These three newly ordained graduates from Australian Lutheran College come from a wide range of backgrounds but will all be stepping out in faith to begin their first pastoral ministry parish assignments in 2023. Read on to get to know them a little and discover more about their ministry journeys.

JEREMY SMITH

AGE: 30

FAMILY: Wife Katie Smith

HOME CONGREGATION: St Johns Corinda Qld

VICARAGE: Faith Warradale SA, with Pastor Tim Klein

ASSIGNED TO: Immanuel Kadina, part of Maitland Parish SA

Who were the most influential people in your life as you were growing up? My family has been an incredible gift from God, especially the example of the faith of my parents and grandparents and the continual support and dependability of my parents and siblings.

Who are the most influential people for you now? Apart from my family, Katie and other long-term friends continue to help me through challenges and to understand how God works in my life.

What did you do before you went to ALC? I studied computer games programming and spent several years in games development while also working part-time at a conference centre.

Who or what encouraged you along the journey towards beginning pastoral studies? My brother helped me understand my sense of call, but my entire family and my experiences leading Christian Life Week camps were great sources of encouragement.

What is your most relied-upon Bible verse and why? 1 Corinthians 2:2. It’s easy to get caught up in the complexity of theology, but this verse is a hope-filled reminder that draws me back to the heart of the gospel – Jesus Christ and him crucified for us.

The most important thing people need to know about God is … what he has done for them (deliverance from sin, death, and the power of the Devil), and what it cost (the suffering and death of Jesus, his Son).

Which privilege of being a pastor are you most looking forward to? Walking the baptismal journey with people, especially supporting parents in their role of handing on the faith to their children and in helping young people understand all that they have received through baptism.

What is your favourite leisure activity? Katie and I enjoy going for walks to look at birds, bugs, and other wonders of God’s creation, and playing video games.

What is your favourite movie? It’s hard to pick a favourite, but I do enjoy The Princess Bride.

If you could chat with any famous person, living or dead, who would it be and why? There would be a lot of great people I would love to talk to as a witness of the faith, such as Paul, Mary, or Luther (perhaps with both our ‘Katies’!), but I would also like to chat with my grandmother, Neva, again.

JOEL GRIEGER

AGE: 31

FAMILY: Wife Nicola and son Henry

HOME CONGREGATION: Pilgrims of Zion Sedan SA

VICARAGE: St Pauls Glenelg SA, under the supervision of Pastor Tim Ebbs

ASSIGNED TO: Bordertown Parish SA

Who were the most influential people in your life as you were growing up? My parents

Who are the most influential people for you now? There are a lot of people who guide and influence me.

What did you do before you went to ALC? I worked in retail, more specifically in the fresh produce department of a supermarket.

Who or what encouraged you along the journey towards beginning pastoral studies? My participation in the 2017 Grow Leadership program, along with Pastor Neville Otto, whom I met during the program.

What is your most relied-upon Bible verse and why? Psalm 119:105. It reminds me that all we know about God comes from his word and that his word tells us how we should strive to live a holy life.

The most important thing people need to know about God is … that he is a loving and compassionate God above anything else!

Which privilege of being a pastor are you most looking forward to? Encouraging people on their faith journey by walking alongside them; serving people through God’s means of grace – welcoming them into God’s family through baptism, and reminding them of that grace through the Lord’s supper.

What is your favourite leisure activity? I am a sports fanatic, so anything to do with playing or watching sport.

What is your favourite movie? I’m not really into movies, but Forrest Gump definitely stands the test of time.

If you could chat with any famous person, living or dead, who would it be, and why? Bruce McAvaney, as he seems to be a sports nut, which would resonate with me. There are also people in biblical times – such as Judas or Jonah – whom I would want to ask why [they did what they did].

EDWIN SHOESMITH

AGE: 33

FAMILY: Wife Fiona and children Paxton, 4, and Chester, 18 months

HOME CONGREGATION: Emmanuel Lutheran Fellowship Toowoomba Qld

VICARAGE: St Petri Lutheran Church Nuriootpa SA, with Pastor Adrian Kitson

ASSIGNED TO: St James Lutheran Church Hervey Bay Qld

Who were the most influential people in your life as you were growing up? My grandfather played a key role in mentoring me, he would always be willing to help me.

