Roydon Ng

Press Service International

Roydon Ng is a Christian writer and Baptist seminary graduate from Western Sydney.

Soli Deo gloria.

Follow @RoydonNg on Twitter

Email: roydon@roydonng.com.au

Roydon’s previous articles are available at: https://www.christiantoday.com.au/by/roydon-ng

  • Why Christian Culture?

    Christianity is worth fighting for. There is so much that we owe to Christianity, it can be described as a debt that many in the world are either naïve or blatantly ignorant about.

  • Standing up Against Distortion

    It is not surprising that liberals are upset at Donald Trump’s nominee to the Supreme Court of the United States. The announcement of Judge Brett Kavanaugh, who arguably is a textualist and fairly originalist interpreter of the US constitution, is of significant concern to liberals who have placed faith in upholding unconstitutional decisions as human rights.

  • Slavery is a choice but who’s your master?

    Whether it be Milo Yiannopolous, Chance the Rapper or Kanye West, it can be said that Kanye is drawing attention to the socio-cultural bondages that are arguably holding people back.

  • God’s not dead

    Christians in Australia have found themselves increasingly marginalised over recent years – a point made with much emphasis in Sydney Archbishop Anthony Fisher’s Easter address.

  • Being genuine

    “Fakeness” and hypocrisy is part of our human condition called sin.

  • The milkshake duck

    Even if you don't know the word, you know the phenomenon.

  • Jesus – a never expiring passport

    In 2017, Australian politics has been dominated by questions and debates over identity.

  • The church’s spiritual #MeToo crisis

    With #MeToo spreading in response to sexual abuse scandals in Hollywood and with Australia having just come out of a Royal Commission examining many institutional responses to child abuse, I started thinking about the church.

  • Youngest ever Willoughby Councillor, a committed Christian promising common-sense politics

    At just 22 years of age, University of New South Wales student Brendon Zhu is a newly elected independent councillor in Willoughby City Council.

  • It all ends up in a box or does it?

    What does the board game Monopoly and human life have in common?