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AUSTRALIAN
HISTORY: Why Australia's Christian heritage matters Charles Francis QC |
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Too many Australian academics and commentators
tend to downplay or deride Christianity's vital contribution to our nation. Charles
Francis QC, however, takes the opposite view and reminds us why we ought
to remember our Christian heritage - today more than ever. I want to discuss a much-neglected area
of Australian history - our Christian heritage. To me it is a matter of
regret that, in 1988, when we celebrated our bi-centenary, very little
reference at all was made to that heritage nor to
its considerable contribution to our nationhood. No doubt this was in part due to modern
theories of the interpretation of history, theories which emerged in the
second and third decades of the 20th century and which blossomed in the 1940s
and '50s, when history came to be interpreted primarily in economic terms
rather than in terms of the influence of particular men. As early as 1913 the American historian
Charles Beard wrote his Economic Interpretation of the Constitution of the
United States, whilst in 1928 in England Richard H. Tawney,
who was both a Christian and a socialist, wrote his famous Religion and
the Rise of Capitalism. Interpretation Manning Clark in the immediate post-war
period became In his History of Australia
Clark did chronicle some of the details of what was done by individual
Christians in early Australia, but, to my mind, did not attach sufficient
importance to the influence of their beliefs on the future development of our
country. In general, there has been a neglect in emphasising the importance of the totality of
the religious beliefs of all denominations. Perhaps, most forgotten of all,
is the strong influence of the Anglican tradition, to which I will refer
further on. I would like to begin with the
Portuguese navigator Pedro Fernández de Quirós (1563-1615). In the ninth century AD, the great
Polynesian navigator Kupe had already charted most
of the South Pacific. Kupe had reached When the Spaniards came to Although he was a Portuguese, de Quirós was, for much of his life, in the service of Before finally sailing from the
Peruvian Whether or not de Quirós
reached In 1642 the Dutch seafarer and explorer
Abel Tasman made his great voyage from Although William Dampier, our first
English visitor, is often spoken of as a rascal and a pirate, after his
voyage to "But this satisfaction I am sure
of having, that the things themselves in the discovery of which I have been
employed, are most worthy of our diligentest search
and inquiry; being the various and wonderful works of God in different parts
of the world. "And however unfit a person I may
be in other respects to have undertaken this task, yet at least I have given
a faithful account, and have found some things undiscovered by any before,
and which may at least be some assistance and direction to better qualified
persons who shall come after me. "I returned to England in the Canterbury
East-India ship, for which wonderful deliverance from so many and great
dangers I think myself bound to return continual thanks to Almighty God;
whose divine providence if it shall please to bring me safe again to my
native country from my present intended voyage."[3] The renowned English navigator and
explorer Captain James Cook had been baptised in the Anglican parish church
of Marton-in-Cleveland in north Before he sailed, Cook's wife Elizabeth
gave him an Anglican prayer-book from which source he named a number of
places on Far more religious was Cook's immediate
companion, Sir Joseph Banks. A naturalist with a deep love of the productions
of nature, Banks believed that every consideration that a man made of the
works of the Almighty increased a man's admiration of his Creator. Religion and good order When, finally, the First Fleet sailed
from In the first draft of these
instructions he was to grant full liberty of conscience, and the free
exercise of all modes of religious worship not prohibited by law, provided
his charges were content with a quiet and peaceable enjoyment of the same,
not giving offence or scandal to government; he was to cause the laws against
blasphemy, profaneness, adultery, fornication, polygamy, incest, profanation
of the Lord's Day, swearing and drunkenness to be rigorously executed. He was not to admit to the office of
justice of the peace any person whose ill-fame or conversation might occasion
scandal; he was to take care that the Book of Common Prayer as by Law
established be read each Sunday and holy day, and that the Blessed Sacrament
be administered according to the rites of the Church of England.[5] Of the First Fleet approximately
two-thirds classified themselves as Church of England and one-third as Roman
Catholics. The Home Office appointed as chaplain the Revd Richard Johnson who
had been recommended by the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel. Johnson was a worthy man, but he was
unfortunately caught in the conflict between his own conception of religion