Who are the most influential people for you now? Close family and friends

What did you do before you went to ALC? I was a theatre nurse in Toowoomba, then moved into clinical support for an orthopaedic company working with surgeons in theatre.

Who or what encouraged you along the journey towards beginning pastoral studies? My father was a big player in my taking the first step to contact ALC, along with Bishop Paul Smith. During my time at ALC, Dr Stephen Pietsch and Dr Andrew Pfeiffer were both hugely involved in my discernment for pastoral ministry.

What is your most relied-upon Bible verse and why? Isaiah 40:1–11. Because of Christ, our warfare is ended, we can find comfort in him and share that comfort with others. The most important thing people need to know about God is … that you are forgiven.

Which privilege of being a pastor are you most looking forward to? Ministering to those in times of need

What is your favourite leisure activity? Hunting and fishing

What is your favourite movie? The Lord of the Rings amongst many others

If you could chat with any famous person, living or dead, who would it be and why? J.R.R Tolkien – I would get a nice scotch, sit down in a comfortable chair, and ask him to ‘tell me a story’.

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Going GREYT! 1 Peter 4:10

Over the years, this column has celebrated how God’s light shines through those who share their talents in his service. Those interviewed are but a small reflection of the many quiet workers in God’s vineyard. This month, as we observe All Saints’ Day, we bring you a posthumous Going GREYT! account of a couple recently called to their heavenly home, whose story shows how God works through the joys and heartbreaks of our lives and remains with us always.

by Helen Brinkman

Originally a shy farmer’s daughter from the Wimmera region of Victoria, Jill Schefe has been recognised for her efforts as a vibrant community connector through the Lutheran Church of Australia’s Servant of Christ Award.

Born Jillene Heinrich, the eldest of three children, she grew up on a wheat and sheep property in Kaniva, not far from the South Australian border. After finishing school, drought in the Wimmera led her to spend a year droving sheep.

Despite her grandmother’s belief that girls shouldn’t pursue further education, Jill, now 73, undertook two years of theological studies at Lutheran Teachers College in North Adelaide to become a deaconess. ‘The term “deaconess” comes from the Greek word “Diakonia”, which means servant’, explains Jill. ‘It is a ministry of word and service.’

The modest study cost of $450 included two years of tuition and board. On graduating in 1969, she was assigned to the Metropolitan Missions Committee for the next three years and worked six days a week across various parishes in Adelaide’s northern suburbs, including Tea Tree Gully, Cheltenham, Port Adelaide and Hampstead under four different pastors.

‘Every day was a new challenge, and my work changed all the time’, she says. ‘It helped me overcome my natural shyness. I realised that shyness was pride turned inwards, so reliance on my Lord was my call.’

Jill taught religious education in schools, led confirmation classes and Bible studies, the latter with the youth and women’s fellowships, as well as taking adult instruction in the Christian faith and visiting members or the unchurched and serving in other ways when required.

Her mentor and pastor of one of her first parishes, Clarrie Janetzki, had said at the time, ‘You are the only bible some people are ever going to know’.

‘I felt so enriched by working in different parishes. As they introduced me to different types of ministry, each pastor modelled different ways of ministering’, Jill says. ‘I couldn’t have asked for a better introduction into evangelism and later as a pastor’s wife. You were just all the time engaging with people.’

It was at a birthday party in April 1972 that Jill met her future husband Clarrie Schefe, who was a seminary student. Engaged in July of that same year, Jill completed a six-week course in preparation for her role as a pastor’s wife before they married in Tea Tree Gully in February 1973.

After their marriage, Clarrie was assigned to Ceduna as their first parish in 1974. During their three years on the west coast of South Australia, their first son, Paul, was born. After contending with the outback dust and even a dog urinating in the Koonibba church during a service, her husband was called to Biloela in Central Queensland in 1976 to establish a Lutheran nursing home and Lutheran primary school.

