Posts Tagged ‘Avondale Alumni Association’

Homecoming: Citation (Young Alumnus of the Year)

Friday, August 15, 2014

Chris Koelma

Chris Koelma is a musical linguist. The composer and bass guitarist’s ambition: to share the universal language through performance and education.

Chris Koelma

Chris Koelma: Avondale Alumni Association’s Young Alumnus of the Year for 2014.

The latter saw Chris employed as music director at Terrigal Uniting Church during his studies. He returned there after graduation while also teaching music at Narara Valley High School.

The former saw Chris leave his position at the church and take leave from the school to record in Los Angeles the debut album of the band St Leonards. Chris completed two tours of the West Coast before returning to Australia in 2010.

He married Mikaela Prout and the two took a teaching opportunity in Buenos Aires, Argentina to “gain more experience with English-as-a-second-language students, live as expatriates in a foreign country and learn Spanish.” During his tenure as head of primary music at St Georges College, Chris developed a new instrumental music program, produced five musicals and managed a team of five staff members. He also completed a Master of Educational Studies through The University of Newcastle, graduating with distinction.

With a sharp downturn in economic stability and security in Argentina, Chris and Mikaela looked for other international teaching opportunities. They moved to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, in mid-2013—Chris took a position as head of primary music at Garden International School. The role sees him coordinating the school’s primary music curriculum and its choirs, orchestras, concerts and tours and helping coordinate an instrumental music tuition program. He’s also led workshops at professional development conferences on the use of iPads in the classroom.

Chris only began to play bass in his mid-teens, but he has developed his own style by adding a twist to existing bass expressions. The launch of his debut album at Avondale in 2008 illustrates his ambition: the album raised money for an orphanage and school in India.

The Avondale Alumni Association honours Chris Koelma for using music not to further his own interests but to further the interests of others.—Brenton Stacey, public relations officer, Avondale College of Higher Education

Homecoming: Citation (Alumna of the Year)

Thursday, August 14, 2014

Adele Rowden-Johnson

Lavinia “Adele” Young was well travelled by the time she arrived at Avondale College. Born in Franklin, Tasmania, she attended primary school in Queensland and high school in Western Australia before moving to Avondale to study accounting. “My parents thought I needed some assistance with numbers,” she recalls. “I still need help, so I married an accountant!”

Adele Rowden-Johnson

Adele Rowden-Johnson: Avondale Alumni Association’s Alumna of the Year for 2014.

After leaving Avondale in 1964, Adele found secretarial employment at Sydney Adventist Hospital. In 1970, she and husband John Rowden became missionaries in Fiji—John would die in a waterskiing accident five years later.

On returning to Australia, Adele worked as a medical secretary at Dora Creek Medical Centre. Earning a teaching certificate in 1987 began a career in technical and further education, a sector in which Adele would work for the next 10 years. She would also study, graduating with a Diploma of Teaching from The University of Newcastle in 1991 and a Bachelor of Counselling from the University of New England in 1996.

Adele married Les Johnson in 1997, the year she had her first contact with what is now Southlakes Refuge. “I was only meant to stay for a short while, then return to TAFE teaching. God had other ideas.” She left teaching to become the managing director of the refugee and now credits the difficult times in her life as good preparation for the position. “My prayer has always been, ‘Please God, don’t allow those experiences to go to waste!’ He never has, and I pray He never will.”

The refuge has been acknowledged for its contribution to community spirit, winning a Southlakes Business Excellence Award in 2002. It also gave Adele other opportunities—she served as a member of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in the South Pacific’s Domestic Violence in Families Taskforce, for example—through which to share the wisdom of her experiences.

The Avondale Alumni Association honours Adele Rowden-Johnson for her dedication in caring for and raising awareness of women and children who are the victims of abuse or domestic violence.—Sara Thompson, alumni relations officer, Avondale College of Higher Education

Homecoming: Citation (Alumnus of the Year)

Friday, August 8, 2014

Cliff Morgan

Those who know Cliff Morgan know he’s not one to slow down. The outdoor enthusiast and committed exerciser—Cliff ran a half-marathon this year—retired in 1989 but has volunteered, notably as founding director of Volunteers in Action, for 20 of the 25 years since then.

Cliff Morgan

Cliff Morgan: Avondale Alumni Association’s Alumnus of the Year for 2014.

Born in Biloela, Queensland, to farming parents, Cliff grew up wanting to pursue a profession. This led to him studying accounting at the then Australasian Missionary College, where Cliff would be baptised and meet Valerie Hartley, who he married. After graduating in 1954, Cliff would study teaching at the then Queensland Teachers College and at The University of Queensland.

