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Can Science see the end?
Published date: Monday, September 01, 2003
By: Ross Mckenzie & Greg Clarke

How is biblical eschatology to be interpreted in the light of what is known from physics about the history and possible future of the universe?

To the minds of some educated people, the most bizarre and unsubstantiated aspect of Christian faith is the area known as eschatology. Eschatology refers to the study of the "last things"—death, the end of the world, heaven and hell. More generally, it also refers to the study of the future and how we can

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Filed under : Science & Medicine
Where are all the conscientious objectors?
Published date: Thursday, September 18, 2003
By: Tom Frame
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Bishop to the Defence Force, Tom Frame, writes about UNSW students, actress Judy Davis, the war in Iraq, and whether political activism about war is a thing of the past.

A war against Iraq would be aggressive, destructive, unnecessary, protracted, illegal, and evil. These were some of the public assessments made early in 2003 about the proposed multinational campaign to disarm Iraq of Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMDs). The subsequent conflict,

Filed under : Social & Cultural Issues
The myth of secular tolerance
Published date: Wednesday, September 03, 2003
By: John Coffey

The resurgence of religious violence at the start of the twenty-first century has reinforced the myth of secular tolerance—the notion that whereas religious believers are instinctively intolerant, tolerance comes naturally to the secular mind. This paper challenges the myth. It suggests that secular people are not immune from the temptation to persecute and vilify others, and argues that the Christian Gospel fostered the rise of religious

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First, an apology
Published date: Monday, September 01, 2003
By: Greg Clarke

Negative, positive, apologia, kategoria ... and something else. Greg Clarke introduces CASE’s approach to apologetics.

It is a good rule in life never to apologise. The right sort of people do not want apologies, and the wrong sort take a mean advantage of them. (P.G. Wodehouse)

It is tempting to apologise for the presence of the word ‘apologetic’ in the name of this new venture which I have been employed to direct, the Centre for Apologetic

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Filed under : Theology & Apologetics
Faith on the chopping block
Published date: Monday, September 01, 2003
By: John Dickson
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In the 2003 Smith Lecture, John Dickson outlined the major flaws in a ‘pluralistic’ outlook in both the popular pluralism of contemporary culture or the more sophisticated pluralism of the academy. He then considers whether Christianity can stand up in the face of its claims.

Pluralism’s fatal flaw
One problem can be stated quite simply. In seeking to affirm all religious perspectives, pluralistic cultures like ours tend to honour none of

Filed under : Theology & Apologetics
Driving the point home
Published date: Monday, September 01, 2003
By: Andrew Cameron

How do mobile phones, microwaves and rock music affect our relationships? A new book explores the impact.

"Who you are among the students is as important as your academic work", wrote one CASE Associate in an encouraging email. Her wise observation is supported by research being carried out by the Relationships Foundation in Cambridge, UK, under the guidance of Dr Michael Schluter. Michael was at New College earlier this year, delivering lectures

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Filed under : Book ReviewsSocial & Cultural Issues
The Book Against God
Published date: Monday, September 01, 2003
By: Greg Clarke

Many a doctoral student might identify with Thomas Bunting, the central character of James Wood’s provocative novel, The Book Against God. Seven years into his philosophy Ph.D., Bunting is brought to a standstill by his failing marriage, his inability to tell the truth (he is separated from his pianist wife until she is satisfied that he has stopped lying), his unemployment, and his side project—an enormous atheistic journal known as the BAG, the

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Filed under : Book ReviewsHistory & Philosophy
Reconnecting faith and scholarship
Published date: Monday, September 01, 2003
By: Trevor Cairney

How does a scholar’s faith commitment affect how she or he teaches and researches? Should there be a connection. Trevor Cairney reviews his own career in education through the lens of his Christian faith.

One of the aims of CASE is to challenge Christian scholars to consider more fully the relationship of faith to their scholarship. In doing this CASE encourages the expression of views across a wide range of fields of study that are informed by

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Relationships research at the heart of academic work in the global era
Published date: Monday, September 01, 2003
By: Greg Clarke & Andrew Cameron

Relationships in an era of globalisation.

"Who you are among the students is as important as your academic work", wrote one CASE Associate in an encouraging email. Her wise observation is supported by research being carried out by the Relationships Foundation in Cambridge, UK, under the guidance of Dr Michael Schluter. Michael was at New College earlier this year, delivering lectures and participating in seminars considering the significance of

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Filed under : Social & Cultural Issues
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