Sydney Archbishop Peter Jensen’s last presidential speech before his retirement

Posted by Kendall Harmon

We are in a place and time of growing evangelistic opportunity and obligation....Our secure, wealthy and beautiful region is alive with people, especially new people. Many of these people know nothing about Jesus and they need to hear about the way to eternal life. We are here for them. It is as simple as that....

You could say [after looking at the statistic profile of Australia's spiritual landscape], don’t fret: Our business is to look after the religious needs of the descendants of the English. We are a declining chaplaincy church. Christianity is a religion of consolation rather than salvation.

You had better say: The gospel itself utterly forbids us to think like that. The gospel addresses all men and women without exception in the same tone of voice, with the same demands and the same promises, the same Lord and the same Saviour. It is a matter of salvation, not consolation: of salvation, not of growing our numbers. Any gospel church is aptly described as One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic, universal words which embrace all nations and peoples and languages. If our denomination, will not accept the challenge posed by the new and increasingly different world which has come to us, we are not being faithful to the gospel which has formed our churches and saved our souls.

Read it all.

Filed under: * Anglican - EpiscopalAnglican ProvincesAnglican Church of Australia* Christian Life / Church LifeParish MinistryEvangelism and Church Growth* Culture-WatchReligion & Culture* International News & CommentaryAustralia / NZ* TheologyPastoral TheologySoteriology

1 Comments
Posted October 9, 2012 at 10:01 am [Printer Friendly] [Print w/ comments]



1. MichaelA wrote:

“You could say, don’t fret: Our business is to look after the religious needs of the descendants of the English. We are a declining chaplaincy church. Christianity is a religion of consolation rather than salvation.

You had better say: The gospel itself utterly forbids us to think like that. The gospel addresses all men and women without exception in the same tone of voice, with the same demands and the same promises, the same Lord and the same Saviour. It is a matter of salvation, not consolation: of salvation, not of growing our numbers. Any gospel church is aptly described as One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic, universal words which embrace all nations and peoples and languages. If our denomination, will not accept the challenge
posed by the new and increasingly different world which has come to us, we are not being faithful to the gospel which has formed our churches and saved our souls.”

Amen. 

I suspect that historians will look back and see Archbishop Jensen’s greatest effect has been not so much within Sydney Diocese but outside of it.

October 9, 10:54 pm | [comment link]
Registered members must log in to comment.




Next entry (above): In Kenya, the Anglican Church Rebrands Its Social Transformation Arm

Previous entry (below): R and E Newsweekly—More churches/Faith groups are creating small farms to feed the urban poor

Return to blog homepage

Return to Mobile view (headlines)