Thursday, 12 February 12 Feb

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Open for business

Sydneys newest ministry school will be hanging up its shingle tomorrow, inviting citys workers to trade Thursday night at the shops for a theological education.

Church feeds 18,000 on the run

It takes training, persistence and months of organisation. Just like Tanzanian Patrick Nyangelo who won this year's City to Surf, the Rev Tom Henderson-Brook's seven year 'winning' streak at the event is no overnight success.

Indigenous education worth the effort

Most Wednesday afternoons Inaburra School visual arts teacher Genelle Griffin and teacher librarian Jenni Lochens have been racing 50 minutes from Menai to Minto in order to help a dozen Aboriginal kids with their homework.

10 easy ways to keep me from visiting your church because I visited your website

I spent quite a bit of time tonight visiting church websites throughout the country to find a cool church to tell you about this week. Don't worry. I found one, and I'll tell you about it in a separate post. In the process, though, I found lots of uncool sites. With that in mind, I thought this list might be helpful. Now, at least, you'll know what it might take to become my cool church of the week.

Honour and shame - David McIlroy

Contemporary Western society suppresses the concepts of honour and shame, although they re-surface in its media in a theatre of the grotesque. Honour reinforces good behaviour through appeals to a shared morality, while shame penalises bad behaviour through disgrace and exposure. The Bible offers a different social vision, in which honour is respected through discretion, and where shame and disgrace can be dealt with through confession, reconciliation and restoration into the community.

Inner west discovers boot-loads of charity

Croydon Parks Lyn and Ian Thornell are 'fairly new Christians so they were a bit apprehensive about asking people to donate food for the needy "“ cars full of kindness was the last thing they expected.

Queen’s minister becomes king’s man

Britains Chuck Colson, former Tory MP Jonathan Aitken, has called for Sydney Anglicans to do more to support the Prison Fellowship "“ a ministry that transformed his own life.

Pride and Perjury & Porridge and Passion

Originally a respected British MP of impeccable Eton and Oxford background, a cabinet minister in the Tory government that preceded Tony Blairs Labour ascendancy, Jonathan Aitken fell from grace to become a notorious, vilified figure. He had been an Anglican churchgoer, but at this time he embarked on a spiritual quest through which he came to know and follow Jesus Christ deeply and personally.

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