The relaxation of Australia’s border restrictions has led to many happy reunions between long-separated family members and other loved ones.

And it was a similarly joyful reconnection between international church friends when Lutheran Church in the Philippines (LCP) President Reverend Antonio del Rio Reyes visited Adelaide recently for the installation of LCANZ Bishop Paul Smith. The three-day visit was President Reyes’ first to Australia, but it offered the opportunity to catch up with Lutheran leaders and members, including Bishop Paul, whom he had met previously, or connected with online.

President Reyes attended the installation as the Asia-Pacific representative of the International Lutheran Council (ILC) and conveyed greetings from the international body and LCP. He also thanked the LCANZ ‘for the love and support you gave to our church workers … at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic’, referring to financial support sent to assist pastors who were without income.

While the LCANZ and LCP are still working towards an official partnership, the two churches have forged a strong friendship. Pastor John Henderson, immediate past bishop of the LCANZ, and Pastor Matt Anker, Assistant to the Bishop – International Mission, are among those who have worked to build on the close working relationship with LCP.

According to President Reyes, the Philippines church’s membership of ILC and the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) has resulted in an ‘automatic relationship’ with the LCANZ, which is an associate member with both bodies. But, he says, the fruits of the friendship attest to a shared commitment to ‘walk and work together’ for the sake of the gospel and Lutheran Confessions. ‘I look at the LCA as being also a partner in the proclamation of the gospel in doing good works, because in Ephesians 2:8,9 it says, “For by grace you have been saved through faith, and this is not your work, it is God’s gift lest you should boast”. And then verse 10 says, “For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good work”’, President Reyes says.

‘Doing good works collectively as children of God is one thing I look at in this relationship – so we walk together, we work together, we study together and how can we manifest the fruits of our faith together? We have different gifts we can put together and then we work as one body.’

Pastor Matt says he is inspired by the Philippines church for several reasons: ‘The first is the depth of understanding and living in the scriptures and the confessions that I see in their church workers, which then inspires them to be very mission-focused. Secondly, they are so ready, as Saint Peter says, to give a reason for the hope that is in them. That kind of evangelistic passion and readiness and zeal is something that we can learn a lot from.’

Already a subscriber? Click here to login and read this article.
Not a subscriber? Click here to receive stories & upcoming issues in full

by Lisa McIntosh

When Tom Krahling was about 12 or 13, he began to wonder whether God wanted him to become a pastor. So, he spoke to his parish pastor about it and received some surprising advice.

‘He told me to be like Jonah, to run away and that if God wanted me to do it, he’d send a big fish to swallow me up and spit me out’, Tom says. ‘I went and asked some other pastors and other mentors and they thought that advice wasn’t bad, and so throughout high school, I spent my academics preparing to be an engineer and I spent my Sundays growing in the faith and preparing in that way.

‘At the end of the day, it comes down to the theology of vocation. What has God given me to do? How can I use those gifts to serve others?

‘I thought I would pursue engineering, and I worked at it as if working for the Lord. But when the opportunity came up at church to grow or to get experience, I would go for that as well.’

The sense he was meant to be a pastor didn’t leave Tom, despite putting his energies into engineering studies. And so, with COVID ramping up in 2020, he decided to take leave from university and ‘test the waters’ by enrolling in the Discover program at Australian Lutheran College (ALC) from the second semester. Now 21, he has since completed three semesters of Discover and has applied to enter pastoral ministry study.

In his second semester at ALC, Tom moved onto campus at North Adelaide – a move that helped crystalise his decision to pursue pastoral ministry.

The two-part Discover program features academic study and personal formation, including a ministry placement. Tom’s placement was at Bethlehem Lutheran Church in Adelaide, helping out with the youth group and livestreaming services there.

His own experience shows that the so-called ‘aha’ moment of discernment is ‘often a lot more mundane than people expect’. ‘Over the years I’d had an interest, I’d had encouragement from people, but the final moment was just that last person who said, “You know Tom, I think you should become a pastor”’, he says. ‘And she was not the first person to say this. She was maybe the 100th person – pastors and mentors and friends confirming the inner call, and that’s really what made me sure.

‘There is more than one good thing that you can do in life, and I felt like God was saying, “Tom, you can be an engineer and do good and I will work through you in that; you can be a pastor and do good and I’ll work through that. I’m giving this choice to you”. I chose to study to be an engineer, and he said, “Good choice, but try again”.’

Contact Australian Lutheran College at enquiries@alc.edu.au to learn more about Discover

Subscribe here to receive stories & upcoming issues in full

We all know racism is a sin, even though we’d like to think it’s one we’re not guilty of. But do we always think, speak and act in love and without prejudice towards people whose race or ethnic background is different from ours? We asked Craig Heidenreich, the LCANZ’s Cross-Cultural Ministry Manager, to explore this complex but crucial topic.

by Craig Heidenreich

If someone accused me of being racist, I think I would feel quite defensive because of all the negative connotations around that term.

