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211

Calling all composers and songwriters!

The LCANZ’s Commission on Worship (CoW) is running a new music project and administration coordinator Libby Krahling says CoW is looking for music in any style which is suitable for use in worship. This could include lyrics to existing tunes, new arrangements of old hymns/songs, new liturgical compositions or music written for special occasions/feasts of the church year. For more information, and to obtain a copy of the music criteria, contact David Simpfendorfer at simpfy3@gmail.com

212

Volumes of music needs covered

The Commission on Worship has been preparing music resources for several decades for use across the church. This includes four Music Resource volumes, which may assist congregations.

Volume 1: KEYBOARD AND INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC FOR WORSHIP: Contains worship music mainly for organists, pianists and keyboardists. Hymn introductions, preludes and different harmonisations provide many ways in which to enhance worship. There are also arrangements for strings based on well-known hymns.

Volume 2: SUNG WORSHIP SERVICES: All the sung worship orders for holy communion and Services of the Word, ready for musicians to play on organ, keyboard, piano or guitar.

Volume 3: PSALM SETTINGS: Music settings of the book of Psalms. The selection of psalm texts has been based on the requirements of the Revised Common Lectionary. A revised edition with added guitar chords was released in 2022.

Volume 4: SONGS OF THE CHURCH – ADVENT, CHRISTMAS AND EPIPHANY: Published last year, this collection features hymns and songs from the broader ecumenical tradition, as well as familiar favourites with refreshed arrangements. It is available as a spiral-bound musician’s book or an e-book, and individual songs are also available for digital download.

All four volumes are available from Australian Christian Resources (www.shopacr.com.au).

213

Assisting a neighbour in crisis

Crisis assistance, which is sometimes referred to as emergency relief, is the provision of material aid to a person, couple, family, or community in immediate need. It may also include a referral to other specialist community services, such as personal or financial counselling.

There are many reasons people need crisis assistance. These may include a sudden reduction in income, gambling issues, financial management problems, loneliness, the death of a loved one, relationship breakdown, domestic violence, drugs, illness, isolation, inherited debt, a major appliance failure, or having a wallet or purse stolen. These situations and others can cause financial as well as emotional distress.

Large increases in living costs and the requirements placed on refugees who are on bridging visas have continued to bring more people through the doors of our churches and agencies in search of help.

A report by the Australian Council of Social Service indicates that those at greatest risk are unemployed people, children in sole-parent families and people whose main income is from social security payments. In 2020, approximately 3.24 million people lived in poverty in Australia (of which 774,000 were children and 424,800 were young people).

WHAT CAN WE DO TO HELP?

How can my congregation provide crisis assistance? When a neighbour comes knocking is a resource to help you get started. It offers guidelines for establishing crisis assistance and ideas for a typical food parcel. It also provides suggestions for managing risks associated with confidentiality, negative behaviour, referrals to services and more.

God has given us all many talents and gifts to use to his glory. One of the gifts we possess is the gift of giving itself, without expecting anything in return. May God bless you as you show hospitality to strangers, speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves, and defend the rights of the poor and needy (Hebrews 13:2; Proverbs 31:8,9).

You can download the When a neighbour comes knocking resource from www.lca.org.au/events-training-resources

Tania Nelson – Executive Officer – Local Mission

214

Podcasts to share LCANZ stories

The LCANZ will this month launch regular audio podcasts as a new way of sharing stories with the wider church community.

To be published fortnightly and accessible for listening through the LCA website (www.lca.org.au/podcasts), the podcasts will feature interviews with a wide range of people on a wide range of topics of interest within the church.

Check LCA eNews for further details, including information on how to subscribe to the podcasts. Sign up to LCA eNews for the latest news and updates from across the church each fortnight – at www.lca.org.au/lcaenews-signmeup

215

Sending love to Somalia

Creative, colourful and a little crazy, our Lutheran family is …

Sending love to Somalia

From baking and brightly decorating spectacular cakes to donning and displaying crazily patterned socks, from staging yabby and cockroach races to serving up steaming hot bowls of porridge with all the trimmings, members of our LCANZ have been getting creative to support children in drought and famine-hit Somalia to go to school – and have a full tummy.

