The little known story of England's first evangelical Queen
The little known story of England's first evangelical QueenThe modern evangelical movement owes a great debt to England's first evangelical queen. This is the story ...
The little known story of England's first evangelical QueenThe modern evangelical movement owes a great debt to England's first evangelical queen. This is the story ...
Over the last decade the Church has moved from defining itself historically and theologically to culturally and politically. The choice then will not be between high and low church, but woke and much more woke.
Welby should have resigned years ago, not only for his failure to expose abuse, but for his rejection of the foundational truths of Scripture, his blatant apostasy, and his attempted subversion of the CofE.
There is no modern precedent for an Archbishop of Canterbury to be forced into a resignation in the way we have seen this week. Maybe those of us in the Church of England feel like we have no words left, looking at the crisis as it unfolded, and now wondering what will come next.
God has seen the future, and it is good.
Maybe it is time, as in the era of Abram, faced as we are by the idolatry of antisemitic wokeness, to simply pack up once again and leave.
The high-level pressure is piling up on Archbishop Welby to go.
Political logic appears to be on the side of Conservative MP Sir Gavin Williamson in his bid to deprive 26 Church of England bishops of their seats in the House of Lords. But the Labour government is likely to resist his amendment because the "Lords Spiritual" have proved to be so reliably left-wing.
The groundswell of moral outrage at the failure of the Most Reverend and Right Honourable Justin Welby to deal with a distressing sex scandal is growing daily following the publication of the Makin Report last week.
Among British Christians, there are many perspectives on what Trump's return to office means not only for the United States but also for the wider world and the nature of political leadership itself.
Climate change is a matter of life or death for millions of the world's poorest people. But could recent extreme weather in the world's wealthiest nations accelerate climate action?
Donald Trump has won the 2024 US election to be the next president of the United States of America. It is likely to be one of the most consequential moments in international politics for years to come.
As the dust begins to settle a bit (and there's a long way to go before the changed landscape becomes clear) we can begin to reflect a little on why this election result is so significant. We can also begin to tentatively suggest some of the possible future implications of this event.