More than 110 people took part in Australian Lutheran College’s (ALC) inaugural Festival of Learning in February, which offered short courses both online and on-campus.

The majority of the 113 registered participants favoured a remote-learning experience and many sampled ALC’s academic program for the first time.

Due to the hybrid approach used to bring people together, the five-day festival was open to anyone, anywhere. The event also provided a platform for several LCANZ Local Mission departments – Grow Ministries, New & Renewing Churches and Lutheran Media – to deliver training.

Later in February, the ALC community marked the start of a new academic year with staff and students gathering for the opening service. Physical-distancing measures meant attendance this year was restricted to members of the campus-based community, but the service was also live-streamed for the benefit of ALC’s distributed learners.

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Did you watch Lutheran worship services on community TV stations Channel 44 in South Australia or Channel 31 in Victoria in 2020? If so, the worship committee of St John’s Lutheran Church Unley wants to hear from you.

Services from St John’s and Bethlehem Adelaide were broadcast on SA community TV as part of the LCANZ’s COVID-19 response supporting members unable to attend public worship, as well as services from St Paul’s Box Hill in suburban Melbourne, which remain on that city’s Channel 31 each Friday.

St John’s is exploring the possibility of restarting the TV slots if the need for this ministry remains. The committee is seeking feedback, including to these questions:

  • Which service/s did you watch on community TV and how often?
  • How were/are they helpful to you?
  • In which town or city do you live?
  • Would you like the Channel 44 broadcasts to resume?

Contact St John’s via email at office@stjohnsunley.lca.org.au or on 08 8271 9556. If you would like to watch any of the St Johns broadcasts you can do so online at: https://bit.ly/3bIJujT

To read the full story, go to www.lca.org.au/news

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The LCANZ project to establish a Christian Care Sunday acknowledging volunteers and better connecting Lutheran aged and community services with congregations is underway.

The move results from a proposal to General Synod by the church’s Committee for Ministry with the Ageing. The Committee believes a focus on Christian care in congregations will assist provide awareness-raising opportunities for the care that flows from Lutheran communities and agencies into society.

Project officer Anna Kroehn will be guided through the 12-month project by the steering committee of Colleen Fitzpatrick, Helen Lockwood, Pastor Peter Miller, Sue Westhorp and Dr Tania Nelson. Anna said: ‘We plan to develop intergenerational, thought-provoking worship guides, studies, ministry program plans, social media resources and activities to help congregations and Lutheran aged-care and community services to explore and thank God for the Christian care extended by our people every day.’

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The LCANZ’s new congregational child safety standards will go through a consultation process in April and May.

The LCA Child Safety Standards for Congregations are aimed at ensuring that the church can meet its regulatory responsibilities in response to an increasingly rigorous child safety landscape in Australia and New Zealand, especially in the wake of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse recommendations.

Tailored to the congregational and faith-based context, the standards are a more user-friendly version of the National Principles endorsed by COAG (Council of Australian Governments) in 2019.

They will also be trialled in some congregations before they are finalised and implemented.

Notifications about the release of the standards consultation package will appear in LCANZ District eNews bulletins and the package will be available on the LCA website.

To read the full story, go to www.lca.org.au/news

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Going GREYT! 1 Peter 4:10

In Going GREYT! we feature stories of some of our ‘more experienced’ people within the LCA, who have been called to make a positive contribution in their retirement. We pray their examples of service will be an inspiration and encouragement to us all as we look to be Christ’s hands and feet wherever we are, with whatever gifts and opportunities we’ve been given.

by Helen Beringen

Being called a ‘Ham’ may not be too flattering for most people, but for Western Australian retiree John Stephens it is a badge of honour.

That’s because the 85-year-old has been a ‘Ham’ for most of his life – an amateur radio operator that is.

What started with childhood tinkering with crystal radio sets has progressed into his Christian witness through a community radio station in Albany, Western Australia.

This labour of love includes rising at 4.30am every Sunday to host the Christian Breakfast show on Albany’s Great Southern FM radio station, which he has led for 20 years. He also started a Bakelite Radio show on Thursday afternoons, which features music from the 1920s through to the 1950s.

It was during the days of Bakelite radios, which were the first commonly used moulded plastic radios of the 20th century, that John discovered his love for radio.