THE ICING ON THE CAKE

While they weren’t competing in a TV baking contest or devising a dessert recipe for a grand occasion like the late Queen Elizabeth II’s Platinum Jubilee celebrations, students from Cornerstone College at Mount Barker in the Adelaide Hills nonetheless gave a right royal performance in the kitchen recently. Most importantly, the effort put in to make 52 stunning sweet creations was not just about winning the college’s seventh annual bake-off competition, this year it was also a way of supporting the work of Australian Lutheran World Service (ALWS) and its partners in Somalia. Somalia is in the grip of harsh drought and resulting famine and ALWS has secured an 18:1 matching grant from church partners in Europe and the US, which means that for every $10 donated, a child’s education is supported for a year.

Cornerstone Wellbeing Director and ALWS Board member Morgan Brookes said the school community was excited to have raised $2217 through cake sales, which will support 220 Somali children at school. ‘We are always incredibly heartened by the commitment that Cornerstone College students show on days like this’, Morgan says. ‘Not only do they step up and produce wonderful and inventive items to share, but they also take part, wholeheartedly, in selling and/or buying every single slice of cake to raise funds to help those in need.’

GO CRAZY AND PUT A SOCK ON IT!

Naomi Kotzur, a teacher from St John’s Lutheran School Kingaroy in Queensland, says students from her school community have put their best foot (or feet) forward for children in Somalia. The school encouraged students to wear their ‘craziest’ socks and bring a gold coin donation to send love and care to Somalia.

They were hoping to contribute $1 per student or $521 toward the cause, which with the matching grant would mean a total donation of more than $9,000 – or support for 48 children.

Along with money raised through its participation in the Queensland recycling scheme Containers for Change, St John’s donated $1180 after its Crazy Sock Day – enough to support 118 children at school in Somalia. Naomi says the school was also looking forward to being involved in its first Walk My Way last month, as part of efforts to look beyond their own community and think of others. ‘Kids are not too young to have a positive impact on someone else’s life’, Naomi says. ‘As a teacher, I have the perfect opportunity to inspire children – I don’t want to waste it.’

SOWING THE SEEDS FOR CHANGE

The Barossa North Lutheran Parish from South Australia have also been quick off the mark lending their support to children in Somalia in creative ways.

Along with the annual parish Blessing of the Seed, Soil and Water service led by Pastor Mathew Ker in late April, about 150 members and 20 children enjoyed fantastic fun and fellowship, including yabby and cockroach races, a billy boiling competition and a community lunch.

Held outside a century-old shearing shed near Truro, the event made a real connection to the land and elements for those who attended, ALWS Community Action Manager Jonathan Krause says. ‘This, in turn, connected us to Somalia where families also depend on the land – raising sheep and cattle and growing sorghum’, Jonathan says. ‘The parish congregations have donated more than $2200 to ALWS – enough to support 220 children to go to school for a year, plus have a daily school meal of porridge!’

THAT IS HOW YOU MAKE PORRIDGE

When ALWS Board members and staff met in Albury, New South Wales, earlier this year to mark 75 years since the Lutheran Church’s ministry to refugees in Australia began, there was no grand party to celebrate the milestone. Instead, they shared bowls of porridge for breakfast, followed by a thanksgiving service!

The porridge was made to the same recipe used by ALWS’ international partners to feed children threatened by famine in Somalia. Instead of payment, staff and guests donated to ALWS’ 18:1 Matching Grant, with every $10 funding a year’s education (including a daily meal of porridge) for a child in Somalia.

Renowned community leader the Reverend Tim Costello (below left) was the guest speaker for the gathering and keenly joined the breakfast. The leader of the Help Fight Famine campaign through interdenominational advocacy group Micah Australia, Rev Tim reflected on Jeremiah 29 and ALWS’ commitment to global justice in his message. He also encouraged those gathered to continue to serve as God’s hands and feet wherever they are placed.

