A prayer for victims of crime

I met with Ray Metcalfe, the State Manager of Prison Fellowship,Tasmania recently. He forwarded me the following prayer which I would like to share with you.

Loving Father,
Please comfort and care for victims of crime and enable us to be Your feet and hands and mouth as we minister to them in Your name. You are the Great Physician and healer of all. You create healing in our bodies, our minds, and our spirit when we are wounded. You redeem us through Your Son. By Your stripes we are healed. By faith in You we are made whole.

We pray for justice, healing, reparation and reconciliation for all victims of crime.
Help us to help the wounded, to take them to the Inn of healing, to bind up their wounds, and give them all they need to get better, instead of bitter.

Gracious Father we pray for the families and friends of those in prison, that you will provide for them and comfort them. Please sustain and heal the relationships that are fractured by separation. Encourage those who are in need to reach out and seek help and hope.

Father of Mercy, the secrets of all hearts are known to you alone. You know who is just and you forgive the unjust. You alone are the Almighty Judge and we, because of our sin, are not worthy to judge anyone. Your grace and mercy is sufficient.
Holy Spirit, we pray that offenders will ‘come to their senses’ like the lost son (Luk 15:17) and that you will give them a way of escape from sin (1 Co 10:13).
Transform them, renew their minds, grant them repentance and cause them to believe in you. Give them patience and hope in their sufferings, and bring them home again soon. Let them trust in Jesus Christ and live with hope.

We pray that all offenders will make amends for the harm they caused, with restitution and reparation, so that they will find a home in our community.

We ask for your blessings for those who support offenders and victims of crime in our communities. We gather together and stand united with them. We are indeed united in the journey towards healing for all those affected by crime. When one of us is hurting after a robbery, a rape, or a murder we all hurt as a community.
We pray for the restoration of offenders into our community and that we, your people, will do all we can to make righteousness flow like a never ending stream.

Jesus, we pray especially for your church, that it will be a beacon of hope and healing for all those affected by crime.

Thank you for all staff and volunteers, who dedicate their time to care for victims and offenders. We pray that their work will be fruitful and that you will refresh them. We pray that among them your people will be beacons of hope, in whom Christ is manifest, and through whom a defence for the hope that we have is proclaimed.

For Jesus’ sake and in whose mighty name we pray. Amen

Ray can be contacted at the following email address: ray.metcalfe@prisonfellowship.org.au

Girls Kidnapped

Many of you would have no doubt been dismayed at recent reports of the kidnapping of 276 schoolgirls in Northern Nigeria – targeted for seeking an education and for their supposed indoctrination in Western values. There were also reports on last week that a further 11 girls had been kidnapped. We can only imagine the pain and grief that the girls and their families must be enduring at this time.

Please pray the following prayer which was written by Elizabeth Smith (International Anglican Women’s Network).

O God, we cry out to you
for the lives and the freedom
of the 276 kidnapped girls in Nigeria.
In their time of danger and fear,
pour out your strong Spirit for them.
Make a way home for them in safety.
Make a way back for them
to the education that will lift them up.
Hold them in the knowledge
that they are not captive slaves,
they are not purchased brides,
but they are your beloved daughters,
and precious in your sight.
Change the hearts and minds of their kidnappers
and of all who choose violence against women and girls.
Cast down the mighty from their seat,
and lift up the humble and meek,
through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

Response to welcome to a new Ministry: Devonport

On Tuesday evening the Venerable Canon John Tongue responded to words of welcome at his Commissioning as Rector of the Parish of the City of Devonport. John’s response is a fine example of Gospel clarity, encouragement, challenge and warm hearted grace. With John’s permission, I share it with you. Thank you, John, and blessings on your life and ministry in Devonport. John’s response:

Thanks:

  • for all the kind words of welcome – to Shirley and me (and the children, in their absence)
  • for those who’ve come along this evening to support us in this new beginning, and those who’ve been praying for us and for the Parish,
  • For the warm welcome we’ve already received from many of the Devonport parishioners
  • to the Ulverstone and Penguin folk, for your sharing with us in this journey of costly generosity

We are really looking forward to continuing the good work that’s been happening here in Devonport.  It has sadly been a situation of much turmoil and heartache, over many years, but even in the midst of that, we give thanks for all those who have contributed to the life of the church, and the growth of Christ’s Kingdom in this place over many years.  We look forward to continuing that legacy, in partnership together.