The Biloela parish was 250 kilometres long and included four congregations and a preaching place. ‘We spent nearly 11 years in Biloela’, says Jill. The couple had two more children, Warren and Cassandra, while there and now have six grandchildren. Jill continues to stay connected with her grandchildren and even teaches confirmation lessons to her granddaughter Jessica, 14, via video call.

Throughout her journey as a pastor’s wife in various parishes, including Dimboola in Victoria, Jill has found ways to connect with people. ‘In Dimboola I rode my bike for exercise incorporating visiting parishioners as well’, she says. Jill adds that it was ‘easy to chat over the fence’ in their front yards, or perhaps stop in for a cuppa.

She and Clarrie moved to the Glasshouse Mountains in Queensland’s Sunshine Coast hinterland in 2003, before he officially retired in 2010. And while Jill is officially retired, she still receives an honorarium for her care of the parish, including teaching, visiting the sick, aged and the isolated, as well as distributing private communion, hosting Bible studies and affirming folk in their faith.

Whether it be a women’s fellowship or a Bible study group, or organising confirmation classes and parish visits, she strives to keep in contact with members of the parish, even despite COVID restrictions over the past few years.

‘COVID can’t stop you in your spiritual growth, you’ve got to think outside the square’, says Jill. ‘During COVID, the parish has not had a full-time pastor and I started sharing the daily devotions, adding items related to our local parish, and adding hymns and images and sharing them.’

Jill also writes letters and designs cards as a tangible way of making connections. ‘Necessity is the mother of invention. I learnt to use my own resources to keep in contact with everyone when everyone was alienated’, she says. ‘My commission is to be adhesive.’

Jill feels blessed to have so many opportunities to share the gospel. However, she was overwhelmed to receive the Servant of Christ award. ‘I didn’t realise simple acts of kindness would be recognised’, she says. She was nominated by Glasshouse Mountains congregation for her unwavering dedication and service to their congregation and the wider church.

Last month, for the first time in five years, the whole family was able to come together (minus one ill member) to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Clarrie’s ministry, and an early commemoration of Jill and Clarrie’s 50th wedding anniversary. It was a special moment for the couple, who have spent their lives connecting with and serving their communities.

Jill says Philippians 4:13 reminds her of the source of their strength: ‘I can do all things through Christ who gives me strength.’

Helen Brinkman 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

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LCANZ Bishop Paul Smith has urged the wider church to pray for the delegates, officials, organisers and volunteers who will meet for the in-person sessions of the LCANZ’s Convention of General Synod in Melbourne from 9 to 12 February.

The call for prayers comes in the lead-up to the meeting, which continues the 20th LCA convention opened with online sessions in October 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Adjourned until this month, the convention will consist of two full days of business at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre, bookended by part-days with gathering and closing worship services.

In his ‘Because we bear your name’ column in this edition of The Lutheran (see page 4), Bishop Smith speaks of ‘our Lutheran ethos’, in which ‘the cross is central, … the word of God is properly distinguished as law and gospel and … God’s people strive daily to lead a holy life, even as Christ has made them holy’. Bishop Smith is calling on the Lutheran family in Australia and New Zealand to pray for those who will meet as Synod and that God will continue to build his church ‘through our Christian witness and service’.

‘In February 2023, we are gathering for the second part of our Convention of General Synod in Melbourne. Delegates will have significant matters before them, including proposals regarding whether only men or both women and men are to be ordained as pastors among us. Some are troubled about what is ahead for our church’, he says.

‘As we gather for Synod 2023, we continue this united common faith that we have received: to know Jesus Christ and him crucified. Nothing can be conceded or given up of this doctrine of the gospel. Please pray for those who gather in February, that the Lord would continue to build his church through our Christian witness and service, as people of the Lutheran Church of Australia and New Zealand.’

As part of convention preparations for delegates, in November–December last year the church hosted three ‘town hall’ online sessions on the ordination proposals to go before General Synod. The town halls were open to all church members; however, only delegates and alternates could pose questions electronically.

