Stephen Fyson
Stephen Fyson is a Christian psychologist by trade and Christian teacher at heart. He explores the embodied soulness of who we are with reference to both disciplines, the dynamics of why it is ignored in both Australian professions, and how we might respond.
Articles by Stephen Fyson:
2 June 2026
4.1 MINS
Governments are rushing to 'deradicalise' those with opposing political values — but when belief runs to the heart, no state program can engineer a change of mind.
24 April 2026
3.5 MINS
Are modern coping strategies truly helping us flourish — or feeding a deeper hunger? Explore how psychological myths about happiness, growth, and identity may be leaving us emptier than before.
7 April 2026
2.8 MINS
Three Easter encounters — a fickle crowd, two dying criminals, two blinded disciples — reveal how our expectations of Jesus shape everything about how we meet Him.
27 March 2026
4.6 MINS
Why is bullying getting worse despite new policies and programs? The answer may lie not in our classrooms, but in what we fundamentally believe about children.
12 March 2026
4.9 MINS
Is multiculturalism beyond critique? This article argues that cultures must be evaluated honestly, warning that abandoning Judeo-Christian foundations risks moral confusion and civic decline.
27 February 2026
3.9 MINS
Amid rising unrest and hollow calls for unity, Australia’s cohesion depends on its Judeo-Christian foundations—without shared transcendent beliefs, national values lose meaning and society becomes unmoored.
16 February 2026
4.9 MINS
Australia’s calls for unity raise deep questions: what truly binds us together? Beyond comfort and civility, lasting community comes from grace, shared purpose, and transcendent commitment to God.
4 February 2026
4.5 MINS
A thoughtful critique of youth social media bans, questioning the science, highlighting deeper cultural and spiritual factors, and arguing that family strength and faith—not legislation alone—shape young people’s wellbeing.
14 January 2026
3.8 MINS
As Australia prepares a Bondi Royal Commission, this article weighs free speech against civic welfare, drawing on Scripture and J.S. Mill to argue that liberty must restrain evil.





