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Read article online at www.sydneyanglicans.net, click here. To discuss the article, visit the forums at sydneyanglicans.net.

It’s a boy!

BREAKING NEWS. Hugo Robert McNeill born an hour ago 712pm 13 May. 3.95kg 51cm. Mother and child healthy. Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ!!

SUNDAY Midday Update: It’s hard to describe the excitement of meeting our child. He’s been with us for nine months, gender unknown… but now to meet him face-to-face is a great joy.

Mandy and Hugo are staying at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Camperdown. Visiting hours are 2pm to 8pm. We expect to be home on Monday.

This morning Liana, Jemimah and Oscar visited the three of us, so that for the first time, all six of us were together. A great joy! God is very good.

The most amazing thing was walking into The Birth Centre at RPA with only two people, and walking out with three. What a joy.

Birth is never a safe exercise, and so we are thankful to our wonderful God for the safe delivery of our child.

God is good, hey?

Read article online at www.sydneyanglicans.net, click here. To discuss the article, visit the forums at sydneyanglicans.net.

Increasingly it seems the achilles heel of atheists is the discussion of relativism. When anyone holds any claim to absolute truth then the secularists rise up in cries of protest.

Read the colourful responses to Philip Jensen’s Good Friday sermon in The Sydney Morning Herald.

Here was my unpublished letter to the editor in response:

It seems that the only people who took offence at Philip Jensen’s Good Friday sermon were secularists and atheists (Letters, April 17). The majority of Australians who believe in God warmly welcome such debate about religious beliefs. If secularists and atheists want to be taken seriously then they should enter the stage and join the discussion, rather than shouting “racism” and “arrogance” from the cheap seats in the crowd.

The Futter Hall at The Kings School-- The new venue for TWIST

The continued growth of TWIST, the music conference of Emu Music and Youthworks is causing more growing pains. As a result of three years of capacity crowds, despite increasing the venue size every year, we need somewhere larger.

To solve this problem, we will be moving this year to The Kings School, in Parramatta, to a venue that can seat in excess of 1000 people.

This year’s conference will be held on Sat 12th – Sun 13th August, 2006. Our guest speaker is John Dickson.

For full details, including online registration, visit www.twist.org.au