John’s talents were directed into Christian radio early in life, through his local church in suburban Perth.

‘As a young child of four years of age, I was taken to the Church of Christ Sunday school at Maylands by two young girls who were neighbours and lived across the road from my parents’, John says.

In those days people walked to church, so young John was pushed in a stroller to the church in the neighbouring suburb by the girls, whose Christian family played a big part in his life.

‘I married my school days sweetheart Edna in that church. Both of us taught Sunday school … in those days of big Sunday schools we had 180 students ranging from kindergarten to seniors’, he recalls.

John and Edna, who were married for 58 years before her death in 2015, were active on church committees. They went on to raise two daughters and two sons, and have nine grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren who live in Western Australia and the United States.

It was through the church that John became involved in Christian radio.

‘Churches of Christ had a Christian radio Sunday school operating out of one of the commercial radio stations in Perth and country stations in Northam’, John says.

‘This was a live program with young people representing several of the local churches attending the studio and singing on each Sunday morning.’

While at high school, John’s love for the technical elements of broadcasting led him to the technical production of radio, through work experience as a control room operator.

This led to an apprenticeship in electrical engineering after completing high school, culminating in a 38-year career in technical education.

‘I was also encouraged by one of the members of our Maylands Church who had been a radio operator in the navy during WWII to study for AOCP, which is the Amateur Operator Certification, commonly referred to as a “Ham’s licence”. This means you can operate your own radio station on shortwave and talk to other “Hams” around the world’, John says.

‘I was successful in achieving a call sign, VK6KJS, and became an active SWL – shortwave listener. This enabled me to listen to Christian broadcasting stations around the world. I still maintain that call sign today!’ That guided John along another volunteering pathway – the Far East Broadcasting Company (FEBC). FEBC is a global media ministry spreading the gospel to inspire people to follow Jesus Christ, broadcasting in more than 50 countries in 30 different languages.

‘While a representative for FEBC, I visited Singapore, China and Manila and witnessed the activities in the mission field’, John says.

John’s volunteer work in Christian radio has been inspired by a book by Australian Uniting Church minister Vernon Turner called God gave me a microphone, a forerunner in Christian radio ministry.

‘His book reminded me of me in my early days, as we both began with crystal radio sets’, John says.

Since retiring in 2000, John has continued that Christian witness at the crack of dawn each Sunday, with his own 6am to 9am Christian program on Great Southern FM (100.9 FM), which broadcasts to the southern area of Western Australia.

John’s grateful for the support of Christian groups such as the LCANZ’s Lutheran Media, which supplies its Messages of hope outreach ministry’s radio spots he shares with listeners, along with Christian hymns and songs.

His favourite message of hope comes from the hymn ‘To God be the Glory’ which reminds him that even in countries where missionaries are unable to work, radios are still able to beam messages of God’s love into people’s homes.

Helen Beringen is a Brisbane-based writer who is inspired by the many GREYT people who serve tirelessly and humbly in our community. By sharing stories of how God shines his light through his people, she hopes others are encouraged to explore how they can use their gifts to share his light in the world.

Know of any other GREYT stories in your local community? Email the editor lisa.mcintosh@lca.org.au

Messages of hope

Lutheran Media’s Messages of hope radio programs are broadcast by more than 800 commercial, community and Christian stations around Australia and New Zealand, as well as into Papua New Guinea and Asia, the latter via shortwave.  

For more information, go to www.messagesofhope.org.au or www.messagesofhope.org.nz  

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The LCA Visual Arts Working Group is organising the first churchwide simultaneous art exhibition to be held across Australia and New Zealand this year, with the theme, ‘Living Water’.

The August event is open to artists of all ages, skill levels and across all media, who participate in exhibitions in their local communities.

South Australian participants can register exhibitions with the SA Living Artists Festival (www.salafestival.com) or join the SALA exhibition at St Stephen’s Adelaide (contact chrisathiel@gmail.com by 30 April 2021).

Email libby.krahling@lca.org.au to register your interest.

