2022 'Australia Day' - the one day of the year where the Australian Flag comes out in mass, displayed on cars and houses alike. Its citizens take a deep breath, offering a quiet thank you for this bountiful country, and enjoy a variety of measures to celebrate such a nation.
As odd as it might sound, these are some of the 'honest to goodness basics' I enjoy about Australia and the way we live.
the garbage is collected every week
if anyone is in disparate need society helps
the hospital, doctor and dentist not too far away
there are plenty of churches to choose from
citizens by and large live by congenial acceptance of the law
there is education for our children
employment is a major tenant of
These are very 'honest to goodness basics' issues for living our lives peaceably and with good intent to our friends and those around us.
We can join any number of associations or societies such as the Chamber of Commerce for business people, to play groups for young mums, craft for anyone including the oldies, music bands for both young and old, swimming club for the young, and thousands more ….
Entrenched is this 'honest to goodness basics' idea
After serving as the Australian Cricket team chaplain for 17 years to 2000 (ret) and then establishing Life After Cricket from 2001, I was enjoying a meal with a former national cricket coach where I conveyed some of my cricket ministry experiences.
One of these incidents was when the new national captain Allan Border and coach Bob Simpson came onto the scene in 1985. I had not been long in the picture myself. This cricket coach knew the story I relayed.
When Bob Simpson took over as coach of the Australian cricket team, his theme was three words, "Back to Basics"! As cricket is an entrenched national sport so too is this 'honest to goodness basics' philosophy.
Back to Basics is an old story
These words were certainly welcome with the advent of the Reformation in the C16 as a Protestant evangelistic clarion call. "Honest to goodness basics". The Bible was discovered by the ordinary people with the advent of printing and the cry was soon being shouted to the roof tops, "Honest to goodness basics".
This was also the philosophical cry that came with the Pentecostal movement in the 1970s in Australia where much of the outward expression of Christian worship was ditched and in its place came a "honest to goodness basics" theology that promoted the "winning of souls", a straight talking "evangelism" and a plain speaking "direct action" in community ministry.
Australia still remains strongly Christian in it's under girding and that much of this can be laid at the feet of this reaction to "honest to goodness basics". As a realist, in Christian ministry for 36 years this under-girding faith in the Lord Jesus Christ is found in the most surprising places.
Earlier this year I met a self proclaimed agnostic British trained doctor and when we got chatting and the physician realised to whom he was speaking, this medico went into a long soliloquy. He could not count the number of times he'd witnessed the most astonishing "get-wells" after people had come to bedsides to pray. He later became a follower of Jesus.
This was simply another illustration of this essential aspect of Christian belief and practise, it is the "honest to goodness basics" reality of Christian life of every day grand parents, mums and dads, young adults, students and boys and girls.
A Calling Card for Australia Day
This Australia Day be aware that this idea of "honest to goodness basics" is none other than being vigilant for the cause of Christ. Vigilance is critical, whether it's in relationships, politics, civil liberties, business, the law, media and above all, the eternal page with Christ as Lord of life.
"Honest to goodness basics" is a siren for evangelism, a call to the core values of Christian commitment of repentance, salvation and the fruit of the spirit. These are the under-girding values.
There is a most salutatory passage in the Bible when Elijah thought he was the only one left: He was reminded by the Lord there were 7,000 others he knew nothing about. We live in the midst of a host of followers of Jesus Christ, regardless of what we might read and hear. This is a remarkable joy to reflect upon for this Australia Day.