Video: Consecration of Dr Siegfried Ngubane as Presiding Bishop of REACH-SA
Posted on April 7, 2024
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We missed linking to this video in February when Dr Siegfried Ngubane was consecrated and installed as Presiding Bishop of REACH-SA (The Reformed Evangelical Anglican Church of South Africa) at Christ Church Midrand.
As the REACH-SA website says, the service was “nothing short of monumental” with a very encouraging array of guests present from around the world.
Bishop Malcolm Richards represented Archbishop Kanishka Raffel at the service, sending greetings from Sydney. Archbishop of Uganda, Stephen Kaziimba, preached. The service is introduced by outgoing Presiding Bishop, Bishop Glenn Lyons.
Most encouraging.
‘Indefinitely mothballed’: Quake-hit cathedral’s dire future unless $30m found by August
Posted on April 6, 2024
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“The Christ Church Cathedral rebuild has a funding gap of $114 million – and if $30m isn’t secured by August this year, the project will be indefinitely mothballed, it has been announced.
And the Christ Church Cathedral Reinstatement Limited said a ‘mothballed scenario’ would ‘be hidden from view, and people will not be able to visit it, or preserve it, because it will remain a construction site in suspension’.
The iconic building had lain in ruin for many years after the Canterbury earthquakes. …”
– Report from NewstalkZB, New Zealand.
Photo: Christ Church Cathedral in 1978.
Armidale Diocese gives thanks for Barraba Bash ’24
Posted on April 5, 2024
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“This year’s Bash was a brilliant day!
On March 23rd, 220 youth from right across the Diocese gathered together to praise God in song, listen to his Word preached faithfully and have a whole lot of fun.
Over the day we did a deep dive into Hebrews chapter 12 as we considered big questions like ‘What does it mean to endure as Christians?’, ‘How can we carry on living for Jesus when our friends live so differently?’ …”
– Give thanks with the churches in the Diocese of Armidale for this key youth event.
Moore College Open Week 6-10 May 2024
Posted on April 5, 2024
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The next Moore College Open Week is coming up next month – a great opportunity to learn about the College – especially if you are considering study.
Also from the College:
“We thank God for the Governing Board’s approval of the Acting Principal’s nomination of the Rev. Charles Cleworth as a part-time member of the Moore College Faculty. …” – 02 April 2024.
Things that hinder and sins that entangle – with Dominic Steele
Posted on April 5, 2024
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From The Pastor’s Heart:
“Dominic Steele speaks to our hearts today as we engage in the battle of the Christian life. We get a call today to perseverance and resilience.
Dominic addresses, not just pastors, but young and old; healthy and unfit; wealthy and poor; busy and quiet; husbands, singles, divorcees and widowers; fertile and infertile, straight or experiencing same sex attraction; or struggling in addictions. …”
“I’m a cultural Christian”, says Richard Dawkins
Posted on April 4, 2024
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“ ‘When you give up Christian faith, you pull the rug out from under your right to Christian morality as well. This is anything but obvious: you have to keep driving this point home, English idiots to the contrary.’ (Nietzsche)
Richard Dawkins is now a self professing, ‘cultural Christian’. …”
– What does it mean? Murray Campbell follows some threads. (Dawkins does think that Christian claims about Jesus are ‘nonsense’.)
Here’s the interview. Image: LBC.
Raising Leaders and Leading with Scripture — Archbishop Miguel Uchôa
Posted on April 4, 2024
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The latest Global Anglican Podcast, Episode 3, has been released by Gafcon:
“No leader works alone. Archbishop Miguel Uchôa, Gafcon Vice Chairman and Primate of Brazil, joins Bishop Paul Donison for a candid conversation about the need to raise up godly leaders in the pews of our local churches. Scripture plays a central part.
Archbishop Uchôa shares the ways he has brought the Bible back into secular communities, and also describes how Gafcon brought support and structure to the faithful in Brazil in their time of need.”
– Listen here.
Food, glorious food for the soul
Posted on April 4, 2024
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“We live in a busy age where the temptation is more and more to be disconnected as we live our lives. Look around eating establishments outside the home and it is very common to see headphones cutting off conversation, and to see eyes glued to screens even among people seated at the same table.
The same kind of thing can creep into the family mealtime. What’s more, with the kind of schedules many of us have, the mealtime can be inconvenient, rushed and detached. Many spend their meal times around screens (common or individual) with very little opportunity for the kind of fellowship that sharing a meal can and should provide. …”
– The latest Ministry Matters newsletter from CCAANZ (the Church of Confessing Anglicans Aotearoa/New Zealand) is all about food.
Bishop Jay Behan (pictured) writes on “Breaking bread together – The power of the family table”.
There’s also an article on how CCAANZ churches are using food to share the gospel.
