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Book Review: We Belong to the Land

We Belong to the Land tells the story of Elias Chacour, a Palestinian Christian priest in Northern Galilee. It discusses a number of the tragic events that has afflicted Palestinians – Chacour's family is evicted from their village in Northern Gallilee in 1948, the massacre of 3000 men, women and children in the Sabra and Shatila refugee camp during the Israeli invasion of Lebanon, and Chacour's agonising visit to the Gaza strip in 1988 during the Intifada. However the main thrust of the book is on his work towards reconciliation.

Would Jesus have condemned the war?

Is it possible to reach a Christian position on war? In any discussion of war it is unlikely that ‘the Church' will speak with ‘one voice' on the matter. That is because of two complementary aspects of the Bible's teaching. On the one hand, the Bible teaches that people powerfully pursue their own goals at the expense of others—they ‘sin' against each other—and such a world requires rulers who sometimes enforce peace by means of coercion (while resisting the temptation to sin). Yet on the other hand, God intends for human societies to live in peace, without death and bloodshed, and redeems people for himself who are committed to this peaceful life, now and in future.

Hope for girl who lost parents to AIDS

An Anglican parish in the remote Ntchisi mountains region of central Malawi is playing a major role in the local battle against the HIV/AIDS pandemic tearing apart this African nation.

Thousands turn to Christ amid ‘Africa’s World war’

Five years of brutal civil war, hundreds of thousands of Christians forced to flee their homes, and almost no churches to meet in around most of the country. Far from ideal circumstances in which to be working in Christian ministry, but these are the challenges faced daily by Bishop Masimango Katanda, Archdeacon Muhindo Isesomo, and the Anglican Church in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

New head for Christian culture centre

The Rev Professor James Haire, National President of the Uniting Church in Australia, has been appointed Executive Director of the Australian Centre for Christianity and Culture.

Sydney enters war for water

As part of the International Year of Freshwater, the Archbishop's Overseas Relief and Aid Fund (ORAF) has joined the national ‘Water Matters‘ campaign.

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