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Victoria Tasmania District of the Lutheran Church of Australia

1201 Riversdale Road
Box Hill South VIC 3128
Phone 03 9236 1200

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Search Results for: church

Letting off steam at St Paul’s Box Hill

On Saturday morning last weekend about fifteen ministry and governance leaders from the St Paul’s Box Hill and Chinese Lutheran Church of Victoria congregations came together to learn more about fire safety. Alex from FES educated us about home and workplace protection and after some discussion and some eye opening videos we adjourned to the rear of the church grounds to practise using fire extinguishers.

If you can participate in emergency procedure training it’s well worth considering engaging in this type of session. You can also engage in more general emergency evacuation sessions. At the very least take time twice a year before or after service to ensure members and visitors can locate fire extinguishers, fire exits and the evacuation assembly point.

Other tips include:
• install smoke detectors in every room – fire moves quickly (and change batteries at least annually)
• reduce clutter – unnecessary items are fuel to fire
• consider chemicals used in the church and at home
• turn off electrical equipment when not in use
• ensure tagging and testing are done as required
• locate fire prevention equipment near exits
• consider the likely high risk areas and activities
• appoint wardens who are able to take the lead in an emergency
• develop an evacuation plan and practise and review it
• in the case of an actual fire ensure 000 is called, even if the fire appears to be out and close internal doors and windows and open fire exits

This is not a comprehensive list. We recommend all congregations develop a safety plan and communicate it to members and non-member site users, and review it regularly. You can also contact the Fire Prevention Association of Australia (FPA) to get information on providers of choice

Filed Under: congregational leadership

Vale Pastor Geoff Schirmer (em)

We were saddened to hear of the death of Pastor Geoff Schirmer last week. Pastor Geoff served in many Calls over his ministry, including as District Hospital Chaplain from 1994 – 2003. We pray that God will comfort Pastor Geoff’s wife Colleen, their children and children-in-law Kym, Paul & Kristy, and Jacki & Tony, and extended family and friends.

The funeral will be held at St Johns Church,165 Yarra Street Geelong, at 10am on Thursday 10th February 2022. Please note that you will need to check in using the QR code before the service, and masks will need to be worn in the Church. The service will be available on livestream from 9.50am on  YouTube St Johns Lutheran Church Geelong LIVE. You can find the link by going to the St Johns YouTube channel at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTjQZ1pFr1UNxKUkpzQcSaQ and clicking on the livestream on the day. The service will also be available to watch on YouTube after that time.

Following the service there will be a light luncheon from 12 noon to 2pm in the Community Centre at the Windsor Park Retirement Village, 120-130 Townsend Road, St Albans Park. Parking is available on Dickens Drive and Townsend Road. Please note that evidence of vaccination is required for entry into the Community Centre.

There will be opportunity for donations to the Leukaemia Foundation (in lieu of flowers) at the funeral. For those attending via livestream, you can donate at www.leukaemia.org.au.

Colleen Schirmer passed on the message ‘Thank you for all your kinds words, wishes and thoughts in recent days, and particularly for giving us a chance to laugh as we have talked about Geoff and the many things he got up to! It has been greatly appreciated’.

Filed Under: News

Expression of Interest sought – People & Strategy Subcommittee

An opportunity exists to serve the LCA Victorian and Tasmanian District on the People and Strategy subcommittee, a subcommittee of the LCAV District Church Council.

The role of the People & Strategy subcommittee is to assist DCC to ensure appropriate strategies, policies, and frameworks are in place for effective people management, strategy development and nominations and elections, taking into account the environment in which LCAVD operates.

We would welcome people with skills and experience in the Human Resource area, balancing the existing skills base of strategic planning, risk management and church governance.

Expressions of interest are sought from those willing and able to contribute Human Resource skills, and the characteristics and capacity per the Terms of Reference

Applicants should provide details of relevant skills and experience and motivation for this role.

Enquiries and applications to: People & Strategy subcommittee Chairperson, Katie Lang      Email: katie.lang@lca.org.au.

