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331

Baptism resources for everyone!

In baptism, God gives us forgiveness of sins, freedom from death and life with God forever. At our baptism, we are given a candle to remind us that Jesus is the light of the world, and we too are to be shining that light of Christ.

The GIFT Baptism intergenerational event resources from Grow Ministries have been designed to help your congregation celebrate the promises made in baptism and the GIFT of the new life we receive through it.

An event that brings all generations together provides a wonderful gift of learning, sharing faith and relationship building. GIFT stands for Growing In Faith Together.

SHARING THE MESSAGE WITH CHILDREN

Among a wide range of baptism resources, Grow Ministries also provides children’s addresses that explain the sacrament to younger churchgoers, through the stories of Jesus’ baptism and John the Baptist.

INTERACTIVE OPTIONS FOR YOUNG DISCIPLES

Grow Ministry’s new confirmation resource Grow Disciples also contains an excellent section on baptism, including a wonderful learning activity option featuring prayer stations.

HITTING THE LEARNING TRAIL

The Faith Trail Ministry resource from Grow includes two trail markers relating to baptism – one about baptism and one about baptism anniversaries. Faith Trail resources are designed for parents and congregations serving in an intergenerational faith-building partnership with children. They celebrate the spiritual markers in a child’s life. The baptism resource includes a comprehensive Q&A on the sacrament.

For more about these and other resources, go to www.growministries.org.au or email Grow Resource Coordinator Christine Matthias at christine.matthias@lca.org.au 

332

Splashed with God’s promise

by Anne Hansen

My journey into God’s family began on 26 September 1965, when I was baptised by my father, Pastor Ronald Gerhardy, at St John’s Lutheran Church Ipswich in Queensland. I was 10 days old, and my parents wanted me baptised before the family travelled to Horsham in Victoria for the 1965 National Women’s Convention and General Synod.

When I was baptised, I was brought into God’s family and splashed with his promise that I would spend eternity with him. Not only eternity but that he would remain with me every day of my life and would guide me through the Holy Spirit.

God has indeed been with me every day. During my school years, I confirmed my faith in 1979 at Immanuel College Novar Gardens in South Australia.

He was with me when I tried to work out my vocation in teaching as I travelled throughout Europe, the UK, and the USA. God was with me in my ministry with Lutheran Youth Encounter and in meeting my husband, Mark. He guided us back to Australia, through teaching, seminary, and having a family, and continues to be my constant in all I do.

He blesses me every day with my ministry at Lutheran Tract Mission as he inspires me to put his words into stories and encouragements. I pray that God will continue to use me to reach others who do not yet know his saving love. It all began at my baptism when God splashed me with his promises.

WIDE VARIETY OF BAPTISM RESOURCES

Lutheran Tract Mission (LTM) has many resources relating to baptism – tracts explaining what it is; others celebrating the baptism day and baptism anniversaries; family devotions about baptism and tracts for congregations to fill in for godparents.

Have a look at our website www.ltm.org.au and choose ‘Find Resources’, then click on the category ‘Baptism’. Or come into the LLL offices and see them. There are about 35 different ones to choose from. While you are there, check out all our other resources – about 950 in total.

We all have our story of being brought into God’s family. Share your story with people you care about today!

Anne Hansen is Lutheran Tract Mission Development Officer.

333

All ages step out for refugee kids

by Jonathan Krause

When more than 40 people on South Australia’s Eyre Peninsula gathered to do their own 12-kilometre Walk My Way recently through Australian Lutheran World Service (ALWS), young Amos gave it his all. ‘I’m exhausted, because the walk took two hours’, he said. ‘My feet are dead. I did the walk because of people that had to run away from their homes because they were getting attacked.’

Hannah, the youngest walker in the 25 June event near Cleve, is just five. She might have had a bit of help from her dad as they walked 4 kilometres, but at the finish line she was all smiles.

But you don’t have to have young feet to Walk My Way – Carly Zacher and husband Geoff have, as she says, ‘161 years between us’.

ALWS created Walk My Way in 2017 to raise money to support refugee children to go to school. Since then, more than $960,000 has been raised by thousands of dedicated walkers and their sponsors, supporting education for tens of thousands of children in places like Kakuma Refugee Camp in Kenya.

WALKS TO SUIT EVERYONE, EVERYWHERE

During the two years of COVID restrictions on large public gatherings, ALWS developed Walk your Way, in which local groups could do their own walk, on a date, in a place and across a distance that suited them.

