Our societies need affordable housing, which is a human right. The prophetic role of religious communities need not conflict with pragmatic engagement. Churches can work within existing systems to achieve incremental progress while continuing to articulate a vision of justice that transcends current arrangements. The point is to house people.
Christian Spirituality and Public Life
Tech Sabbath: Recovering the Desert in the Digital Age
There’s a hum beneath everything. You’ve grown so accustomed to it that you no longer hear it, the way a person living near a highway eventually stops noticing the traffic. It’s the sound of perpetual connection: the buzz of notifications, the soft glow of screens in...
We’re One Australian People: A Christian Reflection After Bondi
These have been heavy days in Australia. Our Jewish neighbours are mourning the loss of loved ones and wondering if they’re safe. Our Muslim neighbours grieve alongside them while bracing for the suspicion and hostility that so often follows. And all of us, whatever...
Christmas and the Hope of the World: The Light of Christ That Enters Everything
I remember, as a boy, the magic of Christmas morning: waking before dawn, creeping down the hallway, heart pounding with anticipation at what waited beneath the tree. The lights, the tinsel, the smell of my mother’s cooking, the rustling of wrapping paper: it all...
The Breath and the Algorithm: A Christian Theological Response to Artificial Intelligence
Something unprecedented is happening, and the church is largely silent. Not silent in the way we’re sometimes silent before mystery, that pregnant, worshipful hush that precedes genuine encounter with the Holy. No, this is a different kind of silence. It’s the silence...
No Easy Answers: What Job Reveals About Suffering, Silence, and the God Who Weeps with Us
“We were promised sufferings. They were part of the program. We were even told, ‘Blessed are they that mourn,’ and I accept it. I’ve got nothing that I hadn’t bargained for. Of course, it’s different when the thing happens to oneself, not to others, and in reality,...
Keeping Christ at the Center: Resisting Idolatry in an Age of Distraction
There’s a tragedy unfolding in many corners of the church today. It isn’t loud enough to make headlines. It doesn’t announce itself with scandal or collapse. Instead, it moves like a subtle fog through sanctuaries and institutions, soft enough that few notice the...
A Cruciform Witness Against Anti-Palestinianism: Learning to See, Lament, and Love in the Way of Christ
There are wounds that span generations. Wounds carried not merely in flesh but in memory, in longing, in the very landscape of a people’s story. For Palestinians (Christian and Muslim alike) these wounds have become a defining mark of existence: dispossession,...
A Cruciform Witness Against Antisemitism: A Christian Call to Love, Justice, and Truth
Christians throughout the centuries have used the word “cruciform” (literally “cross-shaped”) to describe a life patterned after Jesus’s self-giving love. A cruciform faith is one shaped by the self-giving love of Jesus revealed on the cross. It embodies a way of...
The Centrality of Jesus Christ for Christian Discipleship and Spirituality
There’s a center to all things, and it’s not us. In an age where the self is enthroned and every voice declares its own truth, Christian faith makes a startling claim: that the true center of reality, of faith, of creation itself, isn’t an idea or a moral code, but...
How the Bible Shapes Christian Discipleship and Spirituality
There are few things more radical than believing that the living God speaks: still, now, through words on a page. Compared with the views of our age, it's an astonishing conviction to believe that these words in Scripture, ancient yet alive, can pierce the noise of...
Doubt and Discipleship to Jesus: How Christian Spirituality Guides Our Way
There are nights when faith feels like silence. When prayer echoes into absence. When words once bright with certainty now taste like ash. It’s tempting to think something has gone terribly wrong; that doubt is failure, that questioning means betrayal. Yet the...