District Church Council are responsible for the appointment of members to the People & Strategy Subcommittee

Filed Under: Uncategorised

National Carers Week 10 – 16 October

Running from 10-16 October 2021, National Carers Week is a time to recognise and celebrate the 2.65 million Australians, and 430,000 New Zealanders, who provide care and support to a family member or friend.

Carers are people who provide unpaid care and support to family members and friends who have a disability, mental health condition, chronic condition, terminal illness, an alcohol or other drug issue or who are frail aged – anyone at any time can become a carer. Many, many people in our Lutheran church communities are carers, and we remember and celebrate them this month!

Great resources for reflection:

Messages of Hope by Lutheran Media has excellent resources that reflect the reality of being a carer, and offer hope through this season. In the Chronic Pain series, you can watch episode 2, “What about the Carer?” to learn more about what it means to be a carer and reflect on how to support carers. Order a discussion guide from Lutheran Media to use as a bible study or reflection with your small group or family; it comes as an e-book or packaged with the Chronic Pain DVD series. Alternately, watch John and Maureen’s story in Dementia – this is our story.

So many people are providing informal, unpaid care for family and friends in our communities – let’s give thanks for them, honour their work, and support them in this essential role. God’s love comes to life when we celebrate and care for those people who compassionately care for people in need.

Easy ideas for a celebration:

Download the Christian Care Sunday resources at www.lca.org.au/ccs and plan to include a prayer for carers in your worship service in Carers Week.

In Australia, put up a poster for the Carer Gateway in your church so that those in care roles know there is Government funded support available to them. You can request posters and other resources free of charge from https://publications.carergateway.gov.au/ or by ringing 1800 050 009 in business hours. In New Zealand, provide ‘A Guide for Carers’ or other resources from Carers NZ, available online at www.carers.net.nz or by phoning 0800 777 797.

Host a morning tea for carers to chat and connect – perhaps even virtually over zoom if you are in lockdown, or people find it hard to leave home and their care responsibilities.

Celebrate the carers in your community with a card, a coffee voucher or chocolate bar, or a prayer of blessing. Order cards or tracts to use from Lutheran Tract Mission https://www.ltm.org.au/.

A prayer for carers:

Lord Jesus Christ, we remember how exhausted you often were as you gave yourself to all who came to you in need. In the midst of a raging storm, you slept in the bottom of a rough fisherman’s boat. Thank you that you understand how we can become drained and empty by the demands made on us as we constantly care for those who depend on us. Renew our strength that we may not flag in our service. Refresh our spirits that we may work with patience and with joy. And restore our love that we may serve in the same way as we love to serve you. We ask this for your glory. Amen.

Adapted from David Short & David Searle, Pastoral Visitation: A Pocket Manual, p. 83 – as reproduced in the Mental Health and Pastoral Care Institute 10/10 church resources pack accessed online at http://www.mentalhealthinstitute.org.au/resources/1010-videos

Short Messages of Hope to share in Carers Week on your social media platform:

Caring for someone you love with chronic illness https://youtu.be/xq-xKORMnxs

Who cares for the carers? https://youtu.be/rcGtTbYJbEw

Dementia – this is our story https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JUUxw-eJnGg&t=393s

If you would like support to celebrate Carers Week or Christian Care Sunday in your congregation, please contact the Project Officer, Anna Kroehn via email: anna.kroehn@lca.org.au.

Filed Under: Uncategorised

Update on LCA Child Safety Standards

In recent months, you may have heard about the draft LCA Child Safety Standards for Congregations. These draft standards have been developed as a mechanism for implementing the National Principles for Child Safe Organisations within our congregations. The proposed LCA standards are heavily reflective of the National Principles in content and requirements but are tailored to the congregational context and have been written in straight forward and user-friendly language. They incorporate a simple self-assessment requirement, and a child safety planning process for church councils to oversee and implement.

