‘Come heckle Christ’?

“I didn’t think that Jesus was a particularly controversial topic.” 

What an astounding comment!

Josh Ladgrove said it while defending his one-man comedy show ‘Come heckle Christ’. I am compelled to ask, “Is this one-man’s ignorance?”

Is this ‘comedian’ unaware that ‘Jesus’ is an incredibly controversial topic! Jesus himself was crucified for his claims and many of his followers are being persecuted and killed today simply for being followers of Jesus.

I have no in principle objection to mockery and ridicule either in favour or against the Christian faith or any belief. The prophets of old used mockery to show very effectively the folly of idolatry. e.g. Isaiah 44:9-17.

This is where I will both agree and differ with my Brother in Christ, the Revd Fred Nile, who says ‘”free speech does not justify blasphemy” and has urged people to email both the State Government and BankSA and ask them to stop the show’, here.

The Revd Fred Nile, as a Christian, quite appropriately objects to the blasphemy, the denial Christ’s divinity, and sees the show as promoting an opportunity for people to ‘Come heckle’ Christ’. As a believer in Christ’s divinity, I also believe that to ‘heckle Christ’ is blasphemy. This opportunity is clearly promoted by the Adelaide Festival in its claims for this show and due to my Christian belief I find this mockery offensive.

However, I differ with Fed Nile in insisting on Josh Ladgrove’s right to express his views and for his audience to express its views. That is, no matter that I personally find it offensive, I believe that the show must be allowed to go on.

Why is this? Because I believe that freedom of speech is crucial to our society.

Bear in mind that there is a balance here because freedom of speech is not an absolute freedom in Australia or other democracies.

Society’s wisdom asks, “Where does freedom embrace sensitivity, and sensitivity temper freedom?”

The comedian, Josh Ladgrove, claims to be seeking to generate laughter through heckling “an idiot – that’s me”, but is this heckling really against him, or is it against Jesus, or is it against and disdainful of people with disability (note unusual dress and prop define ‘idiot’), or is it a cheap and hurtful way to appeal to our baser instincts and generate a dollar or ????

Josh shared his own wisdom in defending his comedy show:

“The show is just an opportunity for the audience to come along and heckle an idiot – that’s me – for an hour,” he said.

“It’s an entirely improvised show; there is no script, there is no premise, there’s no preconceived idea of what needs to be said.

“It absolutely does not have to be about religion or Christianity or Jesus; it’s simply a means to an end and a catchy title.” . . .

“I didn’t think that Jesus was a particularly controversial topic.” 

My letter to Josh,

Dear Joshua Ladgrove,

With every respect for free speech and creativity in the arts, I must say that I do not find your wisdom in the title and robing for ‘Come heckle Christ’ comedy show, to provide “an opportunity for the audience to come along and heckle an idiot – that’s me – for an hour,” to be compelling.

But my main concern is your apparent ignorance of the person and work of Jesus Christ. I find it astounding that you could state, “I didn’t think that Jesus was a particularly controversial topic.”  Christ died for his claims and teaching and many of his followers are being killed around the world today. I think it is ignorance of Jesus that concerns me as it indicates a staggering lack of knowledge of the beliefs and concerns of many fellow Australians. Moreover, Christians may well not be the only ones unnecessarily offended through your unintended remarks and unintended consequences of your shows.

Please reconsider the ways in which you generate interest in your comedy shows, for the wellbeing of a healthy Australia.

Good humour and edged mockery are both ingredients of a free society. May freedom embrace sensitivity, and sensitivity temper freedom.

I wish you the very best for your comedy career.

Shalom, John

See, ‘Come Heckle Christ’ ABC report. My articles arguing for freedom of speech:  I agree with Irish atheists  and  The West’s fear of free speech.

St. David’s Cathedral hosts Jessie Taylor

St. David’s Cathedral will be hosting a Friday Forum with barrister and refugee advocate, Jessie Taylor on January 31st.  I encourage you to attend.

FRIDAY FORUM: NOT OUR PROBLEM?
How and why civil society offers REFUGE to those in need.

People at our Door

Barrister and Refugee Advocate
JESSIE TAYLOR
will speak and answer your questions.

Friday, Jan 31, 2014
1pm – 2pm
St. David’s Cathedral

Jessie TaylorJessie Taylor has a broad practice in private and public law. She works particularly administrative law, crime, compensation, mental health, human rights & equal opportunity and migration.

Jessie is the author of the report ‘Behind Australian Doors: Examining the Conditions of Detention of Asylum Seekers in Indonesia’. She is co-writer and producer of the films ‘We Will Be Remembered For This’ (2007) and ‘Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea’ (2011).

Jessie has Honours degrees in Law and Arts from Monash University, and a Master of Science (Humanitarian Action) from University College Dublin.

Stranger on the ShoreIn 2012 Jessie and Afghan refugee Jaffar Ali were the subject of an ABC TV Australian Story special episode Stranger on the Shore.

