Bruce N. Kaye is Adjunct Research Professor at the Australian Centre for Christianity and Culture, Charles Sturt University, Canberra, and formerly General Secretary of the Anglican Church of Australia. His most recent books are Colonial Religion: Conflict and Change in Church and State (2020) and The Rise and Fall of the English Christendom: Theocracy, Christology, Order and Power (2018).
What do we have to learn from the Anglican church in Australia about how the church faces the challenge of the end of Christendom? The answer is that we have much to learn if our teacher is Bruce Kaye. Kaye is a no-nonsense theologian who makes these essays shine with clarity and wisdom. All who are trying to think through what it means to live as Christians after that is no longer a given will benefit from Kaye's book. --Stanley Hauerwas, Duke Divinity School, retired Leadership through liminality requires re-embracing identity, recalling our formative story. Second, it requires courageous experimentation and imaginative exploration to discover how our identity might be expressed in changed circumstances. Finally, it involves discerning effective ways forward, consonant with our identity, as they emerge from experiments. In this collection of essays, Bruce Kaye offers this kind of leadership; with theological and historical acuity and insightful analysis, he creatively opens future possibilities. --Phillip Aspinall, Anglican archbishop of Brisbane and former primate of Australia Frozen Institutions is a wonderful compendium of essays . . . . With insight and sharpness, Kaye brings his considerable skills as a wise and astute interpreter of the faith and fortunes of the Anglican Church worldwide as it grapples with issues of diversity and plurality in the modern world. A scholarly, penetrating, at times disturbing yet unfailingly gracious account of the ecclesia of God. --Stephen Pickard, Charles Sturt University There is no better student of the life and witness of the body of Christ than Bruce Kaye. An Anglican theologian deeply committed to and thoroughly engaged in the church in Australia and globally, Kaye is a sharp critic of the forces that undermine the church's faithfulness to the gospel. These essays offer a hopeful future for both the Anglican Communion and Australian Anglicanism beyond Christendom and its divisive power politics. Good news indeed! --Ian T. Douglas, bishop of the Episcopal Church in Connecticut Ranging over Anglican, Australian, and ecumenical territory, Kaye shows that the institutional embodiment of religious faith is essential for its faithful transmission from one generation to another. But Kaye also urges a process of ecclesial reform and development if faith is to remain a reality in the world. With its focus on structures of power and authority (and their abuse), this is a book to resource and reorientate our thinking. --Paul Avis, School of Divinity, University of Edinburgh