Preaching Paul’s Letters
Posted on April 3, 2024
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“As a Spurgeon fan I can recall many of his quotes at will, and one of them is, ‘No Christ in your sermon, sir? Then go home, and never preach again until you have something worth preaching…’
This would be most relevant in preaching from the Old Testament, where we (should) use our Biblical theology skills, and preach Jesus as the fulfillment of the Old testament text. …
Far too often, nearly always, I hear sermons on the epistles, where the main application, is ‘Be like Paul.’ where Paul is the hero of the passage.
I’m suggesting, that this isn’t handling any passage from Paul’s epistles well…”
– Jim Mobbs writes to encourage preachers – at The Expository Preaching Trust.
Making the most of an “extensive job description”
Posted on April 2, 2024
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“There are no doubt many anniversaries to be celebrated in 2024, but the one I am personally thankful for is the 30th anniversary of the appointment of the Archdeacon for Women’s Ministry.
I’m reflecting, with thanks to God, about all that has been done, who did it, and how we can continue building on this vital work. …”
– Archdeacon Kara Hartley reflects – at SydneyAnglicans.net.
Bathurst Easter Newsletter 2024
Posted on April 1, 2024
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For your prayers and encouragement. (PDF file.)
If you want to know how and why sex is dividing the church, read this book
Posted on April 1, 2024
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“If you want to know how and why sex is dividing the church, read this book.
It begins by showing how sexual identity has become the beating heart of how most Westerners understand themselves and their place in our world. This helps explain why our culture has clashed with the traditional teaching of the church on sex.
Yet, not all Christians agree on how to respond to this strange new world …”
– At SydneyAnglicans.net, Jodie McNeill highlights a new book by Mark Durie in Melbourne.
Read more – and see where you can get the book – at Mark Durie’s blog on Substack –
“The focus is on Australian churches, but the principles are the same all over. This book is about several things. It’s about what it means to be human. It’s about how churches are structured and how they can divide. It about combatting religious illiteracy. It’s about the law and freedom of religion. It’s about the future of Christianity.”
“The Areopagite” by Bruce Smith
Posted on March 31, 2024
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The Areopagite
I’m restless
and have been ever since
that itinerant preacher
spoke his lines
on Mars Hill.
He campaigned on God
and righteousness
and capped it all
with talk of resurrection.
At the time
we mostly laughed
and dismissed him
as a fool,
but his words had power
and I’ve not been able
to forget them.Dionysius says he’s glad
the preacher came;
it’s changed his life, he says.
I can believe it,
it’s changed mine, too.
Resurrection from the dead,
like he spoke of,
in Jerusalem or Athens or anywhere,
must change everything.
I can certainly vouch for Dionysius
and Damaris, too, for that matter
(and there are others);
they are different
since the preacher came,
markedly different.We’ve never been able
to make sense of dying.
It’s the one experience
we don’t handle well
and everything else
is affected by it.
We philosophise and protest
and try our religions,
but we make no progress.
We have nothing to go on,
nothing or no one we can point to
and say “There, beyond all doubt,
is the answer –
that’s what life’s about.”
But that’s exactly what the preacher offered –
he gave us an event, a happening,
something we could put our hands on,
and we just laughed at him.Yet they call us
Neophiliacs – lovers of novelty!
It’s not true.
We only love what’s new
if it doesn’t threaten
too much change,
at least that’s my problem.
Dionysius says we are the fools,
not the preacher.
He’s probably right.
The Areopagite, by the Rev. Bruce Smith. © 1984, from his collection of poems “I’ll Not Pretend”. Used with the kind permission of Bruce’s family.
Photo: Ramon Williams, Worldwide Photos.
A refection, of course, on Acts 17:16-34.
A Philosophically ‘Enlightened’ Easter
Posted on March 31, 2024
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“The Scottish philosopher David Hume (1711-1776) famously declared that the resurrection of Jesus did not happen.
His logic was simple: the resurrection is a miracle, and miracles cannot happen, and therefore miracles do not happen, and the resurrection did not happen.
However, his logic was simply flawed. …”
– David Burke, Moderator-General of the Presbyterian Church of Australia, shares this Easter message.
Dead to sin and alive to God in Christ
Posted on March 31, 2024
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Romans 6:6-11
“What shall we say then? Are we to continue in sin that grace may abound? By no means! How can we who died to sin still live in it? Do you not know that all of us who have been baptised into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? We were buried therefore with him by baptism into death, in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk in newness of life.
For if we have been united with him in a death like his, we shall certainly be united with him in a resurrection like his. We know that our old self was crucified with him in order that the body of sin might be brought to nothing, so that we would no longer be enslaved to sin. For one who has died has been set free from sin.
Now if we have died with Christ, we believe that we will also live with him. We know that Christ, being raised from the dead, will never die again; death no longer has dominion over him. For the death he died he died to sin, once for all, but the life he lives he lives to God. So you also must consider yourselves dead to sin and alive to God in Christ Jesus.”
– ESV.