured and informed.
While this is true for every marriage, there are some additional pressures, expectations and joys that come to married couples in Christian ministry. …”
– Simon and Margie Gillham share how important it is to support married couples among the student body at Moore College.
The World Awash with Sin and Judgement
Posted on November 11, 2025
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From Phillip Jensen:
“After the genealogy of Genesis 5, we have finally left Adam and Eve. But then as we merge into chapter 6, we find Adam’s baleful influence dominating the landscape.
This week’s episode of Two Ways News does not seek to answer the many questions people ask about the flood, but to pay attention to the central message of sin and judgement.
Your temptation may now be to skip this episode, but that is because of sin and judgement! So as the old hymn has it, ‘yield not to temptation’.”
– Hear Phillip and Peter Jensen at Two Ways News.
Aged Care, VAD, Religious Freedom and s 109
Posted on November 11, 2025
Filed under Culture wars, NSW Comments Off on Aged Care, VAD, Religious Freedom and s 109
“Should a religious aged care provider be able to operate in accordance with its religious convictions?
This issue is being debated in NSW at the moment in the context of the law allowing “voluntary assisted dying”.
The Voluntary Assisted Dying Act 2022 (NSW) allows persons with a terminal illness to choose death, which can be self-administered or administered by a health professional. Many health professionals have religious convictions which mean that they find the procedures for persons to choose death morally unacceptable. They do not wish to be involved in the process.
Under the legislation there is a right for individual health professionals to conscientiously object to the procedures, and to decline to be involved: see sections 9, 21 and 32. Faith-based hospitals may also decline to be involved in VAD procedures. However, at the moment faith-based aged care facilities are obliged to allow medical practitioners onto their premises to administer VAD. …”
– Associate Professor Neil Foster writes at Law and Religion Australia.
Related:
Contact your MP – via Freedom for Faith.
Antisemitic slurs must be rejected
Posted on November 10, 2025
Filed under Announcement, NSW, Sydney Diocese Comments Off on Antisemitic slurs must be rejected
Here is a media release from the Diocese of Sydney:
Antisemitic slurs must be rejected
The rally staged outside the New South Wales Parliament on Saturday has rightly drawn condemnation from across the community – particularly as it occurred on the eve of the anniversary of Kristallnacht, the 1938 pogrom against Germany’s Jewish community.
The black-uniformed protestors, carrying banners with the slogan ‘Abolish the Jewish Lobby,’ were clearly intent on spreading fear and antisemitism.
Authorities must investigate whether Saturday’s neo-Nazi rally in Sydney breached laws against inciting racial hatred.
Christians are defenders of free speech. We prize the freedom to declare ‘the praises of Him who called (us) out of darkness into his wonderful light’.
This includes defending the freedom of others to disagree with us, and even to mock the truth we proclaim.
But speech that incites hatred is illegal in New South Wales.
Antisemitism has traded in lies, hate and violence for centuries. When it appears in modern day Australia it must be named, resisted and rejected.
Antisemitism—whether from the far left or far right—has no place in Australian society.
Archbishop Kanishka Raffel
10 November 2025.
– from SydneyAnglicans.net.
The “eye-opener” of disability
Posted on November 10, 2025
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“When you see provisions for people with disability at your church, do you ever put yourself in the shoes of the person who will use them?
Or do you just assume that the hearing loop has a practical set-up for visitors, the news sheets and overheads can be read by everyone, and no-stairs access into the church means that those with physical impairments can get around easily? …”
– Very helpful article by Judy Adamson at SydneyAnglicans.net – with practical suggestions.
How to Present Your Sermon Really Well
Posted on November 9, 2025
Filed under Encouragement, Resources Comments Off on How to Present Your Sermon Really Well
“Like every skill worth doing, good preaching requires sustained study, effort, practice, self-evaluation, and a determination to improve and master the skill.
