What’s wrong with the Church of England? — Church Society podcast
Posted on October 3, 2023
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“The second in the mini series looking at the Church of England featuring Charlie Skrine, James Cary, George Crowder, Lee Gatiss and Ros Clarke.”
Includes clips from the recent Junior Anglican Evangelical Conference.
– Listen here.
Bishops in Communion and Prayers in Love and Faith
Posted on October 2, 2023
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“To say that the House of Bishops Occasional Paper Bishops in Communion, published in 2000, is not well known is an understatement. Twenty-three years after its publication very few people in the Church of England even know of its existence. However, despite this fact, Bishops in Communion remains an important document because the understanding of how bishops are meant to conduct their ministry which it puts forward continues to shape the way in which bishops operate in the Church of England today.
To put it another way, the actions that the bishops of the Church of England have taken, and continue to take, during the Prayers of Love and Faith process directly reflect the thinking about the role of bishops which is found in the pages of Bishops in Communion. …
The model of episcopal ministry set out in [the paper] sees bishops as facilitators. The job of the bishops, it says, is to ensure that dialogue between those of different views continues until a consensus emerges about the mind of Christ for his Church. This understanding of the bishops’ role is what shaped the Living in Love and Faith Process. The whole point of that process was to encourage an open process of discernment across the Church of England between those with different views about human sexuality.
If this is indeed the model that is shaping the way that the bishops are acting, it follows that the existence of the Prayers of Love and Faith proposals following on from Living and Love and Faith must mean that the bishops collectively believe that a new consensus has been reached. …”
– At his Reflections of an Anglican Theologian, Martin Davie looks at the self-understanding apparent in the Church of England’s House of Bishops – and why that is a huge problem.
Related:
Churches backing traditional marriage are cut loose by their bishops –
“Paul’s suffering supported his apostolic authority to appeal to these baptised Christians in virulently pagan Ephesus to stand together for the truth of the biblical gospel centred on Jesus Christ, the divine Son of God the Father almighty. Such unity based on a shared understanding of the essentials of Christian truth is vital if the Church is to be effective in proclaiming the gospel and defending it in a hostile culture.
Sadly, the deep doctrinal divisions in the Church of England undermined a united response to a recent attack on orthodox Oxford churches by the university’s powerful 3,000-member LGBTQ+ Society. …”
– Julian Mann asks how can bishops who support novel doctrines be a support for those churches which stick to the Bible.
Bishop of Bathurst’s latest newsletter – Synod 2023
Posted on October 2, 2023
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Bishop of Bathurst Mark Calder has released his post-Synod newsletter.
Download it for your encouragement and for your prayers. (PDF file.)
Included in the prayer requests:
Parishes without clergy – Dubbo, Cudgegong Valley, Kelso, Narromine, Gilgandra, Coolah-Dunedoo, Condobolin, Trundle, Coonamble, Warren, Bourke-Brewarrina, Cumnock and Warren.
Please pray that the Lord would raise up 13 godly, able and passionate men or women to serve in ALL of these parishes, to his great glory!
The power and pain of perseverance — CCL event
Posted on October 1, 2023
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On 18 October 2023, Moore College Principal Dr Mark Thompson is speaking on “The power and pain of perseverance” at a Centre for Christian Living event.
Watch the 55 second promo video, and register here (it’s free!).
New Presiding Bishop of REACH-SA
Posted on September 29, 2023
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Today’s GAFCON prayer request –
“We prayed for the synod of REACH-SA last month. Three new area bishops were elected. Also, The Rev. Dr. Siegfried Ngubane has been elected as the eighth Presiding Bishop of the Reformed Evangelical Anglican Church of South Africa. Pray for each of these bishops to know the Lord’s help and guidance as they prepare to take up their roles.
(Photo: Presiding Bishop Elect, Siegfried Ngubane, meeting with Bishop Glenn Lyons).”
