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191

Listen while you work, walk or relax

The LCANZ is shaping communications to the ways you as members of the church like to receive information.

Many of you prefer to listen rather than read. So, we are trialling fortnightly podcasts, which will cover a wide range of issues relevant to congregation leaders and members.

Our Laudio (Lutheran audio) podcasts will keep you up to date with what’s happening around the church while you are on your daily commute, driving the header, or pounding the treadmill.

Listen to any of our Laudio podcasts at www.lca.org.au/podcasts or better yet, subscribe to receive alerts in your inbox every time we add a new podcast by pressing the ‘Sign up to Laudio’ button on the above webpage.

192

Progress made in child safety

by Mary-Ann Carver

LCA congregations have been making important progress in the child safety space over the past few years.

More than 82 per cent of congregations have this year either submitted a Child Safety Plan outlining their commitments for 2023–24, or an assurance that they have no children in regular attendance at their churches.

The plans have been developed in response to the LCA Child Safety Standards for Congregations. Introduced for implementation in all Australian congregations in 2021 and 2022, the standards require that plans are developed, submitted, and implemented by every congregation with children in regular attendance.

This is a promising development for the LCA and we are encouraged that child safety is being prioritised at the congregational leadership level. The progress in this area also pleasingly suggests congregations are embracing their new responsibilities in constructive and positive ways.

THE IMPORTANCE OF PRAYER

Please pray for our congregations – almost 250 in total – which have developed their child safety plans and made a clear commitment to developing a child-safe congregational culture.

Please also pray for them as they embrace their child safety challenges and embark upon their implementation journey during the remainder of 2023 and into 2024.

We also ask you to remember that our children are a precious gift from God with unique vulnerabilities requiring special care and consideration. Please pray for all our children, for their ongoing safety and wellbeing, and for their families too.

Mary-Ann Carver is LCA Child Protection Project Officer.

193

Trans-Tasman treasures join Australian archive

With a total weight of almost a tonne and measuring more than 30 linear metres, a precious collection of documents, books, magazines, audio-visual items and photographs that tell the story of the Lutheran Church of New Zealand across 180 years were officially ‘welcomed’ to Lutheran Archives in Adelaide on Saturday.

The 180 boxes of historical material from the New Zealand district and its congregations left Te Puna Mātauranga o Aotearoa (the National Library of New Zealand) in Wellington earlier this year to join what is now the LCANZ’s churchwide archives.

The ceremony to officially acknowledge the arrival of records and to introduce and bless them was held in NAIDOC (National Aboriginal and Islanders Day Observance Committee) Week and Kaurna elder Uncle Mickey Kumatpi O’Brien performed the Welcome to Country and smoking ceremony. LCNZ Bishop Emeritus Mark Whitfield, a member of the fifth generation of Lutherans in Aotearoa New Zealand, gave an introduction and led a blessing of the three-pallet load of records, noting that they hold taonga (treasure in te reo Māori language), both historical and spiritual – sacred even.

‘As we commended the taonga of our history as church in Aotearoa to its safe journey to Australia, we acknowledged that our story in Aotearoa is part of God’s whole story with his creation and his people from the beginning of time’, Bishop Emeritus Mark said. ‘It is a story of grace and love, most beautifully demonstrated in Ihu Karaiti, his Son, Jesus Christ. As our archival material has been recorded and preserved over these past 180 years and now as it resides here in Kaurna land, we pray that it will serve to keep alive the memory of the church in Aotearoa and the work God has done in and through it.’

Lutheran Archives Director Rachel Kuchel and LCANZ Bishop Paul Smith committed the Lutheran church in Australia to preserve the precious stories entrusted to it.

‘Thank you to New Zealand Lutherans who have entrusted their records to Lutheran Archives’, Rachel said. ‘We will continue to preserve these records and will undertake indexing, cataloguing and digitisation on them so that they will be accessible for generations to come.

‘When we look at the records of our church, we can be encouraged that our congregations and ministries do not exist in isolation, and see all the wonderful and diverse ways that God blesses us and works through us as the LCANZ.’