I would probably defend myself with the thought that I am more tolerant and open-minded than that other bigoted person I know – that person who says what the rest of us only think (from time to time).

Let’s be honest, humans experience this strange tension along racial lines that is almost as old as history itself.

What is this driving force in our nature that will justify ourselves by putting someone else down?

Sadly, this is as old as sin itself, as old as Adam justifying himself by putting Eve down – ‘this woman you gave me caused me to eat the fruit’. It wasn’t Adam’s finest moment to focus on gender that day and about as silly as our focus on genetics.

Racism is part of the air we breathe in this fallen world and is fed by our insecurities.

We squirm when family members or certain politicians overtly appeal to the worst in our tribal natures, but we also contend with it in many subtle ways.

We need to fight this instinct if we choose to follow Jesus and be anything like our Heavenly Father.

In heaven, when ‘every tribe and tongue’ are worshipping, there is simply no racial hierarchy.

Jesus left his followers with a final request – that we should go out among all the nations to invite them back into a relationship with him.

The Father loves the whole world. Probably the most quoted verse of the New Testament would be John 3:16, ‘For God so loved the world, that he gave …’.

Our Heavenly Father invites us to love like he loves and enter into his joy as each lost sheep is found.

Let me offer a stark challenge: Racism is one of Satan’s primary attacks against God’s plan to gather all people back to himself!

Satan tempts us to judge the very people that Jesus died to save, the people we are called to love.

We need to see this attack for what it is and not tolerate it – it is as deadly as the self-righteousness that stops me associating with a sinner when I should be ‘the beggar showing another where to find bread’.

As we adjust our thinking to value what the Lord wants, let’s take in something of his sheer delight in the diversity of the humans he has made.

This is not about tolerating each other. This is about celebrating each other. This is about a church that is enriched and completed when we all come together.

So, what does this all mean in practice?

If we as individuals are to be free of this subtle racist pull, we probably need to ask the Lord to wash our minds of attitudes that we have taken in from our parents, our schooling, the impact of media, and even our church life. He may bring attitudes to mind that we should repent of.

Just think of the strong confirmation bias that happens when we access the internet and get our news from limited or similar sources. We think that we are sophisticated enough to spot the prejudice, but our minds can be shaped by what we see and hear.

I am aware of a dislike of certain nations or ethnicities that have lodged in me after watching some movie (maybe 30 years ago). The movie was probably quite biased, but at the time it suited my fallen nature to dislike those people. All these years later I find myself reacting to certain accents when I hear them.

How easily we start to judge other nations or ethnic groups for systemic injustices while self-righteously thinking, ‘I am not like that’. This is very thin ice!

We need to go through the Lord’s washing machine as much as Peter did in Acts 10. A voice from heaven said to him that day, ‘You must stop calling unclean, what God has made clean’.

When we meet together in church, our human instinct is to gather with others like ourselves and to seek leaders who look like us.

This attitude keeps reinforcing certain things and leads to a mono-cultural environment.

Is it possible that our church experience should be less about our comfort and more about our growth in love?

Humans contend with all sorts of tensions that play out along generational, gender, social and intellectual lines. These are the contexts for us to ‘prefer one another in love’ (Rom 12:10). Our racial differences are also a great context to act maturely and, in a world riven by racism, our mutual respect (across racial lines) is a clear witness to the work of our Lord.

Recently I was in a church service watching people line up to take communion and the line that day was a veritable ‘united nations’. It made my heart feel glad to see the transforming work of Christ in action among our Lutheran family.

Let’s lift our gaze to focus on what the Lord has in mind.

As we read in Revelation 7:9–11:

‘After this I looked and saw a multitude too large to count, from every nation and tribe and people and tongue, standing before the throne and before the Lamb. They were wearing white robes and holding palm branches in their hands. And they cried out in a loud voice: “Salvation belongs to our God, who sits on the throne, and to the Lamb”. And all the angels stood around the throne and around the elders and the four living creatures. And they fell facedown before the throne and worshipped God.’

Come, Lord Jesus!!

Already a subscriber? Click here to login and read this article.
Not a subscriber? Click here to receive stories & upcoming issues in full

by Nick Schwarz

Many people understand racism as an ideology that teaches that people of some races are naturally superior and that those of other races are inferior.

It also teaches that a person’s race is indicative of their character and capabilities, that people of ‘superior races’ should have greater rights than people of ‘inferior races’, and that the lives of members of ‘superior races’ are more valuable than the lives of people of ‘inferior races’.

Some go as far as to advocate that multi-racial societies should be governed in ways that preserve the power and privilege of the allegedly ‘superior’ race.

