New Search

If you are not happy with the results below please do another search

871 search results for: church

481

Hundreds share talents through art exhibition

Hundreds of members of the LCANZ family – from small children to the elderly – shared their creative talents through the Living Water Churchwide Simultaneous Art Exhibition last month.

There were 14 exhibitions held across Australia, with five in South Australia, three in Queensland, while Western Australia and New South Wales hosted two each and there was one each in Victoria and the Northern Territory. Some exhibitions were staged purely for online viewing due to COVID-19 restrictions, while others were able to open to in-person visitors. The members of Immanuel Lutheran Church North Adelaide even took their exhibition to their local streets!

All addressing the theme ‘Living Water’, the exhibitions were put on by congregations, Lutheran schools and early learning centres, while members of aged-care communities also took part. The event, which was deferred from last year because of the pandemic, welcomed artists of ‘all ages, stages and media’ and was staged by the Commission on Worship’s Visual Arts Working Group.

482

Editor’s letter

I am constantly inspired by God’s grace shining through the work of members of our Lutheran family in service to his kingdom.

So many of you lovingly serve God, his church and the communities in which he has placed you, whether as volunteers, paid lay workers or pastors, or as ministry supporters. You give unstintingly and almost inexhaustibly of yourselves by sharing your God-given time, talents and resources, and by your prayers.

Isn’t it wonderful (and mind-boggling) that he works through us in this way, according to our giftings and vocations, and despite our human failings? 2 Corinthians 12:9 springs to mind – ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness’. Thank God that this is the case throughout our lives. (If not, there would be some months The Lutheran wouldn’t be finished on time!)

What’s even more remarkable is that no matter how we serve – formally or informally, part-time or full-time, voluntarily or employed, in our congregations or the wider church – or where we’ve come from workwise or vocationally, God uses our life’s experiences to prepare us to bless others and grow his kingdom.

In this edition, we are privileged to share life-journey stories of LCANZ members who serve as pastors, lay workers and volunteers. Their backgrounds are incredibly diverse, and I have been amazed to learn of the many ways God has led these people to his service. I hope you, too, will find encouragement in these testimonies.

Of course, had this been an ‘ordinary’ year, this edition would have been completely different – themed around our upcoming LCANZ Convention of General Synod. But with the triennial meeting now to be held in two parts, including a two-day online meeting on 1–2 October and much of its business deferred until 2022 (see www.generalsynod.lca.org.au for more details) due to the extraordinary circumstances relating to COVID-19, we felt this was a great opportunity to share some personal good-news stories. With many in our two countries in lockdown as I write, I’m sure we can all do with more of those!

And, with our sisters and brothers in New South Wales suffering more than much of Australia and New Zealand, most of our prayer calendar this month is focused on the people and ministries of the LCANZ’s NSW District. Of course, as usual, there are devotions and a themed Bible study to foster our home faith life, too.

And you can read about some wonderful new resources from our church departments, agencies and congregations, including an encouragement to all congregations to recognise, bless and give thanks for those engaged in care in their communities through the Christian Care Sunday project (see page 13).

God bless your reading,

Lisa

483

Expressing thanks for Christian care

by Anna Kroehn

Many people know the story of the Good Samaritan. When an expert in the law asks Jesus, ‘Who is my neighbour?’, he answers the question with a story and another question. Our neighbour is the person in need in our place and time.

In our communities, people offer loving care to their neighbours in different ways. Recognising this care and thanking God for it are the aims of the LCANZ’s Christian Care Sunday. Developed from a proposal to the 2018 Convention of General Synod, the project has gathered resources to help congregations celebrate, honour and bless people engaged in care. This includes congregational care ministries, individuals in formal and informal care roles, and Lutheran aged-care and community services.

Every LCANZ congregation is encouraged to celebrate Christian Care Sunday, choosing a Sunday in the next year to suit their calendar and local organisations.

LCANZ Bishop John Henderson blessed and endorsed the resources during an online launch on 18 August, saying: ‘It is the love of Christ who compels us to care for one another fully, giving ourselves for each other as he has given himself for us. May we always thank God for those who have cared for us in life, as we too, in our turn, care for others.’

WHAT DO THE RESOURCES INCLUDE?

There are Christian Care Sunday resources to help choose a date, in line with the lectionary or other relevant celebrations, while intergenerational worship resources have been provided by Grow Ministries and liturgical helps in line with the Commission on Worship’s Worship Planning Page are available too – including a ‘ready to go’ service order.