The thanksgiving service was held at ALWS’ head office in Albury, not far from the Bonegilla Resettlement Centre where thousands of European Lutheran refugees were temporarily housed after World War II. Pastoral support provided to Lutheran refugees 75 years ago by local Lutheran Pastor Bruno Muetzelfeldt began the Lutheran Church’s ministry to refugees – and was the forerunner to the establishment of what became the LCA’s overseas aid and development agency – ALWS.

Why not hold your own ‘Power Porridge Party’ and support children at risk due to the famine in the Horn of Africa? For more information, go to the ALWS website at www.alws.org.au or call 1300 763 407. Each $10 donated will support a child in Somalia at school for a year with a daily meal of porridge, a school uniform, a desk, renovated classrooms, facilities and assistive devices for children with special needs, training for teachers and dignity kits for girls.

216

Serving the maker of heaven and earth

Going GREYT! 1 Peter 4:10

In Going GREYT! we feature stories of some of our ‘more experienced’ people within the LCANZ, 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.

by Helen Brinkman

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.

Glen is comfortable sticking with numbers: ‘I’m not one who can go out and witness. God gave me a gift of numbers so I can thank him for that. Doing that, I can give something back to the Lord.’

Glen was only 24 years old, and fresh off the mainland when he became treasurer in May 1973. He had moved to Burnie in 1971 from South Australia’s Barossa Valley.

His first job out of university was working as an industrial chemist in a local paper mill. He said he’d probably stay for four to five years when he was interviewed for the role. Fifty-two years later he’s still here, ‘and I’ll probably die here’, he says.

‘Part of the reason I looked for a job in Tasmania was because I didn’t really like the hot climate in South Australia’, he says. ‘While at uni I did some internships, one in Tasmania, and the other in Dampier, northern Western Australia – with temperatures as high as 50 degrees – and I was counting down the hours until I finished. It sort of pushed me to Tasmania.’

Growing up in the small Barossa town of Stockwell, Glen didn’t like the big city, so he was quite happy moving to Burnie with its population of about 20,000 people.

And of course, Glen liked the cold! So much in fact that he decided to try snow skiing. While he admits he wasn’t very good to start with, his persistence paid off. By 1979 Glen had his first winter holiday in the ski fields of New Zealand.

‘When it is -5 degrees on a sunny day, it’s lovely’, he says.

Glen has never looked back, skiing at many of the world’s major ski fields until about 20 years ago when he decided the Canadian snow resorts were his favourite – and they became his go-to destination until COVID hit. Aside from his ability to work with numbers, skiing has given Glen another blessing – access to some of the best mountain views in the world.

‘Picture a clear blue day, with such crisp clean air and the sun shining on white snow so it just gleams’, he shares. ‘The snow just hides all the scars in the earth, and for me, that has absolute beauty.’

It reminds Glen of his favourite worship song, Robin Mann’s ‘How shall I call you?’, with the lyrics ‘How shall I call you? Maker of heaven, poet of sunset and painter of sky’ (song number 43 from the All Together Now songbook).

‘When I am standing on the top of mountains and looking down at mountain peaks covered in snow, that song used to buzz around in my mind’, Glen says. ‘Everything is crisp, clean and beautiful – and you think God’s created all this, and he looks down and everything’s perfect.’

Fast forward to 2023, and Glen is hoping to plan his next ski trip to Canada in 2024. ‘That may be the last, as age is catching up with me’, he says.

But Glen is keeping fit as a fiddle for skiing by walking kilometres each day up and down the hills between his home and the Burnie church manse. This is because he’s not only the congregational treasurer but is also looking after the manse while the parish awaits a new pastor.

Oh, and he’s also treasurer of the North Tasmania Lutheran Parish, which includes the congregations of Devonport and Launceston, as well as Burnie. His maintenance and information technology skills have also been put to good use developing the weekly service orders, PowerPoint presentations and service arrangements for the three congregations.