People are drawn to believing that they are members of a ‘superior race’ because it boosts their self-esteem, gives them a feeling of greater entitlement and gives them scapegoats to blame when things go badly.

Indeed, racist beliefs have led to terrible injustices throughout history. People have dehumanised and mistreated their fellow human beings, stolen their land and possessions, tried to eradicate their languages and cultures, kidnapped, enslaved and killed them.

Integral to racism are othering, by which we sort people into ‘us’ and ‘them’; ethnocentrism, through which we see our own culture as natural and right, and other cultures as strange and objectionable; xenophobia, the fear or dislike of foreigners; negative stereotyping; and partiality and double standards by which we don’t accept or act as though the lives of people of all races are equally valuable.

There are many ways in which racism is present today in Australia and New Zealand.

Racial injustices, both past and present, are denied, trivialised, or regarded with apathy. People are resented, put down, maligned and made to feel unwelcome because of their race. People of particular racial groups are stereotyped as being of bad character and they therefore regularly experience prejudice in dealings with law enforcement officers, in sectors such as retail, transport, health care and finance, and when they apply for a bank loan, a job or a rental property.

And they may be assumed to be less intelligent, less emotionally capable and naturally contented with lower status and standard of living than others.

All racism is hurtful and harmful. It should never be dismissed as trivial. The most cruel and violent forms shock and sicken us. But constant exposure to what we might call ‘covert’ or ‘subtle’ racism can also be soul-destroying and lead to poor mental and physical health and premature death.

When a society succeeds in suppressing overt racism, attention may turn to suppressing less obvious forms of it. Ideally, this is done in ways that keep people on side. Antiracism campaigners risk losing support if they imagine they can eliminate racism entirely and punish people for innocent, non-malicious speech and actions.

But what is the Christian perspective on racism? It’s simple. Racism is sin.

When sin entered the world, humans began to see each other as competitors and potential threats. Only the people in one’s ‘in-group’ – the clan or tribe – were considered fully human. Outsiders were less than fully human – if indeed they were human at all.

The moral thing to do was to serve the interests of the clan. If this was done by treating outsiders well, perhaps because they were powerful or because trading with them brought benefits, it was right to treat them well. But if it served the interests of the clan to kill outsiders or enslave them and take over their property because they became weak and vulnerable, that would also be right. Outsiders had no value in and of themselves; their value lay only in what the clan could get from them.

We might like to believe that in the 21st century we have left tribal thinking behind. We might like to think that our commitment to universal human rights is unshakeable.

But our tribal instincts are deeply rooted and Satan is keen to take advantage of them. He wants to keep us divided and suspicious towards each other and he wants us to selfishly use each other for our own ends. Racism is one of the tools he uses to achieve these goals. He is especially keen to infect Christian families and communities with racist attitudes.

Jesus encourages us to overcome our tribal instincts, to recognise the full humanity of people of every colour and creed, and to treat them as we would treat ourselves or members of our own family. Within the Christian community, we are to see Christians of every race as fellow adoptees in God’s family and brothers and sisters in Christ.

Many biblical teachings provide the foundations for a Christian response to racism, none more so than Genesis 1:27, which tells us that all people are created equally in God’s image and that human dignity is therefore God-given, not dependent on race or other attributes.

Throughout the New Testament we are reminded that God’s love and his plan of salvation are for people of every race, language and culture – in other words, Jesus’ died and rose again for all people. During his earthly ministry, Jesus taught that the ‘neighbours’ we are called to love are not just people of our in-group, but strangers, including people in need and people treated unjustly (eg Luke 10:25–37), people who treat us unjustly (eg Luke 6:28,29), and people we are accustomed to seeing as our enemies (Matthew 5:43–48).

It’s a safe bet that those of us who are old enough to read this article have had uncharitable thoughts about other people because of their race and allowed those thoughts to shape our actions towards them. Let us ask the Holy Spirit to reveal to us our prejudices and repent of them. And let us pray for the wisdom to discern how to respond in God-pleasing ways if we are accused of racism, witness it, or are targeted by it ourselves.

Nick Schwarz is the LCANZ’s Assistant to the Bishop – Public Theology.

Already a subscriber? Click here to login and read this article.
Not a subscriber? Click here to receive stories & upcoming issues in full

by Lisa McIntosh

Those who have felt the pain of racism know that the hurt can run deep, and the scars can last a lifetime.

And it’s not just on the sporting field, at the pub or in the classroom that people are subject to hate-filled physical attacks, spiteful slurs or pointed snubs. Racism is everywhere. And whether it is perpetuated individually or institutionally, it is deeply personal to people on the receiving end.

So how can we as individuals and as a church do better in this space?

Dora Gibson, a Thuubi Warra First Nations woman from Hope Vale in Far North Queensland, believes the answer lies in people of different races and cultural backgrounds getting to know each other on a personal level.