Bishop Paul said the archived materials are ‘precious story from the mission of God at work amongst the Lutheran people in Aotearoa’. ‘From this side of the Tasman, we thank God that these treasures of story have arrived safely here in South Australia. We commit ourselves to watch over what has been handed into our custody, and we appreciate that these archival records tell a specific story – of faithfulness to God and of God’s faithfulness to us.’

The Alexander Turnbull Library (which holds non-government archival material) had been the custodian of the collection since 1976, but the LCNZ archive had always remained the property of the church. Almost four years ago, the LCNZ Synod voted to send this collection to Lutheran Archives so that the history of Lutherans in New Zealand and Australia would be able to be told side-by-side.

A Poroporoakī (sending) was held on 19 January at the National Library and the records were received at Lutheran Archives on 2 March. The welcome and blessing ceremony on 8 July also included aspects of the Poroporoakī, as well as a song of thanks in te reo Māori, German and English, and prayers and blessings in Māori and English.

In Adelaide, the New Zealand collection is being described, arranged and rehoused by Project Archivist Susan Kreymborg, with support from Collections Archivist Angela Schilling.

The collection will remain accessible to New Zealanders and other international researchers through the Alexander Turnbull Library digital catalogue.

– Lisa McIntosh and Rosie Schefe

194

New bishop for SA-NT District

by Jess Smith

Pastor Andrew Brook was elected unopposed as the next bishop of the South Australia – Northern Territory District at the district’s Convention of Synod at Victor Harbor, south of Adelaide in May.

He will succeed Bishop David Altus who did not seek re-election after 13 years in the role. Pastor Andrew is the lead pastor at St Johns Lutheran Church in suburban Unley and previously served in the Victoria–Tasmania District.

Pastor Adrian Kitson, who serves the congregation of St Petri Nuriootpa, has replaced Pastor Andrew as First Assistant Bishop, while Pastor Joel Cramer, of The Ark Salisbury, continues in his role as Second Assistant Bishop. Both assistant bishops were installed during the May Synod.

The SA–NT Synod approved a new Assistant Bishop for the Northern Territory position, which will be based in Alice Springs to support all ministries within the NT. A call committee will be formed, and it is hoped that a pastor would be called to this role before the end of the year. The District and Finke River Mission have committed to a four-year funding partnership for this position.

It is anticipated that Bishop-elect Andrew will be installed as district bishop in early September. Bishop David has been serving in the role in ‘caretaker mode’ since the convention.

In a message to the district after his election, Bishop-elect Andrew said that, for as long as he could remember, he had wanted to be a pastor.

‘I’m immensely thankful to God for being able to follow this calling’, he said. ‘I feel both excited and daunted as I prepare to serve as your District Bishop. My ordination text encourages me in what I know will be both demanding and fulfilling work: “I am not ashamed of the gospel, because it is the power of God that brings salvation to everyone who believes” (Romans 1:16).

‘I also know that God’s power is made perfect in weakness, including mine. That’s a great encouragement for the church as we face significant cultural headwinds. We have the good news that the world needs: the God who created the world and everything in it, who loves us in his Son, Jesus Christ who died on the cross to reconcile us to God, and who through the Holy Spirit calls us to live fully and purposefully in the community of his church. Real grace. Real life. Real community.’

Before taking up the call at Unley in 2017, Bishop-elect Andrew served in five different ministries, including three parishes: Burnie–Devonport in Tasmania, and Good Shepherd, Ringwood, and St Paul’s Box Hill, both in suburban Melbourne. He also served as the Victoria–Tasmania District Pastor for Child, Youth, Tertiary and Family Ministry and was a tertiary chaplain at the University of Melbourne, and pastor to the student congregation meeting in St John’s Southgate, in central Melbourne.

He is married to Jodi, who serves as director of the LCANZ’s Grow Ministries, and they have three adult children, Henri, Emilia and Thomas.

Story courtesy of the LCA SA–NT District

195

2024 General Synod theme and logo launched

Grace as God’s unifying gift to his church will be the thematic focus of next year’s LCANZ 21st Convention of General Synod in Adelaide.

The theme, ‘The Gift of God – it’s grace that unites us’, is based on Ephesians 2:8, ‘For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith – and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God’, and has been approved by the General Church Board, along with an accompanying logo.

The General Synod logo was created by Elysia McEwen, a member of the LifeWay congregation in Sydney and designer of The Lutheran.