I look forward to getting to know people, as we all join together in supporting and encouraging each other in the love of Jesus.  To that end, please be patient with me, when I remember your face, but maybe not your name – and also please try to find – or to get, and wearing, a Parish or other name tag, would be a great help, not only to Shirley and me, but to other newcomers to our church, as well.  Also, please don’t be afraid to drop round to the Rectory for a cuppa, or to “have a look at what we’ve done with the place”!!

Because of past history, as a Parish, we will need to “look to ourselves” – to be seeking healing for past hurts, to be building each other up, fostering and encouraging unity and community.  BUT – we can’t just be inward looking!  We believe that in Jesus, we who follow him find real life, but that’s a life that the wider community also needs.  Even as we look to the Lord to strengthen our weak hands, and make firm our feeble knees, so the Lord still calls us to be offering the hope, life and love of Jesus to those around us.  Some of Jesus’ last earthly words to his disciples were “Lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age.”  We here in Devonport (and in Ulverstone and Penguin) cling onto that promise, that Jesus is with us, and so we find strength and comfort in that.  But these words come after he said to them “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me.  Go, therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything that I have commanded.”  Then he said, “And lo! I am with you”.  Go….and Lo! I am with you.  I once heard someone talking on this passage say – “no Go… no Lo”.  The Lord will be with us, to strengthen and encourage us – even in the “going” (by his Spirit) to fulfil his great Commission.

Devonport has been promoted as “The City with Spirit”.  I long to see the Anglican Parish of Devonport, encouraged and empowered by Christ’s Spirit, to be working with the Spirit of Jesus to bring real life to bear in our city, so that it might truly be, “The City with the Holy Spirit”.

This journey may not always be comfortable – but the Lord promises to be with us always, even to the very end of the age.  In a scene from the Bayeux Tapestry in England, depicting the battle of Hastings, one scene has the King standing behind his troops with drawn sword, prodding them in the backs, and urging them onwards into battle – and the caption reads “The King comforteth his troops”!  The Lord will bring us comfort, peace, restoration and renewal in him – but in the journey that lies ahead of us, we expect that this will sometimes be a “discomforting comfort”.  Still, we wait on him to do great things amongst us as we move ahead in partnership in him, and to bless us greatly as he does.

See also: http://imaginarydiocese.org/bishopjohn/2014/05/08/prayer-for-devonport/

Prayer for Devonport

Greetings in the name of the Resurrected Lord Jesus Christ!

I write asking for you to join with me in prayer for the Parish of the City of Devonport over the week 4th to the 10th May.

The Parish of Devonport is about to commence a new season of ministry under the leadership of the Venerable Canon John Tongue and I want to bring to the Parish and City of Devonport the full force of the prayers of the Missionary Diocese of Tasmania.

In order to achieve this, I have asked all Parishes in the Diocese to include prayers for the Parish of the City of Devonport in their worship services on Sunday 4th May.  I have also asked that throughout that week prayer groups and mid week worship services include prayers for Devonport. 

To support this call for prayer, please see below Praise, thanks and Prayer Points for the Parish of Devonport for the week Sunday 4th May to Saturday 10th May. 

We are a Diocese in solidarity in prayer before the Resurrected Lord of Life, Jesus Christ. Alleluia!

Please join in praying for Devonport.  Thank you.

Shalom, + John 

 Praise, Thanks and Prayer points for Parish of the City of Devonport
S
unday 4th May – Saturday 10th May, 2014

 Praise

  • The Lord of all grace and mercy for His salvation won for us in Jesus Christ, and for all the blessings that flow to us as a result,
  • For our wonderful celebrations of Easter just past,
  • For God’s continuing faithfulness to lead his people into the future,

