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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: pastor

Planned Giving

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Planned Giving

Every Sunday the offering plate comes past you again in church. To whom, or to what, are you giving? I’m not looking for an answer like ‘To God, of course’. Where do you believe your money is going? Christians are called to be generous. If your gift is going to help your congregation meet its budget, you may not be passionately moved to give generously. Budgets are hard to get really enthused about – unless you’re a congregation treasurer! We don’t give to budgets; we give so that people may be better equipped to do God’s work. Or we give to meet the needs of people who are hurting in some way. Or we give so that our pastor may continue to equip us for our ministries. Or so that new pastors, lay workers and teachers may be trained. Or so that some lonely person listening to a radio may hear the gospel. We are called to be generous. We are called to help people.’

—From a devotion by Bob Turnbull, in ‘New Strength for each Day’ (LCA, Openbook, 1998)

Planned giving from congregations to the district is a very important part of each congregational budget. Planned giving supports the staffing of the District Office, which in turn provides support back through training, assistance with advice, managing risk and the various other high-level administrative and compliance tasks that arise in our congregational communities.

 

LAMP & LAMP 2

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LAMP & LAMP 2

LAMP stands for Lutherans in Australasia Members Portal. For many years, it has been the Lutheran Church of Australia and New Zealand’s electronic directory.

LAMP has now been replaced by LAMP 2 and the congregation, parish or agencies details can be updated there.

LCA Statistics are now able to be entered in LAMP 2 also.

What do you need to do?

If you are a pastor, lay worker, or parish or congregation leader, and you have not completed and returned your LAMP2 access form, you must do this now.

Visit the LCA LAMP 2 webpage for forms and more information.

Administration

  • DEPARTMENTS Homepage
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Administration

The District Office provides operational and administrative support through the work of the District Administrator Stephen Mildred, Executive Assistant Kate Burke, and the District Finance Officer Wai Yee Li.

  • Constitutions
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Hospital Chaplaincy

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Hospital Chaplaincy

Lutheran Hospital Chaplaincy is generally offered on a regular basis to Lutheran patients in the inner-city hospitals of Melbourne, by the part time District Hospital Chaplain (position currently vacant).

Chaplaincy is offered to Lutheran patients, many coming to Melbourne for critical care from across Victoria and nearby states, some for a short-term stay, and others for a slow and complex return to health, where their lives may be forever changed. Patients and their families express appreciation for Lutheran pastoral care during their stay in hospital.

With the patient’s permission, you may contact the District Office to arrange a visit to Melbourne inner-suburbs hospitals.  Please note that, while the position is vacant, only emergency visits are possible.

When possible, Melbourne hospitals regularly covered are:

  • Alfred
  • Austin/Repat
  • Cabrini
  • Caritas Christi
  • Epworth Richmond; Epworth Freemasons
  • St Vincent's Private East Melbourne; St Vincent's Private Fitzroy
  • Mercy Heidelberg; Mercy Private
  • Peter MacCallum
  • Royal Children’s; Royal Melbourne; Royal Women’s
  • St Vincent’s; St Vincent’s Private

For pastoral care to patients in hospitals other than those listed above, please contact the District Office, who can direct you to the local pastor in the area.

District Hospital Chaplaincy is partly funded through donations to the District Lenten Appeal and by funds raised by the This n That Community Store.

Hospital Chaplaincy

District Hospital Chaplain
position currently vacant

30th Anniversary of Ordination – Pastor Frank Rasenberger

On Sunday 4 February 2024, Pastor Frank Rasenberger celebrated 30 years since his ordination with his current congregation, St John’s Lutheran Church Ballarat, where he has been serving as pastor of Word and Sacrament since January 2023.

Pastor Frank was ordained on 30 January 1994, at New Life Lutheran Church in Browns Plains. Present were: Pastor John Vitale (Qld District President at the time), Pastor James Haak (pastor of New Life congregation at the time), Pastor Eric Simpfendorfer (who confirmed Frank), and Pastor Melvin Mueller (the pastor who started New Life congregation).