The following years were spent teaching in the public school system and, together with Val, raising three sons. Cliff turned down multiple offers from the Seventh-day Adventist Church to teach in its schools, promising instead that once retired, he would serve the mission of the church at his own expense. Fly’n’builds in Vanuatu and in Fiji in the late 1980s saw this promise come to fruition.

In 1993, Cliff and Val joined with the church’s Euro-Asia Division to build churches, clinics and schools in the former Soviet Union. Of the 57 countries the Morgans have visited, Russia has proved most memorable. “The people suffered so much under communism and had few funds, but their faith in God dwarfed mine. Each week Val and I would see or hear of another miracle, so our trust in God grew enormously.”

A visit to the Solomon Islands and to Papua New Guinea in 1995 surprised Cliff. The church’s greatest need in those countries: finding sponsors for local missionaries to grow churches in isolated areas. So began Volunteers in Action, a ministry that has now led to more than 16,000 baptisms across the South Pacific. Cliff credits its success to the dedication of the volunteers and of the donors—and, most importantly, to the grace of God.

The Avondale Alumni Association honours Cliff Morgan for his commitment to the mission service of the Seventh-day Adventist Church.—Sara Thompson, alumni relations officer, Avondale College of Higher Education

Toilets come up trumps

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Winner of alumni-sponsored prize brings health to Amazon villages

Dr John Cox
Editor, Reflections
Avondale College of Higher Education
Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia

 One Mission Brazil 2014 edit

An honouree of the Avondale Alumni Association has led another team of students on a One Mission project — this time to build toilets in northern Brazil.

Odailson (Dada) Fialho, who received the Alumni Association’s Community Service Prize this past year, led the team on a seven-week trip around South America, helping to provide improved water and sanitation to remote villages. The team worked with the Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA), the humanitarian organisation which has been offered financial support by the mayors of two districts in Brazil.

The ADRA project has improved health and sanitation in some of Brazil’s most remote villages, where water-borne diseases are a major cause of illness and death. Teams from the Avondale College of Higher Education student club One Mission have worked with ADRA over the past three years to build 49 toilets, a classroom and a health clinic. Villages in surrounding districts have appealed to ADRA to do the same for them.

The 27 students on this year’s team raised $35,000 for building supplies, as well as $5000 each for airfares and other expenses. Preceding their work on the health and sanitation project, the students visited Brazil, Bolivia, Argentina, Paraguay, Chile and Peru. From Peru, they travelled for several days down almost the full length of the Amazon River, first in a small boat, then in a larger boat they shared with 500 passengers, sleeping each night in hammocks on the open decks. At a port on the lower Amazon, they met ADRA staff members, then boarded a mission boat for a seven-hour trip back up the river to the area where they were to work for the next three weeks.

Mission trips such as these have real challenges. The Amazon is infested with alligators and piranha. There are dangers from snakes, ants and malaria-bearing mosquitoes. There are the challenges of living in primitive conditions, coping with an unfamiliar diet and managing tiredness. And there are dangers from the tools the group uses, such as chainsaws and machetes. But no student has suffered a serious illness or injury during any One Mission trips.

Team leader Dada describes the trips as bringing positive changes to the lives of many of the students. “The trips also motivate significant numbers of students for future leadership roles,” he says. Three students from the Brazil team have already volunteered to lead future mission trips.

Dada, a Brazilian, came to Avondale to learn English, but stayed on to complete a degree in theology and ministry. “I am grateful to Avondale for the opportunities it has given for mission service, especially to my home country,” he says. Being involved in One Mission “is one of the best things that has ever happened to me.”

“I want to thank everyone who has prayed for us. And I want to thank Avondale for encouraging and supporting One Mission.”

Is the Seventh-day Adventist Church yet ready for social justice?

Friday, February 18, 2011

Harwood Lockton

Edited extract of the Alumni Lecture delivered at Homecoming 2010. At the time of the lecture, Harwood Lockton was the Director, International Program, ADRA Australia.

Social injustice is pervasive in all societies, whether at the level of individual households, within nations or between nations. In popular usage, and often within the Adventist church, the term “social justice” is loosely used to mean acts of compassion and social involvement as in delivering food parcels to needy persons in the local community or participating in overseas fly ’n’ build missions. In its more precise meaning, social justice is about justice being applied across society and implies advocating for those who have been wronged by society. It is this more precise meaning that is used here.