At Sydney Synod earlier this month, Bishop Malcolm Richards moved –
‘Synod, noting –
(i) the long partnership between the Diocese of Sydney and the Reformed Evangelical Anglican Church of South Africa (REACH-SA), and
(ii) that the Synod of that Church met from 11 to 13 September 2023,
(a) gives thanks to God for –
(i) the election of the Rev Dr Siegfried Ngubane as the eighth Presiding Bishop of the REACH-SA,
(ii) the faithful service of the current Presiding Bishop, the Rt Rev Glenn Lyons who will hand over leadership at a date to be announced, and
(iii) the election of three new Area Bishops for the largest regions (dioceses) in REACH-SA, and
(b) requests that the Archbishop’s office write to Dr Siegfried and Mrs Maureen Ngubane and to Bishop Glenn and Mrs Sandra Lyons assuring them of the prayers of our people, expressing the congratulations of this Synod and the commitment of this Diocese to continued gospel partnership.’
from the draft Synod minutes.
Bishop Glenn Davies speaks about the ACL
Posted on September 29, 2023
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ACL Council Member Michael Latten reports on last week’s visit to Moore College of Bishop Dr Glenn Davies:
On 21 September, 42 students and faculty members came to an Anglican Church League lunchtime talk at Moore College.
Former Archbishop of Sydney and Bishop of the Diocese of the Southern Cross, Glenn Davies, with his characteristic wit and humour, outlined the impact of the ACL over the last 100 years in establishing and sustaining the Protestant, Reformed, and evangelical character of the Sydney Diocese and in supporting evangelicals in Australia and beyond.
While Bishop Davies noted the strong influence of the ACL in Sydney on diocesan elections today, he warned that we must never take for granted the evangelical character of the diocese. Like those who came before us, we too must contend for the gospel in Sydney and beyond.
Southern Cross magazine Sept-Oct 2023
Posted on September 29, 2023
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The latest copy of Southern Cross magazine from the Diocese of Sydney is now out and will be available in parishes.
You can also read it online, or download your PDF copy.
National Police Remembrance Day 2023
Posted on September 28, 2023
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Friday 29 September 2023 is National Police Remembrance Day.
It’s a good reminder to pray for all who serve in the police services, and also Christian chaplains to the Police.
in 2018, Archbishop Glenn Davies wrote a prayer for the occasion.
Image: NSW Police Legacy.
US Survey shows mainline denomination church members are much more conservative than their clergy
Posted on September 28, 2023
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In today’s The Briefing podcast, Albert Mohler discusses a survey which shows that in US mainline denominations, the clergy are much more liberal than their congregations.
Yes, this is an American context, but it’s a good reminder as to why Biblical theological education is vital.
– The Briefing, Thursday 28 September 2023.
St. Andrew’s Cathedral Community Garden
Posted on September 28, 2023
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Dean of Sydney Sandy Grant writes in the Cathedral newsletter about plans for a new ministry space at the Cathedral:
“Friends in Christ, it was a pleasure to show the site and plans for the Cathedral Community Garden to many in-person attenders last Sunday. It was obvious that seeing it ‘from the inside’ as it were is really helpful to imagining what an excellent outdoor ministry space it could be for the Cathedral and for the community.
For example, you could easily imagine a BarBQ there in the summer shade, and how much easier it will be to welcome people into the Chapter House, as well as improved wheelchair access to the Cathedral proper.
To remind you, the project will provide a community garden that will
- adorn one of the city’s premier civic and heritage precincts,
- provide rare and valuable deep-soil CBD green-space,
- be often open to the public,
- add valuable outdoor ministry space to the Cathedral ministries, such as Cathedral Kids, ESL and community chaplaincy for the needy,
- and be available as an educational space to SACS and Gawura (Indigenous) School as desired.
Completing the Garden will also remove the eye-sore of a building rubble site that has stood unusable behind hoardings next to our beautiful Cathedral for well over two decades.
Let me put all that into a bit of historical context…”
– Read about the plans at the Cathedral website.
The Gospel Coalition announces The Carson Center for Theological Renewal
Posted on September 27, 2023
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At The Gospel Coalition, Collin Hansen writes,
“On behalf of The Gospel Coalition, I’m pleased to announce the launch of a major new initiative: The Carson Center for Theological Renewal.
Around the world today, biblical illiteracy inhibits spiritual depth—not just in the shrinking church of the West but even in the growing churches of the South and East. But there’s no spiritual renewal without returning to Scripture. And while the internet offers unprecedented access to the Bible, many of the most widely used resources for studying God’s Word are unhelpful at best or heretical at worst.
That’s why TGC has started The Carson Center for Theological Renewal, named in honor of TGC cofounder Don Carson. …”
– Read all about the plans here.