The resources are available for free to download from the LCA website at www.lca.org.au/ccs

Once your congregation has held an event, please give us your feedback on the resources at https://forms.office.com/r/vTQGknzPbM

Email me at anna.kroehn@lca.org.au if you need assistance planning your Christian Care Sunday celebration.

CHRISTIAN CARE SUNDAY IDEAS

  • Pray for your local care organisations – including Lutheran aged-care and community services
  • Invite a guest speaker to talk about their care work – a doctor or nurse, social worker or chaplain
  • Provide a special morning tea for your local aged-care staff team, child-care centre or medical centre
  • Write a thank you card to a care professional who has helped you
  • Ask a local care service how your church community can support their work
  • Surprise your pastor, lay worker or chaplain with a gift card, coffee voucher or bunch of flowers to thank them for their care work

Anna Kroehn is Christian Care Sunday project officer.

484

Beauty (and soul) therapy

Are planned church programs or congregational community outreach essential to effective cross-cultural ministry? Or can we also work for the Lord’s harvest in everyday life? Beverley Heidenreich, a member at Trinity Lutheran Church Pasadena in South Australia, shares a recent personal experience.

‘Oh mum, you need your eyebrows threaded’, my exasperated daughter moaned. Forewarned, I headed to a local beautician. It’s one of those little shops in a mall with pictures of beautiful young women on the outside while inside a collection of ageing women in various states of repair reclines on chairs.

This is how my evangelism story began the other day. The staff who attend to my eyebrows are like the beautiful women in the pictures – Indian girls from Hindu families. We always have a good natter.

Today, Irene and Nicky are sorting me out. I have built a rapport with Irene. She has talked about wanting a baby and today is positively ‘popping’, so we share the joy of her ‘bump’.

TAKE IT TO THE LORD IN PRAYER

The girls know I help run a prayer group for my church. They are Hindu but don’t see this as odd as they have praying mothers. So, amid our laughter, I suggested we pray for the baby. I checked if it was okay to pray in Jesus’ name, and they were happy. Placing my hands on the bump, I said, ‘I can feel a foot’, to which Irene laughed, ‘Oh no, that’s my mobile!’

I prayed a simple blessing over the baby and that it would grow to know God and be healthy, strong and full of joy.

Next, Irene asked, ‘Which church do you go to?’, so I told her about my Lutheran church. ‘Oh’, she said, ‘I also work as a carer, and I go to a Lutheran church in Glynde [South Australia] with my client on Sundays. My favourite song is “Jesus loves me”, and when I went to the church recently that was the first song they sang.’ So, we promptly sang ‘Jesus loves me’ there in the beauty parlour, followed by some more laughter.

SEEING THE SPIRIT AT WORK

I felt it was time to take the conversation further, so I said, ‘Do you know why you heard that song, Irene?’. ‘No’, she replied, a little more serious now. ‘It’s because God’s Holy Spirit knows you and is moving over you and calling you.’

They were thoughtful and quiet.

While I paid my bill one of the girls announced, ‘If you go to St Luke’s church and pray, it’s good luck, and your prayers will be answered’. This gave me a chance to explain that Christian prayer is not like praying to Hindu gods because you are praying to your Father in heaven who loves you and wants to know you personally. God hears your prayers, and you don’t need to make a wish.

My prayer then is that God’s Spirit will continue to work in Irene and her colleagues. Praise be to him.

485

Aged and community care webinar series begins

With the Aged Care and Community Services Networking Forum cancelled as an in-person event, the LCANZ’s Ministry with the Ageing has begun providing webinars on a range of important topics.

The first seminar in the series was held last month on the theme ‘Lutheran Care – Identity and Ethos: how God’s love influences our care’. The second in the series will be held at 2.30–3.30pm (ACST) on 14 September on the topic ‘Dementia and the Church’. In it, Committee for Ministry with the Ageing chair Colleen Fitzpatrick speaks with Ann Pietsch about how to become a dementia-friendly church. To register, visit www.lca.org.au/ministry-with-ageing and go to the Events, Training & Resources page.

486

Alternatives being planned for postponed mission conference

LCANZ Local Mission’s New Horizons conference planned for Melbourne in late July, which was to have carried the theme ‘Bridging cultures with the gospel’, was postponed due to COVID-19 restrictions.

The joint New & Renewing Churches and Cross-Cultural Ministry planning team has been working on alternative solutions to deliver its cross-cultural ministry content, with updates to come via the New & Renewing department website at www.newandrenewingchurches.org.au/events/

Future New Horizons conferences are also planned for Brisbane (date to be advised) and New Zealand and Perth (both 2022).

