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Anglican Bishop of Barbados, Michael Maxwell, has called on Christians to reach out and help those who are unemployed. Expressing sadness at the fate of almost 3 000 workers employed under Government’s National Beautification Programme and by the National Housing Corporation who were told last week that they would be on the breadline on March 31, Maxwell said God’s people were required to help. “I, too, am saddened by those …
Christmas Message from the Anglican Bishop of Barbados, Michael Maxwell. Dear Barbadians and visitors to our nation, I greet you on this Christmas day that is described by many across the world as the most wonderful day of the year, when Christians commemorate the Nativity (the birth) of our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ. If there is a word that captures the essence or soul of Christmas it is the …
Anglican Bishop Michael Maxwell
Dear Barbadians and visitors to our nation, I greet you on this Christmas day that is described by many across the world as the most wonderful day of the year, when Christians commemorate the Nativity (the birth) of our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ.
If there is a word that captures the essence or soul of Christmas, it
The Anglican Bishop of Barbados has broken his silence on last month’s controversial Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) survey, describing it as an underhanded way of seeking information from children and a misuse of power that should never be allowed to happen again.And he wants to know why officials were gathering that information in the first place.A month after the October survey, which questioned 733 first-form students about their gender identity, sexual activity and drug use, Bishop Michael Maxwell said the administering of the survey without parental consent should be considered a form of disrespect to principals, parents and the students.The head of the local Anglican Church told Barbados TODAY that while some people believe that children were aware of some of the issues raised in the survey, “nevertheless, I still think that parental consent should have been sought before anything like this should have been given to our children”.