‘Developing the logo was a challenge’, said LCA communications manager Linda Macqueen. ‘While the concept of “grace” is well known by us Lutherans, it is difficult to convey visually.

‘We thank God for the gifted graphic designers we call on for assignments such as this. They are members of Lutheran congregations and therefore they understand the foundations of our Lutheran teaching. I love watching how they bring theology and creativity together to serve the church in this way.’

Elements of the Synod logo include:

  • The hand of God holding us emanates from the cross, which is the means through which God has reconciled us to himself.
  • Grace flows to us through the cross and from the cross – it is God who moves towards us. The people are passive – we cannot earn grace; it is God’s gift.
  • God’s grace holds us together as one body. We are joined together in his embrace, united for now and eternity as his dearly beloved and baptised children.

Synod will be held 4 – 7 October 2024.

196

Walking with God

by Helen Brinkman

A life walking with God is something to sing about – at any age.

And for one of the Lutheran Church’s oldest choir members, it’s a blessing he’s still singing about at the age of 96.

A simple statement in Genesis about a chap named Enoch walking with God gets to the heart of God’s love for us, says Emeritus Bishop Pastor Reinhard Mayer.

Found in Genesis 5:24, the four words ‘Enoch walked with God’ form Reinhard’s favourite Old Testament Bible passage.

‘It just tells you everything about who God is and his place in our lives, that he just comes to us and walks with us’, Reinhard says.

That has kept the tenor as an active member of the St Peters Lutheran Church choir in Indooroopilly, in suburban Brisbane.

In February this year, the congregational choir celebrated Reinhard’s 96th birthday at its regular practice. Reinhard’s role as a choral tenor is likely to make him the oldest active tenor in the church.

He’s keen to see how long he can keep going, noting: ‘It is a little unusual, as your voice loses its flexibility and resonance.’

‘The moment you think you have reached your use-by date – it is still worth keeping on going, as once you stop that, you lose something’, he says. Reinhard takes that same message to heart in his daily life – he still lives independently and drives.

Reinhard’s tenacity has shown throughout his eventful life, which began in 1927 in the small wine-growing village of Nierstein on the banks of the Rhine River in Germany. When he was one, his family emigrated to Queensland’s Darling Downs, swapping vineyards for a dairy farm.

It was a tough time. After surviving the Great Depression, and the drought of 1935-6, World War II ended Reinhard’s youth abruptly. The need for local workers forced the then 15-year-old to the local cheese factory where he took on the back-breaking work of several men, heaving 35 to 40-kilogram blocks of cheese onto cold room shelves.

Post-war the family moved to Brisbane, managing a milk run. After five years of working from midnight til morning, Reinhard began feeling he wasn’t fully using his God-given abilities. ‘I had a growing feeling I should do something else but had not gone beyond Grade 7 at school’, he recalls.

When Pastor Max Lohe from his local Nazareth congregation at Woolloongabba in inner Brisbane suggested he join the seminary, Reinhard responded with an absolute ‘no’. He not only was very shy and lacked confidence, but Reinhard had left school in Grade 7. ‘The thought of becoming a pastor scared the living daylights out of me.’

However, the seed was sown. ‘After a year of telling God “No, find something else for me”, all of a sudden, things changed’, he says. Reinhard’s younger brother Rolph was partway through his own seminary studies, prompting Reinhard to consider whether he could have taken a similar path, given changed circumstances.

Within a month of his parents realising Reinhard’s ambition, he was enrolled at Brisbane’s St Peters College, 10 years after he’d first left school. Aged 22, Reinhard achieved his leaving certificate by cramming four years of studies into 18 months.

‘It took a lot of effort, but I was determined.  I set my mind to it and got through. I went on to the seminary, and the rest, as they say, is history.’

In 1955, Reinhard Mayer was ordained at Nazareth Lutheran Church, four years after his younger brother Rolph, who went on to become chaplain at Immanuel College, in Adelaide, and then principal of Lutheran Teachers College.

Despite a heart for the country, Reinhard only spent three years in parish ministry, serving in Mildura and Loxton after his ordination. He went on to serve a total of 25 years as chaplain of St Peters College, Indooroopilly, which included a full-time teaching role – not only religious studies but also Latin, Greek and Mathematics!