That’s where passionate people like Eyre Peninsula organiser, Dawn Briese, come in. ‘I did the Walk My Way in the Barossa Valley last year, and thought it was a good opportunity to bring it out to the Eyre Peninsula’, she says.

Led by Dawn’s hard work, the people of Eyre Peninsula have raised more than $6,800 – enough to support 261 refugee children to go to school!

BRINGING LOVE TO LIFE ACROSS THE WORLD

On the weekend of the Eyre Peninsula walk, Assistant to the Bishop – International Mission Pastor Matt Anker and Julie Krause from ALWS shared how these two LCANZ agencies work side-by-side but serve differently. As International Mission supports overseas partner churches to reach out with the no-strings-attached gospel and ALWS provides no-strings-attached practical aid, our church helps bring love to life.

Love will come to life again this year, when Lutheran schools host a Walk My Way for the wider church at Victor Harbor South Australia on 21 October. The walk is being held on a Friday to maximise the number of students who can take part alongside the broader Lutheran community.

Jonathan Krause is ALWS Community Action Manager.

Find out more or register at www.walkmyway.org.au or phone 1300 763 407.

334

Opportunity knocks in the Gabba’s shadow

Going GREYT! 1 Peter 4:10

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

by Helen Brinkman

When the Brisbane Bears joined what was to become the Australian Football League (AFL) in 1987, who would have guessed the ripples of opportunity that flowed from its emergence as the first Queensland-based club?

The club’s home at the famed Gabba, the Brisbane Cricket Ground, created an unexpected boon for the good folk of the nearby Nazareth Lutheran Church, Woolloongabba.

For the past three decades, the Bears’ home matches, and those of their successor the Brisbane Lions, have created an ongoing fundraising opportunity for the church.

Located 600 metres up the road from the Gabba, a tenant in one of the church rental properties first noted a few cars parking on the church property on game days.

It wasn’t long before all vacant space owned by the historic Hawthorn Street church was up for grabs for home matches, coordinated by longstanding Nazareth members Ruth and Colin Schneider.

Ruth and Colin, now both 81, took responsibility for organising paid parking, firstly on the congregation’s vacant lots, then its car parks and grounds. It was $5 a car park for footy patrons. ‘In the end, we could get 90 cars because Colin and I would do it together. He’d park them, and I’d stand at the gate and collect the money’, says Ruth.

In the early years, the operation become more sophisticated when Colin set up temporary spotlights for evening matches. Additional parking spaces were utilised around the church property, its kindergarten and across the road at Nazareth’s then-senior citizens’ home.

As development occurred, parking opportunities changed but never stopped. The Schneiders were helped by fellow members and enjoyed the camaraderie of fans usually enjoying fun, pre-match banter about their beloved teams – and yes, they still do allow opposition team supporters equal access to the car parks!

‘It was a fun time and everyone’s happy because they are going to the footy’, says Colin.

Even when the church was gutted by fire in May 2000, the car parking continued.

Colin recalls how most parkers, who were now regulars and had seen details of the church fire plastered over the news, had donated generously toward the church restoration fund. ‘We’d be getting $50 notes just given to us’, he says.

And Ruth even saved the church from a $300 fine for a misplaced parking sign, after a written plea to the Brisbane Lord Mayor asking him to waive the fine as the church had recently burnt down and the parking funds were supporting its re-build.

For Ruth and Colin, car parking has been part of a life-long connection to the church. ‘It has been part of our lives to be at church, and you see things that need to be done, and you think, “I can do that”’, says Ruth.

The pair lives within walking distance of the church that Colin was baptised, confirmed and married in, on a street where Colin has lived since birth. Ruth moved into the street, three doors down from Colin, when she was 10.

They grew up in a street of young kids, who played cricket and football together on the road. They went to the same high school and Colin would go to her home each morning so they could travel to school on the tram.

Married in 1964, they had only started dating when Ruth was 21. Colin, then an apprentice watchmaker, would wait for her tram to arrive from her city insurance job each afternoon. It was only months later that Ruth realised that their daily chat at the front gate was not accidental but had been deliberately timed!

‘The people you meet are normally so lovely and you enjoy their company. You have happy times; your friends are there and it’s a good feeling when you do something like this.’ The pair coordinated the fundraiser for almost 20 years, agonising over raising the parking price after the first decade, first to $6 then to $10.

In 2004, the Schneiders passed the baton to a series of fellow members. Most recently committee member and octogenarian Eric Parups worked with other members to keep the fundraiser going for almost two more decades and has supported a transition to new members this year.