For more, go to www.lca.org.au/news

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CHURCH@HOME www.lca.org.au/churchhome

Home worship nurtures faith

Regular devotions are a powerful part of an active home-worship life. They can help nurture our faith and even that of our families, as they strengthen our relationship with Jesus, increase our trust in God and our openness to the call of his Spirit. We pray that you will receive blessings from the devotional materials here and in the Church@Home resources collection collated and shared on the special webpage at www.lca.org.au/churchhome. There are also other faith-building and practical resources available through this webpage. If you have internet access and a printer, why not print some and mail or deliver them to those who may otherwise miss out?

–Lisa

Jeremiah 29:11

For I know the plans I have for you … plans to give you hope and a future.

DEVOTIONS FOR HOME WORSHIP

These reflections are from a fresh set of devotions written for our LCA/NZ family and friends to help us to keep our eyes on Jesus. They can be used by families and individuals as part of the Church@Home resources. You can find these and more on the LCA website at www.lca.org.au/daily-devotion

Seen and loved by Sonia Hulme

‘As Jesus walked beside the Sea of Galilee, he saw Simon and his brother Andrew casting a net into the lake, for they were fishermen’ (Mark 1:16).

Read Mark 1:14–20.

In today’s reading, we see Jesus at the very beginning of his earthly ministry, assembling the group who would become his 12 disciples. These are the ones who would spend the next three years travelling with, eating with, living with and learning from him.

Three of them would become part of his inner circle, including Simon. It seems this might not have been his first encounter with Jesus. The Gospel of John records that it was Simon’s brother Andrew who had first introduced them. Over the next three years, though Jesus and Simon were master and servant, they also became close friends. Jesus renamed him Peter, and he was the first disciple to recognise Jesus as Messiah, the one promised by God to save his people. No matter the exact timing or circumstances of their meeting, Simon Peter’s story began with being seen by Jesus as he toiled away at his everyday job. He saw into Peter’s heart, which was capable of great love but also deeply flawed, and called him anyway.

The beginning of Peter’s life-changing kingdom adventure was being seen in all his humanity and loved despite his imperfections.

It’s no different for you and me. Jesus sees you toiling away at your everyday tasks. He sees you, and calls you into deep and intimate friendship with him and then on into his kingdom work. Where does he see you today? Perhaps you are not a fisherman but employed in some other vocation? Or you are retired or struggling to find work? Jesus issues you the same invitation. Might he be saying to you, ‘I see you; I know you; I love you. Come; follow me, and take part in what I’m already doing in the world. Come on a life-changing kingdom adventure …’

Thank you, Lord, that you see me where I am today, and you love me. Your seeing of me frees me into life. Help me take up your invitation to friendship and join, with joy, your kingdom work in the world. Amen.

A hospital for the soul by Maria Rudolph

‘He sent forth his word and healed them, he rescued them from the grave’ (Psalm 107:20).

Read Psalm 107:1–3,17–22.

I recently had a big medical procedure done. I was in hospital numerous times, and I needed bed rest to recover. For weeks, I wasn’t able to take part in normal life. All outings in the car (that I couldn’t even drive myself) were trips back to the hospital or to see some kind of doctor. Finally, I was able to go on my first non-medical outing. It was Ash Wednesday and a friend took me to church for a special service. I sat there, breathing in the holy space after weeks in bed, after staring at ceilings in hospitals and at home. It suddenly struck me: on this outing, too, I had actually come to a hospital. The church is like a hospital, a place of healing for the soul. After weeks of living so outside of the norm, my innermost being was yearning for the sacredness of the word spoken, prayed and sung by a group of Christians in church. It enveloped me with peace.

The psalms are so raw; the psalmists captured human struggles and emotions so well. Today’s psalm describes a parched soul who hungers and thirsts for the Lord after straying from God’s path. But as soon as they are ready to turn back to God, there he is. He is like a well-watered garden, like a spring that never stops, filling them up and healing them instantly.

We might not experience the healing hand of God in a physical sense, although that can also happen to some. But absolutely every single one of us will experience the refreshment the Lord brings our weary souls when we are parched and open ourselves up to God.

What does that mean for where you are at in your own life at this moment? Here is Matthew 11:28,29 for you in The Passion Translation: Jesus says, ‘Are you weary, carrying a heavy burden? Then come to me. I will refresh your life, for I am your oasis. Simply join your life with mine. Learn my ways and you’ll discover that I’m gentle and humble. You will find refreshment and rest in me’.

