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Debates

The Faraday Institute have announced a UK tour based on their influential new resources to help Christians answer the New Atheists, Test of Faith.

“The New Atheists – Dawkins et al – are throwing up questions many church leaders don’t feel equipped to answer – particularly questions of science and faith,” said Ruth Bancewicz, Director of the Test of FAITH project. “We are putting on a nationwide tour that will resource, encourage and help pastors, youth workers and leaders of all kinds to answer the questions they face.

“We are aiming this tour at the church leaders of today and tomorrow – including youth leaders and small group leaders, as well as those involved in evangelism and outreach,” she continued. “The question of whether science and faith are incompatible is not going to go away, and the Church needs to be ready to give an answer. This tour will enable that to happen.”

The tour dates are:

  • Aberdeen School of Christian Studies (1st March);
  • Holy Trinity, St Andrews (2nd March);
  • LST, Northwood (9th March);
  • Trinity College, Bristol (10th March);
  • St Johns Nottingham (11th March);
  • Cliff College Sheffield (21st April);
  • ICC, Glasgow (27th April)
  • LICC, London (19th May)

Further details are available from the Test of Faith tour website

Further details can be found on www.testoffaith.com

‘The New Atheists – Dawkins et al – are throwing up questions many church leaders don’t feel equipped to answer – particularly questions of science and faith’ said Ruth Bancewicz, Director of the Test of FAITH project. ‘We are putting on a nationwide tour that will resource, encourage and help pastors, youth workers and leaders of all kinds to answer the questions they face.’

‘We are aiming this tour at the church leaders of today and tomorrow – including youth leaders and small group leaders, as well as those involved in evangelism and outreach. The question of whether science and faith are incompatible is not going to go away, and the Church needs to be ready to give an answer. This tour will enable that to happen.’

The tour will now visit the Aberdeen School of Christian Studies (1st March); Holy Trinity, St Andrews (2nd March); LST, Northwood (9th March); Trinity College, Bristol (10th March); St Johns Nottingham (11th March); Cliff College Sheffield (21st April); ICC, Glasgow (27th April) and finally LICC, London (19th May).

Further details can be found on www.testoffaith.com

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#synod: the week in review

by Ian on February 15, 2010

in Features, News

SynodAfter another week of debates, motion, amendments,votes and all the obscure etiquette that is the modern governing body of the Church of England, it is now all over, and many observers will be asking what, if anything, was accomplished?

There was no groundbreaking new resolution passed – no ordination of women, no Methodist/Anglican covenant, no Fresh Expressions. It seemed to be a synod of ‘wait and see’; a decision to not make any decisions.

The report on Women Bishops was postponed, as it seems no final arrangement can be found; Fresh Expressions and other initiatives from Mission Shaped Church were given a pat on the back and told to carry on; the BBC were let off the hook in the emasculated ammendments to the debate about religion in the media; amendments also sanitised the potentially explosive debate about the ACNAthey were ‘recognised’ and ‘affirmed’ but anything else was put off until 2011. The only real decisions were to grant equal pensions rights to surviving partners in civil partnerships as married couples and various other financial issues.

It is, perhaps, ironic that the most moving and inspirational part of the who week was the address by the chair of the Methodist Conference, Revd David Gamble. Facing church decline that means the Methodist Church could cease to exist within 40 years, he spoke to synod with a blend of passion and humilty that gave him a prophetic force. He said that the Methodist approach the Covenant with the Church of England in the spirituality of the Covenant prayer, and that, “when we say to God ‘let me have all things let me have nothing’, we say it by extension to our partners in the Church of England as well. We are prepared to go out of existence not because we are declining or failing in mission, but for the sake of mission. In other words we are prepared to be changed and even to cease having a separate existence as a Church if that will serve the needs of the Kingdom.” Read the full text of teh speech here.

However, the biggest development of this Synod was the way technology involved people from all over the world. As well as a live audio stream Twitter, through #synod, became the means of a global community responding to and engaging with the debates as they happened. Participants included Synod members on the floor, the official Synod Twitter account, members of the press in the gallery (including me) and Anglicans from around the world who were listening in. The decisions may have been taken on the floor, but the issues raised have taken on a life of their own as the Anglican Communion moves beyond the formal structures to engage people in parishes and dioceses far beyond the confines of Church House.

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C of E to Debate Communion with Breakaway American Anglican Group

January 8, 2010

A private members motion tabled for the February General Synod of the Church of England will debate whether the Church should be in full communion with the breakaway group, The Anglican Church in North America. The group was formed by conservative parishes and dioceses unhappy with the theological developments in the Canadian and American Episcopal [...]

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The Science of Belief

December 12, 2009

Alison Hull talks with the creators of a new resource about the relationship between science and faith.
‘Science does away with the need for God!’ scream the headlines, Richard Dawkins asserts that there is no room for the idea of God in a rational Universe, and Christians know he is wrong… but quite why is more [...]

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Book Review: Theology after Darwin

December 1, 2009

Theology After Darwin
M. S. Northcott & R. J. Berry (Eds) £14.99
This book is something I have been looking for – it assumes the general truthfulness of Darwinism and starts it theological considerations from there. Many books are still discussing the issue, and although this may be needed it does leave a gap for those Christians [...]

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Darwin & Christianity to be debated

October 27, 2009

November 2009 sees the 150th anniversary of the publication of Darwin’s hugely influential book, On The Origin of Species.  Since its publication Christians have differed regarding whether and how Darwinian evolution is compatible with Christian faith.  Next month’s God and Darwinian Evolution Day Conference is bringing together Christians who understand the scientific, biblical and theological [...]

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