‘We just need people to get to know us as an individual, not as a stereotype’, says Dora, a lifelong member of the Lutheran Church and a former teacher who today works with an employment agency helping young people become job-ready. ‘Treat us as a person, treat me as Dora. Get to know people.’

Dora and her husband, Trevor, run cultural workshops in Hope Vale when COVID restrictions allow and she says an example of the power of personal connections came through the visit of high school students from Melbourne last year during NAIDOC Week, which celebrates the history, culture and achievements of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

‘They came and lived with us, they saw what we did, they took part in our activities and saw firsthand that it’s not all that bad living in the bush and experiencing living off the land’, she says. ‘Later one of the boys said, “I’m glad we came. You opened our eyes to something we didn’t even know existed. I’m just so thankful that I was given the opportunity to come and see everything firsthand”.’

Having lived much of her life in a community that has a majority of Indigenous people, Dora says most of the racism she has encountered has been what she describes as ‘institutional’. ‘That’s why we were placed in these missions’, she says of former government policies that segregated Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in places like Hope Vale. ‘That’s the onset of what I believe is when we were treated as a minority and treated as a stereotype, “Oh, you’re living in a mission”.’

‘Then as we were growing up, we were expected to live with white people down in the cities, so we were sent away, as part of assimilation. That was when they were trying to make us white, in the early 1970s to 1980s’, says Dora, whose secondary schooling included several years at Concordia Lutheran College at Toowoomba.

Of course, a further government policy involved the removal of Indigenous children from their families – people later known as the Stolen Generations. Dora believes the responsibility for that tragedy lay at a systemic level, rather than with people involved in carrying out the policy. ‘You have to feel sorry for them because in their mind they were trying to do the right thing’, Dora says. ‘But it was very detrimental to our whole race.’

During her time working for the local council engaging parents of school-aged children with teachers and schools in the district, Dora also encountered institutional prejudice. She says many people expect a teacher to be a white person and it was assumed that she was the ‘helper’ to a young white ‘teacher’ she was with. In fact, their roles were reversed.

While such attitudes have been painful for Dora, her response is incredibly gracious. ‘It’s not their fault. It’s not deliberate. It’s just the mindset’, she says. ‘It does make you feel inferior though. If it wasn’t for the colour of our skin, it would have been different.’

She says her Christian faith has helped her forgive the injustices, but she doesn’t forget the lingering hurt.

However, Dora is hopeful that a growing appreciation of First Nations culture, country and language in Australia can usher in a change in opportunities and a positive sense of identity, particularly for young people.

She is also buoyed by ongoing efforts within the church in reconciliation and making worship more inclusive of Indigenous culture and language. ‘It was through the church that our written language was kept alive, so that’s a big thing. The gospel was read in our Guugu Yimithirr language as well as in English. And still, we do that here, we have hymns in language.

‘Just little things can make a difference. It doesn’t have to be big. You start from that, and from little things big things grow.’

Unlike Dora, Indonesian-born Ani Sumanti has only lived part of her life in Australia – since 2013. But she, too, has experienced the hurt and harm of racism – ‘lots’ of times.

A qualified pastor in Bali’s Presbyterian Church, Ani has been serving as a lay worker at Pasadena Lutheran Church in suburban Adelaide since 2016, as well as ministering to the Indonesian Christian Fellowship which meets there. For the past few years, she has also been working as an aged-care carer, having undertaken studies to better support her late mother, who had dementia before she died last year.

Before joining the staff at Fullarton Lutheran Homes in 2021, Ani worked at a community-run aged-care home outside of Adelaide. There, she says, other staff yelled at her if she didn’t immediately understand them, ignored her, were rude to her and treated her as beneath them, due to English being her second language.

‘Sometimes if I didn’t understand something, their words, they would raise their voice’, says Ani, who began English studies in Australia in 2015. ‘And it was very painful for me; I was crying because I found it shocking. Why would someone not explain first what they mean rather than yell at me?

‘Some of them just ignored me, didn’t talk to me, and made me feel like they put me on the bottom, not the same level with them.’

Ani, who has also experienced negative ‘looks and body language’ when needing assistance with language while shopping, says an Asian-born Muslim friend has told her of the discrimination she has experienced, too. ‘She told me it’s very hard to find a job because they are not accepting someone who wears a hijab and maybe they’re a bit scared because they had heard news about radical Muslims’, Ani says.

‘And my friend said it’s very painful and very sad for her because people are not accepting, not welcoming for her.’

However, Ani, who endeavours to gain a greater understanding of Australian culture through talking with her Australian husband Mark Mosel, doesn’t find such behaviour difficult to forgive.

