| UPDATE
- 22nd June, 2006
Organisers
report than more than 1,000 communities across Australia took
part in the National Day of Thanksgiving with an estimated
250,000 people either participating directly or impacted by
the day.
“Churches have discovered the outstanding opportunity
the day presents for them to give positive leadership in their
community which can open doors into areas of the community
they have not previously connected with,” organisers
say in a statement.
In Brisbane, hundreds of Christians gave tens of thousands
of hours of community service by cleaning the homes of 370
people who can’t do so themselves while in Launceston
people turned out to watch an ‘honor parade’ down
the main street of the city. In other places across Australia,
Christians gathered to hold breakfasts where local identities
were honored or held community festivals.
The organisers write that unexpected results were reported
in many places. After Christians thanked firefighters in St
Ives, Sydney, for example, the firefighters offered to attend
church the next morning and, after doing so, invited the church
to their Christmas Party.
“Who
knows...where the relationships being built will finish up?”
the organisers ask.
31st
May, 2006
DAVID
ADAMS
“We’re known for being a nation of knockers...”
notes Tasmanian Judy MacKenzie. “(But) one of the things
that we hope will come out of this over a period of years
is that people will appreciate what a great country we live
in and the good things people do for us.”
MacKenzie is one of thousands of people who are taking part
in the National Day of Thanksgiving being held across the
nation this coming Saturday.
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"(It's) a reminder that the exceptional quality
of life we have enjoyed is not accidental," says
Brian Pickering.
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The
convenor of National Day of Thanksgiving celebrations in Launceston,
she
says the city will be holding a thankyou breakfast that morning
to honor those who serve the community in uniform, such as
police, ambulance officers and firemen as well as those serving
in the military, or who care for those who can’t care
for themselves, such the poor or the marginalised. More than
360 people are expected to attend.
“They just come along, get blessed and hopefully go
away feeling blessed and appreciated,” she says.
Later Saturday morning, the community is also, for the first
time, holding an “honor parade” of about 300 people
through the centre of the Launceston CBD, starting at the
Civic Square.
“We’ve hoping the public will come out in force
and shout and cheer and let (those marching) know that they’re
being appreciated,” MacKenzie says.
This year’s National Day of Thanksgiving is the third
that has been held in Australia after the initiative was first
held on the weekend of Pentecost Sunday, 2004.
According to the organisers, tens of thousands of Australians
took part in activities in more than 600 different communities
last year, including an estimated 500 federal and state and
local government politicians.
As many as 80,000 specially printed “Thanksgiving Day”
cards were distributed and church groups and individuals performed
thousands of “random acts of kindness” in association
with the day.
While the day last year highlighted those working in the areas
of health and education, this year’s focus - as evidenced
by the Launceston celebrations - is on thanking those who
serve our nation in uniform and those carers who look after
people unable to care for themselves.
Brian Pickering, national co-ordinator of the day, estimates
that as many as 1,000 communities across the nation will be
holding events this year.
As well as community breakfasts and other public events, churches
are being encouraged to gather together on Saturday night
under the theme of “Australia worships” to give
thanks to God for “his goodness to us as a nation and
as His people”.
The 400th anniversary of the “prophetic declaration”
of Australia as the “Great Southland of the Holy Spirit”
is expected to be a special focus.
Pickering says the National Day of Thanksgiving provides “real
opportunities” for the church to build bridges into
the community while providing the community with a “refreshing
experience of graciousness between citizens”.
“For both it will be a reminder that the exceptional
quality of life we have enjoyed is not accidental,”
he says.
Ken Graham, senior minister at Tea Tree Gully Community Church
in the northern east of Adelaide, is also the leader of ‘Pray
Tea Tree Gully’, an umbrella prayer movement for the
40 to 45 churches in the region which is organising events
for the National Day of Prayer.
As it did last year, the group is holding a breakfast on this
Saturday morning to which churches are inviting people in
uniform - such as those who work in the military, police,
fire and ambulance services - and carers such as those who
care for the disabled, the aged, the dying and the homeless.
“Many
of the people that we’ve had at our breakfasts
have never in this way been acknowledged and appreciated
before and there’s been some quite touching
and moving moments as we ask individuals to stand
and acknowledge them...and you can see tears running
down their cheeks as we acknowledge them...,”
says Ken Graham.
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“But
we haven’t limited it to those two categories,”
says Graham. “They’re the pre-eminent categories
but we’ve got other people coming from other areas as
well. So where-ever a congregation has felt that they wanted
to publicly say thankyou to people at this time, they’re
inviting those people.”
It’s the third year the breakfast has been held in Tea
Tree Gully. The first year, the breakfast attracted around
165 people and last year it attracted 206.
Graham says that as well as the breakfast, church-goers are
taking part in a range of other activities in the area - such
as making morning teas at aged care facilities - over the
week.
He says the day is a chance for people within the church to
say thanks to God and the blessings He has poured out on Australia,
“but we want to say it to other people as well”.
Thanksgiving Day events over the past couple of years have
helped to create connections between the community and the
church, says Graham.
“Many of the people that we’ve had at our breakfasts
have never in this way been acknowledged and appreciated before
and there’s been some quite touching and moving moments
as we ask individuals to stand and acknowledge them...and
you can see tears running down their cheeks as we acknowledge
them...”
Speaking from Tasmania, MacKenzie agrees that the day is a
great way for the church to reach out to the community.
“It’s a great opportunity because we’re
not preaching at them...It’s just the church getting
out of its four walls and instead of trying to get people
to come into the church, it’s the church getting out
into the community.”
In Queensland’s twin towns of Townsville and Thuringowa,
such is the strength of the links created between the community
and the church that the city councils and churches are jointly
organising a civic reception thanking people.
“There’s about 300 guests invited to that,”
says Matthew Bolte, pastor of Hope Community Church and the
coordinator of the National Day of Thanksgiving efforts in
the Townsville area.
”They’ll be given a formal thankyou reception,
there’s a formal thankyou cake that the councils have
ordered made and they’ve also had some special chocolates
made so each individual being thanked will take a selection
of chocolates back to their workplace with the National Day
of Thanksgiving logo embossed upon the top of the chocolates.”
Bolte says that both of the local councils “are very
keen to participate” in the day.
“They’ve put it on their permanent calendar now
and they’ve organised a way of jointly funding it and
rotating which city physically hosts it...” he says.
"They
see themselves, the council, as about building community
and they recognise that the churches are committed
to building community and so they want to partner
with us,” says Pastor
Matthew Bolte.
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“In
fact one of the mayors made the comment that what really excited
him was that the churches and the council were headed in the
same direction. They see themselves, the council, as about
building community and they recognise that the churches are
committed to building community and so they want to partner
with us.”
Bolte says the 50 or 60 churches in Townsville are also holding
a combined worship night on Saturday night and are implementing
a “go to the workplace and say thankyou” program.
Under this program, people from the churches are visiting
fire and police stations and organisations like Lifeline or
St Vincent’s and taking morning teas or cards or ribbons
and saying thankyou on behalf of the churches.
“There are about 80 groups we’re trying to cover,”
says Bolte.
MacKenzie, meanwhile, says the day has also been a unifying
force in the churches in the Launceston area.
“I’m a firm believer that there’s only one
church in the city, many congregations...” she says.
“It’s not only that we can do more when we’re
together but (people) see then there’s only one body
of Christ.”
“When something like this is on - something like the
National Day of Thanksgiving - you just realise the value
of the body of Christ working together.”
~
www.thanksgiving.org.au
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