There is a sense that the Adventist church does not fully embrace even social involvement and compassion as legitimate parts of its mission, let alone social justice. Evangelism is given primacy and social involvement seems to be useful more for its public relations value. Zdravko Plantak, in his 1998 book, The Silent Church: Human Rights and Adventist Social Ethics, shows that in the nineteenth century the only non-self-interest public issue that Adventist leadership was willing to engage with was slavery. During the second half of the twentieth century the issues of race relations and women’s rights challenged the corporate church but primarily from the perspective of employment issues, not the concerns of the wider society. Has the Adventist church continued to be silent on social justice since Plantak’s analysis?

The corporate church

In 2009 the General Conference released a revised mission statement of which the “Our Methodology” segment is of interest: “This calls the church beyond preaching and teaching to a ministry of serving and acting” on behalf of the poor and oppressed. This statement suggests that serving and acting are as integral and legitimate as preaching and teaching.

Periodically the General Conference issues “official statements” about social, theological and ecclesiological issues that have been approved and voted by church leadership. Of the sixty-one such statements issued since 1980, twenty-seven might be categorised as about social involvement and social justice and thirty-four categorised as ‘inward’ in orientation dealing particularly with lifestyle/behaviour and other church issues.

The comparatively limited number of social engagement statements published during Dr Jan Paulsen’s tenure must be balanced by his frequent and consistent calls for a greater engagement by the church in society. He argued in several publications, and notably the Adventist World, for the church to work for social justice for the marginalised as it is a major concern of God.

At the 2010 General Conference Session, the church issued an official statement on global poverty. Of particular note is the language that moves the discussion from social involvement to social justice and human rights, including a call for advocacy and political action:

Working to reduce poverty and hunger means more than showing sympathy for the poor.  It means advocating for public policy that offers justice and fairness to the poor, for their empowerment and human rights…

In early 2010, ADRA International and the Women’s Ministries Department of the General Conference jointly launched the “enditnow”® awareness-raising campaign to advocate for the end of violence against women and girls around the world, with the ambitious goal of presenting a petition with at least one million signatures to the UN Secretary General.  For SDAs this was an unprecedented foray into social justice not seen for over a hundred years since the Adventist anti-slavery work of the nineteenth century.

Biblical basis for social justice

There are over two thousand verses in the Bible that address poverty/wealth, oppression and exploitation. Yet until recently Christians in general, including SDAs, have missed such a large body of biblical material – Christians have been known to build whole doctrines on considerably less biblical material! Frequent attention has been given to the words translated as “righteous/ness” and “justice” in English language Bibles. In both the Old and New Testaments either word is valid though older translations with their preference for “righteous” rather than “justice” or “fairness”, have led us to miss the real intent of significant portions of Scripture. The Christian is called not only to acts of compassion but also social justice.

Adventist basis for social justice

In addition, some uniquely Adventist beliefs contribute to a theology of social justice, notably the Sabbath, which is central to SDA identity. The Sabbath commandment calls us

  • not to exploit our families, workers, migrants within our care, or our livestock,
  • to remember that all humans have been created in the image of God and hence have equality (Exodus 20:11),
  • to remember that God’s people were released from economic and social slavery and so everyone is free (Deuteronomy 5:15).

In addition to the weekly Sabbath, there were the Sabbatical Year – every seven years – and the year of Jubilee – every fiftieth year (Exodus 23: 10-12, Leviticus 25: 1-7, 8-54). These had radical social justice provisions with the land being rested or fallowed, debts being released and slaves offered their freedom. These concerns with land, capital and labour are the foundations of all economic systems. It seems that the divine principles behind the sabbatical systems were to counter the acquisitive behaviour of some that amasses wealth and power at the expense of the many.

It is not without significance that the prophets and Jesus were strongly influenced by these concepts of social justice in the sabbatical system – his inaugural sermon was couched in Jubilee language. Isaiah and Amos both railed against the unjust practices of Sabbath keepers.

Adventist ambivalence

Yet there is an ambivalence within official Adventism. References to social involvement let alone social justice are only occasional in church papers. For example Adventist World has a regular feature, Window into… which outlines a featured country’s basic history, geography, SDA presence and mission. Only rarely does mission include anything other than evangelism and baptisms, whether it be humanitarian activities or health care. Education institutions fare a little better.

So is the Seventh-day Adventist church yet ready for social justice? It would seem from the evidence surveyed that the answer is still no, despite several and possibly increasing voices.  Even social involvement is not theologically and fully accepted as part of the church’s legitimate mission in all quarters. Until that happens, social justice will be a fringe activity championed by a few biblical idealists.