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Standing on Holy Ground

 

Rev Eira Clapton recently visited Sri Lanka with UnitingWorld staff, to see the work of the Methodist Church of Sri Lanka which is supported by the partnership of the Uniting Church in Australia Synod of Western Australia

I start a new notebook for this Sri Lanka trip, because a pen and paper are quickly accessible when you want to make notes in a foreign country. On the title page I write these words: What if we were standing on holy ground“?

Holy ground is difficult to get to. For us it involves a very early start. At 3.51am I climb into a small bus and we set off on crowed roads out of Colombo to the more remote north and east of the country. These are the areas which have been devastated by the double disaster of civil war and tsunami. There are fewer people to do the work in these areas – many of the young were killed in the war, or the disaster, or left disabled by them. The roads are poor so the villages are hard to get to, isolated from each other and from government services. The bus rollicks over dry creeks beds and picks its way at a snail pace around deep potholes.

I visit a Church hall in Muthur, where some tiny children have gathered to greet us with their mothers and preschool teacher.  They place garlands of flowers around our necks as we enter. This is a Church run school for those who can’t afford to send their children to government run preschools. One mother explains that she sells goods to provide for her family. Sometimes there is money for education, sometimes none. In this place everyone is welcome to come – it is a multi-faith school.  The preschool turns no-one away, even though the Church has no funding to support it.  The teacher has not been paid for months, and the only food provided to the children comes from what the parents can bring.

The children sing us a song, which sounds like ‘Heads and shoulders, knees and toes’, and we all smile at each other.

Eira’s Law of Spiritual Economics says “you know you are getting close to the kingdom of God when there is not enough money to do the work”. I conclude that we are very close today.

In the next district we visit more preschools in which teachers work for next to nothing and the churches provide emergency aid type nutrition packs for children, as the whole population is under-nourished. We are treated as special guests each place we go.

If you feel jaded about the church, visiting the projects that your church supports with funds, and meeting the passionate workers at the other end, will make you feel better.

In my notebook I write that I am thinking of all the faithful donors to appeals, and wishing they could have been with us.  We are thanked over and over by each preschool community, but of course they don’t mean to thank us personally -we just represent the Australian churches.

Anyone seen the kingdom of God? Maybe they could start looking around here.

Rev Eira Clapton

 

If you want to be part of sharing the work of the Kingdom of God in this place, you can support the preschool project by donating to:

BSB 036-001  Account 92-1834 Uniting Church in Australia

Reference Sri Lanka Preschools

Cheque – made payable to Uniting Church in Australia

Send to: Social Justice Unit, Uniting Church Synod of WA, GPO Box M952, Perth WA 6843

or email social.justice@wa.uca.org.au

Please note that donations to this appeal are not tax deductible.

 

 

 

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News & Announcements

Boyup brook support for BlazeAid

On behalf of the combined churches of Boyup Brook in the south west of WA, a cheque for $2,055.30 will be presented to BlazeAid, an organisation which assists people in rural Australia after disaster.

The churches, including members of local Uniting, Baptist, Catholic and Anglican Churches asked for donations of second hand books and items for a jumble sale held during the Boyup Brook Country Music Festival.

Volunteers spent many hours sorting the books into various classifications and marking each book with a bargain price. St Saviour’s Anglican Church, located within the area of the street market during the festival, provided the ideal site for the book sale. Volunteers from the local churches thank Boyup Brook Country Music Festival organisers for their support.

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Growing in grace, vitality and mission

Rev David de Kock was inducted as general secretary of the Uniting Church WA on Friday 8 April at Applecross St Stephens Uniting Church.

The service was attended by representatives from all over the church both locally and nationally including congregations, schools and agencies. During the service, many of these people presented symbols, representing the diversity of the placement and those that David will have pastoral responsibility with. Symbols included a Bible, water, bread and wine, as well as a cup, books, wheat, a juniper plant and a mini Good Samaritan Industries donation bin.

Rev Steve Francis, moderator of the Uniting Church WA delivered the sermon, and talked about renewal in the church, encouraging those present to let go and to think creatively.

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World Day of Prayer

This year, on Friday 4 March, people around the world celebrated World Day of Prayer with a service prepared by women in Cuba.

Foothills St Martin’s Uniting Church, in Forrestfield, hosted the service for their area in which the participants came from several local churches.