Frank’s 30 years of ministry has included:

1994 – 2000 – Cambrai-Sedan Lutheran Parish – Cambrai, Sedan, Black Hill, Stonefield
2000 – 2008 – Crow’s Nest Lutheran Parish – Crow’s Nest, Haden, Cooyar (added later)
2009 – 2013 – Gympie Lutheran Parish – Gympie, Imbil, Tin Can Bay
2014 – 2022 – Northwest Melbourne Regional Ministry – Melton, St Albans, Sunbury
2023 – present – St John’s Lutheran Church, Ballarat

Frank’s wife, Anne, provided the following reflection:

Congratulations to my husband for reaching 30 years of Ministry in the LCANZ. The verse and hymn below came to me when I was thinking about what to say.

“You go before me and follow me.
You place your hand of blessing on my head.”
Psalm 139:5

“Thy strong Word did cleave the darkness;
At Thy speaking it was done.
For created light we thank Thee,
While Thine ordered seasons run.
Alleluia! Alleluia! Praise to Thee who light dost send!
Alleluia! Alleluia! Alleluia without end…”
Martin Franzmann, 1954

God has gone before us every step of the way, leading us by His holy and inerrant Word, using Frank to do His work as pastor, with me by his side, and later also Josiah. This has been an interesting, challenging, and inspiring journey, and God has always been there, despite our imperfections, leading us and guiding us. I have realised that God uses ordinary people to do His work, just as he has used my husband’s gifts to do His work, with us as His family by His side along the journey.

Thanks to God first of all for all His goodness, love, and mercy. Thanks to our parents, siblings, nieces, and nephews for their support. My sister joined us with her children and our friends who were able to attend. Many who couldn’t attend have sent greetings. Thanks to the ladies who set up the hall and everyone who attended and brought some food to share. Thanks also to Ron for reading out the greetings. Thanks also to Paul for setting up the slide show of memories of Frank’s time serving as pastor in the LCANZ.

God has gone before us and has been with us through the ups and downs of life in Ministry, and He will continue to lead us and guide us into the future, whatever that may be.

Filed Under: community

Pastor Janos Dabasy reflects

Pastor Janos Dabasy, pastor to the Melbourne Hungarian Congregation, retires on Friday 10th September, also his 85th birthday. Pastor Janos shares the story of his life and the journey into ministry as a Specific Ministry Pastor.

I was born before the war. The first few years comprised many beautiful memories.

Then came the war. Memories include: my father who was in the army corps of engineers was sent to the Russian front; the nightly air-raid sirens; spending nights downstairs in the strongest part of the house; a large part of the city flattened by carpet bombing; moving out to the country to avoid bombardment; in 1945 running away from the advancing Soviet army, first on train then on foot; overrun by the Soviets in Austria near the German border; going back on foot to Hungary; spending nearly 12 years under the communist puppet government; participating as university student in the ill-fated uprising in 1956; fleeing from Hungary to Austria empty handed on foot to escape persecution.

I arrived in Australia empty handed at end of October 1957 on a Thursday not knowing the language, and with a half-finished qualification. Next Monday, I went to work as draughtsman. My first boss was a Dutch engineer with whom I conversed in German, another engineer was Ukrainian with whom I communicated in Russian (it was compulsory in school). I worked for one day, the next was a holiday and I got paid. What was the holiday for? “A horse race”! What a great country?!! Now, 64 years later, I still think it is a great country!

After finishing engineering I worked as an engineer for 32 years. My experience included leading the mechanical design for several new chemical plants around Australia as principal design engineer.

The motto of my life is Romans 12:12 “Rejoice in hope, be patient in tribulation, persevere in prayer.” It became my motto after a harrowing experience I had waiting for my father to be released from detention by the secret police. Throughout my life I often needed this advice! It is most appropriate also now during the pandemic.

The Hungarian Lutheran Congregation was served by pastors Béla Bernhardt from Sydney, Peter Kemeny from Perth, and Arpad Breglec from Sydney usually bi-monthly. I served as one of the founding ‘presbyters’ (council members), and after the death of the chairperson in the seventies, I was elected the new chairman. When pastors were not in Melbourne we had reader services. I was one of the readers.  My duty as chairman was to hold the congregation together. I visited members, called them on phone; made sure that they were not forgotten. During Pr. Arpad’s time I became authorised to conduct communion services.

