Church planters are breaking ground all over Australia. Stuart Robinson considers what we can learn from the efforts being made to raise a 'tropical' plant.
Church planters are breaking ground all over Australia. Stuart Robinson considers what we can learn from the efforts being made to raise a 'tropical' plant.
I dont know if you noticed, but there is a long-standing practice of critiquing penal substitution and justification by faith as overly "legal" or "forensic." From the Council of Trent to the New Perspective and the Emergent church, writers have dismissed both the doctrine that God would forensically declare sinners as "righteous" as a legal fiction, and the proposition that Jesus had to pay our penalty on the cross as beholden to Western legal categories.
Motivated by a desire to 'prove the Christian vote and inform the Christian electorate, the Australian Christian Lobby invited Prime Minister John Howard and Opposition Leader Kevin Rudd to address the Christian constituency for the first time in the lead-up to a federal election. 36 Anglican churches registered to screen the address on August 9 through a live webcast. But what are Sydney Anglicans thinking in the aftermath?
I must confess that until reading Amazing Grace: William Wilberforce and the Heroic Campaign to End Slavery, I knew nothing of William Wilberforce, nor the author of the book, Eric Metaxas.
I was expecting the book to be more about how to pray and prayers for while you are eating at a fast food restaurant, but what you get is so much more.
Archbishop Jensen and Sydneys five assistant bishops will delay their reply to the Lambeth 2008 invitation until after the American bishops clarify whether they will comply with the Windsor report.
Our resident youth expert has warned Sydney Anglicans not to 'cynically dismiss the Prime Ministers push for defence force gap year recruits as a quick fix for the dwindling numbers of ADF staff.
A lecture on the theological minutiae of Jeremiah or a relaxing night of Tuesday night television. Which would you choose?
Subscribe now to get our top stories in your inbox every week.