As for his treasurer’s duties, Glen has noticed the changes in the role over the decades.

‘It’s certainly become more complicated over time’, he says. ‘These days you need to do a lot of reporting. Compliance is important.’

While he serves the parish in multiple capacities, Glen believes keeping the congregations functioning well, especially during pastoral vacancy, is a team effort. ‘I am just one of the people helping to keep the church working’, he says.

When it comes to serving, Glen’s advice is to seek God’s guidance: ‘You just need to pray. If people are really motivated to serve, God will lead them to find what suits whatever they can do. ‘There’s lots of little ways they can help. Anyone can push a mower around, as long as you enjoy doing that. God’s given everyone different gifts. Without those little jobs, the church couldn’t exist.’

And the final verse of his go-to Robin Mann’s song reminds us all of God’s faithfulness: ‘How shall I call you? Master and servant, lord of the seasons and lord of the years; faithful and constant in loving and mercy, giver of laughter and taker of tears.’

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

217

Way Forward project team appointed

The project team to lead the LCANZ’s Way Forward project has begun its work. The team’s 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’.

The three-person project team will report to the General Church Board (GCB) and College of Bishops (CoB), which jointly hold overall responsibility for the delivery of the proposal in response to the Synod resolution.

Eight working groups will provide guidance, requirements and inputs on the theological, constitutional, governance and other issues that will be required for a ‘detailed framework’ to be presented in time for discussion by the 2024 General Pastors Conference and 2024 General Synod. The groups were appointed last month by GCB and CoB. It is envisaged that the proposal development process will involve wide consultation within the LCANZ prior to the General Pastors Conference and General Synod.

Former Chief Executive Officer of Lutheran Super, Stella Thredgold, heads the project team in a part-time capacity as project director. As an ASX100 C-Suite Executive, she has spent most of her career leading organisations through change. Stella will provide strategic oversight of the project direction, engaging with various stakeholders and ensuring that a disciplined and transparent process is followed.

Joining the team with Stella are Tim Niewand and Tony Vong, both of whom have extensive project-management experience coupled with longstanding membership of Lutheran congregations in Victoria.

Joining the team full-time, Tim brings 20 years’ experience in Fortune 500 companies, and has managed projects across a diverse range of scopes including product development, process improvement, real estate, finance and software. A lifelong active member of the Lutheran Church, he is currently chairperson at Pakenham Lakeside Church on Melbourne’s eastern outskirts.

Tony has 20 years’ experience leading programs and teams within the public sector, with a strong focus on risk and change management. He holds voluntary roles on District and congregation boards and committees, including that of his home congregation, Chinese Lutheran Church of Victoria. Tony joins the project team in a part-time capacity.

‘We’re humbled to be able to lead this project. We understand this is a difficult time for the Lutheran Church, but it also brings tremendous opportunity’, Stella said. ‘We’re committed to listening, openness, transparency and respect, and we invite everyone involved in the Way Forward to bring this spirit to the conversations.’

The project team will oversee and coordinate the assignments of the working groups, as well as manage the timeline and ensure successful preparation for the 2024 General Pastors Conference and 2024 General Synod. The recent call for expressions of interest to join working groups saw more than 500 people download the application form and almost 60 people apply within the two-week timeframe.

The Standing Committee on Nominations, which processed the expressions of interest, and GCB and CoB, which made the appointments, aimed for diversity across the working groups (including gender, age, cultural background, conviction about ordination) and people from all districts of the church. Stella said she was delighted with the high calibre of appointments to the working groups: ‘The project team extends our thanks to all the people who applied to the working groups, including those who were not appointed, for being prepared to volunteer their time, experience and expertise to this project. We thank God for you, and we look forward to engaging with those appointed as we implement the resolution your General Synod delegates have placed before us.’