Thanks

  • For the faithful followers of Jesus in Devonport, who have continued as salt and light for the Gospel throughout many years, and many challenges,
  • For valuable lessons learned, and for growth in godliness through all the difficult times, and good times, for Devonport Parish,
  • For faithful partnerships in the gospel between people of the Parish, and a range of locum and full-time ministers over recent years,
  • For a willingness among the People of God in Devonport to continue to grow in Christ, and to advance his Kingdom,
  • For the generous partnership of the Parishes of Ulverstone and Penguin with the Parish of Devonport,

 Prayer

  • For the healing of a whole range of past hurts,
  • For unity in the Gospel,
  • For the Holy Spirit’s enabling people to grow in love for, and trust of, one another across the Parish of Devonport,
  • For the Commissioning of the new Rector, (Ven Canon John Tongue) on the 6th May and his wife Shirley as they settle in to the Parish,
  • For the Parishes of Ulverstone and Penguin, as they explore the future God has in store for them,
  • For the grace and mercy of God to be evident in all our dealings with one another, even when we disagree,
  • For the Holy Spirit of life and love to bind all spirits of division, animosity, and distrust,
  • For all powers and authorities in the heavenly realms opposed to the flourishing of the Kingdom of Jesus in Devonport to be prevented, thwarted and frustrated in their efforts,
  • For growth in knowledge and experience of the length and breadth and height and depth of the love of Christ for his church,
  • For the peace of God that passes all understanding.

A Prayer for the Church
Almighty God,
by whose spirit the whole body of your Church
is called in to a royal priesthood
hear our prayer for all members of your Church in the City of Devonport
that in their vocation and ministry
they may truly serve you,
devoutly love you
and faithfully follow in the way of your son,
Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

See also, Response to welcome to a new ministry: Devonport. http://imaginarydiocese.org/bishopjohn/2014/05/08/response-to-welcome-to-a-new-ministry-devonport/

lifeincolour: Barney’s Ln

What an encouragement from Barney’s Community in Launceston!! Thank you Andy and the Team! Shalom,  John

Hello friends!!

Some of you may already know, but over the last couple of months we have started a regular podcast – the lifeincolour podcast.  The podcast aims to share stories, experiences and ideas from within our Barney’s community all about being followers of Jesus.

Every Friday morning we upload another episode…. (This coming Friday’s episode is possibly the best one yet…. Just saying’ !)

You can listen to each episode at www.lifeincolour.com, or by subscribing to the podcast using this RSS feed

And if you’re not sure what a podcast is, read this page: http://www.lifeincolour.com/a-what-cast

If it turns out that you like the podcast, please ‘like’ it on Facebook too: http://www.facebook.com/thelifeincolourpodcast

And finally, please do let me have any comments, questions or other feedback…

God bless,

Andy,  Rev. Andy Goodacre

Team Leader – Barney’s (St Barnabas’ Anglican Church, Launceston, Tasmania)

New life in Christ

New life in Christ – The foundation of our hope and trust

The Chinese congregation was joyfully expectant as baby Angus was baptised, his father confirmed and eight people reaffirmed their commitment to Christ.

As Christ is our wellspring of life through the Holy Spirit, so we celebrated new life in Christ at the Wellspring Anglican Chinese Congregation in Hobart!

Baptism is a celebration of Life.

Baptism with water signifies the cleansing from sin that Jesus’ death makes possible and the new life that God gives us through the Holy Spirit.

We declared this life affirming proclamation at the commencement of the Baptism Service in Mandarin, Hakka and English! These words affirm our commitment to life twice over: life through our parents and life through the Holy Spirit.

New life is joy filled and often accompanied through pain of birth. Life involves this chaotic intermingling of joy and pain. Why this note of sorrow? Well, life is chaotic and in prior weeks I have been involved with the sudden death of a much respected and loved Rector of the Parish of Deloraine, Revd Bill Knuckey, and time with his grieving family and parish, and a few weeks earlier the unexpected resignation of the Rector of Devonport.

In the midst of this sorrow the loving care of the parishes was amply evident, their heart for the grieving realised in practical compassion.

As affirmed so powerfully at the Service of Thanksgiving for Bill Knuckey,

I have this hope that because Jesus is the resurrection and the life because you (Bill) believed in him, you will never die, but sing praises of Jesus in heavenly places, which will be wonderful.

What is the foundation of our hope and trust in new life?