Will there be a place for me in the Church of England?
Posted on September 27, 2023
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“In August, the Church of England announced that a series of meetings were to be held in September ahead of the bishops presenting to November’s General Synod ‘proposals t o enable same-sex couples to come to church following a civil marriage or civil partnership for prayers of dedication, thanksgiving and for God’s blessing’. …
Where does this leave those of us who wish to uphold the faith ‘as we have received it’? Having been an ordained minister in the Church of England for more than 35 years, I wonder if there will be a doctrinal place for me in my later years?…”
– The CEEC’s John Dunnett asks the question and looks at what would be required – in Evangelicals Now, this copy with thanks to Anglican Mainstream.
Related:
The Church that needs you — Charlie Skrine at JAEC 2023.
The Church of England Evangelical Council.
New book on the Peter Cameron Presbyterian “Heresy trial”
Posted on September 27, 2023
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Many Sydney Anglicans will remember the so-called ‘heresy trial’ of Presbyterian minister Dr Peter Cameron.
It began in 1992 when Dr Cameron, the Principal of St Andrew’s College at the University of Sydney, spoke at a centenary women’s event at Ashfield where he referred to the Bible as ‘sub-Christian’. In response to the apostle Paul teaching about women, he replied, ‘So what?’.
The disciplinary proceedings came about not because Dr Cameron was in favour of women’s ordination (even though most media reports claimed that was the case), but because he dismissed the authority and trustworthiness of Scripture (not just in that sermon, but on other occasions).
The Presbyterian Church had to make a crucial decision. Would they accommodate theological liberalism as did the Uniting Church which they had declined to join fifteen years earlier?
Now, thirty years on, Paul Cooper and David Burke have edited a series of essays exploring what happened and why –
From the back cover of the book:
“In 1992, the Presbyterian Church of Australia through its disciplinary procedures convicted one of its ministers, the Rev Dr Peter Cameron, Principal of St Andrew’s College, of what the newspapers of the time called ‘heresy’. The secular media and commentary were strongly supportive of Cameron and highly critical of the Church.
Cameron, in 1994, published ‘Heretic’ which told the story from his point of view.
This book, Principle & Principal, invites the reader to consider the other side of the Cameron Case. It reflects a different bias to that propagated by Cameron and his supporters. It tells why the Presbyterian Church took this action knowing that it would result in an avalanche of criticism. While over thirty years have passed since the finalisation of the Cameron Case, and the ranks of those involved have thinned, many of the chapters in this book are written by people who participated in these events.”
Campbell Markham at Cornerstone Presbyterian Church in Hobart has written this review for AP.
– Details and ordering information from Eider Books.
Related:
The Crisis of ’77 – personal reflections by the Rev Bob Thomas on the decision of Presbyterians to ‘continue Presbyterian’.
Now, where and how for Sydney Anglicans – with Raj Gupta and Zac Veron
Posted on September 26, 2023
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From the Pastor’s Heart, an important episode on the future of the Anglican Church in Sydney –
“We engage in a ‘Stockdale Paradox’ discussion, confronting the brutal facts about attendance, finances and National Church Life Survey data about mission, newcomers and maturity.
Plus we review the recent Sydney Anglican Synod debate where leader after leader poured out their heart.
The gap is widening between the diocese’s declining attendance and Sydney’s growing population.
- While there are COVID factors, the National Church Life Survey trends are clearly observable and are worrying.
- There’s a difference between having a heart for evangelism and knowing how to engage effectively.
- While gross giving has increased, real giving (adjusted for inflation) seems to be down.
- There’s a clear difficulty with strategic planning and implementation.
- What to do about the accelerating trend of people moving to larger churches.
We look at the hard facts and attempt to chart a way forward.
Zac Veron is the senior minister of Bayside Anglican Church, Sydney.
Raj Gupta is the senior minister of Carlingford Anglican Church, Sydney.”
– Watch or listen here (though it’s recommended you watch so you can see the charts).
New Perth Assistant Bishops introduced
Posted on September 26, 2023
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The Diocese of Perth has posted brief videos introducing the two new Assistant Bishops of the diocese. Many of readers will know Archdeacon David Bassett who was ordained in the Diocese of North West Australia and who is now heading back west from Adelaide.