and that of Governor Phillip. Johnson saw religion as the divine medium for
eternal salvation, but the governor saw it rather as a medium of
subordination, and gauged a chaplain by the efficiency of his work as a moral
policeman. On Sunday, February 3, 1788, under a
huge tree, Johnson preached his first sermon to a congregation of troops and
convicts. He chose as his text Psalm 116, verse 12: "What shall I render
unto the Lord for all His benefits toward me?" Unfortunately for Johnson, he made
singularly little progress, and the depravity of the troops and convicts
brought him at times to hopelessness and despair. After the departure of
Phillip, even more disappointing for Johnson was the attitude of Phillip's
successor, Francis Grose, who did not conceal his
contempt for Johnson and all he sought to do. Grose
ordered Johnson to conduct his services at 6 am and to cut the entire
service, including the sermon, to three-quarters of an hour only. After Revd Johnson returned to Marsden had considerable Christian
influence in Under Governor Lachlan Macquarie,
Christianity made considerable progress in Manning Clark says of Macquarie that
"to instruct the rising generation in those principles which, he
believed, could alone render them dutiful and obedient to their parents and
superiors, honest, faithful and useful members of society, and good
Christians, he established several schools in Sydney and the subordinate
settlements".[7] Under Not only did Macquarie build schools at
Liverpool, In Among many of our early explorers too,
Christianity was an enormous source of strength which helped them to
accomplish their greatest feats. When Matthew Flinders was questioned
about sailing on a Sunday on his epic voyage along the eastern coast, he
replied: "The stars still shine on the Sabbath. How could we keep it
better than in telling the glory of Creation?" After his voyage was
over, Flinders wrote: "Such was the plan I pursued and, with the
blessing of God, nothing of importance should have been left for future
discoverers."[8] Scenes of danger Even greater seems to have been the
faith and devoutness of Captain Charles Sturt. He
maintained that by one way only was peace to be found, and that was by
prayer. In many scenes of danger Sturt was
comforted and refreshed by prayer, and he asserted that "no treasure on
earth" would ever persuade him to give up the inestimable comfort of
pouring forth his feelings before God in the silence of his chamber.[9] On his long voyages down the Darling
and In the early 19th-century we can point
to many famous Christian Australians, all of whom made notable contributions.
Mrs Pryor who visited convict-woman ships, Rowland Hassall,
Ellis Bent (the judge advocate), Therry and Connolly (the first Catholic
priests), Governor Thomas Brisbane, Archdeacon William Broughton, Caroline
Chisholm and Eliza, wife of Governor Darling. From time to time, in early Australian
history, the influence of even one Christian leader alone has often proved
profound. When George Arthur was appointed lieutenant-governor of Van Diemen's Land in 1824, James Stephen of the Colonial
Office told him that he had an opportunity to make the dependency of When a number of aborigines wandered
into the small town of This example was quickly followed in
high places in The influence of Sir William Stawell in
From then on, Stawell's influence on Stawell assisted in the foundation of
numerous charitable institutions and helped to form the constitution of the
Anglican Church in Even as chief justice, despite his many
other civic duties, Stawell still found time each Sunday to teach at the
Anglican children's Sunday School. More recently, in Sir Edmund Herring, who
was appointed chief justice in 1944, Great leaders The people and events which I have
mentioned form but a small part of the totality of our great Christian
heritage. We have produced great leaders in the past, many of whom were also
great Christians. We often ask ourselves today why we
have no great leaders. May I suggest the greatest leaders are not produced by
political systems but rather by a deep and abiding Christian philosophy? We
fail to honour - and risk forgetting - our Christian heritage at our peril. We need to remember God and our
Christian heritage with humility and gratitude. For a little more than 200
years we have, as compared with the rest of the world, indeed been "the
lucky country"; but if we as a nation fail to serve God and obey his
commandments, our civilisation must inevitably wither and fail. - Charles Francis, AM QC, is a
barrister and former member of the Victorian state parliament. This article
comes from a paper he originally delivered to the Christian Lawyers' Society,
REFERENCES: 1)
C.M.H. Clark, A History of Australia, p.16. 2)
Ibid., pp. 29 and 34. 3)
Dr Graham McLennan, Understanding Our Christian Heritage. 4)
Ibid., Notes 2. 5)
C.M.H. Clark, A History of Australia, p.80. 6)
Ibid., p.139. 7)
Ibid., pp.280-281. 8)
Prof. Sir Ernest Scott, The Life of Matthew Flinders,
p.272. 9)
C.M.H. Clark, A History of Australia, p.97. 10) Ibid., pp.113-114. |