Why is Spongs book Jesus for Non-Religious "along with other recent sensational claims "likely to gain traction with our friends and family?
Why is Spongs book Jesus for Non-Religious "along with other recent sensational claims "likely to gain traction with our friends and family?
Jack Spong is back. Once again he is visiting Australia to promote a new book. This one is called Jesus for the Non-Religious and like so many of his others it pulls no punches.
Mary Andrews College principal Narelle Jarrett asks four women what MAC did for them, and where ministry training has taken their lives to date.
Facebook, the social networking phenomenon that is taking the Internet by storm, is ripe for use by anyone interested in Christian ministry. Andrew Lim tells you why.
Spong paints a portrait of a Jesus who overturned the barriers of race, creed and sexuality in order "to free our humanity to enter another realm of consciousness". But to arrive at this figure the author first explains that almost everything the Gospels say about him is historically false.
Clearly you can't keep a good book down - or maybe that should be 'you can't put a good book down'. In either case, sydneyanglicans.net is happy to provide it's second review of John Chapman's well-though-out resource for evangelising those in their autumn years.
On Reagenomics and the gospel.
There now exists a Global South Network which is making its presence forcefully felt, especially through its leaders presence in Anglican Communion primates meetings.
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