It is important that our Church embraces the proposed standards within our congregations, given that the child safety regulatory landscape in Australia is changing – most jurisdictions have either already implemented a new regulatory framework for child safety compliance or have indicated their intention to do so in the near future. This is new ground for churches and presents new challenges for our congregations in relation to child safety proactivity, compliance and reporting.

Of greater importance, implementation of the proposed standards within our congregations has the potential to yield great benefits – not only in terms of the safety and well-being of our children and young people, but also in connecting with our children and their families, and in helping us to further strengthen our already well-established child safety commitments.

The LCA draft child safety standards were released for targeted consultation across LCA Districts in May 2021. Consultation sessions with various congregations have been held and completed in Queensland and Victoria with further consultations scheduled to take place in NSW, the ACT and Western Australia in the coming weeks. Thus far, the consultations have been well attended and very informative. They have produced some robust discussions and generated a wealth of constructive suggestions for improvement. A big thank you to all who have contributed to the consultations to date.

In South Australia, the proposed LCA child safety standards are currently being trialled in a small number of congregations. This has involved the application of the proposed self-assessment process and will soon progress to the development of congregational child safety plans. It is anticipated that the trial will help us to gain a realistic picture of the implementation process, in terms of practicalities, constraints, timeframes and workload. Participants in the trial have also been able to identify areas for improvement and have already provided us with many helpful suggestions for change. A big thank you also to those who are participating in the trial.

We plan to have completed the consultations and the trial by the end of August and to have collated and analysed all the data by mid-October. A finalised version of the standards incorporating learnings from the consultations and the trial will then be prepared and submitted to the General Church Board for consideration and approval in October.

Pending GCB approval, it is intended that implementation of the LCA Child Safety Standards for Congregations will commence in early 2022.

If you have any queries about the consultation or the proposed standards, please contact either the Professional Standards Officer in your district or myself. We are very happy to answer any queries you might have, and our contact details are provided below.

Mary-Ann Carver
LCA Child Protection Project Officer
28th July 2021

Contact Details:
Mary-Ann Carver
LCA Child Protection Project Officer,
mary-ann.carver@lca.org.au
Based in the churchwide office, 197 Archer St North Adelaide, SA
Ph: 08 8267 7300 or 0490 281 727

Vic/Tas District Professional Standards Officer:
Denise Muschamp
denise.muschamp@lca.org.au
0437 180 928

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Child Safety Standards

Giving Thanks for Those Preparing to Serve

Romans 10:15b — “How beautiful are the feet of those who bring good news…”

In today’s edition of the Vic-Tas District eNews (29 April 2026), you’ll have seen a joyous report concerning the recent graduations of Erin Grainger and Pr. Sue Westhorp – congratulations Erin and Pr. Sue!

It is wonderful to acknowledge that theological study is not merely academic advancement; it is part of the church’s prayerful discernment of how God provides servants for his people and mission. In a heartening recent update from ALC we can give thanks for:

  • 44 students currently enrolled in Theology and Ministry courses at ALC in Semester 1, 2026 (19 females and 25 males).
  • Of these, 12 are discerning the General Ministry Pastor pathway, and 15 are engaged in Specific Ministry Pastor opportunities.
  • There are also 26 participants in LEA’s Leadership Development Program completing an ALC unit in Educational Theology, plus 11 Bachelor of Counselling students.
  • Within the Vic/Tas District, several people are already connected with SMP pathways, and one person is listed as discerning pastoral ministry.

What a cause for thanksgiving! In a time when the church is acutely conscious of the need for ministry workers, God is still stirring hearts toward study, discernment, formation, and service.

Behind every enrolment number is a person, a story, a congregation, and a possible call of God that deserves prayerful attention. Perhaps God is ‘tapping you on the shoulder’?

A new and encouraging local example: SMP formation in practice

At Horsham, Adam Borgas, a licensed SMP Candidate, is serving in a structured ministry-training arrangement connected with Holy Trinity Horsham and the Dimboola–Natimuk Parish. Pr Hans Peethala is providing close face-to-face oversight and mentoring for Adam as he completes field work along with his SMP study program at ALC.