487

Helping young people build a sense of belonging

by Jodi Brook

At Grow Ministries, we often encourage congregations to rethink their ministry to children, young people and their families. But what does ‘rethinking’ ministry involve?

We frequently begin training days with a question: Who or what has influenced your life of faith? Responses often include parents, grandparents, pastors, Sunday school teachers, mentors, friends, Bible studies or Christian camps.

These answers tell us that across decades, geographical locations, and in different sizes of congregations, relationships are among the most important influences on our faith.

We often put energy into programs for children and young people that provide learning and fun but may exclude them from getting to know the wider congregation. Therefore, our rethinking needs to emphasise relationships first and programs second.

So, how can we build relationships with young people in our congregations that help to build connections and a sense of belonging?

Grow Ministries developed 10 Guiding Principles to help efforts in creating effective practices that support ministry to children, young people and their families. This is intergenerational ministry, as it requires the efforts of all generations and brings benefits to all generations.

WHAT ARE THE 10 GUIDING PRINCIPLES?

  1. Leadership – Leaders in homes and congregations have a strong understanding of the nature and practices of effective child, youth and family ministry, and their role within it.
  2. Intergenerational – Meaningful intergenerational church experiences are intentional and valued.
  3. Faith at Home – Faith is integrated into family identity and practice.
  4. Mentoring – Children and young people have multiple adult mentors of vital faith.
  5. Lifelong Faith Formation – Use the NCLS Research framework of church vitality to assess nine core qualities and three attendance measures.
  6. Peer Relationships – Faith formation is encouraged by building Christian relationships through quality, age-specific ministry.
  7. Personal Crisis – People of all ages are engaged in a Christian community that provides support during times of personal crisis.
  8. Gifts and Talents – Opportunities are given to discover and express gifts and talents.
  9. Acts of Service – Opportunities are given to participate in acts of service that show the love of Christ.
  10. Missional – Ministry practices and approaches have a strong missional focus.

Go to www.growministries.org.au/guiding-principles-home/ and click on each principle for ideas and resources.

WHERE SHOULD WE START WITH INTERGENERATIONAL MINISTRY EFFORTS?

Don’t feel like you need to do everything at once. Rather look at the guiding principles list as a menu of opportunities. Think about how God has gifted you and how you could serve a young person in your congregation, family or community.

A great place to start is simply getting to know one person a little better.

Offer to help at youth events, invite a young person to visit your small group. Ask them to speak about how God is working in their lives. Be prepared to share with them also. Become a prayer partner or a pen pal with a young person. May God bless us as we continue to be faithful servants of God’s mission in this world.

Jodi Brook is Director of Grow Ministries.

488

National conference to highlight life issues

Lutherans for Life (LFL) will hold its national conference this month, with registered participants able to attend in person in suburban Adelaide (COVID-permitting), or online via live streaming.

LFL is part of the LCANZ, accountable to the church through the Commission on Social and Bioethical Questions. LFL offers resources and information on life issues on its website (www.lutheransforlife.lca.org.au), through its newsletter, Life News, and on Facebook (Lutherans for Life – Australia).

The one-day conference on 18 September at Our Saviour Lutheran Church Aberfoyle Park will carry the theme ‘Fearfully and wonderfully made – Celebrating the beginnings of human life’. Conference speakers Meagan Schwarz, Kimberley Pfeiffer, Jodie Pickard and Pastor Andrew Brook will address life issues from personal, ethical, biological and biblical perspectives.

To find out more and to register, go to www.lutheransforlife.lca.org.au and click on the news item about the conference on the home page.

489

Devotion book fills rural ministry need

Pastor Stephen Jaensch, who serves St John’s Lutheran Church Emerald in Queensland’s Central Highlands region, says he’d noticed the lack of a genuinely rural devotion resource among the many on offer in Australia.

So, in about 2014, he began encouraging the congregation to join him in producing something to serve country people and provide a resource for rural ministry. Pastor Stephen (pictured) believes he asked members once a year for four years whether they would get behind such a project. The fifth time he asked, they said ‘yes’.

The resulting 204-page book of 118 devotions – Rural Reflections: Living out front with the outback God – was launched by the congregation recently and ‘far exceeded’ Pastor Stephen’s hopes for the project.

‘SMALL BUT TALENTED’ CONGREGATION BACKS PROJECT

Emerald congregation has an average worship attendance of about 20 people and around 50 members. However, while St John’s is not large, Pastor Stephen says it has ‘very talented people’. The Emerald Lutheran family drove the devotion project, including arranging photography, contributors, printing and publicity, but it was also an ecumenical production, with people from eight denominations involved.

