‘Communion for Anglican bishops becoming Catholics’
Posted on January 2, 2011
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“Three Anglican bishops who are converting to Roman Catholicism have taken holy communion at Westminster Cathedral, with three ex-Anglican nuns…”
– Report from BBC News.
Biblical inerrancy
Posted on January 1, 2011
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“I have long wanted to write a serious piece on the doctrine of biblical inerrancy. Recently I was given the opportunity to do so through an invitation to contribute to a volume essays, The Bible and the Academy: Critical Scholarship and the Evangelical Understanding of Scripture in the 21st Century, edited by James Hoffmeier and Dennis Magary and to be published by Crossway in 2011.
I do not intend to reproduce the article here but instead simply to outline its argument…”
– ACL President Mark Thompson writes at Theological Theology.
Accordance for iOS
Posted on December 31, 2010
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Those who use Accordance 9 Bible software may be interested to know that it’s now available for the iPhone and iPad. It’s a free app, and if you already have purchased modules, they can be used. Details here.
Mark’s Gospel performed by Max McLean
Posted on December 31, 2010
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Looking for something worthwhile to watch on New Year’s Eve?
Justin Taylor at Between Two Worlds points out that the video of Max McLean performing The Gospel According to Mark is available in its entirety on YouTube, thanks to the Fellowship for the Performing Arts Theater Company.
See at all here – you can see the entire Gospel performed in about 90 minutes. Well worth your time.
Two-Year Bible Reading Plan
Posted on December 30, 2010
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One of the most-searched-for terms on our website is “Bible reading plans” – and here Stephen Witmer on The Gospel Coalition website has some helpful thoughts – as well as a quote from Robert Murray M’Cheyne.
Barry Newman on ‘Science & Genesis 1:1–2:3’
Posted on December 28, 2010
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Barry Newman has now uploaded all his blog posts on “Science and Genesis 1:1 – 2:3” as a single PDF file.
“One of the most significant areas that we believers need to address is the scepticism that arises because of what is perceived to be the consequences for belief of commitment to certain cosmological, biological evolutionary, anthropological, psychological and sociological theories. This blog series and ones hopefully to follow, will attempt to examine afresh the early chapters of Genesis to see what implications there are for such theories. Its main emphasis however will be on the text of Scripture itself rather than the theories themselves.”
– There’s plenty to provoke thought and further investigation.
Assurance and Perseverance
Posted on December 25, 2010
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“I was recently asked to write a brief response to a question about assurance. The questioner had been troubled by the question (or rather by some responses to the question) ‘Can a believer lose their salvation?’
The question of assurance is a deeply troubling one for many. In every church where I have served there have been people who have struggled with this question…”
– Mark Thompson writes on “Assurance and Perseverance” at Theological Theology.
See also Mark’s (unrelated) previous post, Whatever happened to ad fontes?
“Many of the great advances of the Renaissance and Reformation eras were built upon the humanist program of education in the eloquence of antiquity. Intellectuals such as Desiderius Erasmus believed that society could be improved, and the abuses and errors of the past corrected, through serious and extensive engagement with classical literature.
In the field of theology, one of the most decisive changes was an insistence on first-hand engagement rather than a reliance on secondary summaries of great thoughts from the past. Instead of relying on the Vulgate, Greek and Hebrew studies flourished. Instead of working from collections of purple passages from the church fathers, reading extensively in their works was encouraged as a means of properly understanding the context and significance of things they taught…”
Christmas Day sermon 2010 — Bp Stuart Robinson
Posted on December 25, 2010
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Read Bishop Stuart Robinson’s Christmas Day sermon — to be preached this morning at St. John’s Reid, in Canberra. (PDF file.)
Peter Jensen’s 2010 Christmas message
Posted on December 24, 2010
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See Archbishop Peter Jensen’s 2010 Christmas message – 90 second video. Text here.
“Jesus Christ, the Saviour of the world, came to dwell among us, and save us from our failures.”
9Marks end of year video
Posted on December 24, 2010
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Mark Dever and Matt Schmucker report on what 9Marks has been up in 2010.
Bishop Don Harvey’s Christmas message
Posted on December 23, 2010
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Bishop Don Harvey, Bishop of the Anglican Network in Canada, shares his Christmas message for 2010:
“The good news of this great gift cannot be suppressed. We feel compelled to share it with a world of people who have wandered in so many sad directions, never successfully finding what they seek…
Each of us is entrusted with taking a part in seeing that ‘this Saviour who is Christ the Lord’ is made known to others as indeed He is made known to us.”
What’s left of Christmas?
Posted on December 23, 2010
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What’s left of Christmas if you leave out Jesus coming to save men and women from sin and judgment? Not much.
The Primate of the Anglican Church of Canada and National Bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada demonstrate.
Bp of Canberra & Goulburn’s Christmas message
Posted on December 22, 2010
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Bishop Stuart Robinson’s Christmas message, 2010 —
“Leo Tolstoy wrote a book in 1879 called A Confession. This work tells the story of his search for meaning and purpose in life. Rejecting Christianity as a child, Tolstoy left university and went out in search of pleasure. In Moscow and St. Petersburg he drank heavily, lived promiscuously, and gambled frequently. His ambition was to become wealthy and famous but nothing really satisfied him…”
A Christmas sermon ‘from Luther’
Posted on December 22, 2010
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“Dr. Rod Rosenbladt preaches a Christmas sermon borne of Martin Luther’s writings, constructed by Dr. Roland Bainton, who taught history at Yale University from 1936 to 1961. Though Luther never wrote nor preached this sermon, it is assembled from his writings as a series of parts, as Dr. Bainton envisioned Luther could have written a Christmas sermon. This audio was dug up from the archives…”
– a 14 minute 9.6MB mp3 file from The White Horse Inn. Listen with a smile. (h/t Faith by Hearing.)
Abp of Melbourne’s Christmas message
Posted on December 21, 2010
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Archbishop Philip Freier’s Christmas message in online in video form at the Diocese of Melbourne website.