‘It’s going to a good cause, and we quite often get more additional money from parkers as a donation’, Eric says.

The parking price has this year risen to $20, with regular parkers not batting an eyelid as the fundraising is earmarked to support domestic violence shelter, Mary and Martha. Serendipitously, this refuge has been a church mission since its inception by the Nazareth congregation more than 35 years ago.

Nazareth now provides regular donations for bedding that is given to clients moving to more permanent accommodation. And each home match collects about $600 for the cause.

After running in the shadow of the Gabba for 35 years now, the fundraiser shows no sign of waning. Who knows what boon the upcoming Olympic Games in 2032 may bring? Regardless, the Schneiders’ favourite Bible verse sets the tone: ‘The Lord your God goes with you, he will never leave you nor forsake you’ (Deuteronomy 31:6).

The author is a member of Nazareth Lutheran Church, Woolloongabba.

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  

335

Lutheran education community back together

by Kate Bourne

After a two-year delay due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Australian Conference on Lutheran Education (ACLE) was held in Melbourne last month, drawing 450 in-person attendees and a further 120 people online.

The hybrid conference at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre offered an opportunity for connection and re-connection for a Lutheran education community that has faced significant challenges in the past couple of years.

The ACLE theme was ‘One voice, many paths’. With more than 40 presenters leading sessions across the three-day event from 5 July, participants were able to hear from those currently serving in Lutheran education, as well as national and international keynote speakers.

Opening the conference, Lutheran Education Australia (LEA) Executive Director Lisa Schmidt thanked participants for their ‘passionate and dedicated service over the past few years’. ‘This is our long-awaited chance to gather as a whole again’, she said. ‘Communities need connection and nurturing – the next few days is a dedicated time for doing that.’

International speakers included Rev Dr Chad Rimmer, a Lutheran pastor who serves as the program executive for Identity, Communion and Formation at the Lutheran World Federation in Geneva, Switzerland. Neuroscience trainer Nathan Wallis travelled from New Zealand to present a three-part series entitled ‘Engage your brain and the first 1000 days’, which was of particular interest for early childhood educators.

During a collaborative session designed to inform the national initiative exploring our vision for learners and learning, attendees were asked, ‘What’s your vision for the learner and learning in 2022 and beyond in Lutheran education?’.

Given the experience schools have had in recent times it was no surprise that the session ‘Me, We, Us, Wellbeing in the Workplace’, led by Natasha Rae, was in high demand and required a last-minute change to seating configuration to allow more people to attend. Natasha works at Geelong Lutheran College and, with such a positive response to her session, it is anticipated further workshops will be arranged so more people can hear her message.

On the final day, Dave Faulkner and Maddie Scott-Jones from professional learning organisation Education Changemakers prompted participants to work together in school groups to develop a plan for action and impact to take back to their schools.

Addressing conference attendees, LCANZ Bishop Paul Smith described Lutheran schooling as an integral part of the ongoing life and mission of the church. ‘While the Lutheran Church has been forming young people through its schools, Lutheran schooling has been forming the church’, he said. ‘Therefore, that makes ACLE a significant event in the Lutheran Church calendar’.

At the conclusion of the conference, the ACLE candle was extinguished and handed to Lutheran Education Queensland, which will host the next triennial event in 2025.

Kate Bourne is LEA Administration Assistant.

336

New ALWS leader ready to serve

Lifelong Lutheran and experienced business leader Michael Stolz has been appointed Executive Director of Australian Lutheran World Service (ALWS) and will start the new role next month.

Mr Stolz, pictured, brings a wealth of high-level experience and expertise in business, consulting, project management and governance, with a strong track record of 30 years in transport, energy, defence, mining logistics and not-for-profit sectors. Gaining a Bachelor of Engineering (Aeronautical) in 1985, Mr Stolz also has an Executive Master of Business Administration and is a Graduate of the Australian Institute of Company Directors.

The son of missionary parents, he spent the first 15 years of his life in Papua New Guinea. He believes his life’s values were formed there, including an interest and commitment to the developing world.

From early adulthood, he has served the Lutheran Church – in Victoria, South Australia and Queensland – in roles including school establishment committees, congregation evangelism and stewardship teams, and District and Churchwide committees. He served as a non-executive director of the General Church Board (GCB) from 2012 to 2018. He is currently serving as chair of the board of his local congregation, Prince of Peace, Everton Hills, in Brisbane’s northern suburbs.