  • The arrangement is providing a clear framework for shared ministry for the remainder of 2026.
  • Adam’s service is 25 hours per week, with Horsham his primary ministry base and the Dimboola-Natimuk parish as appreciative partners and recipients of his ministry.
  • Oversight, supervision, workload safeguards, local pastoral needs, and careful formal review points are all built into the arrangement so that Adam is well supported.

Please pray for Adam and all those supporting him, including through the office of Bishop as we receive this wonderful example of God helping the LCANZ respond faithfully and creatively to ministry need while also caring for the formation and wellbeing of the person being prepared.

Filed Under: Congregational Support

Easter Camp Review

Easter Camp 2026 ran over the Easter long weekend at Araluen Lutheran Camp in Anglesea, bringing together a vibrant community for a memorable weekend of faith, fellowship, and fun. We were thrilled to welcome a large contingent of under-18 campers who heard about us through our other LYV camps and other youth ministries. Integrating them with our other young adults brought an awesome, energetic dynamic to the weekend.

This year’s theme, “Through the Ages”, invited campers to sift through the chapters of Jesus’ life alongside their own. Through upfronts and small groups, we explored how Jesus navigated the human experience and how we can live our lives in light of his resurrection. Our final study then brought everything together by focusing on evangelism; by discussing how to share the Gospel with others, this session beautifully pointed through the ages of the Christian church to its future.

A true highlight of the weekend was our Friday evening Passover dinner. A Messianic Jew from the Celebrate Messiah ministry guided us through the traditional elements of the meal, including the four cups, matzah, bitter herbs, and the lamb shank bone, beautifully explaining how each element points directly to our ultimate Passover Lamb in Christ. Other moving worship moments included interactive prayer stations focusing on the persecuted church, and a dawn service on Anglesea beach just as the sun rose.

Beyond worship and studies, the schedule was packed with activities that brought out everyone’s competitive and creative spirits. Teams battled it out in a campsite-wide “Civilisation Game” and tested their communication in a Play-Doh “Sculpture Showdown”. Campers also appreciated the relaxed, unstructured free time spent playing board games and sharing fellowship with each other.

A huge thank you to everyone who participated and served: we are already looking forward to doing it all again at Easter Camp 2027!

    

Filed Under: homepage, Youth and Young Adult Ministry

Ash Wednesday

At our Ash Wednesday services, we hear an Old Testament reading from the prophet Joel:

“Blow the trumpet in Zion; sound the alarm on my holy mountain! … the day of the LORD is coming… a day of darkness and gloom… Yet even now, declares the LORD, return to me with all your heart… rend your hearts and not your garments. Return to the LORD your God, for he is gracious and merciful…” (Joel 2:1–2, 12–13)

That’s vivid and startling imagery from Joel – he grabs our attention with his cry of alarm, and talk of darkness, gloom, and ‘rending’ of hearts.

Ash Wednesday, and the season of Lent, are an annual reality-check for us. In the Ash Wednesday service, there is an invitation for ashes to be marked on the worshipper’s forehead as a sign of our fragility and of this world’s temporary and fragile nature. In this, God’s Word tells us the stark truth about our human condition. Yet these ashes are traced in a particular pattern—the pattern of a cross. So even as God speaks his confronting word, he also speaks his comforting word: the truth of what he has done for us in Jesus Christ. God’s rescue has come, by Jesus’ cross and resurrection. And so God’s last word to us is his grace and mercy.

This year other images were fresh in our minds on Ash Wednesday.

As we considered darkness, gloom and ash, the reality of Victoria’s recent bushfires was particularly vivid for some.

The image of a stately old tree, destroyed by fire and covered with ash, bears witness to a day when things were fragile, frightening, and temporary. This image is of an historic tree at Keith and Sally Lockwood’s property at Natimuk. Numerous homes were destroyed, including a former manse next door to the Lutheran Church.

