Showing posts with label ABC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ABC. Show all posts

Sunday, 3 June 2018

Whence the Skilling Australians Fund versus religious employees?

Budget 2018: 

Religious groups have won a valuable exemption that means they can hire workers from overseas without paying into the Skilling Australians Fund.

More on Budget 2018:

Religious organisations will be able to hire temporary migrants as bishops, ministers and religious assistants without paying into a fund designed to support 300,000 Australian apprenticeships.
The Turnbull government announced the Skilling Australians Fund in last year’s budget, but the legislation only passed the Senate on Tuesday afternoon. 
https://www.education.gov.au/skilling-australians-fund
https://ministers.education.gov.au/andrews/skilling-australians-fund-needed-drive-apprenticeship-growth

Monday, 28 May 2018

Social media and a plastic alphabet tiled notice board. The language of the people?


Let me introduce you to Father Rod Bowers!

Father Rod has become something of an institution in Australia in recent years thanks to social media. He is the master of the pithy comment.  Many, many love him.  Many, many loathe him.  I am pretty certain that to-day's comment (the Islamic equivalent of Merry Christmas or Happy New Year for Christians) will drive the fanatics and the bigots nuts.  However, that doesn't both Father Rod.  Go here and you will find a mass of his epigrams for people to enjoy or be driven nutty.  But he won't be stopped!

If you want something a little bit longer and meatier than Father Rod's succinct signage, you can get his sermons. They are erudite and meatier and you can get a feel for the man himself in action.  People sometimes wonder out aloud what Father Rod's boss, the Bishop, thinks of all this. First of all, I think everyone in the Diocese of Newcastle is used to all this.  Second of all, thanks to electronic media, he has acquired as much or more fame than Jesus did in His day and - what is more - he uses it wisely and well.  

So, please join me and many other Australians tonight at 9.35pm.  Father Rod - or to give him his precise title the Venerable Rod Bower - when he appears on the ABC current affairs television program, Q and A.

.... and a little more over here

Tuesday, 13 March 2018

The Mormon Sisterhood

What's it really like being a Mormon missionary?

 

Sister Wolfgram and Sister Lu say the Book of Mormon is often a conversation starter.
ABC RN: SIOBHAN HEGARTY

Sister Wolfgram can only see her family twice a year via Skype: on Mother's Day, and at Christmas.

She's allowed to email relatives weekly, but as a Mormon missionary, this is the most contact will she have with her family, during her 18 months of overseas service.

"I come from a family of 10, there's four brothers and four sisters, so I miss them a lot," says Sister Wolfgram, who was raised in West Valley City, Utah, a majority Mormon state.

Her family is originally from Tonga, another heartland for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints — home to more Mormons per capita than any country in the world. Statistics show that nearly 60 per cent of the population belongs to the church.
"As Tongans, the two most important things are God and family … and then food," Sister Wolfgram smiles.

To read and see more, please go here. 

Tuesday, 12 December 2017

Paul Kennedy & Chrissie Foster --- Hell on the way to Heaven: on ABC TV tonight



One of the greatest scandals facing the Christian churches in recent times has been institutional child abuse.  There is even a movie on the child abuse in Boston in the USA. Cardinal Bernard Law, under whose reign so many children were abused, was whisked away to The Vatican. It has been suggested that Cardinal Law spends his time shopping and doing afternoon teas.

Here in Ballarat where I live, numerous cases of child abuse have at last come into the cold light of date. Across Australia, case after case; church after church has been uncovered - even by clergymen long since dead.  Cases are still coming to light.  One of the most senior cardinals in this country was given a job in The Vatican. In the line of Vatican administration, he was No. 3.  That Cardinal has now been brought back to Australia from The Vatican and his case is now before the courts.  Because of this, I am limited in what I can say.  The newspaper I would suggest you stay in touch with is The Age.

Perhaps the saddest things from all this are the deaths, the sufferings, the lives ruined.  Clocks can't be turned back.  Many of the perpetrators are dead. The graves won't give them back to face retribution.

Relevant books:


Wikipedia entry:

Please note:  The abuse of children is not confined to the Catholic Church. Many other Christian denominations are involved. Many other institutions and religions are involved. The abuse was not only perpetrated by priests but also by brothers.  The writer also knows of one case of sexual abuse that was carried out by a nun in an orphanage.  The writer wonders how it is possible to discern perpetrators. She thinks of one Catholic priest known to her and her extended family and was involved in celebratory events. One night he was spirited away from his parish.  He stood trial. Who would have thought?

Saturday, 24 June 2017

Ethics in our daily doings


Compass is Australia's only religion, ethics and social values TV program.
It has reflected and explored belief, faith, values and the search for meaning through personal stories, documentaries and debate since 1988.
Compass airs for 30 minutes on Saturday nights at 6.00 pm and is repeated on Sundays at 11am, with a third screening on Fridays at 10:30am. You can also choose to watch the program on ABC iview. The Compass website offers an archive of programs and transcripts. You can also take part in our dynamic social media community, by following us on Facebook or Twitter.

This week on Compass they are talking ethics.  An Australian family, the Easthopes, attempt to redefine the way they live, making ethical choices about how they travel and what they eat.  

Part of the show is a visit from Costa Georgiadis of ABC's Gardening Australia -
because growing our own is part of an ethical lifestyle.


Sunday, 15 June 2014

Pope Francis says "World economic system is 'madness; "

The article below is republished from Australia's ABC News website.

Comment from The Editor of Beside The Creek:  And so say all of us???


World economic system is 'madness', 

puts money ahead of people, Pope Francis says

Updated Sat 14 Jun 2014, 1:36pm AEST
Pope Francis has launched a sweeping attack on the world's economic system, saying it discards the young, puts money ahead of people and survives on the profits of war.
The 77-year-old leader of the world's 1.2 billion Roman Catholics said some countries had a youth unemployment rate of more than 50 per cent, with many millions in Europe seeking work in vain.
"It's madness," the Pope said in an interview with the Barcelona-based Vanguardia daily's Vatican correspondent Henrique Cymerman.
"We discard a whole generation to maintain an economic system that no longer endures, a system that to survive has to make war, as the big empires have always done," he said.
"But since we cannot wage the third world war, we make regional wars.
"And what does that mean? That we make and sell arms. And with that the balance sheets of the idolatrous economies - the big world economies that sacrifice man at the feet of the idol of money - are obviously cleaned up."
Pope Francis says there is enough food to feed all the world's hungry.
"When you see photographs of malnourished children you put your head in your hands, you cannot understand it," he said.
"I think we are in a global economic system that is not good."
The Pope says the people's needs should be at the heart of the economic system.
"But we have placed money in the centre, the god of money. We have fallen into the sin of idolatry, the idolatry of money. The economy moves by the desire to have more and paradoxically it feeds a disposable culture," he said.
The pontiff said the young were discarded when "the birth rate is limited" and the old were discarded when they no longer were considered productive.
"By discarding children and the old, we discard the future of a people because the young will pull us strongly forward and the old will give us wisdom," he said.
AFP