Author Archives: CraigT

MtE Update – February 26 2019

  1. We will have another of our hymn-learning sessions after worship THIS SUNDAY March 3. First among the pieces to be learned is a new communion setting we’ll be using during Lent
  2. We are investigating hearing assistance options in the church; a ‘hearing loop’ under the building is impractical  but there are other options, including systems which assist those with and without hearing aids. If this would interest you, please let Craig know.
  3. Our ASH WEDNESDAY service is Wednesday March 6. This year the service will be preceded by a light meal from 6pm (gold coin donation), with the service itself commencing at 6.45pm. Our Ecclesiastes reflections, commenced last Sunday, will be taken up again in the Ash Wednesday service. 
  4. News from the Justice and International Mission Unit (JIM) of the Synod
  5. Hotham Mission will be running a BBQ fundraiser at Brunswick Bunnings (in the carpark behind the store) on Saturday 09/03/19, between about 8:30am – 4:30pm. IF you are interested and able to assist for however long on the day, please let HM’s community development coorindator, Joey, know (11-2pm is the busiest, but help at any time would be great!): joey.rebakis@hothammission.org.au 
  6. Our Lenten Study series will run for four weeks after Ash Wednesday (Wednesday nights, March 13,20,27 and April 3). An intro to the series can be found here, and hard copies are available in the church. There will also be a Friday morning series at Hawthorn in the same weeks (March 15, 22, 29 and April 5).
  7. If you are interested in participating in an ONLINE (video conference) version of the Lenten studies, early evenings for four weeks on Tuesdays from March 12, please let Craig know. We need ‘quorum’ of 3 or 4…
  8. We will return to Ecclesiastes on Ash Wednesday. This coming Sunday is Transfiguration. If you would like to do some background reading on the texts, see the commentary links here

Other things potentially of interest 

  1.  A Good Friday performance of Bach’s St Matthew’s Passion

Old News

  1. Details of our Lenten and Easter services are now available here.
  2. Beginning this Sunday February 24, and for most of the Sundays and special services in Lent, we will be working through parts of the book of Ecclesiastes, using ‘the Teacher’s’ understanding of ‘life under the sun’ as a way of interpreting Jesus’ path to the cross. More information about this can be found here, but in the mean time you might find it helpful to take the time to read Ecclesiastes once or twice before we begin together with it.

Lectionary Commentary – Transfiguration C

The following links are to the Revised Common Lectionary commentary pages of Howard Wallace and Bill Loader, and are suggested as preparation for hearing the readings in worship for the Sunday indicated above.

Exodus 34:29-35 see also By the Well podcast on this text

Psalm 99

2 Corinthians 3:12 – 4:2 see also By the Well podcast on this text

Luke 9:28-36 (37-43) see also By the Well podcast on this text

 

 

 

MtE Update – February 21 2019

  1. Beginning this Sunday February 24, and for most of the Sundays and special services in Lent, we will be working through parts of the book of Ecclesiastes, using ‘the Teacher’s’ understanding of ‘life under the sun’ as a way of interpreting Jesus’ path to the cross. More information about this can be found here, but in the mean time you might find it helpful to take the time to read Ecclesiastes once or twice before we begin together with it.
  2. Hotham Mission will be running a BBQ fundraiser at Brunswick Bunnings (in the carpark behind the store) on Saturday March 9, between about 8:30am – 4:30pm. If you are interested and able to assist for however long on the day, please let HM’s community development coordindator, Joey, know: joey.rebakis@hothammission.org.au.
    (11am-2pm is the busiest, but help at any time would be great!)
  3. The most recent Synod eNews (Feb 14) is here.
  4. The most recent update from Justice and International Mission Unit is here.
  5. We will have another of our hymn-learning sessions after worship on Sunday March 3.
  6. Our Lenten Study series will run for four weeks after Ash Wednesday (Wednesday nights, March 13,20,27 and April 3). An intro to the series can be found here. There will also be a Friday morning series at Hawthorn in the same weeks (March 15, 22, 29 and April 5).
  7. Our focus on Ecclesiastes begins this Sunday, with Eccles 1.1-18 being our lead text. Each Sunday we will also hear the psalm and gospel set for the day; for those interested in doing some preparation prior to hearing those two readings for this coming Sunday February 24, see the commentary links here

Other things potentially of interest 

  1.  A Good Friday performance of Bach’s St Matthew’s Passion

Old News

  1. Details of our Lenten and Easter services are now available here.

Lectionary Commentary – Epiphany 7C

The following links are to the Revised Common Lectionary commentary pages of Howard Wallace and Bill Loader, and are suggested as preparation for hearing the readings in worship for the Sunday indicated above.

 Genesis 45:3-11, 15 

Psalm 37:1-11, 39-40 see also By the Well podcast on this text

1 Corinthians 15:35-38, 42-50 see also By the Well podcast on this text

Luke 9:28-36 (37-43) see also By the Well podcast on this text

 

 

February 19 – J R B Love

These weekly “People to Commemorate” posts are a kind of calendar for the commemoration of the saints, reproduced here from a Uniting Church Assembly document which can be found in full here. They are intended for copying and pasting into congregational pew sheets on the Sunday closest to the nominated date.

