The Charismatic Movement In Australia

The Charismatic Movement In Australia

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The Charismatic

Movement

Geoff Waugh

National Church data on the Pentecostal

(regular

church

attendees)

identified

with,

Charismatic

involvement

in, Pentecostalism

attend non-Pentecostal

187

in Australia

Renewal.2

and Protestant churches

in

A new

survey

has

recently

been

published

based on detailed research on the

Anglican

and Protestant churches of Australia.’ This

survey,

the

Life

Survey (NCLS)

of

1994, begun

in

1991,

includes 2

churches and on the Charismatic

Much of the

following

information comes from that

survey

which is more

precise

than the nominal

figures

of government census statistics.

The NCLS

report

indicates that 19% of all

practicing

Christians

in

Anglican

Australia were Pentecostal and a further 10%-20% were involved

in,

or

Renewal in denominational churches. Speaking

in tongues was taken as the measure of attitudes

toward,

and

and Charismatic Renewal.3 In

Australia, about one-half of all

Anglicans

and Protestants who

speak

in

tongues

churches,

and 30% of these church attendees in their twenties and thirties

speak

in

tongues.

that 9% of Australian Catholics

tongues,

which would indicate that 10%-20% of 4 Catholics there have had some

relationship

to Charismatic Renewal.4

The Charismatic movement is

essentially

a Pentecostal

existing

church traditions.

However,

unlike the

early revival,

which was basically rejected by

the

denominations,

variously tolerated, welcomed,

accommodated

Association also

report

The Christian Research

speak

in

revival within

this new movement has been

or

accepted, although

in

some cases it too has been

rejected.

The two most

polarized Renewal are the

Baptist disapproving

denominations

and the Churches and about 12%

speaking

in

tongues.’

in relation to Charismatic

of

Christ,

with 40%

The denomination

Peter Kaldor, ed., Winds of Change (Sydney: Lancer Books, 1994).

Chapter 6 of Winds of Change, entitled “A Wind Shift Rocking the Churches,” treats the

Charismatic Movement in Australia

‘ Kaldor,

Winds of Change, 75. The

(74-90).

question used in the NCLS was worded as follows:

Q: What is your opinion of “speaking in tongues”? Choose the sentence which

is closest to

a.

your

Don’t know or have no opinion.

b. I

opinion. (32%)

generally disapprove of c. I speaking in tongues as it is practiced today. (31 %)

generally approve of speaking in tongues in most situations, but do not in speak

tongues myself. ( 17%) d. I

approve of and have spoken in e. tongues myself. (14%)

Speaking in tongues is ‘ An necessary for all Christians. (6%)

Australian Catholic book on Charismatic Renewal is Adrian

The

Commadeur,

Spirit in the Church (East Keilor: Comsoda Communications, 1992). Kaldor,

Winds of Change, 75. The

corresponding figures for Pentecostals are 94%

approve, 82% practice.

1

188

with the

highest

rate of

disapproval (85%).

Some

characterized

by high proportions glossolalia:

the Westminster Methodists

(64%),

the

Reformed Church

(54%).6

6 Church

of the smaller Protestant

Presbyterians

of the Nazarene

is the Seventh

Day

Adventists

denominations are also of attendees who

disapprove

of

(65%),

the

Wesleyan

(58%)

and the

Structuring of the

Charismatic Renewal

denominations,

conferences

and

teaching

By

the

early

1980s Charismatic

fellowships

had

emerged

in the

larger

each with its

publication,

seminars. The Catholic Renewal has had a

regular

national

7

magazine

while the

Anglican

Renewal Ministries of Australia

in most states. The

Uniting

Church

fellowships

The Lutherans

newsletter. The Churches of Christ Charismatic

Fire in the

Hearth,

the

Baptist fellowship published Spring Rain,

and a

since

1973,’

published

newsletters

also

published

state newsletters.’

national

magazine Renewing Australia,

The

Temple Renewal,

founded arranged many

published

a national Fellowship published

based in the

Uniting Church,

.

agency

for Charismatic minister,

Alan

Langstaff,

a

bimonthly

national conference

were all published nationally until the

early

1990s. The last three ceased publication by

1994 due to

high publishing

and

postal

costs.