‘When the congregation went with it, they carried it far further than I ever imagined’, Pastor Stephen says. ‘Most of the congregation became involved. What really pleased me was that a lot of the younger families became involved.’

Among the 30 contributors, 19 were from St John’s. Eight of the writers are clergy, while 22 are laypeople.

‘It’s designed to cover every circumstance unique to the country’, Pastor Stephen said of the book, which includes sections entitled ‘Rain’, ‘Farming, agriculture and regional industries’, ‘Drought’, and ‘Family life’.

Rural Reflections is available for $20 (to cover costs) at www.emerald.lutheran.org.au

490

Sharing the love and Joy of music

by Helen Beringen

Joy Mules was about three years old when she caught the music bug. In around 1938, the brass bands parading through the streets of Tanunda, in South Australia’s Barossa Valley, drew her away from her mother’s side to march off with one of them.

And just like the German heritage of that annual brass band competition, her rich music heritage was founded in the Lutheran Church.

The eldest of five children, Joy began learning to play the piano at eight years old and by 14 she was playing for Sunday school at the Berri-Renmark Parish in South Australia’s Riverland.

Her pastor, Ern Stolz, encouraged her to take a turn to play for the worship service, a gift she has continued to share for the past 70 years.

Now turning 86 this month, Joy is still on the organ roster at St John’s congregation Unley, where she has worshipped since moving to Adelaide from the Riverland two years ago.

Whether it’s organ music for worship services, piano accompaniment for choirs, or singing, music continues to be the lifeblood flowing through Joy’s veins.

Her early music experiences included singing at a naturalisation ceremony in front of Sir Alexander Downer, then High Commissioner of Australia; to an audience of 3000 at the Brisbane Town Hall as part of a youth convention; and being in 15 Riverland Musical Society productions over 50 years.

Born in Berri in 1935, Joy grew up Glossop and was cutting apricots on the family property by the age of five.

Her interest in music was also a family affair, as the wider family had lovely singing voices and would gather monthly on a Sunday night for singsongs, she recalls.

Joy even met her husband Jim through music, at a local fundraising dance where she was making sandwiches in the kitchen for supper, as her father thought that, at 16, she was too young to attend. Jim ended up dancing her down the aisle in 1958.

‘We moved to Barmera to a fruit property where we raised our son Peter, and our two daughters Jenny and Angela, all of whom have done us proud’, Joy says. The family has now grown to include five grandchildren.

Music sustained Joy through the tough years of bringing up a family and fruit picking and pruning on the property with Jim.

Joy continued to share her musical talents in her church and community until retiring from the farm at age 70, after her husband’s passing.

‘I had to keep serving the Lord no matter what stage of life I was in’, she says. ‘I need to continue doing what I can while I can, that’s keeping me going.’

Joy has volunteered for most of her life, influenced by Christian parents. She was even her congregational delegate at the LCA’s General Synod in 1976 – four years before women received the right to vote at Synod, so she was only granted observer status.

Her church life has been full, with commitments including Sunday school teaching, church council membership and serving as chairperson. Her volunteer efforts in the broader Riverland community, which spanned sport and the arts, were recognised by an Australia Day honour in 2018 when she was named ‘Citizen of the Year’ by the Berri Barmera Council, which she describes as a ‘humbling privilege’.

That same philosophy led Joy to volunteer to raise funds to support refugee children to go to school through the Australian Lutheran World Service Walk My Way fundraiser through the town and countryside of SA’s Barossa Valley on 1 May this year.

Walking from Nuriootpa to Tanunda, Joy was the oldest registered participant, raising enough money to send almost seven refugee children to school.

Despite not being a regular walker, Joy covered just over nine kilometres, not including her training sessions with daughter Angela, who accompanied her on the walk.

‘I was halfway, and I suddenly thought, “God, please give me strength”, and he did’, Joy recalls.

That same strength still sees her on the church roster for readings, flowers and organ at St John’s Unley, as well as volunteering her time to play the piano for residents at the nearby Fullarton Lutheran Homes fortnightly and hymns in the chapel once a month.

Her husband once asked her when she was going to retire from playing the organ. Her response: ‘I’m not going to retire, why would I? God has given me this talent.’

‘I have had a few challenges throughout my journey through life and have only managed them because of my faith in my Lord and Saviour’, she says. ‘Faith is my second name.’

How fitting then, that her favourite Psalm 23 is one she’s sung at many special occasions including weddings and funerals. It is an ongoing reminder of his guidance throughout her life.

‘I always ask God to guide my fingers to play for his glory.’

Helen Beringen 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