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Rugby World Cup offers a way out of the sin bin

Next month the Rugby World Cup (RWC) erupts at different venues across Australia. Inspired by the successful evangelistic initiatives that flourished with the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games, many Christians are preparing to take the gospel to rugby fans from home and overseas.

Book Review: Oryx and Crake

The future is not a happy place in the writing of Margaret Atwood. But then neither is the past or present. Populated with the cruel, the manipulative and the marginalised, her novels combine linguistic beauty with social and personal desolation.

Book Review: A Short History of Nearly Everything

Reading Bill Bryson's new book, A Short History of Nearly Everything, was, for me, a profoundly disappointing experience. After digesting his 420-odd pages of scientific ‘history', I can only assume that he is an atheist. From such a gifted writer, I admit I had hoped for much more. Bryson, an acclaimed travel writer, recounts mankind's greatest discoveries, ponders the mysteries of the universe, and analyses what has motivated the greatest minds throughout history. But he does so with literally no more than a few passing references to God along the way, replacing him with science and human achievement.

Book Review : Reading is Believing

Reading is Believing has a simple aim: explaining the tenets of Christianity to our world through the use of ‘texts' (literary, cinematic, or both). Devoting one chapter to each of the twelve phrases of the Apostles' Creed, Cunningham explores the meaning of the ‘doctrine' contained in the phrase, then shows how one particular fictional text pertains to that doctrine. Each chapter closes with discussion questions, and a list of related theological texts and other works illustrating the doctrine in question.

Wollongong Regional Report: We want you! An army of prayer warriors will lead this Mission

Charles Spurgeon, the great 18th century English preacher and evangelist, described prayer as the ‘engine room' of his ministry. Whatever else he was doing, for Spurgeon, serving God began with prayer. For us – whether it's our Christian lives, ministry in our local church, or the bigger picture of the diocesan Mission – the fundamental starting point must be to pray.

Wollongong Regional Report: We want you! An army of prayer warriors will lead this Mission

Charles Spurgeon, the great 18th century English preacher and evangelist, described prayer as the ‘engine room' of his ministry. Whatever else he was doing, for Spurgeon, serving God began with prayer. For us – whether it's our Christian lives, ministry in our local church, or the bigger picture of the diocesan Mission – the fundamental starting point must be to pray.

Wollongong Region Report: Lois trusted God through tragedy

It is every woman's nightmare. Lois Rabey has never forgotten the day 23 years ago when the hot-air balloon holding her husband and his two friends caught on fire. All three men were killed instantly in front of her and her two young daughters. “At that moment, I had a positive experience of heaven, that it is real, and those men were entering it,” she said. The story received broad news coverage, in part because Mrs Rabey's faith in Christ led her to testify that her Christian husband and the two men killed with him were in heaven. Despite having never spoken in public before, she was soon in demand to share her experience, including an invitation to speak at a Billy Graham crusade in front of 14,000 people just weeks later.

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