‘We see this of people in the world everywhere, some are arrogant, and some are humble’, she says. ‘I come from a culture where we care for each other, where the community is more important rather than yourself, but here I find the culture more individual. So that’s why I need to adjust. And then I just try to forgive rather than accept bad thoughts in myself which is not healthy for me.

‘We are all people. We just want to respect each other, just accept that we are different, but we can work together.’

Like Dora, Ani believes that listening to and building relationships with people of different cultural and racial backgrounds is the key to eliminating racism. ‘We need to sit down together and to understand each other, rather than be judging’, Ani says. ‘Maybe we can learn from other cultures and even learn a bit of their language – there’s a door we can build a relationship with. They may be struggling in their life, for their family or how to survive here. We need that attitude everywhere.’

How can we be inclusive?

We have sisters and brothers in Christ from every race and nation. And God may place not-yet Christians of different cultures in our lives, too. So how can we better welcome, include and embrace these fellow (and future) members of God’s family?

Here are a few simple ideas:

  • Educate yourself by reading from reputable sources about the culture, race or nation of the people you meet, including about the local First Nations people.
  • Learn people’s names correctly – check the pronunciation and spelling, and have pen and paper handy so that they can write it down for you. Addressing people by name shows that you respect them.
  • Learn a greeting in the language of the person you have met. LCA Cross-Cultural Ministry is preparing a 40-language friendly phrases booklet entitled ‘Heart Talk’. Email craig.heidenreich@lca.org.au or sign up to CCM eNews at www.lca.org.au/ccministry-signup
  • Get to know people, ask them about themselves and what their interests are. When we get to know people, we are less tempted to buy into stereotypes.
  • Make a welcome sign for your church or school that includes a welcome in the heart languages of the people in your neighbourhood.
Already a subscriber? Click here to login and read this article.
Not a subscriber? Click here to receive stories & upcoming issues in full

by Murray and Tracy Smith

Attending the recent opening ceremony of the 33rd Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Papua New Guinea (ELC-PNG) was an overwhelming experience – but not because it lasted approximately six hours or because there were an estimated 10,000 people present.

Instead, what made this event overwhelming was that for the duration those attending celebrated being together, renewed friendships, created new ones and prepared delegates for the important business of the church for the next two years.

The procession around the athletics track of Port Moresby’s Sir John Guise Stadium began at 9am on 9 January and featured almost 1000 people. The line behind ELC-PNG Bishop Dr Jack Urame included church administration staff, international guests, pastors and delegates. Many delegates were making their first visit to Port Moresby, so the atmosphere was electrifying.

Dance or ‘singsing’ groups introduced the national flag-raising with the national anthem, which was followed by Bishop Urame’s opening speech, greetings from guests of the Bavarian Lutheran Church and the LCANZ, and the appearance of Papua New Guinea’s Lutheran Governor-General, the Hon Sir Bob Dadae. A further highlight of the ceremony was the ordination of the first pastor from the Central (Port Moresby) District.

Dancing and singing continued throughout the day. The first break came after the day’s proceedings, when we were ushered into a room where guests and members of the church administration were offered a feast of pork, chicken, fish, sweet potato, taro, sago slab, cooked banana, greens and tropical fruits.

ELC-PNG church business was conducted over the following four days, with the synod theme – ‘As for my family and me, we will serve the Lord’ from Joshua 24:15b – featuring strongly throughout. Each day opened with worship or ‘Lotu’, including a half-hour Bible study. The ELC-PNG’s 17 districts each presented a report of its projects and activities.

Synod business was interrupted by the appearance of PNG Prime Minister James Marape, who gave an inspirational Christian message.

Church issues were dealt with by committees, which broke into small groups taking time in discussion before each presenting reports with recommendations to the synod.

Final reports were presented to the synod on 15 January and the synod convention concluded with a divine service including holy communion for 1000 people.

The closing ceremony included more ‘singsing’, an address by the Governor-General, closing remarks by Bishop Urame and a ceremonial passing of the synod shield from the current host district to the next synod host. After the formalities, we once again retired to the ‘feast’ room to share a final meal.

The next couple of days saw many visitors return home to all parts of PNG. It was truly an amazing experience.

Pastor Murray Smith is serving as an LCA missionary lecturer at the ELC-PNG’s Senior Flierl Seminary at Logaweng, PNG. He and his wife Tracy attended the ELC-PNG’s Synod 2022 as guests of the PNG church.

Already a subscriber? Click here to login and read this article.
Not a subscriber? Click here to receive stories & upcoming issues in full

by Lisa McIntosh

We can never comprehend the power of the Holy Spirit to turn a seemingly small act of kindness into a love-filled, life-changing gift.

But that was what small a packet of homemade honey biscuits represented for Craig*, a recent inmate at the Adelaide Remand Centre (ARC).