Our prayers are still needed for those who survived and are carrying the shock – and further afield for those who lost loved ones in other parts of the state.

In a firestorm, what we thought we could rely on can ignite and become ash with terrifying speed. This is a reality check.

But Ash Wednesday is not the Church being grim for the sake of it. It is God’s kindness returning us to reality through the call to repent.

We misunderstand repentance though, if we think it is a religious self-improvement project — “I’ll try harder… so that God will be pleased with me… so that God will overlook the ‘other stuff’… so that God will see that ‘at least I’m trying!’

Each of those “so thats” is merely a bargain, a religious cloak that we drag on, an attempt to manage God on our own terms.

No, repentance is a gift. “God’s kindness leads you to repentance” says Paul in Romans 2:4.

And God delivers this gift through his Word, as he speaks to us in the two ways that our Lutheran tradition has called God’s two ‘words’: his first word that exposes and kills the lie (the law), and his last word that raises and restores us with Jesus (the gospel).

Listen to Joel again: “Return to me with all your heart… rend your hearts…” (Joel 2:12–13). God is not asking for a performance. He is after our heart—because our heart is the problem.

God’s first word names the truth that we want to avoid: the world is broken—and we are involved. The brokenness is seen in the environment’s attempts to kill us – and our attempts to kill the environment. The Bible gives us language to describe this: “the world is fallen” from where God intended it to be. St Paul says: “the whole creation has been groaning” (Romans 8:22). We see it and feel it in the fragility of things, when the “normal” conditions we assume should be with us every day suddenly disappear in a storm of ferocious fire – or when our health fails or some other unexpected suffering lands.

But, ultimately, God’s Word refuses to let us hide behind the delusion that the problem is “out there somewhere.” Because repentance calls us to recognize that the deepest crisis is not in the atmosphere, or the politics, or the stupidity of other people. The deepest crisis is in our own human heart.

Our propensity to love and trust things other than God, and our propensity towards selfishness, has destructive implications for our relationships, within families, between husbands and wives, between parents and children. Between the two sexes generally. Between Christians. Between Christian groups.

The problem of sin is not ‘out there’. The Russian novelist Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn wrote that “the line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being”. This is why the Psalmist does not pray, “Help me polish myself up,” but: “Have mercy… wash me… create in me a clean heart” (Psalm 51). He is pleading for divine action, not human effort.

And here is the good news: God has taken divine action. God does not speak his first word to you without intending that you also hear his last word.

After fire, what do we see: in time first shoots push through what has been a dead landscape. The ground is cleared, the undergrowth opened, gentle life-giving light reaches places it hasn’t reached for years. Repentance has this shape too: God clears away the dense undergrowth of self-deception and sin, and then God’s light, the light which is Jesus himself, reaches us—reaches into us, with the consoling word of forgiveness.

God’s last word is Jesus.

On Ash Wednesday the ashes speak to us of God’s first word – but the cross shape that they come in speaks to us of God’s last word. Joel puts it like this: “Return to the LORD your God, for he is gracious and merciful…”

And so, also on Ash Wednesday we hear St Paul writing with the same kind of urgency as Joel: “We implore you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled to God… now is the day of salvation” (2 Corinthians 5:20; 6:2).

And how does God reconcile you? Not by telling you to climb back up to him, but by coming down right to where you are – in his Son: “For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God” (2 Corinthians 5:21).

And so God’s last word, the gospel, does not say to us: “Achieve.” It says: “Receive!”

God does not say: “Fix yourself,” but “Look!, behold my perfect Son, given for you.”

I saw an illustration of the divine help of the gospel back in 2009, right after another Victorian bush fire. That was the year of the cataclysmic Black Saturday bushfires. Many will remember the horrific scale of loss—lives, homes, communities, and the long shadow that followed. At the time, I was serving as pastor at Greensborough, and we had parishioners in the fire zone north of Melbourne. When Sunday morning came, the news was still unfolding. We were fearful for our members; phone calls were made, but communications were out.

