Anglicare Southern Queenslandâs story began 150 years ago in Brisbane. To celebrate this special milestone, a collection of historic and modern photos will be on display at the Peopleâs Gallery, Brisbane City Hall between 12 and 18 October
Anglicare Southern Queensland was recently awarded $12 million in funding by the Commonwealth Department of Health and Aged Care to implement new Specialist Dementia Care Programs
In this new series on how art intersects with faith, Year 11 FCAC student Hannah Stanton shares how oil painting brings her back to what is important in lifeâs busyness: âThe coins in the artwork represent the story in Luke 21.1-4 where a widow donated what she could despite her own shortcomings â to me the coins represent resilience and doing what one can even when the odds are against youâ
Find out more about the Anglican Parish of Logan’s involvement with the Queensland Community Alliance by watching this video, and consider attending the Alliance’s ‘Foundations of Community Organising’ training workshop in September
As more than 800,000 Queensland students return to school this week, parents and guardians have a crucial role to play in helping their children manage the transition from home to classroom
Dressed in black clerical shirts and fluorescent tabards emblazoned âFaith Teamâ, Archbishops Welby and Cottrell were among the Anglican priests to join faith leaders from other denominations and religions in a chaplaincy team serving the queue of people waiting to see the Queen lying in state
Over hundreds of years, Sami El-Yousefâs ancestors have participated in the Holy Fire procession, carrying a banner representing one of the 13 oldest Christian Orthodox families in Jerusalem
World Council of Churches general secretary The Rev’d Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay welcomed positive developments in ongoing talks between the warring parties in Sudan
âIf youâve ever used a woven flax basket, youâll know how incredibly strong they are. A strand on its own has no real power, but woven, each strandâs power lies in its connection to the others,â says St Johnâs Cathedral community member Jane Francis on Maori raranga (âthe art of weavingâ)
âThe VAD training day affirmed that the new legislation will impact many in our communities. While it may not directly impact you or a loved one, no doubt someone in your wider community, for example in your church family, will be impacted. Conversations about dying are important because it is something that we all face,â says The Revâd Canon Cheryl Selvage