The story behind those honey biscuits is that members of Lutheran women’s fellowships from around South Australia have been making and giving out the traditional festive treat since Christmas 1968 when 3250 bags of biscuits and sweets were distributed.

Now known as Christmas Cheer, the project has operated under various names and committees’ direction since it began, with the input of thousands of volunteer bakers and people in hospital or with other needs receiving biscuits.

Most recently, biscuits and a Christian tract were given out to people including those at aged-care homes, corrections facilities such as prisons; mental health services, disability support services and community care organisations across Adelaide.

Richard Hawke, who visits the ARC as a chaplain, says handing out the cellophane packs of biscuits to inmates across the prison was ‘such a privilege’.

‘The men, many of whom were in lockdown due to COVID restrictions, expressed their deep gratitude, especially [as] the biscuits were homemade’, says Richard, who passed on their thanks via the LLL which produces the tracts through its Lutheran Tract Mission outreach. ‘Many inmates were also able to receive a second packet on Christmas Day. That was pretty special.

‘Perhaps the highlight of the ministry was the feedback from Craig, who was arrested and came to the ARC just prior to Christmas. He had attempted suicide only hours before police caught up with him.

‘Craig says, “If I hadn’t come to prison, I would probably be dead by now. But what really touched me was receiving those biscuits. When I opened up the pack there was a leaflet inside with the words: ‘For God so loved the world he gave his only Son, that whoever should believe in him, shall not perish but have eternal life’. Straight away I felt deep emotion come all over me … I knew God was speaking to me. It was a reminder that God hadn’t forgotten about me”.

‘Craig is desperate to break his addiction to drugs and made a decision to renew his commitment to follow Jesus. All of us at the Remand Centre are very grateful for the contribution made by the Lutheran ladies … none more so than Craig.’

Lorraine Kempf, a member of St Pauls Lutheran Church Ferryden Park, who coordinates the project and has been involved with Christmas Cheer since 2011, says Craig’s story is encouraging for the 61 women’s fellowship groups who baked enough biscuits to fill 1160 packets in 2021.

‘That brings tears to my eyes’, she says. ‘We might think, “What’s a packet of biscuits?”, but to hear what it means to people makes it worthwhile. It gives you great encouragement to hear that.’

*Not his real name

Already a subscriber? Click here to login and read this article.
Not a subscriber? Click here to receive stories & upcoming issues in full

by Rosie Schefe

For centuries Christian bishops have been commissioning new music, both for worship and bringing the church together in celebration of God’s gifts to us. Newly installed Bishop of the Lutheran Church of Australia and New Zealand, Pastor Paul Smith, is no different.

Late last year Bishop Paul approached his friend and colleague, Bishop of the Lutheran Church of New Zealand Mark Whitfield, to write a new setting for Psalm 37, to be sung at Bishop Paul’s installation on 20 February.

This setting for soloist, piano or organ and congregation is responsive, with the congregation reminding church leaders to ‘Commit your way to the Lord, trust in him and he will act’. It includes a descant and instrumental line which picks up on the musical theme of Lord, Take My Hand and Lead Me (Lutheran Hymnal with Supplement 301) – a favourite hymn for Bishop Paul.

‘It’s my way of adding something personal and tangible to it for Paul’, Bishop Mark says.

Better known musically in the LCANZ as an organist and composer, Bishop Mark has been writing psalm settings and other liturgical music for almost 35 years – since his days leading the choir at the then Luther Seminary, now Australian Lutheran College. Much of his composition since has been for choirs, including his latest work, first performed in the Wellington Cathedral of St Paul, New Zealand on Advent Sunday last year.

The 25-member Anglican choir, of which Bishop Mark has been a member for about 14 years, sang the work within its annual Advent procession service. ‘I have written a lot of music, but to have this incredible choir perform my music is a real joy and blessing’, he says.

The piece is a new setting of two well-known hymn texts into what Bishop Mark describes as an ‘Advent-Christmas song’. O Come, O Come – Behold a Rose is Growing focuses on Isaiah’s prophecies foretelling the Messiah, combining lyric couplets from both hymns (LHS2 and LHS622).

‘The O Come sections contain musical nods to the melodies of both carols, while the Behold couplets are set to completely new music’, Bishop Mark says.

Although written specifically for this choir and cathedral, the piece is scored for four parts, with as many as six parts in places, and can be performed in different ways.

‘We are very lucky to have Mark in the choir and have performed works of his before, so I knew it was going to be lovely’, Wellington Cathedral Director of Music Michael Stewart says. ‘I was intrigued by the marrying of the two Advent texts … I knew it would be a very appropriate work to feature. This is a beautiful Advent work that deserves to be heard widely.’

‘I love writing music liturgically for the setting of local congregations – just occasionally I get a big break,’ Bishop Mark says, adding that this piece eventually may be made available by a European publisher who published two of his earlier works.