Trust,

an

early

ecumenical

in 1972

by

Methodist

national conferences and

published

magazine

called Vision.9 Renamed Vision Ministries in

1979,

it held a

in

Sydney

that

year, attracting

1980,

Vision

magazine

was

merged

with

Impact,

the

publication

of the

15,000 people.

In

a Pentecostal New

Day,

body,

to form published

under

Christian Revival Crusade

(CRC), Australia’s New

Day,

later

simply Pentecostal

Charismatic service

organization Chant and Dennis

auspices by

the House of

Tabor,

a nondenominational

founded

by

two CRC

pastors, Barry

Slape.’°

New

Day,

“Serving

Life

which

appears monthly,

is

beginning

6 Kaldor, Winds of Change, 75-76.

7The first Catholic Charismatic

periodical

in Australia was the

Newsletter,

the Charismatic Renewal Throughout Australasia and Pacific” (1/1 dated October 1973); this was called the National Newsletter by the end of 1974, and New

Australia since July, 1975. All these were published from Brisbane, but when Brisbane ceased

publication,

Jesus is Alive was

published

from Melbourne

in 1990. Another Catholic Charismatic publication was Ruah from South Australia.

8 Further information on Charismatic Renewal in the Uniting Church can be found in Robert L. Bruce, ed., Streams of Renewal (n.p.; The Uniting Church Board of Mission, 1991), especially Chapter 2, “The Charismatic Stream,” 14-22. ‘ Issue no. 1 of Vision is dated January/February 1974.

10 more information on the

Temple Trust,

the House of Tabor and other Charismatic developments can be found in Barry Chant, Heart of Fire (Unley Park: The House of Tabor, 1984), 229-239.

2

Logos

Foundation

189

subtitled “For Charismatic

Revival and

Unity”

and caters to a

public similar to the one Charisma

serves in the United States.”. .

was started in 1969 in New Zealand

by

former Baptist

minister Howard Carter, who transferred to Australia in 1970. The foundation functioned actively into

the

early 1990s, during

which time it also established

local churches which still continue. In the

1980s, Logos

conducted

many

conferences and mailed over

11,000 copies

of

Restore.

The Full

Gospel

Business Men’s

Fellowship

International

(FGBMFI)

its free

magazine

established

chapters

in Australia

from

1960,

and is still

active

in all

states. The same is true for Youth

With A Mission. Since

1987,

John

Wimber

and the

Vineyard

teams

organization

Brisbane has established co-publishes

an

eighty-page

have attracted conferences of

an

independent

College

of

Ministry,

which

3,000-5,000 people, organized by

Kairos

Ministries,

founded

by Uniting

Church

minister,

Dan

Armstrong.

A consortium of Pentecostal and Charismatic

groups

and

colleges

in

the Brisbane

Renewal Journal twice a

year,

edited

by Geoff

Waugh.12

The Brisbane

College

of

Ministry

does not award degrees,

but acts as a voice and

negotiator

with

award-granting

and

denominations and those that are

is for smaller

groups

or

colleges

to become extension centers of

award-granting colleges

and universities

offering

courses or

on behalf of small

groups

development

degrees

in renewal studies.

bodies colleges,

both those within

independent.

The

present

By 1994,

Pentecostal and Charismatic

groups

have formed networks to facilitate communication and research. A

meeting

in

Sydney

in March 1994 established the National Christian Ministries Network to

for the

growing

numbers of within the

provide support

and

accountability independent

non-Pentecostal denominations. (as

with the

Baptists),

within the denomination. denominational

congregations Charismatic

fellowships.

assemblies and for the renewal

congregations

Where local churches have

autonomy

the Charismatic

However,

have chosen to become

The new

network,

consultation in July

1994,

is especially significant for these

groups.

congregations

tend to

stay recently

a number of

independent

which held a national

“New Day, P. 0. Box 564, Plympton, South Australia 5038, Australia. 12 Renewal Journal, GPO Box 674, Brisbane, Qld 4001, Australia.

3

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