LCANZ Bishop Paul Smith said Mr Stolz would bring ‘faithful passion and purposeful deliberation to the role of executive director of ALWS’. ‘I have served with Michael in Lutheran agencies and on committees for almost 30 years, and I cherish his deep understanding of the gospel and his heartfelt yearning to serve the church in the name of our Lord Christ Jesus’, Bishop Paul said.

A long-time personal supporter of ALWS, in 2020 Mr Stolz joined the ALWS Board as a non-executive board member and also the Finance Audit & Risk Committee as a member.

ALWS Board chair Jodie Hoff said: ‘We thank God for calling Michael to this role. He is an exceptionally experienced and gifted team leader. On top of that, his governance experience on GCB and the ALWS Board will be invaluable.

‘For all his life he has sought to serve God wherever God has placed him – and he has done this with deep passion, great faith and profound humility. We look forward to how God will work through him as we bring God’s love to life in those the world forgets.’

Mr Stolz said he was looking forward to meeting stakeholders and staff and working with the ALWS team to ‘deliver an even stronger, better organisation that delivers impactful development and aid outcomes for the forgotten people in our wider world’.

‘It’s such a joy to witness how ALWS can bring together the mission field of students and staff in our Lutheran schools with our local church communities, together reaching out to people in the world’s most vulnerable communities’, he said. ‘You only have to see people of all ages stepping out in Walk My Way, and families in refugee camps celebrating that their children can now go to school, to know that ALWS is a precious gift of God to enable us to go and grow and bring love to life.’

Mr Stolz is married to Kathy, and they have four adult children.

337

LCANZ hosts international mission gathering

by Nathan Hedt

International mission practitioners, researchers and theologians from four different continents met recently in North Adelaide, hosted by the LCANZ’s New and Renewing Churches department at Australian Lutheran College.

The International Consultation on Ecclesial Futures (ICEF, formerly known as the IRC, International Research Consortium) is a yearly get-together of mission scholars and practitioners which is hosted across four continents on a rotating basis. The LCANZ was privileged to host the 2022 gathering, originally planned for June 2020, and twice postponed due to COVID, in Adelaide.

Guests from various denominations attended from South Africa, the USA, Australia, the UK and Denmark. Fifteen people attended in person and others joined in and presented online through Zoom. Each day of the week-long conference featured presentations and discussions of missional papers from various ICEF members.

The theme of the conference and open day was ‘Riding the Waves of Change’. Presentation and discussion topics included ‘Exploring exile as a theological narrative for churches emerging from COVID lockdown’, ‘Christian spiritual formation that guards resilience’, ‘Developing a Trinitarian theology of leadership’ and ‘Lessons from 30 years of NCLS surveys in Australia’.

Attendees at the open day held at Adelaide West Uniting Church heard presentations from missional scholars from four different continents and discussed the implications and actions arising from these presentations with a focus on their own local church’s mission and action.

The day was a wonderful opportunity for more than 60 attendees to receive and reflect on missional approaches from many different perspectives. Although originally planned as a fully in-person event, one of the presenters tested positive for COVID and one could not travel from the UK because of a COVID diagnosis, so they gave presentations on Zoom – a perfect illustration of the waves of change that all of us have faced in the past two and a half years! The presenters took us through a post-war history of the mission of the church in Australia; New Testament approaches to spiritual formation; assessing whether your local church is ready for change, and the dynamics of the change process in local churches.

The conference open day sessions have been recorded and will be made available for viewing via the New and Renewing Churches website at www.newandrenewingchurches.org.au

The IRC/ICEF conference and open day were made possible by a grant from the LLL.  What a wonderful blessing and privilege to get to know, and hear from, mission practitioners and researchers from all over the world during this week!

Pastor Nathan Hedt is Manager of the LCANZ New and Renewing Churches Department.

Pictured  L-R: Edwin Van Driel (USA), Marius Nel (South Africa), Scot Sherman (USA), Frederick Marais (South Africa), Scott Hagley (USA), Gayle Hill (Aus), Nelus Niemandt (South Africa), Nathan Hedt (Aus), Doret Niemand (South Africa), Dean Eaton (Aus), Ruth Powell (Aus), Ian Robinson (Aus), Glen Powell (Aus). At home due to COVID: Steen Olsen (Aus), Pat Keifert (USA), Nigel Rooms (UK), Mike Harrison (UK)

338

Jubilee celebrates coming together of cultures

We may think of cross-cultural or multiethnic ministry as a relatively recent focus of the LCANZ. But that’s far from the case, as a joyful anniversary celebration held in Brisbane this winter shows.

