Evangelicalism in crisis
Ranald Macaulay
Date posted: 1 Jun 2018
Mary Davis interviews Ranald Macaulay for en
Ranald Macaulay studied Law at Cambridge University.
Evangelical crisis
Ranald Macaulay
Date posted: 1 Aug 2018
Dear Sir,
Kenneth J. Stewart is right to point out in
his July letter that I should have been more
careful in my statements about Pietism in
the 18th century. All sorts of helpful changes came from this German-based renewal
movement and we benefit from them to
this day. Church historian G. R. Cragg is
similarly positive. He devotes an entire page
to its merits in his The Church and the Age of
Reason (Pelican 1970).
Darwin undeniably discredited
Ranald Macaulay
Date posted: 1 Oct 2016
Ranald Macaulay introduces us to a very significant book
My admittedly dramatic title is deliberate.
Lausanne & the polemical imperative
Ranald Macaulay
Date posted: 1 Mar 2016
Ranald Macaulay asks if the 1974 Congress missed something vital
When the Lausanne Congress opened in 1974 the global community was being treated to searing images of the Ethiopian famine.
Lausanne and true truth
Ranald Macaulay
Date posted: 1 May 2016
Dear en,
I was thankful for Chris Wright’s gentle
corrective in the April edition. I should have
expressed more appreciation for The Cape
Town Commitment because it is full of helpful
affirmations and observations.
Image of God reply
Ranald Macaulay
Date posted: 1 Dec 2014
Dear Sir,
We are glad that Bob Alloway (Nov en)
seems to agree with our main point (Oct en)
that the image of God in man has to do with
our intrinsic nature. He says: ‘… theistic evo-lutionists would agree that (Adam and Eve)
were designed –
and would say,
‘[human
beings] didn’t just evolve by chance’.
Pussy-footing atheism
Ranald Macaulay
Date posted: 1 May 2013
Book Review
WHAT MAKES US MORAL?
Science, religion, and the shaping of the moral landscape: a Christian response to Sam Harris
Read review
The last of England
Ranald Macaulay
Date posted: 1 Dec 2012
Book Review
TRIPLE JEOPARDY FOR THE WEST
Aggressive secularism, radical Islamism and multiculturalism
Read review
Influencing Anglicanism?
Ranald Macaulay
Date posted: 1 Aug 2013
Dear EN,
Although I am not an Anglican I follow
Chris Sugden’s ‘Worldwide Anglican Update’
carefully and appreciatively. I am thankful
EN enables us get his regular commentaries.
Landmine?
Ranald Macaulay
Date posted: 1 Dec 2009
Book Review
THE CHRONICLE OF PILGRIMAGE TO THE HOLY LAND
The Adventures — The Events — The Holy Sites
Read review
Meagre challenge
Ranald Macaulay
Date posted: 1 Feb 2009
Book Review
A FRIENDLY DIALOGUE BETWEEN AN ATHEIST AND A CHRISTIAN
Read review
A bit ‘churchy’
Ranald Macaulay
Date posted: 1 Apr 2008
Book Review
DISCIPLES AND CITIZENS
A vision for distinctive living
Read review
Reflecting on the Olympics
Ranald Macaulay
Date posted: 1 Oct 2008
A chill swept through me as I read Charles Moore’s recent article on the Beijing games1.
Media images of hard, cruel-faced bodyguards accompanying the Olympic torch around the world now slotted into place. ‘As the choice of Berlin for the Olympic Games in 1936 marked Hitler’s success and international acceptance, so the choice of Beijing for 2009 marks China’s’. In other words the global community was being treated to a massive con exercise. An emblem of peace masks a system of despotism.
Learning from Francis Schaeffer
Ranald Macaulay
Date posted: 1 Jan 2008
At the risk of oversimplification, Francis Schaeffer’s vision can be expressed in two fundamental concerns:
* True truth
* True spirituality
Born in the German town section of Philadelphia in 1912, as a young man he came in contact with the Christian faith in an almost unique way. During his late teens he happened to be reading classical philosophy. This showed him (a) that he had found the field of interest in which he felt most at home, ideas; and (b) that philosophy had no answers despite the fact that it dealt with what he called later ‘the basic philosophic questions’. Plenty of questions, but no answers!
Rescuing Darwin or wrecking the faith
Ranald Macaulay
Date posted: 1 Nov 2008
I was weaned from Darwinian evolution completely by surprise.
Converted my first weekend at university back in 1956 I found I had an immediate love of the Bible and a thirst to read more. At the same time I remained sceptical about origins. ‘Yes’ I said to my friend, ‘I do believe the Bible to be true, but don’t think I’m going to accept the Genesis myths uncritically!’ Like practically everyone today I had been raised to think that evolution was unquestionable — hence my problems about Adam and Eve.
Reaction and distraction
Ranald Macaulay
Date posted: 1 Jul 2008
When Marian Evans’s novel Adam Bede came out in 1859 it made the name ‘George Eliot’ justly famous.
Her novels soon took their place among the finest in the English language. To discerning readers, however, Marian’s scepticism indicated a growing problem about Christianity and the church.
Living in Sodom
Ranald Macaulay
Date posted: 1 Jun 2006
The fact that we find ourselves living in Sodom should come as no surprise.
Almost a century ago to the day (April 8 1906), Lytton Strachey of Trinity College, Cambridge, wrote to Maynard Keynes, the future economist, ‘We can’t be content with telling the truth — we must tell the whole truth: and the whole truth is the Devil… It’s madness for us to dream of making dowagers understand that feelings are good, when we say in the same breath that the best ones are sodomitical … our time will come a 100 years hence.’
As implausible as Father Christmas?
Ranald Macaulay
Date posted: 1 Dec 2006
The Bible emphasises that its truth is never readily accepted by the human heart.
It therefore prepares us not just for physical opposition but also for varying degrees of intellectual misunderstanding and even incredulity. When Paul addresses the Athenians, they object that he is bringing them ‘strange ideas’. The same would doubtless have been true had he been preaching in India or China, America or Egypt. Having said that, it is at least arguable that a new type of incomprehension has taken hold in Europe since the 18th century and that this new mindset is almost unique in history.