The theme for the day was ‘Receive children, receive me.’ Foothills St Martin’s Uniting Church provided a preacher, Robert Watson; a speaker, Rita Lennon, a librarian; and others who carried symbols and provided morning tea.

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Concerts connect church and community

There’s a quiet, creative revolution happening in the South Metro region that you might not be aware of. It happens every quarter and is growing in popularity all the time. It’s a musical revolution at Willetton Uniting Church.

Walking into the hall at Willetton for the first concert of the year was a revelation as the room was filled with people, musical instruments, cameras and even a stuffed kookaburra puppet. It wasn’t what I was expecting. The vibrancy and breadth of talent and performers was astounding. Expert pianists as young as 12-years-old and dashing acapella singers with silver lining their hair, variety was exactly the right word for it.

Willetton Uniting Church’s musical heritage is a long one; the concerts themselves began ten years ago, as current concert convener Lyn Muir endeavoured to provide a platform for pianists in the community to practice performing their craft.

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Royal Commission update: Safe Church for all

It is everyone’s responsibility to provide an environment that is safe from sexual abuse for all our children.

The media coverage in February of The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse hearings from Rome, has once again focussed the attention of many.

In Western Australia, the Synod’s Royal Commission Task Group continues to meet regularly, refining our current practices and policies, as well as identifying areas and actions for future improvement. Coupled with this is the need to ensure all aspects of the church’s life are compliant of the new requirements.

As an individual, what can you do?

Most importantly, be actively involved in ensuring the safety of everyone participating in our church community, particularly children. You may need to speak-up, if you see or hear anything which makes you uncomfortable or doesn’t seem quite right.

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Tokyo Ballet in Gingin

Gingin was treated to a fantastic evening recently with the performance from the ABC Tokyo Ballet of ‘The Messiah’ on Tuesday 22 March at the Gingin Soundshell, sponsored by Gingin Uniting Church.

These world-class performers said that the Gingin Soundshell was the best venue they had ever performed at. Everyone was most enthusiastic, and it certainly lived up to expectations, with such a high class ballet and choreographed depiction of the reality of the struggle between good and evil in the world and individual lives. The final scene was one of hope in our current dark world. An afternoon performance at the school was also much enjoyed by the children.

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Support and training for long-term recovery in Fiji

Cyclone Winston, the strongest storm ever recorded in the Southern Hemisphere made landfall in Fiji on 20 February, flattening entire villages with torrential rain, storm surges and winds of more than 300 km per hour.

More than 40 people were killed and thousands of homes damaged. Hospitals, schools, crops, livestock and water supplies were hit and thousands of Fijians were forced to shelter in schools, churches and community buildings. Many remain there today. Thanks to a generous response to UnitingWorld’s emergency appeal – gifts of almost $200 000 – UnitingWorld were able to respond quickly. Funds are being used to assist the Methodist Church in Fiji, a partner church of the Uniting Church in Australia, to work alongside the Fijian government and provide humanitarian relief to thousands of people throughout affected communities.

In particular, providing food, shelter, water purification tablets and cooking utensils, which are critically important for preparing the type of food that is distributed in emergencies and for purifying potentially contaminated water. These materials are being bought in non-affected areas of Fiji, helping to buoy the local economy and sustain the livelihoods of local people.

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Uniting Network marches to welcome LGBTIQ refugees

On Saturday 5 March, Sydney’s Oxford Street was awash with rainbows and  glitter and filled with music for the annual Mardi Gras parade. Seventy people marched with Uniting Network, the LGBTIQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex, queer) members of the Uniting Church in Australia and their friends, families and supporters.

During the march, Uniting Network were drumming to demonstrate anger, and holding lanterns as a symbol of light. The theme of the float was more sombre than the typical Mardi Gras celebrations: LGBTIQ refugees are welcome here. The float was a protest directed towards the Australian government’s treatment of people fleeing persecution overseas because of their LGBTIQ status. There are currently numerous LGBTIQ people having their claims of asylum in Australia slowly processed; some are detained on Manus Island.

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Archives and records

The Uniting Church is responsible for preserving records so they are available for consultation in the future.

Uniting Church records should be maintained as part of general operating procedures.

Records that are no longer in use by congregations should be sent to the Synod Archives at: 91 Edward St Perth WA.

It is particularly important to preserve items such as Baptism registers, Marriage registers and Original Signed Minutes of all committees.