The foundation is a Person. The foundation is the One who said,

I am the resurrection and the life. Those who believe in me, even though they die, will live, and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die. John 11:25,26

Jesus finishes with the most important question every person will answer: Do you believe this?

At the funeral of a Christian we declared, Yes, we believe!

At the Chinese congregation, in Mandarin, Hakka and English, we declared, Yes, we believe!

On Resurrection Sunday, in languages all around the world, the minister declares, Christ is risen! and we respond with shouts of joy, He is risen indeed. Alleluia!

Yes, I believe!

Christ is risen. He is risen indeed! Alleluia!

New life in Christ is for living. Enjoy!

Shalom,

+ John
Bishop of Tasmania

See article, New Life in Christ: http://www.tasmaniananglican.com/ta201404-01/

More articles in the April issue of our Tasmanian Anglican magazine: http://www.tasmaniananglican.com/ta201404-00/

Easter: Prof Ian Harper, Australian Financial Review

Professor Ian Harper was invited to submit an Easter message for the Easter Weekend Edition of the Australian Financial Review. Please pray that this message strikes a chord in the hearts God has prepared to receive this message.

An Easter Reflection…

There’s nothing like the death of a close friend to remind you of what really matters.  Last week, on successive days, I attended the funerals of an old friend and a young colleague, and gave the eulogy at one of them.  Death seems so final; such a full stop at the end of life’s sentence.

I’m always struck by what people say at funerals.  They remember the person they knew far more than the things they did.  Seldom do they say anything about what the person owned and never how much money they made, although possibly how much of it they gave away.

What people value is the quality of their relationships with the person who died.  After all, this is what they’ll miss.  Some of the deceased’s achievements will last and the wealth they accumulated will be shared around but the ability to relate―the catch-up over coffee, the unexpected phone call, the shared laughter, the hugs and kisses―this is what disappears and leaves those of us left behind feeling abandoned.

When my mother died, my father said it was like someone had torn off his right arm.  “You could still feel it but each time you looked there was nothing there.”

At Easter, Christians reflect on a very significant death.  It was untimely―Jesus of Nazareth was only 33 years old when he died, young even by the standards of the day.  It was violent―death by crucifixion was the cruellest method of execution reserved for the most despicable criminals.  And it was unjust―Pontius Pilate caved in to the demands of the mob even though he could find no grounds for sentencing Jesus to death, let alone death on a Roman cross.

Jesus’ death profoundly shocked and confused his disciples.  Didn’t he claim to be the long-awaited Messiah or Christ who would deliver the Jewish people from their oppression at the hands of the Roman Emperor, the latest in a long succession of tyrants to oppress the Jews?  How could such a deliverer be so easily despatched and show no signs of resistance?

If that was all there was to the Easter story, it would have been forgotten long ago.  How many would-be revolutionaries have ended up on the gallows or before the firing squad, never to be heard of again?  The death of Jesus of Nazareth would be just another political assassination, and there would be no Easter and no Christian church to celebrate it for that matter.

Christians remember the death of Jesus because it was like no other death before or since.  It was not a full stop.  The testimony of the gospel writers recorded in the New Testament is that Jesus did not stay dead but came back to life, with a resurrection body that was recognisable to his disciples, including the famously doubting Thomas, but which was also ethereal and could disappear from view.  After some time meeting and eating with his disciples, the Bible records that Jesus ascended into heaven to be with God the Father, where he lives still and from whence he will one day return to inaugurate the renewal of all creation.

The reason Christians celebrate Easter is not to remember the unjust execution of the founder of their faith but because, miraculously, this was not the end of his story.  The dramatic reversal of events that all human experience before and since associates with finality and irreversibility is the basis of one of Christianity’s most essential qualities―hope.  For Christians, Jesus’ resurrection from the dead affirms that nothing is beyond the redeeming grace of God and that death itself is not the final denouement it appears to be.

If death can be defeated, then nothing can separate us from God’s redeeming love, as St Paul writes in his New Testament letter to the Roman Christians.  But, by the same token, as Paul writes in another letter, if Jesus was not raised from the dead after all, then the Christian faith is “worthless” and Christians are to be pitied above all people.

