Archive for May, 2010

Festival of Faith’s gifts of grace

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Brenton Stacey
Public relations officer
Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia

Four other Avondale College students will follow Rhianon Bougaardt and Imogen Menzies’ lead and publicly commit to Christ following Festival of Faith this past week.

Faye Stothers baptises Imogen Menzies. Festival of Faith has inspired four other students to follow the lead of Imogen and Rhianon Bougaardt, who also publicly committed to Christ. More than 20 have asked for Bible studies. Credit: Ann Stafford.

Rhianon and Imogen were baptised by alumna Faye Stothers after the Friday evening worship service, 7.28. Seventy students responded to speaker Pr Stuart Tyner’s call during the service. Of these students, more than 20 asked for Bible studies.

The Festival of Faith theme Masterpiece emphasised grace in the book of Revelation. Artists such as Andy Collis and Tony Martin painted and pottered on stage while Stuart spoke. Tony says the theme reminds us God is a creator and encourages us to think of connecting with Him in other ways.

Stuart, the minister for nurture and discipleship at La Sierra University Church (Riverside, CA, USA), emphasised grace continuing throughout the end-times and of Jesus remaining the only means of salvation.

Student Associated Ministries gave away copies of Stuart’s new book, Chosen by Grace, to 300 students after the service, and it seemed Stuart signed almost all of them. The response impressed Dr Wayne French, chaplain on Avondale’s Lake Macquarie campus. “It feels like the students have suddenly discovered they don’t have to worry about the end of time.”—with Kirsten Bolinger

 

COSMOS to push for Fairtrade food

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Kirsten Bolinger
Public relations assistant
Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia

Student mission club COSMOS is promoting a campaign called Fairtrade Fortnight as part of its push to make changes to Avondale College’s food purchases.

COSMOS and the Out of the Box Café are selling Fairtrade products, including chocolate, until Friday this week. Credit: Natalie Rixom.

COSMOS wants Avondale to buy more Fairtrade certified products to sell in the Out of the Box Café on the Lake Macquarie campus. The club and the café have been selling Fairtrade products since Fairtrade Fortnight began on campus on Monday this past week (May 3). COSMOS has also been collecting signatures for a petition it plans to present to Avondale’s administrators.

The promotion seems to be working, with director of food services Nick Hartigan reporting an increase in the sales of hot drinks. Nick is a supporter of the Fairtrade movement, but he is also committed to providing a cost-effective service. He trialled the use of Fairtrade products in the café this past year but received only a lukewarm response. “I can’t afford to stock a product that doesn’t move,” he says.

According to The Fair Trade Association of Australia and New Zealand, Fairtrade is about better prices, decent working conditions, local sustainability and fair terms of trade for farmers and workers in the developing world. “Fairtrade Fortnight reminds us our purchasing power does make a difference in poor countries,” says Brad Watson, a lecturer in international development studies in the Faculty of Arts and staff adviser for COSMOS.

Brad and the COSMOS team have repositioned the club this year—it now focuses on advocacy, development and sustainability. Says vice-president (public relations and marketing) Anjuli Cruz, “We belong to a Christian college and should all have a vested interest in what is happening in the world around us.”—with Brenton Stacey

A cause worth living for

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Dr Bruce Manners
Senior minister
Avondale College Seventh-day Adventist Church

I’ve been reading some Tertullian. Tertullian lived about 160-220 AD and is the first major Christian writer to use Latin. He’s famous for introducing several words into the Christian language, including trinitas (trinity) as a description for the Godhead.

He’s been called a “pugilist with a pen” because in his writings, he’s always arguing a case. He targets paganism, idolatry, the Jews and Christians who aren’t maintaining the true beliefs, particularly Christian standards. He believed the church was for saints, not sinners.

Tertullian’s Antidote to the Scorpion’s Sting is a piece about martyrdom—it’s the scorpion’s sting. This was written at a time when Christians within the Roman Empire were being executed for being Christian.

It seems the Roman officials were targeting new Christians to stop others becoming Christians. You find this in the story of the martyrdom of Perpetua and Felicitas—a story that appears to be a partial firsthand account written by Perpetua that some believe Tertullian edited and finished.

He explains just as a doctor might use the scalpel, the hot iron and the fire of mustard to bring healing, so martyrdoms bring salvation. God, he writes, creates the “opportunity for martyrdoms.” To those who had given in to the pressure and denounced Christianity, he calls for a return to an authentic Christian understanding of martyrdom and embrace its possibility.

As one who has never had to face the possibility of martyrdom, I wonder how I would face this challenge. Then I wonder if I remained firm to my convictions would it be from stubbornness or faith?

Of course, you can argue against Tertullian’s reasoning, that’s easy 1800 years later. The fact remains living is more meaningful when you have a cause—and a faith—that’s worth dying for.

That’ll never change.