Dear Lord, thank you for refreshing my soul time and again. I praise and thank you for nourishing me more than the choicest food and healing me more deeply than the most knowledgeable doctor. Amen.

PRAYER 

You Lifted Me Out of the Depths 

I will praise you, O Lord,

For you lifted me out of the depths!

You did not let my enemies laugh at me,

Lord my God, I called to you for help and you healed me.

O Lord, you brought me up from the grave, you saved me from the pit.

Sing to the Lord, you saints; praise his holy name.

For his anger doesn’t last and his love lasts a lifetime;

Weeping may last for a night,

but rejoicing comes in the morning.

You turned my crying into dancing;

you removed my rags and clothed me with joy,

that my heart may sing in praise forever.

O Lord my God, I will give you thanks forever!

– Psalm 30, from justprayer.org

Hebrews 10:23

Let us hold on firmly to the hope we profess because we can trust God to keep his promise.

I know exactly how you feel by Sue Westhorp

‘Because he himself was tested by what he suffered, he is able to help those who are being tested’ (Hebrews 2:18).

Read Hebrews 2:9–18.

Have you ever had the experience of telling someone a part of your story and had them react with the words ‘I know exactly how you feel’? Perhaps it is a phrase you use to show that you understand and feel empathy for the other person. Sometimes this can be helpful for us, creating a sense of solidarity that helps us to feel less alone. Sometimes we might question whether it is actually possible for someone to know exactly how we feel. After all, we are all unique human beings with unique experiences, aren’t we?

Today’s reading outlines God’s plan for salvation through Jesus. Jesus is described as the pioneer of our salvation who is made perfect through suffering and ‘tastes death for everyone’. And in doing so, he claims us as his sisters and brothers, because he became human like us. It’s a pretty amazing concept, isn’t it? God had the power to swoop in triumphantly and save humanity, and yet he chose to become one of us, to experience life as one of us, and ultimately to die – something God could not do unless he was human.

And the story doesn’t end after the death and resurrection, for Jesus continues to help us in our times of testing and suffering. He doesn’t sit at a distance from us, no longer involved now that the work of salvation has been completed. No, he comes alongside us, identifying with our human experiences and helping us to work through them, not as an impartial observer but as one who knows what we are going through.

As you pour out your heart to God in prayer, in lament, and in sighs beyond words, know that Jesus has gone before you, enduring testing and suffering for our sake. And as he listens to you, he says, ‘My sister/brother, I know exactly how you feel, and I will help you through’.

Lord, I ask you to shine your light in my life. In your grace and mercy, illuminate changes I need to make, paths I need to take, and forgiveness I need to seek. May my confession of sins this week include all the secret darkness of my heart, and may I be fully restored to walk in the light. In Jesus’ name, Amen.

‘In tents faith’ by Pastor Tim Castle-Schmidt

‘By faith he made his home in the promised land like a stranger in a foreign country; he lived in tents, as did Isaac and Jacob, who were heirs with him of the same promise’ (Hebrews 11:9).

Read Hebrews 11:8–12.

Would you be happy living in a tent when you knew you had an enormous inheritance? An inheritance that could allow you to live out your days comfortably?

Because that is what Abraham had: faith to live in a tent despite the promise of a nation for his heirs. He had ‘in tents faith’. And yet, it wasn’t his faith through which the promise was fulfilled, but the faithfulness of Yahweh, the promise-giver.

Living in a tent is itself a bit of an act of faith. You have to trust that you won’t get wet, blown away or devoured by the local wildlife. And I suspect that’s part of the attraction of camping; you have to trust that you’ll cope, and that can be intense.

And so, when we are faced with a disruptive event, we are invited to have Abraham’s ‘in tents faith’. Faith to live in a tent when we have the promise of a castle. And that’s not so bad. Abraham and Sarah never entered the Promised Land, and yet their living by faith – intense faith – gave them the energy and connection with reality that was needed for them at that moment.

Lord God, the one who chose Abraham, enliven us with the faith to hang on in the face of adversity, knowing that you promise to be with us through it all. Amen.

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by Tania Nelson

The LCANZ’s Ministry with the Ageing local mission department has a wide range of helpful resources on our webpage – www.lca.org.au/ministry-with-ageing

A great place to start is with our Ministry with the Ageing: a beginner’s guide booklet. Divided into three sections, it addresses ageing as a personal journey through the topics of ‘Post-work years’, ‘As the years pass’, and ‘In the twilight of your life’. It’s a great resource for ageing folk, as well as for the family and friends who support the ageing.