Images (where provided) are of icons by Peter Blackwood; click on the image to download a high resolution copy of the image.

James Robert Beattie (J.R.B.) Love, Christian pioneer

Presbyterian missionary to the Aborigines.

The fifth of 10 children born to the Rev George Clarke Love and his wife, Margaret Georgina, née Beattie, Bob Love’s Christian faith was nurtured in the Presbyterian manse at Strathalbyn, where his father ministered from 1892 to 1923. The family migrated to Australia when he was 5 months old and spent a short period in Vic before moving to SA. Experience gained in the bush around Strathalbyn as he grew helped prepare him for his future work in remote areas of Australia. Interest in a group of Aborigines who camped near their home for a short period kindled his missionary commitment. He taught as a student teacher at Strathalbyn in 1906-7 and was a student at the Pupil Teacher School in Adelaide and commenced study for a BA at University of Adelaide in 1908-9.

He was appointed head teacher of the Leigh Creek School, 500 km north of Adelaide. This environment stimulated his enquiring mind and his interest in exploring the bush. He sent specimens of rare birds to Edwin Ashby for showing at meetings of the Royal Society of SA. One identified as a new genus and species was named Ashbyia lovensis. He visited a nearby mission to learn more about the Aborigines.

In 1912 at the age of 23 he was asked by the Presbyterian Church to undertake an expedition ‘for the purpose of inquiring into the conditions of life among the Aborigines of the Interior’. He left Leigh Creek on 28 Dec 1912 with horses, a mule and two dogs. Accompanied for a short part of the journey by a brother, John, and a friend he travelled extensively in SA, the NT and Qld. He kept a diary and wrote a detailed report of the expedition and formed the habit of meticulous recording of observations, a feature of his later work.

Port George Mission had been established in the north-west of WA in 1912 by the Rev Robert Wilson and his wife Frances. Bob Love was asked to relieve the Wilsons to enable them to take leave. Following his arrival in Dec 1914 he undertook exploratory journeys to seek a new site for the mission. He embarked on a study of the Worora language. He left Port George on 14 July 1915. He enlisted in the AIF on 9 Nov 1915, joined a Light Horse Regiment in April 1916, and transferred to the Imperial Camel Corps in May. In August 1917 he was commissioned 2Lt and promoted Lt in Nov. He transferred to the 14th Light Horse in July 1918 and in Sept was one of the first of the allied troops to enter Damascus. He was wounded in the chest and hand and awarded the DCM and the MC ‘for conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty’.

On his return to Australia he entered Ormond College, University of Melbourne to complete his BA and undertake theological studies. He was ordained in Adelaide in 1922 and appointed to Mapoon Mission in north Qld. He married Margaret Holinger, a teacher at Mapoon, on 5 Sept 1923. They had four children.

After five years of involvement in the evangelistic, administrative, pastoral, agricultural and training work at Mapoon, he heard of financial problems which threatened the closure of Kunmunya, the new site of the former Port George Mission where he had served briefly before the war. He applied to serve as superintendent at Kunmunya and arrived there on 24 Aug 1927.

His early Christian upbringing, knowledge of bushcraft,  academic training, studies in Aboriginal culture and language and experience in leadership contributed to his 13 years of effective service at Kunmunya, a remote community dependent on the mission’s lugger for communication and supplies. He repudiated paternalism and earlier mission policies of opposing traditional customs. He respected the authority of the older men and held regular camp meetings, encouraging the people to discuss problems and make decisions. He was actively involved in the varied tasks of the mission, medical work, education, gardening servicing and running of the lugger, and the cattle industry. He recognised that there were aspects of traditional culture which could be used in explaining the Christian faith. He saw the need of communicating the gospel in the language of the people and engaged in further study of Worora language and translated the Gospels of Mark and Luke. His thesis on Worora grammar earned him an MA from the University of Adelaide. He insisted that when English was spoken by the people they spoke it well. His ministry led to the first baptisms at Easter, 1929 and the further growth of the church at Kunmunya.

While on leave in 1937 he spent 3 months visiting the Pitjantjatjara region of the northwest of SA to advise and assist in the establishment of Ernabella Mission. After 3 more years at Kunmunya he was asked to take up the role as superintendent of Ernabella. Leaving Kunmunya in 1940 he arrived at Ernabella on 2 March 1941 and during the difficult war years administered the development of the sheep industry and assisted in the study of the language. Underlying his involvement in all aspects of the mission’s work was the conviction, as he wrote in 1944, that ‘Our Scriptural commission is to heal the sick and preach the Gospel’.

