Engage.Mail
Articles for Engage.Mail are generally from within a broadly Evangelical perspective. Ethos does not necessarily endorse every opinion of the authors but promotes their writing to encourage critical thought and discussion.
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Monday, 7 November 2016
| Andre van Eymeren
As people of faith, our unique contribution to the city is one of shalom - a holistic concept that opens the door of dialogue as we work together with others of good will for a better world.
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Monday, 3 October 2016
| Doug Hynd
Categorising people as being radically evil suggests they are beyond the possibility of repentance, redemption or forgiveness, implying an ultimacy that can belong to God alone.
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Monday, 3 October 2016
| Alex C. Smith
This first of a 3-part series on hell looks at the implications of an Evangelical Universalist view on our understanding of justice and judgement, imitating God, punishment, God’s character and evangelism.
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Monday, 3 October 2016
| Denise Cooper-Clarke
Suicide is still suicide, with or without a doctor, and to approve suicide for some but not others means that some lives are considered of more value.
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Sunday, 2 October 2016
| Angus McLeay and Gordon Preece
A summit that facilitates genuine, personal conversation about marriage offers a model of civil society conversation that we desperately need.
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Tuesday, 6 September 2016
| Shane Fenwick
The only way to peace and justice is by practicing 'double vision' - seeing through the eyes of the other, moving into their world and acquiring a 'common language'.
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Tuesday, 6 September 2016
| Mary Elizabeth Fisher
When we open up our homes and churches to people of other ethnic backgrounds, we foreshadow the invitation to the ultimate celebration - the marriage supper of the Lamb.
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Tuesday, 6 September 2016
| Mick Pope
The war between science and religion is misguided, and the two have more in common than we often think: both call for honest, critical engagement with the world around us.
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Tuesday, 6 September 2016
| Tom Sine
God is using young people outside the church to remind us that we are called to be people of compassion, creativity and action as we serve those around us.
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Thursday, 4 August 2016
| Dale Kuehne and Gordon Preece
Americans on the right and left are voting for Trump and Sanders respectively, not with their evangelical or Catholic hat on, but instead wearing the mantle of their economic class.
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