You can download a copy from our website or request a copy by phoning the LCANZ Churchwide Office on 08 8267 7300 or by emailing cma@lca.org.au

Excerpt from ‘A Prayer for all Ages’

God of all creation, you are timeless and beyond all ages.

We who are growing old give thanks
for the years you have given us –
for family, friends and all those
who have enriched our lives.

We who are not yet old give thanks
for the older people in our lives:
for grandparents, loved ones, friends
and all who generously offer
the wise counsel of their years.

We who are growing old pray for prudence and sweet timing,
in offering our wisdom to the next generation,
while respecting their energy and creativity.

We who are not yet old pray for openness
and humility in receiving
the advice and guidance of our elders.

God of endless love, help us to understand
that we share a common life journey,
a call to live life to the full
and to strive to enable all creation to come
to the fullness of the Cosmic Christ. Amen

From the LCANZ’s Ministry with the Ageing: a beginner’s guide. Used with permission of Australian Catholic Social Justice Council.

More useful resources

Resources on the Ministry with the Ageing webpage on the LCA website also include informative videos; dementia resources produced in conjunction with Lutheran Media; ‘Worship and the ageing – a list of ideas’; the devotional litany resource ‘Respecting our Elders’; the God’s love – our care booklet, which covers the theology underpinning the practice of Lutheran care; discussion papers on aged-care and end-of-life issues; information about parish nursing; ministry scholarship information; and reports and presentations from the LCANZ’s Aged Care and Community Services Gathering.

Stay updated

You can sign up for the Ministry with the Ageing eNews by visiting www.lca.org.au/enews and following the instructions to sign up. Ministry with the Ageing is part of the churchwide list of bulletins.

Dr Tania Nelson is LCANZ Executive Officer – Local Mission.

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by Jodi Brook

Grow Ministries travels around Australia leading training sessions that encourage congregations to support and equip families to develop family faith practices.

On our travels, we have encountered many parents and grandparents who become very emotional during our sessions. As we discuss research around family faith situations, participants openly share their own experiences as children and parents. What we often hear is a sense of grief, guilt and lament about how they feel they may have failed to nurture faith in their own homes.

Feeling this grief, Grow Ministries wanted to offer a Bible study that provides an opportunity for parents to share their feelings with others and to experience God’s forgiveness and love. In partnership with Pastor Richard Haar, lecturer at Australian Lutheran College, we are pleased to tell you about ‘Parents in Pain’.

Sharing enables support

The Parents in Pain Bible studies have been designed to help parents cope with the heartache of having loved ones turn away from their Christian faith.

These studies are designed to be done in a group setting. This allows for mutual sharing and ensures that parents receive support and encouragement from others on a similar journey. Intended as a guide, we encourage you to allow the discussion to organically unfold as your group’s needs are uncovered.

The studies are not designed to be a therapy or counselling session. If the topics discussed raise deeper issues, please speak to your pastor or seek counselling support.

Study sessions address parents’ pain

The ‘Parents in Pain’ Bible study series is designed to be completed over four sessions.

SESSION 1

You are not alone (COMFORT)

Begin to confront the fear and pain over the heart-wrenching experience of seeing your child/ren reject the faith.

SESSION 2

What went wrong? (REFLECTION)

Explore some of the factors which led your child to turn away from God.

This session has the goal of gaining a deeper understanding of yourself and your child/ren.

SESSION 3

Wrestling with the guilt (LETTING GO)

Deal with the important distinction between appropriate and inappropriate guilt and how to best respond to both of these.

SESSION 4

Just keep loving them (HOPE)

Develop some positive strategies for coping and for encouraging your child/ren to reconnect with the Church and their faith.

We pray this resource is an opportunity to support the parents in your congregation who are struggling with this painful issue.

We pray this resource is an opportunity to support the parents in your congregation who are struggling with this painful issue.

Parents in Pain is available for purchase for $5 from Grow Ministries online store at www.growministries.org.au/product-category/bible-studies/ 

Jodi Brook is Director of the LCANZ’s Grow Ministries.

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