The Loves left Ernabella on 2 March 1946, to serve as moderator of the Presbyterian Church of South Australia. He was called to the Adelaide Hills charge of Mt Barker-Lobethal-Woodside but ill-health limited his time in ministry. He was described as a model of manly Christianity. The policies he advocated and implemented in the period between the two World Wars, respect for Aboriginal cultures and languages, encouragement of Aboriginal decision making and holistic mission, were forerunners of policies accepted more widely in recent decades.

J R B Love, Stone-Age Bushmen of To-day (London, 1936); M McKenzie, The Road to Mowanjum, (Sydney, 1969)

BILL EDWARDS
Content © Evangelical History Association of Australia and the author, 2004

MtE Update – February 15 2019

  1. Advance notice: Lent is still a while away, but the Lenten Study series will run for four weeks after Ash Wednesday (Wednesday nights, March 13,20,27 and April 3). An intro to the series can be found here. There will also be a Friday morning series at Hawthorn in the same weeks (March 15, 22, 29 and April 5).
  2. Beginning on Sunday February 24, and for most of the Sundays and special services in Lent, we will be working through parts of the book of Ecclesiastes in Lent, using ‘the Teacher’s’ understanding of ‘life under the sun’ as a way of interpreting Jesus’ path to the cross. More information about this can be found here, but in the mean time you might find it helpful to take the time to read Ecclesiastes once or twice before we begin together with it.
  3. Details of our Lenten and Easter services are now available here.
  4. We will have another of our hymn-learning sessions after worship on Sunday March 3.
  5. For those interested in doing some preparation to hearing the readings for this coming Sunday February 17, see the commentary links here. Matt Julius will be with us again as guest preacher.

 

 

Lectionary Commentary – Epiphany 6C

The following links are to the Revised Common Lectionary commentary pages of Howard Wallace and Bill Loader, and are suggested as preparation for hearing the readings in worship for the Sunday indicated above.

Jeremiah 17:5-10 see also By the Well podcast on this text

Psalm 1 

1 Corinthians 15:12-20 see also By the Well podcast on this text

Luke 6:17-26 see also By the Well podcast on this text

Lent and Easter 2019

Lent and Easter at MtE will feature a series of reflections on the teaching of Ecclesiastes and how this challenging scriptural teacher might inform our understanding of who we are, who Jesus is, and what he achieved in his path to the cross. For more details on the Ecclesiastes theme, see here.

Details of our Lenten studies this year are here.

Sunday services are typically at 10am; the ‘special’ Lent and Easter services are as follows.

Ash Wednesday

Wednesday March 6, 6.00pm for a light meal, 6.45 for the service

Palm-Passion Sunday

Sunday April 14, 10.00am, a service based around a reading of the Passion of Christ according to St Luke

Maundy Thursday

Thursday April 18, 7.30pm

Good Friday

Friday April 19, 10.00am

Easter Vigil

Saturday April 20, 8.00pm

Easter Day

Sunday April 21, 10.00am

MtE Update – February 7 2019

  1. Advance notice: Lent is still a while away, but the Lenten Study series will run for four weeks after Ash Wednesday (Wednesday nights, March 13,20,27 and April 3). An intro to the series can be found here. There will also be a Friday morning series at Hawthorn in the same weeks (March 15, 22, 29 and April 5).
  2. Beginning on Sunday February 24, and for most of the Sundays and special services in Lent, we will be working through parts of the book of Ecclesiastes in Lent, using ‘the Teacher’s’ understanding of ‘life under the sun’ as a way of interpreting Jesus’ path to the cross. More information about this can be found here, but in the mean time you might find it helpful to take the time to read Ecclesiastes once or twice before we begin together with it.
  3. For those interested in doing some preparation to hearing the readings for this coming Sunday February 10, see the commentary links here.

Other things potentially of interest 

  1. A public forum on the future of Australian refugee policy at the Immigration Museum

 

Ecumenical Lenten Studies 2019

Each year for many years now Mark the Evangelist and St Mary’s Anglican Church in North Mebourne have enjoyed an ecumenical Lenten study series. This year our studies are on the theme of ‘The Spirit in the Desert’ — the title of a series of talks by Rowan Williams on the faith of the desert monks of the fourth century.

The studies will introduce the thought of the monks and invite us to be more aware of our own calling to be Christians in the place we find ourselves, with the people with whom we have been placed.

The audio will be sourced via YouTube and will be heard in the study sessions, so there’s not much which needs to be prepared beforehand. That said, you might find Williams’ book on the theme (developed from the lectures and published as ‘Silence and Honey Cakes’), very helpful supplementary reading.

Copies of a study guide for the series will be made available a couple of weeks prior to commencement, but can be found in advance here.

In addition to the ecumenical series in North Melbourne, there will be another in Hawthorn; you are welcome to mix and match as you like!

The dates for the study groups are:

  • Wednesdays March 13, 20, 27 and April 3, 630pm for a shared supper and 700pm for the study in the hall, ST MARY’S Anglican Church, 430 Queensberry Street, North Melbourne.
  • Fridays March 13, 22, 29 and April 5, 930am at HABITAT UNITING CHURCH, 2 Minona St Hawthorn.
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