Faiths walk together to affirm common humanity

A rabbi, an imam and a priest walk into a synagogue.

No, it’s not the start of a joke: it was all part of the Jewish Christian Muslim Association’s Friendship Walk, held on Sunday 11 October, which saw leaders and lay people from the three religions spend the afternoon walking from one house of faith to the next in order to learn more about each other’s beliefs. Watch now

from Anglican Media Melbourne

 

Some highlights from Archbishop Freier’s address to the Melbourne synod on 14 October.

melb_angArchbishop Philip Freier addressed the Melbourne synod on 14 October.

Melbourne Anglican Archbishop Philip Freier last night told the Melbourne Synod, or parliament, the yet to be named company would provide a best-practice process, independent of any diocese.

Being designed by a working group led by Bendigo Bishop Andrew Curnow, the planned company was in part a response to the Royal Commission on Child Sexual Abuse, was the most advanced in Australia and would be valuable to the national church, he said.

Dr Freier, who is metropolitan archbishop of the Victorian dioceses – Melbourne, Ballarat, Bendigo, Wangaratta and Gippsland – said the Royal Commission has told the church it will hold a public hearing in January into complaints and redress procedures in Anglican dioceses.

Giving his address to the synod – an annual gathering of several hundred clergy and laypeople meeting in St Paul’s Cathedral until Saturday – Dr Freier also criticised the State Government for eliminating special religious instruction in school class-time without consultation.

He said the church was in uncharted territory in dealing with the government. It was remarkable that the government acted without consultation, and even more remarkable that it announced the move as a passing reference in a media release about respectful relationships education.

He also called for proper recognition of the 30,000 Aboriginal people who died defending their land in frontier wars during European settlement. “I look forward to the day when we can make a proper recognition of their heroism and love for this land by a suitable commemoration.”

 

Media Release: Penalty rates and freedom of religion

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14 October 2015

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Penalty rates and freedom of religion


Abolishing penalty rates might cause freedom of religion problems and damage both families and faith communities, according to Dr Gordon Preece, chairman of the Social Responsibilities Commission of the Anglican Church in Melbourne.

Dr Preece says large employer groups are lobbying governments to cut Sunday penalty rates, ignoring the wide community preference for Sunday as a shared day of rest, a shared day of worship for many, and the importance of compensation for those deprived of it, often the poorer members of society.

His concern will be discussed by the annual synod, or parliament, of the Anglican Church in Melbourne at St Paul’s Cathedral this week, involving several hundred clergy and laypeople.

It’s not just that Sunday is a day of worship, but the Church should stand with those, religious or not, in protecting special shared days of rest,” Dr Preece says.

For Christians, Muslims and Jews, weekly worship is a required religious duty, but preserving penalty rates protects the whole community.

Resting on the seventh day is built into creation. Human history shows people need that time of rest – it is built into their rhythms. When the French Revolution tried to give a day of rest every 10 days instead of seven it proved unworkable and they had to abandon it.”

The motion on penalty rates is one of many discussions at the synod on social justice, including refugee policy, euthanasia, family violence and gambling.

On refugees, Dr Preece commends the government for reducing the loss of asylum seekers’ lives at sea and for nearly doubling the intake, and calls for bipartisan support for accepting 27,000 refugees by 2017, as recommended by the Federal Government’s expert panel in 2012.

His motion to the synod deplores ongoing revelations of abuse of refugees on Nauru and Manus islands, and the legislation penalising whistle-blowers who do their professional duty by pointing out such cases.

Melbourne Archbishop Philip Freier says the synod gives Anglicans the chance to raise matters of public interest where they think the Church’s view should be noted.

Building religious goodwill

7 October 2015

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Building religious goodwill

With religion tensions again in the news at home and abroad, it is easy to overlook the vast amount of goodwill between religious groups and their role in building peace, according to Anglican Bishop Philip Huggins, president of the Jewish Christian Muslim Association.

“In many of our communities there are strong networks of interfaith friendship,” Bishop Huggins said.

The three faith communities will celebrate and cement their unity with a spring-time walk between their places of worship on Sunday, October 11, at 2pm.

The walk begins at an Anglican church, St Peter’s Eastern Hill, on the corner of Albert and Gisborne Streets. After a reflection and prayer of peace, those taking part will cross the road to the East Melbourne Hebrew Congregation Synagogue at 488 Albert Street, then walk to the Albanian Mosque at 765 Drummond Street in Carlton North, pausing for prayer and reflection in each. Walkers will have the chance to ask questions at each place.

The JCMA has been building common understanding about the Abrahamic faiths since 2003. Its schools program gives teachers and students an opportunity to challenge the stereotypes and misunderstandings they may have about people from different cultural and religious backgrounds.

For more information, please contact JCMA Executive Officer Ginette Everest on 0400 211 221 or (03) 9287 5590.