You don’t need to be a believing Christian to be buoyed by the message of hope that Christians see in the events of the first Easter.  The chocolate eggs and bunny rabbits that fill supermarket shelves and department store displays at this time of year may seem tacky to the faithful but they symbolise the essentially life-affirming message of Easter.

We are surrounded by death every day; not just literal death but the figurative death of projects, businesses, and plans we might have for the future.  Things are always dying but the Easter message is that this is not the end of the story.  In the midst of death and decay there is new life (eggs) and life in abundance (rabbits).  And this is not just about life after death―the ‘pie in the sky when you die’ view of Christian hope.  Of course, this is a very real part of the Easter story.  But Jesus said, “I have come that they might have life and life in abundance.”  This refers to the here and now.  The abundant life we are promised is not one rich in material goods―that may or may not be our lot―but a life rich in hope and love.

The lives I helped to celebrate at the funerals I attended last week were both marked by hope and love.  Speaker after speaker affirmed the hope for better things, especially in the lives of others including children, that drove both people to give so much of themselves during their lifetime, and also affirmed the love they gave and received along the way.  The fruit of hope and love―human relationships―this is what people remembered as they looked back on lives well lived.

The simple message of Easter is that redemption is always at hand.  As desperate as things may seem, life bursts forth in the most unexpected way.  And the life we celebrate is marked by the love we share with one another in human relationships.

Happy Easter!

Easter: The victory of hope

“I feel weak and angry.  It seems hopeless”.

A young woman speaking during the candle-light vigil held after the tragic death of Reza Barati on Manus Island.  She said what so many of us feel when faced with an injustice.  We ask, “Can anything be done?”

We can channel our outrage, for sure.  We can muster our strength as best we can.  But I want to express more than that.  I cannot be content with simply “I hope it will get better.  I hope justice will come.”  But hope demands more, much more. Hope demands a solid basis.  

In Jesus Christ, in his death and resurrection, we have so much more: we have the victory of hope.

Jesus faced the depths of human cruelty and injustice.  He plunged those depths for love, losing his life.  But it was not in vain.  On the third day he was raised to life.

Easter celebrates and refreshes my faith in Christ’s victory over death and evil.  His victory is not just a victory for which I hope – it is a victory which gives me hope: a personal hope. 

It is a great comfort to know that there is victory over death. Therefore we can live with the complexities and cruelties of life in the sure hope of eternal life.

Christ’s resurrection gives me a motivating hope in the present.  It stimulates generosity and compassion and forgiveness.  How can it not do so when it sheds an eternal perspective on the petty winds and waves of our society?

Christ’s resurrection gives me a hope for the future.  Ultimately I look towards the return of the risen Jesus who will bring justice and restore life in its fullness.

Because of Jesus, I can do more than just say, “I hope our work will bear fruit”. Rather, I say, “I have hope; therefore I work for life in its fullness.”

I exclaim with the Apostle Peter, “Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! In his great mercy he has given us new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead”.

At Easter: 1000 Children in Detention!

MEDIA RELEASE    11 April 2014

Australia’s Anglican Archbishops express ‘profound disquiet’ about children held in detention this Easter

 The Anglican Archbishops in Australia will commence Holy Week with a call for more humane treatment of refugees, particularly children in detention.

 The Archbishops have released the following statement deploring the fact that recent figures suggest that around a thousand children will spend Easter in Australian sponsored detention.

 “As leaders of the Anglican Church of Australia we wish to put on record our profound disquiet that at the end of February this year there were more than 950 children in detention facilities and alternative places of detention in Australia, and a further 177 children in offshore detention in Nauru.  The average time people spend in detention is more than eight months.

 “While our Federal Government has been drawing attention to the number of days without boat arrivals, this is another set of numbers that needs close scrutiny.  These children are innocent victims of tragic circumstances.  To use the words of the UN Charter on the rights of the child, detention of children should be used only as a measure of last resort and for the shortest appropriate time.

 “As church leaders, we are not seeking to express a party political opinion on this matter.  Within our Church there is grave disquiet about the asylum seeker policies of both major parties.