One member had prepared as well as he possibly could—but in truth, he probably should have left earlier. He fought off ember attacks, but as the fire approached, his equipment failed. And in that moment, when careful preparation hit its limit, he did the only thing left to do: he got inside his home, shut the doors, and waited and prayed. He described the roar outside like a freight train. The sky went black. The air turned to grit. Heat pressed in. With nothing left to do, he could only hunker down and cry out “Lord, please save me!”

What saved him and his home was help from outside. The firefighting helicopter nicknamed, “Elvis”. Help arrived in the form of a massive, drenching deluge: thousands of litres of cleansing, quenching, cooling water hit the property.

Hearing him tell the story, I couldn’t help but be reminded of our baptism — in that fire, my parishioner was ‘buried’ in saving water. St Paul teaches us: “Don’t you know that all of us who were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? … we were buried with him… in order that… we too may live a new life” (Romans 6:3–4).

My parishioner was the recipient of a reality check that day. He discovered what he could not do. He also discovered the difference between self-salvation and rescue.

We are led into repentance when we realise all of our “so that” strategies are useless, when our old self hits the end of its resources.

And then, God meets us with grace from outside ourselves. Christ’s death and resurrection deliver to us, again, the needed rescue.

So, each Ash Wednesday when ashes say, “You are dust, and to dust you shall return,” the cross says the deeper thing: you are not abandoned dust. You are dust claimed by Christ — washed, forgiven, and made new. Dust with new life breathed into it.

God’s last word to you is not “try harder.” God’s last word is Jesus: crucified, risen, and given for you.

Return to the Lord, yes. But hear what that really means: return to the One who has already returned to you.

In the name of Jesus! Amen.

Filed Under: devotions, homepage

Theological Foundations – LCA Child Safety Standard 7

The greatest command is the command to love (Matthew 22:36–40).
As receivers of God’s love in Christ and by the power of the Holy Spirit, we also willingly respond to the mandate to teach God’s commands (Matthew 28:20; John 14:26), in order that all in our congregations are clear about the importance of child safety.
This teaching happens not just in word, but also by example (Titus 2:7; 1 Timothy 4:12; Philippians 3:17).

Understanding child safety implies we dedicate ourselves to learning and discovering, being open to implementing current best practice.

This is in contrast to believing we can continue to do things the way we’ve always done them!

The LCANZ runs Safe Church training and provides other useful resources, such as in the Congregational Life Hub https://www.lca.org.au/clh/, to inform us and help us be well prepared and equipped for service.

Are you equipped for service?  Is your Safe Church Training up to date?

Filed Under: Professional Standards Unit

Theological Foundations – LCA Child Safety Standard 6

Continuing our focus on the Scriptural basis for our Child Safety Standards, this month we consider how we manage our reports and complaints processes.

Because human beings are imperfect, methods for airing grievances, resolving disputes and challenging behaviours have existed ever since communities were formed. These methods have been part of church communities too (Matthew 18:15–17; 1 Corinthians 6:1–8). However, by their nature, these processes are often weighted in favour of those with power. Given God’s clear concern for justice for the vulnerable, voiceless and underprivileged (Deuteronomy 10:17,18; Psalm 146:9; Matthew 18:6; Mark 1:40,41; James 1:27), we recognise the need for a complaints system that gives protection, voice and power to those, like children, who may not usually have access to these things.

Ignoring difficult issues and potentially harmful behaviours is not a healthy or safe way to operate. We want to provide a mechanism that allows concerns to be raised and then effectively dealt with. We especially need to encourage, support and empower our most vulnerable members in this process.

Have you checked out the relevant resources for congregational use?

https://www.lca.org.au/child-safety-standards/css-resources/

Please ensure that you display the latest “Report Abuse” poster in your church premises.
This is the one on a red background (replaces the blue one).
This can be downloaded and printed –
https://www.lca.org.au/service-areas/professional-standards/

Filed Under: Professional Standards Unit

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