Gordon Cheng is an Australian Christian author and writer. He is currently Campus Director with the Cumberland Campus of Sydney University, employed by Australian Fellowship of Evangelical Students. For several years he was the Resources Editor of Matthias Media (a non-denominational Christian publisher based in Sydney),.[1][2] He is also an Anglican presbyter (or priest) in the Diocese of Sydney.
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Of Swedish and Chinese descent,[3] Cheng was ordained in the Anglican Diocese of Melbourne.
He worked for 10 years as a senior staff worker with the Australian Fellowship of Evangelical Students at the University of Melbourne, and then ministered at a number of churches in Sydney. He was employed by Matthias Media from February 2004 to January 2009 to work on Matthias Media's resources other than its flagship magazine, ['The Briefing.[2]
Cheng is also an active member of the Anglican Diocese of Sydney. He currently ministers at St Paul's Anglican Church, Carlingford,[4] and from 2004-6 he was involved in the Cumberland University Church, ministering to the Cumberland Campus of Sydney University.[5]
Cheng is the author of several books and other resources published by Matthias Media, including the Pathway Bible Guides Bible study series, and his first book/multimedia publication with Matthias,[6] the Six Steps to Encouragement course.[7] He is an associate of the Anglican Dean of Sydney, Phillip Jensen, and has edited several of his books.
Since the mid 1990s, Cheng has also written numerous articles for The Briefing, a popular evangelical journal distributed in Australia, England and the United States. He is a critic of the ordination of women to the priesthood[8] and homosexuality, and has written on the priority of Christian ministry over secular work.
A a well-known contributor to online and print media in Sydney, Cheng has had numerous letters published in the Sydney Morning Herald and other newspapers,[9] and he posts regularly on many websites and forums, including the Sydney Diocese's own Sydney Anglicans website, where several of his articles have also been published.[10] He has also posted on the Ship of Fools website. In March 2006 some of these posts, in relation to a lawsuit involving the sacking of a lay worker in one Anglican church in Sydney, were republished in the Sydney Morning Herald as a defence of the Diocese's actions.[11] More recently, Cheng has been a guest opinion writer for Sydney's Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph newspapers, writing opinion pieces on religious and ethical issues, including Lent,[12] euthanasia,[13] and racism,[14] In late 2006 he was also enlisted by Daily Telegraph columnist Piers Akerman to be a guest writer for a Muslim-Christian debate run by the paper on multiculturalism; others participating included Lebanese Muslim representative Keysar Trad.[15][16]
Cheng is married with three children.[2]