More than 235 people attended the sessions as delegates or Synod consultants, while a further 164 people viewed the livestream of the sessions, facilitated by LCANZ Executive Officer of the Church Brett Hausler and General Church Board (GCB) member Charmaine Harch. Bishop Smith, and GCB members Tim Wiebusch and Pastor Tim Stringer made up the panel which addressed participant questions. Written responses to questions from the three sessions have been prepared and are available to read on the General Synod website at www.generalsynod.lca.org.au/town-hall-sessions-qa/

Meanwhile, the offering from General Synod will support a Finke River Mission (FRM) project revising and reprinting Lutheran song and hymnbooks in Central Australian Aboriginal languages.

Along with other volunteers and FRM staff, Pastor Rob Borgas, who formerly served as an FRM support worker, has been working on the revision of hymnals in three languages – Pitjantjatjara, Western Arrarnta and Alyawarr. In addition, the Pintupi-Luritja language worship resource will be revised.

Congregations can donate to the offering via the LLL (details below) or, if they prefer to put their offering on the plate during worship, can send a cheque made out to ‘LCA Synod’ or cash to Synod with their delegate.

To donate to the Synod offering:
Name of account: LCA Synod
BSB: 704942  Acct number: 100698743

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LCANZ members are rallying in support of flood-hit communities, with $41,074 donated to the relief effort via the church’s Disaster and Welfare Fund, as of 17 January.

The LCANZ’s General Church Board in December authorised the release of $40,000 from the fund to the NSW and ACT District to be distributed in the areas of greatest need, particularly around the towns of Forbes and Eugowra. The Lutheran church at Forbes was flooded and may not be able to be used for many months, according to NSW and ACT District Administrator Russell Veerhuis.

Since floods hit the region in mid-November, Central West Lutheran Parish Pastor James Leach and his wife Adele have been supporting locals with visits, home-cooked meals, other food and drinks, gift cards, tracts and other needs.

Floodwaters have since inundated South Australian towns along the River Murray and the Lutheran church at Forster (pictured) and Camp Kedron at Lake Bonney were closed in December. South Australia – Northern Territory District Administrator Angela Rogers said she knew of Lutheran farming families impacted in South Australia by the rising water levels prior to Christmas.

She encouraged LCANZ members to pray for those impacted, donate through the Disaster and Welfare Fund and, when and where practical, support the economies of rural communities. SA–NT congregations were also asked to take a retiring offering in support of the affected communities.

Areas of each state and territory and New Zealand also have had flood events in the past 12 months and with the clean-up and recovery efforts in some parts expected to take months, more support will be needed. Under the terms of the LCA Disaster and Welfare Fund, any funds not used in support of the Forbes appeal can be directed to other purposes, including other flood-affected areas as needed.

Ways to donate can be found on the LCA website www.lca.org.au/disaster-welfare  

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Child Safety Plans for congregations
Revised due date: 31 March 2023

Under LCA policy, all congregations are required to submit a Child Safety Plan to ensure they are meeting their legal, ethical and synodical obligations to be a child-safe congregation.

Thank you to all those congregations who have already submitted their plan.

Contact your District Professional Standards Officer (see www.lca.org.au/psd for contact details) if you need help preparing your plan, or contact Mary-Ann or Nicole at the Churchwide Office: css@lca.org.au 08 8267 7300.

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Nominations are open for the Lutheran Nurse of the Year award for 2023. The award recognises faithful and outstanding service during the preceding calendar year by a registered or enrolled nurse who is an active member of a Lutheran congregation in Australia or New Zealand.

It comprises a certificate and a $100 monetary gift. Nominations may be submitted by congregations, schools, aged-care facilities or other bodies or agencies within the LCANZ. The award was launched in 2020, to mark the 200th anniversary of the birth of Florence Nightingale, who is recognised as the founder of modern nursing. The inaugural winner in 2020 was Angela Uhrhane of Wodonga, in Victoria. Last year’s joint recipients were Fred Miegel of Alice Springs and Gillian Mibus of Adelaide.

Nominations must be lodged with LNAA secretary Mrs Rose Howard, with supporting documentation, by no later than 31 March 2023. More information and nomination forms are at www.lca.org.au/ministry-groups/lutheran-nurses/

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