The first Lutheran Scandinavian-language service in Queensland was held on 26 June 1872 and was commemorated with worship and a jubilee celebration exactly 150 years later at St Andrews Lutheran Church, Brisbane City.

The original Danish-language service was led by Pastor Christopher Gaustad, a Norwegian missionary and Pietist, who was gifted with languages. He trained in Norway and Berlin, he also served in India.

Multiple languages were used during the Jubilee 150th service. The Lord’s Prayer was printed in Icelandic, Norwegian, North Sami, Swedish, Finnish and Danish for the consecration of the Lord’s Supper, while Bible readings were given in Finnish, Norwegian and Swedish. The current St Andrews pastor, Finnish-born Tommi Vuorinen, who also serves the Finnish congregation at Woolloongabba in Brisbane, was on leave at the time of the anniversary, so one of the congregation’s former shepherds, Pastor Stephen Nuske, preached and led worship.

As well as being followed by a Scandinavian high morning tea, the service included music from two contrasting wind instruments – the didgeridoo, played by Braden Chambers, and the Bethlehem Memorial Organ, built by the late Danish-Australian Knud Smenge, and played by Mark Boughen. A special canticle was written for the occasion with text by Pastor Stephen and a setting by Mark Boughen. It was sung by Owen Dixon. Braden’s grandfather Uncle Joe Kirk gave the Welcome to Country for those attending, while a significant hymn for the day was ‘Built on the Rock the Church doth stand’, which features in the Australian, Danish, Norwegian, Swedish and Icelandic Lutheran hymnals.

Pastor Stephen points out that today the LCANZ not only includes Scandinavian worshipping communities, but it also has links with outposts of the Scandinavian Mission to Seafarers in South-East Asia through LCA International Mission. ‘This is an important link’, he says. ‘Cross-cultural ministry is not new. The four corners of the world intersect in the city. “They will come from the east and the west, from the north and the south, and sit down in the kingdom of God”’ (Luke 11:29).

339

Youth keep spirit of Reformation alive

For the past three years, 22-year-old Elsa Matthias has represented the LCANZ on the Global Young Reformers Network (GYRN). An initiative of the Lutheran World Federation, the network was created in 2014 by youth for youth and aims to connect young people who are active in their local Lutheran communities. Also a member of the network steering committee representing the Asian region, Elsa is pictured above speaking at the recent Asian Church Leaders Conference in Thailand. She explains the value of these collaborations …

How can we bring the voice of the youth into our church? How do we do this so that the work of the youth can be considered the work of the church?

These are questions I have been exploring with youth around the globe. And guess what? We in Australia and New Zealand are not the only ones to have these questions! Other churches within our South-East Asian region also struggle with the best ways to bring youth into the leadership structures of the church.

At the recent Asian Church Leaders Conference, young people were able to bring these questions to others before God. We may not have the answers yet, but to follow are some ideas raised.

  • Provide ownership of programs to youth: If there are passionate young people within your congregation, give them the opportunity to take the reins with your support. Allow them to lead programs or offer ideas for the whole church.
  • Gather churchwide youth to be part of Lutheran fellowship together: Lutheran youth in Australia and New Zealand are often spread so far apart that we can feel like we’re the only ones. So, for example, hold a half-yearly gathering to show youth that they are part of something larger.
  • Invite youth to join decision-making bodies: There are many ways to continue Lutheran reformation, and these can start within local congregations when youth feel empowered to lead. And encourage youth with leadership passion to serve on churchwide decision-making bodies. I have been on the International Mission committee for more than three years, and it is such a worthwhile experience.
  • Bring back ideas: It’s unlikely you knew what I have been doing within the GYRN – which is fair enough. But I’m not the only young person involved in mission. Do you know those in your church who are? Your congregation could establish a system by which youth who do mission can bring ideas, stories and projects back to your whole church, not just to the youth.

No matter how old we are, we are all aiming for one goal – sharing the gospel for the glory of God! It is my prayer that the LCANZ can be an agent of God’s love and an agent of change within our local, regional and global contexts. I pray that we can continue to welcome ideas that lead to the continual reformation of the church.

Elsa Matthias is a member of Holy Trinity Lutheran Church Horsham in Victoria.

340

Investing to bring blessings

The standard definition of ‘ethical investment’ involves investing in companies that meet certain standards in the environmental, social and governance aspects of their operations. But investing ethically can mean far more than this.