The project team welcomes suggestions from the wider church regarding the way forward towards ‘one church with two different practices of ordination’. Emails can be sent to wayforward2024@lca.org.au

For more information about the project, go to www.lca.org.au/wayforward

218

Conference-goers ‘challenged and inspired’

More than 50 people re-considered their local neighbourhoods as mission fields during last month’s 2023 LCANZ Cross-Cultural Ministry conference in Melbourne.

Based on The Message translation of John 1:14 which says, ‘The Word became flesh and blood, and moved into the neighbourhood’, the theme for the 5-6 May event was ‘Moving into the neighbourhood’.

Dr Tania Nelson, the LCANZ’s Executive Officer – Local Mission, said participants ‘dwelt in the word, worshipped, heard stories of neighbourhood ministry events and missional attitudes, and were inspired by speakers from within the LCA and from other faith traditions’.

‘We heard Maha, a new convert from Hinduism to Christianity, pray in Tamil while we prayed for her growing community in our heart languages’, Tania said. ‘We viewed a Partners in Ministry video entitled “Welcoming” and were challenged to view our website, and the 10 minutes before and after worship, from the viewpoint of a visitor.

‘We were inspired to walk in the shoes of our neighbours and heard of the difficult journeys to Australia from our Congolese and South Sudanese friends. And we heard from Meewon Yang, who shared with us her master’s degree research on “Ways of Being a Multicultural Church”.

‘May we all see ourselves as God’s hands and feet in God’s mission in the local neighbourhood.’

LCANZ Cross-Cultural Ministry Facilitator Craig Heidenreich also presented a draft vision for a missional church at the conference. This included:

We believe that:

  • The Lord is stretching out his hands to the people of Australia and New Zealand and wants a relationship with each one.
  • God is watching over the movement of people who are coming from afar and is choosing to bless them.
  • God is inviting us to join him in this great endeavour and he will help us as we seek to express his love to those we
  • live among.
  • We are all different and each of us has something meaningful to offer.
  • Love comes to life when God’s people grow in his grace and go out into their world with his love.

We see a Lutheran body of believers who:

  • Bless the people around them because God blesses us.
  • Start conversations with strangers, remembering their names.
  • Listen without agenda and bring their concerns to the Lord in prayer.
  • Live out the wisdom and kindness of God in the civic world in which each of us is placed.
219

Your Voice – June–July 2023

LETTERS FROM MEMBERS OF THE LCANZ

Differing conclusions ‘can coexist’

To say that I was disappointed with the outcome of the ordination debate at this year’s Synod would be an understatement. But more than the outcome, the tactic of undermining the theological integrity of those who do not hold to the current teaching is not befitting for a community based on the teachings of Jesus.

If we can learn anything from the ongoing dialogue over the issue over the last 30-plus years, surely it is that we all hold Scripture and the Confessions as the basis of our faith, and the source of our understanding on this issue. As a result, we must cease hurling accusations of misuse of Scripture at one another and recognise that we can draw differing conclusions from the same texts and that both can coexist. For this reason, I thought the Box Hill proposal was superior as it allowed for the ongoing unity of the LCA while upholding our co-existing commitment to Scripture and the Confessions.

I earnestly pray that the College of Bishops and the General Church Board can find a way of maintaining unity – at all levels – while also allowing diversity of practice. Separation into different ‘districts’ will only further entrench our difference rather than bring unity through understanding and allowing diversity of practice.

Rev Tim Castle-Schmidt – Woodside SA

Opinions expressed in letters are those of the writers and do not necessarily reflect those of the editor or the Lutheran Church of Australia and New Zealand. Shorter letters will be given preference over longer letters. Subscribers’ letters will be given preference over those from non-subscribers. Letters longer than 300 words and those containing personal attack will not be published. No more than two letters from the same author will be published in a calendar year. Some letters may be edited for clarity.

220

Today’s slavery

Slavery is not just a long-ago scourge confined to the ancient biblical account of the Israelites captive in Egypt, or the horrors of the trans-Atlantic slave trade between the 16th and 19th centuries. Nor has it been restricted closer to home to the terrible practice of ‘blackbirding’, between the mid-1800s and early 20th century.