This [episode] tells the story of a young woman unsettling her middle class Melbourne family by going out on a limb to ‘adopt’ a fourteen year old Afghan asylum seeker.

Jaffar Ali arrived in Australia two years ago after escaping from Indonesia in a leaky boat subsequently intercepted near Christmas Island.

Immediately prior to coming to the Bar, Jessie worked as a Duty Lawyer in the Criminal Law division of Victoria Legal Aid. In 2010 she was Associate to Justice Mordecai Bromberg in the Federal Court of Australia, working in administrative law, occupational health and safety, trade practices, Commonwealth entitlements, WorkCover, equal opportunity & human rights, intellectual property, employment and migration.

In 2009 Jessie was contracted by the Federal Attorney-General’s Department as a researcher and writer on the National Human Rights Consultation.

Jessie was Chair of the Law Institute of Victoria Refugee Law Reform Committee and sat on the Executive Committee of the LIV Administrative and Human Rights Law section (2009 & 2010). She was a Visiting Fellow at the Australian Human Rights Centre & an Honorary Research Fellow at the Monash Asia Institute. She has worked as a researcher in the Castan Centre for Human Rights Law, and as a tutor in the Indigenous Tutorial Assistance Scheme.

In 2005 she attended the closing session of the UN Commission on Human Rights as an intern with the Australian delegation. She has worked in community development at Springvale Monash Legal Service, and participated in the general law clinic at SMLS, as well as the joint clinical legal service with the South Eastern Centre Against Sexual Assault, assisting victims of sexual assault to obtain Victims of Crime compensation. She maintains a strong VOCAT practice at the Bar.

Jessie received the 2012 Daniel Pollak Readers’ Pro Bono Award for pro bono work undertaken in her first six months at the bar. She is the Senior Vice President of Liberty Victoria (Victorian Council for Civil Liberties).

See my, Christian compassion 4 Boat people? and When it comes to boat people: whatever happened to ‘concern for the underdog’?

Anglican Camping Tas, Now!

Guest bloggers Glenn and Stelle Carmichael present Anglican Camping Tasmania (ACT):

Thanks Bishop John for letting us hijack your blog!

We’d love to give you 5 good reasons to send a young person to an Anglican camp this summer and 2 big ways you can help.

5 Good Reasons to send a young person to an Anglican Camp:

1. Camps give young people a chance to widen their friendship base.

It can be tough to reach out and make new friends – tougher still in
smaller schools or communities. Camps offer a safe environment for children to  develop healthy friendships with a diverse peer group.

2. Camps provide safe, adrenaline filled outdoor experiences.

Teenage brains are wired to seek risk – outdoor activities such as the ones offered on ACT camps (whitewater kayaking, surfing, abseiling and rock climbing) give young people unique, character building experiences.  Did I mention safe? All activities satisfy the most rigorous risk management tests. All our leaders are accredited by the Anglican Church and in all specialised activities leaders have externally recognised qualifications.

3. Camp leaders provide a unique role as mentors and friends for your children.

Your children will learn so much about Jesus from watching leaders in action – as they serve your children, pray for them, encourage them and challenge them. Young people need these role models as they make big decisions about who they are and what they believe.

4. Camps give a break from screen time.

Our teenagers are far more connected now via screens/ machines than they have ever been. Social media dominates their time and their agenda. Camps cultivate real time community and remove the focus from status updates, tweets and hashtags.

5. Absence makes the heart grow fonder.

Summer is a long stretch for families and having something to break it up is great. Camps give young people something to look forward to and something to talk about for the rest of the year.

Two big ways you can be involved in the camping ministry

1. Pray – God had moved powerfully through this ministry in the past with many of our campers growing in their faith and becoming leaders and ministers in the church. Please pray that God’s spirit will continue to work by challenging, equipping and growing our young people.

2. Sponsor / send a kid. If you have a child, niece, nephew, godchild, next door neighbour or twice removed cousin who you think would benefit – send them along. If money is an issue please email us at anglicancamping@gmail.com and we can work something out.

For more information on Anglican camps, visit www.anglicancampingtasmania.org

Thanks for reading and looking forward to hearing from you,

Glenn and Stelle Carmichael

From me, the Bishop 🙂

I commend Anglican camping Tasmania to you in the strongest possible terms.

I have no doubt that God will nurture life in its fullness through these camping programs and their fine leadership teams.

See, Anglican Camping 2010  and  2012  and  2014 Summer Camps now open!

Tasmanian Anglican Articles – December 2013

The December edition of Tasmanian Anglican is now in circulation.  I encourage you to read some of the articles included in this latest edition.  Enjoy!

In this issueTasAnglican-Dec2013

Christmas Conversation 6: Anger no more

Anger no more

Dear Tasmania

Christmas Greetings! As we celebrate Christmas may we allow the embrace of God in the Baby of Bethlehem to be wonderfully received, and may we embrace one another with God’s heart.

