What can we learn from recent secular literature about the practice of Christian pastoral leadership?
What can we learn from recent secular literature about the practice of Christian pastoral leadership?
‘Many of the ways we are running our churches and ministries and many of the ways we are exercising leadership within our churches, has become a significant hindrance to the growth of the church.’
Andrew Heard’s about to be released book Growth and Change will be the ‘must read’ book for pastors for 2024.
In his opening preface Gospel Coalition founder DA Carson - says ‘I am usually loath to proclaim that such and such a book is the best in it’s field … but if there is one book that happily serves as the exception to the rule, Heard’s book is it.’
Gospel ministry in the Indian Ocean is growing rapidly.
Anglican Primate James Wong leads the ministry in Seychelles, Madagascar and Mauritius and is visiting Sydney, on a speaking tour of the Church Missionary Society Australian Summer Conferences.
Archbishop Wong charts a course for further growth in ministry in his region.
The massive drop in church attendance is a crisis facing churches across the Western World and there are external pressures and internal weaknesses that need to be addressed at every level of the church.
We highlighted a few months ago the attendance drop in Sydney Anglican Evangelical Churches in the last ten years.
Raj Gupta first called it a plateau problem. But the data released at last September’s Synod shows it’s now much worse. From a high in 2015, attendance in 2019 was down 7.5 percent. And in 2022, attendance was down a further ten percent.
We catch up with Australian Christian musician for one of our funniest ever episodes, but with a serious message.
Colin talks with Dominic Steele about managing life as a public Christian, living with integrity in family, church and while engaging in the secular media.
‘Do not be anxious about anything’ says the Apostle Paul. But Paul Grimmond says saying that to an anxious person is a bit like telling an icecream not to melt in summer.
How do we think biblically about anxiety while taking on board what else is happening with a person’s biology and environment?
As we head to 2024 most of us are recasting ministry teams for the new year.
But how can we do this without making some of the mistakes that we have made in 2023?
How do we do better with staff teams and all the various volunteer ministry teams across our church?
And even in the best places - there’s an inertia that we will slip back to functioning as rosters… How do we fix that?
How can we make our Christmas Services better?
With just a few days to Christmas, and while some of us are well planned, some of us are still scrambling around putting things together.
Whether it’s Christmas Day or Christmas Eve, or a kids gathering, carols or Gingerbread and Wreathmaking...
What are the pitfalls we can fall into? How do we avoid them?
Cultural changes and increasing push back against churches are impacting youth ministries. It is getting much harder for Christian Teenagers to be Christian among their secular peers.
Teenagers don’t just walk in the door of a church.
What are latest youth ministry trends and opportunities? How can we do youth ministry on the front foot?
Poverty is fundamentally relational says David WIlliams
What might a theology of caring for the poor look like?
The bible’s terms for the poor (widow, orphan and alien) are all relational terms which describe someone who has lost relationships and as a result have lost connection with the land.
The Church of England has abandoned the teaching of Jesus with prayers for same sex blessings potentially to start before Christmas.
‘Tragic’ says Gafcon.
‘Disastrous’ says the Global South.
‘Deeply Troubled’ says the Church of England Evangelical Council
‘First order difference requires first order differentiation’ says Vaughan Roberts
‘It is hard not to dissolve into a flood of tears’ says the Mark Thompson the principal of Sydney’s Moore College.
‘The Archbishop of Canterbury should resign’ - says the Church Society’s Lee Gatiss.
Years and years of putting your feet up is the lifestyle of the sluggard.
To be a sluggard is a so called ‘deadly sin.’
The concept we now know as retirement is a 19th century invention and not a Christian concept.
Former Missionary, Bible College lecturer and principal Mike Raiter says the idea that we should stop work at 65 and enjoy 20 or 30 years of rest is not biblical.
t’s going to be an especially bumpy six months for religious freedom issues in New South Wales..
Legalised Euthansia will be rolled out in just a few weeks. But what about faith based aged care institutions, where organizations and staff are conscientious objectors to euthanasia?
Then there’s the Law Reform Commission inquiry into religious schooling and whether the religious exemptions to anti discrimination law should be removed.
And the debate over conversion therapy will come to a head in the parliament.
A few weeks ago on The Pastor’s Heart we talked with Zac Veron and Raj Gupta about issues confronting Sydney Anglicans.
The National Church Life Survey shows a drop in newcomers from 9% in 2011 to 5.4% in 2021 - a more than ten year trend of fewer people joining church. Plus there’s been a 7.5% drop in attendance between 2015 and 2019.
But it’s not just the Sydney Anglicans that need a wake up call. It’s most of us in Australian Evangelicalism.
Nicky Gumbel teams up with the Global South in rebuking Archbishop Justin Welby
Slowly, carefully, but quite deliberately, a new locus of leadership is emerging within the global Anglican Communion, a locus that significantly is intentionally focused on Christ and biblical authority and not focused on London, England or the Archbishop of Canterbury.
We traverse the historical landscape of identity, starting from Descartes' cogito ergo sum or "I think, therefore I am," to the current age where identity has become a commodity.
Chris Watkin, the award-winning author of the Biblical Critical Theory, helps us understand possessive individualism, starting with John Locke, expressive individualism, and how both terms help us grapple with modern identity formation.
Our focus today is on the massive legacy of some of the greatest women of church history. We discuss how different the Jesus’ mother Mary (as portrayed in the New Testament) is to Mary as she’s popularly thought of. We focus on the account of one of the early martyrs, 22 year old mother Perpetua, who was fed to the lions.
We look at England’s nine day queen Lady Jane Grey and her mentoring by the Swiss Protestant reformer Heinrich Bullinger. Then there’s the extraordinary story of Salvation Army co-founder Catherine Booth’s campaign to have the age of consent raised in England from 12 to the eventual age of 16. And Gladys Alward’s 350 kilometer trek across the mountains of China with 100 orphan children.
Whether we are the senior pastor, theological college lecturer, missionary, student worker, Christian publisher, or denominational leader - we all work within an evangelical ecosystem. And it’s possible for us to make it harder or easier for our ministry peers to play their part in glorifying God.
The future of the Anglican Church in Sydney.
We engage in a ‘Stockdale Paradox’ discussion, confronting the brutal facts about attendance, finances and National Church Life Survey data about mission, newcomers and maturity.
Plus we review the recent Sydney Anglican Synod debate where leader after leader poured out their heart.
Reframing the social justice discussion - Ed Loane, Tim Swan and Berthier Lainirina
Social Justice is a fiercely contested concept among Christians. Often discussions about caring for the poor have not been grounded in a biblical vision for gospel ministry..
Evangelicals have been criticized for appearing to be weak on social justice.
The charge is that we have been so focused on gospel ministry that the poor and disadvantaged have been neglected. How does caring for the poor fit with the mission of Jesus church?