Good delivery must come not as a replacement for, but as the culmination of the certain basic convictions about preaching:
That preaching is central to Christian worship, growth, and evangelism;
That preaching must be Christ-focussed;
That the preacher must be a godly Christian growing in Christ;
That the sermon must expository and carefully prepared. …”
– Agree or disagree with details, Campbell Markham writes to encourage and help preachers do what is vitally important. At AP.
Related:
The Preacher Responding To Criticism
– Bob Thomas writes at The Expository Preaching Trust…
“Criticism of our preaching falls into three categories: ‘mindless’ criticism and therefore not worth worrying about except to try graciously to correct; negative criticism but worth swallowing our pride, taking notice of and responding to; and positive criticism, so thankfully received as it spurs us on to greater endeavour.”
Why we can’t have the Prayers of Love and Faith after all
Posted on November 8, 2025
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“The Church of England has finally published the theological papers and legal advice that the House of Bishops saw before its October meeting.
At that meeting, the bishops gave in to the inevitable and concluded that they weren’t going to be able to go any further without going through the proper legal processes. Just what was in the papers that led to this about-face?
The papers consist of three theological papers produced by the Faith and Order Commission (FAOC) and one legal paper produced by the Church of England’s Legal Office. …”
– At the Church Society website, Michael Hayden shares what has been learned from the information released by the House of Bishops.
His conclusion: “Those of us opposed to the whole project have been saying for years now that they can’t do what they’re attempting to do, and they certainly can’t do it in the way they’ve been attempting to do it. These papers only confirm what we’ve been saying all along.”
Prayer for the Persecuted Church
Posted on November 8, 2025
Filed under for your prayers, GAFCON Comments Off on Prayer for the Persecuted Church
From Gafcon:
“This Sunday marks the International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted Church. Across the world, faithful Anglicans and other believers face hardship and danger for the name of Jesus. Yet they remain steadfast, trusting that the Lord is their refuge and strength, and that nothing can silence His gospel.
As the global Gafcon fellowship, we stand with them in love and prayer. We thank God for their courage as they continue to guard God’s gospel in the face of pressure and persecution. Their witness reminds us that the Word of God is not chained, and that His Church endures by His power alone.
Pray that the Lord will uphold His persecuted people with faith, endurance, and peace. May their steadfast hope inspire us all to proclaim Christ faithfully to the nations, whatever the cost.”
Image: Last year’s World Watch List from Open Doors.
How God works in our hearts
Posted on November 7, 2025
Filed under Theology Comments Off on How God works in our hearts
“God works in many ways to bring His people to Himself.
Sometimes He works over a long period of time, such as with those people who grow up in a Christian home, where ‘Christ is the Head of the house, the unseen guest at every meal, the silent listener at every conversation’. They’ve been dedicated to God as covenant children and day by day, year by year, they grow into Christ.
Sometimes God brings people to Himself with a sudden flash of enlightenment, as with Saul of Tarsus on the road to Damascus.
Sometimes God brings people to Himself by bringing them to their senses in the far country, as with the Prodigal Son who went through a troubled and strugglesome journey.
Often He brings them to Himself after ongoing prayer for them by His people.
But all these ways have much in common, as Paul sets before us in Ephesians 3.14-20. …”
– Bob Thomas shares this encouragement at AP, the Presbyterian journal.
An honourable approach to dishonourable laws
Posted on November 7, 2025
Filed under Culture wars, NSW Comments Off on An honourable approach to dishonourable laws
“Australian Christians face increasing challenges in balancing our obligations to civil authority and God’s word. The question of when to obey God rather than government has become one of the most significant issues confronting the modern church. What the government does is one thing; how the church responds is another.
We must tread carefully, courageously, and biblically, remembering that it is in the Christian DNA to follow in Jesus’ footsteps. Taking up the cross must at least include a willingness to suffer under the hand of an unjust government, laws, or abuses of those laws, as we seek the salvation and good of others and live for God’s glory. If Jesus was willing to die, we must at least be willing to go to jail. …”
– The Australian Church Record highlights this article by Andrew Barry, first published in their 2025 Synod Journal.
Image: Menai Anglican Church.