Rosie Schefe is Lutheran Church of New Zealand District Administrator and former editor of The Lutheran.

Already a subscriber? Click here to login and read this article.
Not a subscriber? Click here to receive stories & upcoming issues in full

by Craig Heidenreich

If someone accused me of being racist, I think I would feel quite defensive because of all the negative connotations around that term.

I would probably defend myself with the thought that I am more tolerant and open-minded than that other bigoted person I know – that person who says what the rest of us only think (from time to time).

Let’s be honest, humans experience this strange tension along racial lines that is almost as old as history itself.

What is this driving force in our nature that will justify ourselves by putting someone else down?

Sadly, this is as old as sin itself, as old as Adam justifying himself by putting Eve down – ‘this woman you gave me caused me to eat the fruit’. It wasn’t Adam’s finest moment to focus on gender that day and about as silly as our focus on genetics.

Racism is part of the air we breathe in this fallen world and is fed by our insecurities.

We squirm when family members or certain politicians overtly appeal to the worst in our tribal natures, but we also contend with it in many subtle ways.

We need to fight this instinct if we choose to follow Jesus and be anything like our Heavenly Father.

In heaven, when ‘every tribe and tongue’ are worshipping, there is simply no racial hierarchy.

Jesus left his followers with a final request – that we should go out among all the nations to invite them back into a relationship with him.

The Father loves the whole world. Probably the most quoted verse of the New Testament would be John 3:16, ‘For God so loved the world, that he gave …’.

Our Heavenly Father invites us to love like he loves and enter into his joy as each lost sheep is found.

Let me offer a stark challenge: Racism is one of Satan’s primary attacks against God’s plan to gather all people back to himself!

Satan tempts us to judge the very people that Jesus died to save, the people we are called to love.

We need to see this attack for what it is and not tolerate it – it is as deadly as the self-righteousness that stops me associating with a sinner when I should be ‘the beggar showing another where to find bread’.

As we adjust our thinking to value what the Lord wants, let’s take in something of his sheer delight in the diversity of the humans he has made.

This is not about tolerating each other. This is about celebrating each other. This is about a church that is enriched and completed when we all come together.

So, what does this all mean in practice?

If we as individuals are to be free of this subtle racist pull, we probably need to ask the Lord to wash our minds of attitudes that we have taken in from our parents, our schooling, the impact of media, and even our church life. He may bring attitudes to mind that we should repent of.

Just think of the strong confirmation bias that happens when we access the internet and get our news from limited or similar sources. We think that we are sophisticated enough to spot the prejudice, but our minds can be shaped by what we see and hear.

I am aware of a dislike of certain nations or ethnicities that have lodged in me after watching some movie (maybe 30 years ago). The movie was probably quite biased, but at the time it suited my fallen nature to dislike those people. All these years later I find myself reacting to certain accents when I hear them.

How easily we start to judge other nations or ethnic groups for systemic injustices while self-righteously thinking, ‘I am not like that’. This is very thin ice!

We need to go through the Lord’s washing machine as much as Peter did in Acts 10. A voice from heaven said to him that day, ‘You must stop calling unclean, what God has made clean’.

When we meet together in church, our human instinct is to gather with others like ourselves and to seek leaders who look like us.

Is it possible that our church experience should be less about our comfort and more about our growth in love?

Humans contend with all sorts of tensions that play out along generational, gender, social and intellectual lines. These are the contexts for us to ‘prefer one another in love’ (Rom 12:10). Our racial differences are also a great context to act maturely and, in a world riven by racism, our mutual respect (across racial lines) is a clear witness to the work of our Lord.

Recently I was in a church service watching people line up to take communion and the line that day was a veritable ‘united nations’. It made my heart feel glad to see the transforming work of Christ in action among our Lutheran family.

Let’s lift our gaze to focus on what the Lord has in mind.

 

Subscribe here to receive stories & upcoming issues in full

Some Queensland Lutherans would know at least a little about new LCANZ Bishop Paul Smith, who served as their district bishop between 2015 and 2021. But many in our church may not have heard the incredible and inspiring story behind the faith journey of our sixth churchwide leader. Who is Paul Smith and how has God led him to this role?

With a surname like Smith, with no German heritage, and hailing from the Atherton Tablelands in Far North Queensland, it’s hardly surprising that the incoming LCANZ bishop is not a born-and-bred Lutheran.

While God brought him to baptism through the Anglican church in Western Queensland as an infant in 1962, Bishop Paul Smith was not raised as a churchgoing Christian. And, as the biography of Paul in Robin Kleinschmidt’s book Your Most Humble Servant states, his childhood family life gave him ‘no experience of regular worship, religious teaching, prayer or Christian formation’.

