The United Nations organisation has revised its population projection for the next century, suggesting that Earth's population may reach 10.1 billion people by the year 2100. While we in Australia debate the relative merits of "big Australia," or some smaller version, people elsewhere are seriously procreating. Africa's population, for example, is projected to more than …
Religious responses to climate change
Five years ago the Climate Institute released a landmark publication, Common Belief, in which Australia's faith communities shared their views on environmental responsibility and how these related to action on climate change. There were contributions from Anglican, Baha'i, Baptist, Buddhist, Catholic, Greek Orthodox, Hindu, Jewish, Lutheran, Muslim, Salvation Army, Sikh, Uniting Church, and other faith …
Climate change is real, we must act
In 2007, former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd famously described climate change as "the greatest moral challenge of our time." Last week, the federal government's Climate Commission released an important report titled, The Critical Decade: Key Messages. Supported by the best recent scientific research, the report claims that "the global climate is changing and humanity is …
Ian Harper on school chaplaincy
In NSW, we have had the school ethics classes battle; in Victoria, a bitter war of words has broken out between Christians and secularists over chaplaincy in state schools. The federal government recently added fuel to the fire by allocating an extra $222 million to fund chaplains in a further 1,000 schools over the next three …
Freedom to talk about Jesus
The stories are mounting up: stories of honest and sincere citizens expressing their faith in harmless ways, trapped and punished by well-organised bands of secularist zealots. One of the latest victims is British GP Dr Richard Scott, aged 50, who has been censured by the General Medical Council for talking to a 24-year-old patient about …