 “It is our view that those who flee from desperate circumstances by boat should not be punished by prolonged detention whether in Australia, Nauru or Manus Island. They are not the people smugglers. They are people made in the image of God, who deserve respect from all Australians, but especially our Government and its agencies.  They come to Australia out of desperation, fleeing religious, ethnic or economic persecution. They seek asylum under the Refugee Convention that as a nation we have signed. Many will be found to be refugees, as the Government’s own statistics demonstrate.

 “We call on the Australian Government to ensure that asylum seekers are treated humanely and respectfully by those charged with their care and protection, and that they are attended to in a timely manner.”

The Most Reverend Dr Phillip Aspinall,  Primate and Metropolitan of Queensland

 The Most Reverend Dr Glenn Davies,  Metropolitan of New South Wales

 The Most Reverend Dr Jeffrey Driver,  Metropolitan of South Australia

 The Most Reverend Dr Philip Freier,  Metropolitan of Victoria

 The Right Reverend John Harrower OAM,  Bishop of Tasmania

 The Most Reverend Roger Herft AM,  Metropolitan of Western Australia

For further queries or requests contact Archbishop Driver’s Media Advisor on 0414972537 or E: kmclachlan@adelaide.anglican.com.au.

Six things a child needs

This Blog post is from an article written by James Oakley (six things a child needs from her Christian Parents). Thank you James for allowing me to publish your wonderful work.

Dear Mum and Dad,

How are you? I’m fine, thanks.

Well, enough small talk. You know I get to write a birthday wish list each year (even though you won’t get me everything – jetskis ARE getting cheaper, you know!) Well, I wanted to write a heaven wish list – you know, what I want you to do to help me know who Jesus is, and to trust him so I can go to heaven. I know you think the children’s minister is awesome, and that he will do the job just fine, but I want YOU to help me more than ANYTHING!!.

Well, here goes.

1. Show me what love means. I hear it ALL the time – ‘God so loved the world …’, love this… , love that…  blah blah blah. What does that even mean? Kids at school talk about love, and it just doesn’t make sense.

You’re always trying to get me to like you – is that because you love me? Do you love me when I’m in time out? What about when you’re explaining what I did wrong? (But you do know that WASN’T me, it was my brother!) And when I yelled at you that I hate you – did you love me then?

How will I know what God’s love is? From seeing your love?

2. You should say you’re sorry. I’m not dumb, you know. I’ve known ever since I was six (which is, like, FOREVER!) that you get things wrong too. So please don’t pretend you’re perfect. Tell me when you’re wrong, and say sorry. It will help me to say sorry too. And I love you and respect you more when you’re open with me. That would be cool.

And that time you yelled at me, and then said sorry to me AND to God was, like, WOW! I could see that you meant it. You showed me how to say sorry to God too.

3. Tell me stories. I LOVE it when you tell me stories. I love made-up stories, but I love the true ones even better. I love hearing about you when you were little (well, mostly when you got in trouble. Those stories are FUNNY!) I love when you say how you met. I love stories from the Bible , and I REALLY love hearing about Jesus. Stories are how I find out who you are, how the world works, who Jesus is, how I fit in.

4. You have to take me seriously. I know I ask a LOT of questions but I really like it when you take my questions seriously. I know they sometimes seem silly  – like ‘did Jesus go to Macca’s?’). And I know that I sometimes say things that are hard  – like ‘Sometimes it’s hard to know if God’s real.’) But it’s really great when you don’t laugh and don’t make me feel like I’m being silly. I’m glad I can ask and say things and you still love me.

5. I need you to show me how to follow Jesus. I’m always watching. I’m not dumb  – I see how you spend your time. I can work out what matters to you. Let me see you following Jesus – reading the bible, praying, helping people.

6. Help me to see who I really am. I want to know the truth about the world and about me. I know I’m not an angel or a princess, but I’m not hopeless either. I’m all these things at different times. Please help me learn how it all fits together.

I think that’s about it, Mum and Dad.

Good luck.

From your favourite daughter.  XXX

PS. I’m sure a jetski will help me get to heaven faster. PleasePleasePlease!!

This article can be viewed in the latest edition of the Tasmanian Anglican magazine. Available here:  http://www.tasmaniananglican.com/ta201404-00/