But God had his eye on Paul and when family circumstances led to him attending St Peters Lutheran College at Indooroopilly in Brisbane as a boarding student in Year 11, his life and faith were transformed. His teachers – including chaplain and English teacher Pastor (now Dr) John Kleinig and the late Adrienne Jericho, who would later become the executive director of Lutheran Education Australia and took Paul for Scripture classes – were among those whose Christian example and gospel witness greatly affected him. Some of his classmates were instrumental in his early faith journey, too.

He was not only confirmed in his Christian faith while attending St Peters, but he also acknowledged a call to the ordained ministry and began studying at the then Luther Seminary (now Australian Lutheran College) in Adelaide in 1980.

He took time out of his pastoral ministry training in 1982 and worked in factories, studied at Adelaide University and continued with part-time seminary study. After a bout of glandular fever, he returned to ‘the Sem’ full-time in 1984. Also in 1984, Paul met Heidi Muller from Henty New South Wales, who was studying at Lutheran Teachers College and was the sister of his best friend at seminary, Tim. Heidi and Paul were married in 1986 and today they have three adult children, Ben, Felicity and Jeremy.

Today, Bishop Paul calls Heidi his ‘co-worker’. ‘She will pray with me, pray for me, encourage me, listen to me and tell me when I’m being a cranky old goat’, he says of his wife, who has studied theology and is a qualified secondary teacher, as well as having worked as a Lutheran aged-care chaplain. This year she will begin work for the SA-NT District as its chaplaincy ministries coordinator.

‘And so, we have that open and robust relationship. She’s a faithful follower of our risen Lord as a Christian and she loves the community and people of the Lutheran Church. She’s a dyed-in-the-wool, card-carrying Lutheran but she understands it doesn’t mean culture, history and community only, it means pointing to the big arrow down – what God does for us, and Heidi is good at keeping me earnest in that way. I’m very grateful for that, so she’s a co-worker in that sense and a team participant in my life as a Christian.’

Having completed his vicarage year at Underdale-Glandore parish under Pastor Clem Traeger in suburban Adelaide in 1987, Paul was ordained the following year at Bethlehem Lutheran Church in Adelaide.

Pastor Paul’s first assignment was as the first Lutheran college chaplain at Trinity Lutheran College Ashmore on Queensland’s Gold Coast. This first ordained ministry role continued for Paul what has become a close and valued relationship with Lutheran schools.

His next call was his first parish ministry, at Tailem Bend/Karoonda in South Australia, where he served between 1992 and 1995. To follow were parish ministries at Immanuel North Adelaide from 1995 to 2001 and from 2002 to 2005 at Good Shepherd Toowoomba in Queensland. These calls were followed by a return to service as a college pastor, firstly back at St Peters Indooroopilly and then at Pacific Lutheran College at Caloundra.

During his time at Toowoomba, Pastor Paul was first elected as a member of Queensland’s District Church Council, a role he would fill from 2003 to 2007, rejoining in 2010. Later that year he was elected as the first vice-president of the LCA’s Queensland District, a role he would fill until being elected bishop in 2015.

Committed to encouraging and progressing the service of younger leaders in the church, Bishop Paul committed to serving two terms and so did not stand for re-election in 2021.

He returned to St Peters as an interim college pastor in the latter half of 2021 and was elected as bishop of the LCANZ in October last year during the church’s historic first online sessions.

He believes God will use his life and ministry experiences in his service as churchwide bishop.

‘I believe God continues to prepare you for any and every role and God will always surprise you’, he says. ‘Has God equipped me especially with experience for this role? Yes, the people in the church have given me the opportunity to make mistakes in the name of Christ and in the cause of the gospel. The people of the church have given me great privileges.’

Bishop Paul comes across as a great optimist when it comes to people and the church. He whistles while he walks, smiles often, loves speaking with people and describes himself as ‘not a glass-half-empty person, nor a glass-half-full person, but a glass-overflowing person’.

He lists three main hopes for the coming years in the LCANZ. ‘The first one is that we would find good dialogue with young Christian people’, he says. ‘At the moment we don’t have a good dialogue with them. What we say, young people aren’t really hearing too well. What they say, is often not heard or properly understood.

‘The second hope that I’d have is that we would discover a growing collaboration with Christian sisters and brothers of our New Zealand and Australian church communities around us.

‘The third one is to discover the way Lutherans are evangelical in the 21st century. How are we Lutherans being evangelical to bring Christ to the nations? We have this great tradition of Lutheran witness, let’s see that grow and flourish in a way that’s authentic to who we are.’

Bishop Paul Smith will be installed as bishop of the LCANZ at Bethlehem Lutheran Church in Adelaide on 20 February. Attendance will be by invitation only, but the service will be livestreamed.

Already a subscriber? Click here to login and read this article.
Not a subscriber? Click here to receive stories & upcoming issues in full