There are 6 conversations I’d like to share with you.  Please click here to see “Anger no more“,  which is #6 in our series of 6.

God’s blessing upon us as we celebrate and embrace Christmas.

Shalom,

+John  🙂
You can view Conversation #1: We are Valued here
You can view Conversation #2: The Just Judge Making Peace here
You can view Conversation #3: Christmas Thoughts for Tasmania here
You can view Conversation #4: You are not Abandoned here
You can view Conversation #5: Take a look at the God who cares here
Bishop’s Christmas Message 2013, here

Christmas Conversation 5: The God who cares

Take a look at the God who cares

Dear Tasmania

Christmas Greetings! As we celebrate Christmas may we allow the embrace of God in the Baby of Bethlehem to be wonderfully received, and may we embrace one another with God’s heart.

There are 6 conversations I’d like to share with you.  Please click here to see “Take a look at the God who cares“,  which is #5 in our series of 6.

God’s blessing upon us as we celebrate and embrace Christmas.

Shalom,

+John  🙂
You can view Conversation #1: We are Valued here
You can view Conversation #2: The Just Judge Making Peace here
You can view Conversation #3: Christmas Thoughts for Tasmania here
You can view Conversation #4: You are not Abandoned here
Bishop’s Christmas Message 2013, here

Christmas Conversation 4: We’re not Abandoned

We are not Abandoned

Dear Tasmania

Christmas Greetings! As we celebrate Christmas may we allow the embrace of God in the Baby of Bethlehem to be wonderfully received, and may we embrace one another with God’s heart.

There are 6 conversations I’d like to share with you.  Please click here to see “We are not Abandoned“,  which is #4 in our series of 6.

God’s blessing upon us as we celebrate and embrace Christmas.

Shalom,

+John  🙂
You can view Conversation #1: We are Valued here
You can view Conversation #2: The Just Judge Making Peace here
You can view Conversation #3: Christmas Thoughts for Tasmania here
Bishop’s Christmas Message 2013, here

Bishop’s Christmas Message 2013

CHRISTMAS: CELEBRATING AND EMBRACING

Christmas: a time for celebrating and a time for embracing.  Christmas is a celebration of our spirituality: our awe and wonder at God born as a baby!   Christmas celebrates our amazement that the Being who made us, our Creator, came as a fully human being to be with us, to communicate with us, to show us how to live life in all its fullness. This is the amazing good news of Christmas.

How do we know that the baby is God? Consider the miracle of His virgin conception, His authority over sickness and death, His teaching, His authority over nature and evil spirits, His death and resurrection. Jesus’ claims about His divinity were either those of a mad man, a bad man or a divine man who was both fully human – and God with us. Logically, He can never be considered just a “good man”.

Christmas is a celebration of life in its fullness:  love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, self-control, friendship, forgiveness, generosity, achievements, and more!

Christmas is a time for embracing these celebrations and embracing one another.  Christmas is a time for embracing healing; the healing of relationships and seeking forgiveness.

Christmas is a time to include those who are lonely; to include those who have suffered the loss of loved ones or the loss of employment; to include those who are struggling. Christmas is a time to care.  If we think about the street in which we live, who are the people who will not have somebody to eat their Christmas pudding with this year?  Who won’t even have a Christmas pudding?  For those of us who are celebrating, let’s invite them over to share.

Let’s celebrate the birth of Jesus and embrace one another, especially those who are struggling.

Celebrate Christmas! Embrace one another! 

See Christmas Conversation: 1 We are valued  and  2 The Just Judge Making Peace  and  3 Christmas Thoughts for Tasmania.

Christmas Conversation 3: Thoughts for Tasmania

Christmas Thoughts for Tasmania

Dear Tasmania

Christmas Greetings! As we celebrate Christmas may we allow the embrace of God in the Baby of Bethlehem to be wonderfully received, and may we embrace one another with God’s heart.

There are 6 conversations I’d like to share with you.  Please click here to see “Christmas Thoughts for Tasmania“,  which is #3 in our series of 6.

God’s blessing upon us as we celebrate and embrace Christmas.

Shalom,

+John  🙂
You can view Conversation #1: We are Valued here
You can view Conversation #2: The Just Judge Making Peace here

Christmas Conversation 2: The Just Judge

The Just Judge Making Peace

Dear Tasmania

Christmas Greetings! As we celebrate Christmas may we allow the embrace of God in the Baby of Bethlehem to be wonderfully received, and may we embrace one another with God’s heart.

There are 6 conversations I’d like to share with you.  Please click here to see “The Just Judge Making Peace“,  which is #2 in our series of 6.

God’s blessing upon us as we celebrate and embrace Christmas.

Shalom,

+John  🙂
You can view Conversation #1: We are Valued here