The 2008 Presidential Address
The Presidential Address delivered by the Most Rev. Dr. Peter Jensen, Archbishop of the Sydney Diocese…
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Archbishop Peter Jensen discussed issues relating to marriage and the family in the first section of his Presidential Address to the Sydney Diocesan Synod. In the second section of the Address he discussed matters relating to the Anglican Communion, including the debate on women bishops and issues relating to human sexuality. The Synod will commence this afternoon and will meet in the Wesley Theatre, 220 Pitt Street.
The Synod of the Anglican Diocese of Sydney will continue discussing a wide-ranging and innovative Mission to start thousands of new churches and radically increase church membership.
The Synod of the Diocese of Sydney will commence its 2003 meeting next Monday 13th October. The Synod will assemble at 2.30pm in the Wesley Theatre, 220 Pitt Street Sydney.
A Sydney father of three who grew up in Curl Curl has confessed he is still in a state of shock at being elected bishop of North West Australia, the largest diocese in geographic size in the Anglican Communion.
Some of Sydney’s key players in migrant and refugee settlement were treated to an extraordinary tribute to the care churches provide new migrants at the opening of the $1.7 million joint Anglicare and Cabramatta Anglican Church facility on July 31. Just four weeks off the plane from the Congo, the Malula family, including three of ten children, presented a song of praise to Jesus in gratitude to the welcome they have received in Australia. In his keynote speech, Dr Jensen argued that the challenge for Australians is ‘not to be hostile to these precious newcomers’ or even ‘indifferent’ but ‘to be genuinely welcoming’, adding that the local church was the best place for that to happen.
Australia is one of the world’s great migrant communities. Sometimes, this is resented, as though those of us who arrived in the first wave of European migration have the right to keep the place to ourselves. In fact, the successive waves of migrants have been to our great benefit, and the Australia that we are all building is truly wonderful place. The challenge for us is not to be hostile to these precious newcomers, not to be indifferent, but to be genuinely welcoming. How can we achieve that?
Bishop Peter Tasker, Bishop of Liverpool in the Diocese of Sydney, has issued a statement expressing the grave concern of the Anglican Diocese of Sydney over the decision of the Uniting Church Assembly, which today voted to permit the Church’s presbyteries to accept and ordain practising homosexuals for ministry in their congregations. Bishop Tasker spoke on behalf of the Diocese of Sydney in the absence of Archbishop Peter Jensen who is overseas until the end of the month.
Churches need to change lives if they are to regain trust said Australian Treasurer Peter Costello at Anglicare’s ‘A Winter’s Tale’, charity luncheon today. Church organisations need to change lives if they are to regain trust asserted the Treasurer Peter Costello at a luncheon to raise money for Anglicare, the social welfare arm of the Anglican Church.
Archbishop Peter Jensen and the five regional bishops of the Diocese of Sydney have released a statement on the 'crisis in the Anglican Communion'. They refer to the appointment of a gay activist to be Bishop of Reading in the UK, the blessing of same sex unions in the Diocese of New Westminster, Canada, and the election of the Rev Gene Robinson, a clergyman living in a homosexual relationship, to be a bishop in New Hampshire Diocese, USA.
Statement from the Archbishop of Sydney and the Regional Bishops of the Diocese of Sydney on developments in the Anglican Communion
News stories that have appeared with suggestions that the Diocese of Sydney is about to commence the practice of lay and diaconal presidency are incorrect. A Committee report will be debated at the June meeting of the diocesan Standing Committee. The report contains the suggestion that a process of consultation with the bishops of the Anglican Communion be set in train later this year before the matter is fully debated by the Sydney Synod in October 2004.
After all the twists and turns of the Hollingworth saga will anyone ever again want to be the Governor–General of Australia? From now on we can expect a close scrutiny of the previous career path, professional decisions and personal relationships of any proposed incumbent for the office.
The great nineteenth century English Baptist preacher, Charles Haddon Spurgeon, was once asked to defend the Bible against various charges. “Defend the Bible?” he retorted, “I’d rather defend a lion! The Bible doesn’t need defending. It can defend itself.” But the title of my talk tonight certainly suggests such a defence. My subtitle asks, “Is the Good Book still good for a watching world?” (By ‘a watching world’ I mean people outside the Church. Of course, they are not ‘watching’ Christians all the time, as if they followed us around and scrutinised our every move. Such people might even be offended if we imagined that about them. However, many people do remain aware of us; and when our leaders face various accusations or say something difficult, it certainly seems that there remains a high level of interest in Christians and their communities.)
In the wake of the Diocese of New Westminster’s decision last year to bless same-sex unions, debate over which one of two Canadian bishops will have episcopal oversight of conservative parishes in the Diocese represents the latest round in the ongoing controversy.
The 2003 Federal Budget is a missed opportunity to address rising child poverty in Australia according to Anglicare Australia.
Clifford Warne, well known as one of Australia's most gifted Christian communicators - particularly through his long association with Anglican Telivision - has died. Details of the funeral arrangements will be posted here soon.
This is a difficult topic to talk upon honestly. Simple superficial platitudes are easy to give, but as soon as we talk honestly and say what Bible says, we tread on peoples sensitivities in an area where many of us have hurts, disappointments, frustrations, anger, and guilt. Some have recently lost their mothers. Some are struggling to become mothers. Some are still struggling to forgive their mothers.
The Anglican Dean of Sydney calls on Australians to turn back to God and truly honour mothers by rejecting 'child-free' ideology In a special address on Mother's Day, the Dean of Sydney, Phillip Jensen, will call on all Australians to stop rejecting God's authority and truly honour the nation's mothers.
The Rev Deryck Howell will be commissioned as the new Archdeacon of the Anglican Church's South Sydney region, in a service at St Andrew's Cathedral this Sunday night, May 11.
If religion goes wrong, then it is not unique in that sense because there are other basic aspects of the human condition which also go wrong. The love between people – that can go wrong. Many of us have experience of that. Patriotism. I arrived in Australia on ANZAC Day, I think it was, I mean it is a wonderful display of patriotism but we all know how patriotism / love of ones nation can become excessive and excluding. So that can go wrong. Even entrepreneurial flair, dare I say in the presence of Opportunity International, can go wrong and result in the exploitation of people rather than in a good stewardship of creation. So religion is not alone in terms of human activities, if it does go wrong from time to time.
The Standing Committee of the Diocese of Sydney voted at its meeting on Monday 28 April to extend the retirement age of Archbishop Jensen from 65 to 70 years of age. This means that the Archbishop, who will celebrate his 60th birthday this year, will remain as Archbishop of Sydney for a further 10 years.
The Bishops of the Anglican Church have called for Australians to show great openness and generosity of spirit to heightened tensions related to the Gulf War.
Already widely recognised as a notable and even controversial preacher, Phillip Jensen, the new Anglican Dean of Sydney, and a self-confessed lover of Sydney, is planning to use his pulpit over the Easter weekend to bring to the city’s residents the real meaning of Easter. Over the Easter period he will be presenting a series of sermons “Jensen on Jesus” at St Andrew’s Cathedral, located in George Street Sydney above Town Hall Train Station.
The Anglican Diocese of Sydney asks church members to pray that tensions in our city may ease, after a student protest held in Sydney Square yesterday degenerated into violence.
The Christian response to war is prayer. Prayer is the most natural supernatural activity. But is it of any use other than making us feel good? What are God’s plans for the world and where does war fit into His plans? And where does this war fit in? And what should we be praying for - hoping for - expecting to happen? Is God on our side?
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