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Many Verandahs, Same House? Ecclesiological Challenges for Australian Anglicanism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2009
Abstract
The article addresses a number of different themes related to Australian Anglicanism. Underlying this inquiry is a deeper concern to trace the contours of an ecclesiology that is both embedded in a particular context (Australia) and through that points to common ideals that inform the self-understanding of the wider Communion. After an introduction, the remainder of the article is divided into four sections. The first section involves a brief historical perspective to introduce Australian Anglicanism to a wider audience. A second section attends to matters of law and governance; familiar enough but often dry territory, though certainly revealing as to the present state of our Church. From history and law I offer in the third section a reflection of a geographical kind on the idea of place as a formative factor in ecclesiology. In this way I hope to be able to highlight some of the particular challenges for Australian Anglicans and hopefully the wider Communion.
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- Copyright © SAGE Publications (Los Angeles, London, New Delhi and Singapore) and The Journal of Anglican Studies Trust 2006
References
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48. The relationship between ‘home base’ and ‘reach’ is an important one in geography. Where ‘reach’ (distance from home base) extends to the point of rupture of the relation this can generate significant anxiety and alienation.
49. Climatic and landscape factors were not totally absent from church architecture. See the important discussion by Holden, Colin, ‘Anglicanism, the Visual Arts and Architecture’, in Kaye, B. (Gen. ed.), Anglicanism in Australia: A History (Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 2002), pp. 265–66.Google Scholar By comparison the design of the chapel for the Australian Centre for Christianity and Culture is an interesting, if controversial attempt to develop a building for ecumenical worship that is in fundamental sympathy with the contours of the land.
50. The early colonial buildings in Australia followed the Georgian style, a simple geometric box with no projecting eves. The verandah was simply added on to this English architecture.
51. Kaye, , A Church without Walls: Being Anglican in Australia (Melbourne: Dove, 1995).Google Scholar
52. The word verandah seems to have a Spanish/Portuguese origin, a sixteenth century lexicon referring to ‘varanda’ as ‘rails to lean the breast on’.
53. John Vincent Taylor's spoke about the ‘go-between God’ and explored a theology of the Spirit in relation to the church's mission. See, The Go-Between God: The Holy Spirit and the Christian Mission (London: SCM Press, 1972)Google Scholar. On Holy Saturday see Von Balthasar, Hans Urs's reflections in Mysterium Paschal (trans. Nichols, A.; Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1990)Google Scholar, ch. 4. More recently Alan Lewis's posthumously published magnum opus, Between Cross and Resurrection: A Theology of Holy Saturday (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2001)Google Scholar, is important. Lewis notes ‘For the Spirit is revealed between the cross and the grave to be the unifying go-between who holds the Father and Son together when in self-abandonment to sonlessness the Father gives up the Beloved One to death and hell’, p. 299.
54. I have begun to explore these issues in a preliminary way in the interests of an ecclesiology that may be of service to the Anglican Church in Australia and possibly wider afield. See Pickard, Stephen, Spiritual Life on the Anglican Verandah: An Australian Perspective (Canberra: St Mark's Publications, 2003).Google Scholar
55. Clearly in the above account ‘place’ is not to be equated with land as such. Minimally it includes the entirety of the physical environment. This is necessary but not sufficient, for the dynamic of place can only be uncovered theologically as it includes environment, human interaction and a construal of the presence of God. Place is thus a dynamic concept that grounds reflection in the local but is orientated towards more universal categories. The value of a focus on place is that it facilitates a critical deconstruction of inherited identities and opens up new possibilities for reconceiving the nature of ecclesial existence. The problem with the fluid category of space is its vacuity in respect to any particular place.
56. This is the intent behind the recently established Australian Centre for Christianity and Culture in Canberra.
57. Holden, Colin, ‘Anglicanism’Google Scholar, refers to the Queensland Federation architect, Robin Dods, who designed ‘wide verandahs and hipped roofs, creating oases of shade from the bright northern sun, [that] anticipate a number of churches built in northern Australia since the 1950's’ (p. 265).
58. Kaye, , Reinventing Anglicanism, p. 37.Google Scholar
59. In Bruce Kaye's discussion of regionalism in Australian Anglicanism he highlights the importance of the church as a ‘community of interdependent diversity’. See Kaye, , Reinventing Anglicanism, pp. 256–57.Google Scholar
60. Kaye, , Reinventing Anglicanism, p. 263Google Scholar, wherein Kaye notes that ‘English colonialism is not the only colonialism that affects Anglicanism’. He is referring to the problem of authority and in particular the nature and functioning of ‘imperial authority’. At its best Anglicanism operates with a broader and more encompassing approach to the exercise of authority that does not admit of a final arbiter in decision making save the ‘mind’ of the koinonia itself.