‘I love Maths, and they were some of the happiest years of my life, so I became a teacher as well as a pastor.’

After 16 years, his chaplaincy was interrupted by 12 years as Queensland District President from 1974 (now known as District Bishop). He then returned for nine further years at St Peters until retirement in 1995, aged 67.

Reinhard’s connection to St Peters had begun in the late 1940s when the college was under development, heavily supported by volunteer labour. As his milk run hours were midnight to 8am, Reinhard and brother George used their milk trucks and muscles to cart sand and gravel, mix cement or dig foundations during the day.

When he returned to St Peters as chaplain in 1958, he was accompanied by his wife Thelma, whom he married 18 months after his ordination. During their 60 years of marriage, they welcomed six children.

Reinhard says that since Thelma’s passing seven years ago, living alone means he doesn’t use his voice as much. That’s one way the choir has helped. He’s been blessed to have his son Greg as the organist and choir accompanist, and his daughter-in-law Tricia Elgar as the choir conductor.

And so, the singing continues, as does Reinhard’s walk with God.

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

197

Bring a friend Sunday

by Rob Edwards

It was a simple plan. Maybe they are the best, I don’t know, but this was indeed simple. Invite a friend. The simple thought behind it was, that if everyone brought a friend to church, we would have double the people there.

And that was the plan.

So I started to cast the vision, presenting the day as one to which we could invite a friend. The promotion started six weeks beforehand, as it needs to. I have found that you can talk about things long and hard, and still, half the people won’t know about it. But I still didn’t know if it would work. People seem to be quite selective with their involvement.

We planned the Sunday, with some good songs, a couple of old ones and a couple of new ones. I had written a parody of ‘I’m a Believer’ as sung by The Monkees. We had planned a bang-up morning tea, and we were ready.

Come Sunday morning, the service was ready to begin, and a few people started coming in. It was about 20 mins before the service. There were only a few people there, and one lady came up to me, touched my arm and said, ‘It’s exciting, isn’t it?’

Nothing had happened yet, but I knew we had hit a sweet spot. Whether many people came or not, it was a success. People were getting excited about outreach. As it happened, we more than doubled our attendance that day. One lady, while walking in, flanked by two friends, proudly announced, ‘I brought two!’ Many more told me how they had invited someone who couldn’t come this time but might next time. We had found a way.

Next time we would need to do more and include follow-up, but for now, we were off to a start, and it was working. We had people in church who were not normally there. This was our first ‘Bring a Friend Sunday’.

We have just had our second. And this time, though we didn’t have as many people, the excitement is mounting. There was still a difficulty in getting the word out, particularly to those who don’t attend regularly, but there were new people in church and some who used to come but hadn’t lately. We had a few regulars who are now getting quite good at inviting a friend.

This time, it was a normal Sunday service. We had our normal two services on a Sunday, and a barbecue afterwards. Quite a few people stayed to chat. It seems that while we see a few new people in church, the greater benefit is that mission is no longer seen by our members as out of reach: it is possible, it is not too difficult, and we are doing it.

Pastor Rob Edwards serves the community at Peace Lutheran Church Gatton, in Queensland’s Lockyer Valley region.

This story first appeared in LCAQD eNews and on the LCA Queensland District’s website at https://qld.lca.org.au/2023/07/04/bring-a-friend-sunday

198

Still seeking a shepherd

While David Preston says a long pastoral vacancy is ‘not something to be welcomed’ by a congregation, he knows it can bring the talents and commitment of its members to the fore. David is the secretary of St Pauls Lutheran Church Wellington in New Zealand, which has been without a permanent ordained shepherd for almost a year.

199

Way Forward project team appointed

The team to lead the LCANZ’s Way Forward project has begun its work. Its primary role is to project-manage the implementation of the 2021–23 General Synod resolution, namely, to deliver a proposal to the next General Synod outlining how the LCANZ could operate as ‘one church with two different practices of ordination’.

200

Serving the maker of heaven and earth

Being good with numbers has been a blessing for the man believed to be the LCANZ’s longest-serving congregational treasurer, Glen Kraft. The 74-year-old member of Burnie congregation on the north-west coast of Tasmania has spent the past 50 years as treasurer of his home congregation and is still going strong.