In 1994 Pr. Arpad realised that I should be able to be ordained as PWAT (pastor with alternative training – now SMP). The Congregation extended a call to me. Pr. Arpad recommended me for ordination to the College of Presidents.  The COP accepted the recommendation and I was ordained on 23 April 1995.

My ordination was the culmination of my entire life. My confirmation in 1948 had a lasting effect on me. It firmly bound me to the Church. Shortly, maybe a year after my confirmation, I received a very personal call to service from the Lord. I did not act on it for many years. I was channeled in to engineering. I fulfilled my role as engineer successfully, but the call was still bothering me deep down. In the mid 1980’s I enrolled at the Seminary via correspondence, but I was dispirited by the length of the time it would have taken to finish the study.  But the Lord did not let me go. In 1995 He called me to serve Him as PWAT/SMP. I am grateful for the opportunity to serve for 26 years, I am grateful to the Lord for not punishing me for not listening to Him but dragging me, into His service.

In addition to serving the Melbourne Congregation, I also served the Hungarian Congregation in Adelaide for 10 years, until their closure. I still serve the Rosebud congregation and have been helping out in several congregations around Melbourne when the pastor was not available.

I have to mention that after God, my best support is my dear wife, Eva. She is my sounding board, and checks my English. She is active in the Glen Waverley congregation and has given spirituality days for Lutheran Women of Victoria.

I am transferring to become a Pastor Emeritus (SMP), but it does not mean that I will rest on my laurels. I will still look after the Hungarian Lutherans in Melbourne, serve Rosebud and I would be still happy to help out occasionally if needed.

I close with the words Lutherans in Hungary greet each other:

A Mighty Fortress Is Our God!

by Pastor Janos Dabasy

Filed Under: Uncategorised

Farewell Pastor Tom Peitsch

Pastor Tom Peitsch was farewelled on Sunday 05 July at a small service at the Lilydale Immanuel Lutheran Church. Pastor Tom had served Lilydale and Croydon Outer Eastern since 2015 and more recently also served the Doncaster Lutheran Church as the congregations joined in a pastor sharing arrangement since 2019.
District Pastor for Congregational Support, Brett Kennett performed the rite of farewell. In a final video message to the congregations he has served Pastor Tom thanked members for their support and shared his prayer that God will continue to guide and direct them as they seek to know his will and that God blesses them in faith and strengthens them as people of grace, claimed by God through his love for them in Jesus Christ.
We thank Pastor Tom for his good service to his members and his support of the Victorian Tasmanian District, including sitting on the District Continuing Education planning committee. We pray that he and Flossie can enjoy a relaxing and rewarding life under God’s good care.

Filed Under: Uncategorised

Installation of Pastor Nathan Hedt

On Monday 28 April, Pastor Nathan Hedt was installed as Pastor to Luther College, Croydon Hills.

Pastor Nathan is looking forward to supporting the school community in general, both students and staff, and continuing to support IGNITE, an outreach which began at the College in 2024, while Pr Nathan was in the role of LCA ‘Pastor for New and Renewing’. IGNITE is a Sunday evening, student-led worship service, and a developing community that is intergenerational and invitational. Contact Pastor Nathan or Luther College for more information.

Pastor Nathan will also be working closely with the two College Chaplains, Anita Foster & Simone Turner.

Filed Under: community

Pastor for Ministry and Formation

Earlier this year the District was approached  by Lutheran Education Victoria New South Wales & Tasmania (LEVNT) about the possibility of a call to a pastor, through the District, to oversee, support and train lay chaplains in schools across the LEVNT region. The current shortage of school pastors has left 5 out of 7 of the district’s full time school pastor positions vacant, with the one more nearing retirement within a year and the other not long after. Attempts to fill vacancies through calls and Expression of Interest have yielded no result.  In the meantime, schools and colleges are employing lay chaplains, in order to fill the pastoral care ‘gap’. The new role of Pastor for ministry and formation will provide a spiritual oversight role for lay chaplains in District schools.

