An open letter to my MP (and yours) on assisted suicide
This new law would not be a mild change to the law, enabling a compassionate approach to a few suffering people who need it. This would be a fundamental change in society, written into law.
This new law would not be a mild change to the law, enabling a compassionate approach to a few suffering people who need it. This would be a fundamental change in society, written into law.
Complaining that some people oppose assisted suicide for 'religious reasons' gets it precisely backwards.
Despite the good news that Essex Police have dropped their Stasi-like investigation into Telegraph journalist Allison Pearson, orthodox Christians should still expect trouble from the woke police.
Christian Today speaks to Sonya Pascoe, bereavement trainer at Care for the Family, about the organisation's new book The Grief Journey and how churches can support people who have lost a loved one.
Despite claiming there is no absolute truth, many postmodern beliefs are selling their own version of 'truth', and seem just as keen to impose their own 'truth' onto others as other worldviews ever did.
It is wrong to argue that human freedom means the right to abort unborn children.
What evil has God asked you to confront in your life? How is God asking you to stand for Him in your life? Like Elijah, are you doing it?
Despite once being a world leader in generosity, the UK has steadily declined in global generosity rankings over the past decade.
The deep divisions within the Church of England and the Anglican Communion over the issue of human sexuality mean that it will become very difficult, if not impossible, to find someone everyone can agree on.
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.