District Bishop Lester Priebbenow and  LEVNT Executive Director Julian Denholm worked together to bring a recommendation on this matter through Vic-Tas District Church Council (DCC) to College of Bishops, who approved the new pastor position, noting that in effect it would replace existing pastoral positions that were not likely to be filled. DCC subsequently received a recommendation from the District Board for Lutheran Education (acting as the call committee) to extend the call to Pastor David Spike, of Geelong Lutheran College, who had already been seconded part-time to LEVNT for a similar supporting role. We are excited that Pastor David has accepted the call, and look forward to his commencement in the role.

Filed Under: News, Uncategorised

Thank God for Your Pastor – a devotion by Rev Lester Priebbenow

When was the last time you thanked God for your pastor? Or told your pastor you thank God for him?
The Epiphany 4 Bible readings drew attention – among other things – to the human tendency to judge God’s servants by their outward appearance or manner.
After Jesus addressed his hometown congregation at the beginning of his earthly ministry, Luke tells us, ‘All spoke well of him and were amazed at the gracious words that came from his lips’ (Luke 4:22). When God called Jeremiah as a prophet to the nations, Jeremiah was afraid that the people would not listen to him because he was too young and ‘didn’t know how to speak’ (Jeremiah 1:6).
Likewise, Moses knew he was not as eloquent as his brother Aaron, and Paul knew people criticized him because his ‘bodily presence was weak.’ People today still fall prey to the human tendency to judge pastors because of their outward traits or personality and to evaluate or compare them with others. This tendency is exacerbated by the age we live in where there is a strong focus on meeting personal needs and where digital media allows us greater ability to choose what suits us.
Jesus knew, however, that human popularity is not the way of God’s kingdom. In Luke 4 we see Jesus deliberately bursting the bubble of his newfound popularity to remind his own people that for him to become the Saviour of all nations would mean being rejected by his own people – which they immediately began to do. In Jeremiah 1 we hear God reassuring Jeremiah that when God’s message made him unpopular, God himself would calm his fears and rescue him.
Both Jesus and Jeremiah were sent with a message of judgement and grace. God told Jeremiah that the words he was called to speak would ‘uproot and tear down, destroy and overthrow and build and plant’ (Jeremiah 1:10).
The words God puts in the mouths of his servants, our pastors, are also words of judgement and grace. They are words intended to go to work on our lives, evaluating us, convincing us of sin and bringing us assurance of salvation.
Author Tim Keller puts it this way, “The power of the Gospel comes in two movements. It first says, ‘I am more sinful and flawed than I ever dared believe,’ but then it quickly follows with, ‘I am more accepted and loved than I ever dared hope’” (Shaped by the Gospel p. 66).
The first of those movements is not always easy for us to hear. It wasn’t easy for the people that Jesus, Jeremiah, Moses, and Paul were called to go to either. But let us thank God that the words God puts in our pastor’s mouth are also words he intends to go to work on our lives, ‘uprooting and tearing down’ every vestige of self-righteousness so that he may ‘build and plant’ us in the knowledge of his grace as our only sure and eternal hope.
Unlike Jesus – and more like Jeremiah, Moses, and Paul – our pastors are not perfect. Like the 12 disciples, Jesus chooses and uses people of diverse personalities and backgrounds to be his servants. Because they too are sinners, Paul reminds pastors that God’s Word needs to go to work on their lives too. Because of the high calling and ‘noble task’ to which God calls them, it is necessary that they prove themselves to be faithful, trustworthy, diligent, and compassionate shepherds of God’s flock.
So don’t forget to thank God for your pastor – and tell him that you do! (If you are in vacancy, thank God for the pastors that serve you in various ways currently.) Give thanks for what God – through you – has called your pastor to do. Pray that God would protect and rescue him, and help him to speak God’s Word without fear so that this Word may go to work on the hearts and minds of his people.
Pastor Lester Priebbenow
District Bishop, Victoria and Tasmania

Filed Under: devotions

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