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Friday, 28 August 2009 11:41

Contact us

We welcome your feedback, comments and opinions.  If you have any questions please don't hesitate to contact us.

Write to us:

General enquiries:
The Secretariat
National Council of Churches in Australia
Locked Bag Q199
QUEEN VICTORIA BUILDING NSW 1230

Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Act for Peace / Christmas Bowl enquiries:
Act for Peace

National Council of Churches in Australia
Locked Bag Q199
QUEEN VICTORIA BUILDING NSW 1230

Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Development Fund enquiries:
National Council of Churches in Australia
Locked Bag Q199
QUEEN VICTORIA BUILDING NSW 1230

Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Safe Church Program enquiries:
Safe Church Program
National Council of Churches in Australia
Locked Bag Q199
QUEEN VICTORIA BUILDING NSW 1230

Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Justice and Care of Creation enquiries:
National Council of Churches in Australia
Locked Bag Q199
QUEEN VICTORIA BUILDING NSW 1230

Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Faith & Unity Commission enquiries:
Faith & Unity Commission
National Council of Churches in Australia
Locked Bag Q199
QUEEN VICTORIA BUILDING NSW 1230

Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Individual Staff members:

If you know the name of the member of staff you wish to contact, their e-mail address will be:@ncca.org.au (all lowercase). E.g. John Brown would be jbrown@ncca.org.au

 

Telephone or fax us:

Phone +61 2 9299-2215
Freecall 1800 625 611
Fax +61 2 9262-4514

Visit our office located at:

Level 7
379 Kent Street
SYDNEY NSW 2000

Our office hours are 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. (AEST or AEDST) Monday to Friday

Contact a State Ecumenical Council:

Contact State Ecumenical Councils in Australia


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KwMap.com - browse the Keyword Map of ncca.org.au

Monday, 24 August 2009 16:29

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Thursday, 18 June 2009 13:13

the people of Mumbai and Orissa, India

the people of Mumbai and Orissa, India (Click here to view a letter from the NCCA to the NCCI.)

Monday, 02 February 2015 01:00

Resources for Peace

Prayers

Bible Study Resources

Reflections

Further Resources

 

.......

start_page_03Over this violence thing...Resources for peace

Violence is a destructive force of immense proportion, which influences our lives at all levels – individual, societal and global. Violence refers to crime, exclusion, war, persecution, terrorism, detention without trial, slavery, environmental damage, bullying, discrimination, harassment, victimization… the list goes on.

Violence is often undertaken in the name of criminality, imperialism, nationalism, political expediency, power and control, and is often legitimized by the prevailing norms, values, belief systems, cultures and structures of relationships in our societies.

Violence affects our humanity and our environment. Our discipleship to Christ and our commitment to ecumenism requires that we work together – the whole inhabited earth – to overcome violence through peace and justice.

"... what God wants of you is to act justly, to love tenderly and to walk humbly with your God" Micah 6:8

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Monday, 01 June 2009 18:28

ANDCMJ

The Australian National Dialogue of Christians, Muslims and Jews

The NCCA is a founding partner in this dialogue on behalf of member churches. Our dialogue partners are:

The Dialogue was officially 'launched' in March 2003 after 12 months of formal preparation, which was preceded by informal contact and discussions between the NCCA, AFIC, & ECAJ.

Monday, 01 June 2009 18:19

About Safer Churches

Australian churches are responding to the challenge of providing safe church environments in which to carry out ministry programs. This challenge is reflected not only in preventing and responding to claims and cases of sexual misconduct in our Christian communities, but also in building knowledge at a local and congregational level. 

In response to this challenge many Christian denominations have established strategies aimed at accountability and transparency in relationships and programs. Significant resources have been put into the establishment of professional standards groups / boards to handle complaints of abuse, and implementation of programs to train employees and volunteer leaders in best practice for creating safer churches. 

The 'Safer Churches?' consultations and conferences (2014-2019) have encouraged openness between Churches. Being willing to ask for help from the family of Churches is an important step in allowing God to heal us and our communities and work towards reconciliation, wellbeing and wholeness.

2019 Conference

17 and 18 September 2019 at the Mecure Hotel Brisbane. 

This was the first conference held by the National Council of Churches in Australia (NCCA) Safe Church Program since the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse recommendations were released in December 2017.

The theme for the conference, "Transforming Cultures: Listening, Reflecting, Acting"  provided the framework across the two-day event.

See the 9th biennial Safer Churches Conference presentation papers, videos and photo gallery here  

Previous Conferences

 

Monday, 01 June 2009 18:18

Stages on the Way

Documents from the Bilateral Conversations between Churches in Australia

edited by Raymond K.Williamson

Stages_on_the_Way_II_small

Stages on the Way (published 1994) and Stages on the Way II (published 2007, covering the years 1994-2007) are collections of the agreed statements and reports from the bilateral conversations between Australian churches in recent times. They bear witness to the extraodinary amount of theological agreement which has been achieved and recognised through our ecumenical conversations.

Whilst there is much still to do, the content of these volumes present both an encouragement and a challenge to the churches to live out the degree of communion that is already experienced and the agreements already achieved. Stages on the Way II also includes an excellent glossary of ecumenical theological terminology which is valuable in its own right.

A great resource for ecumenists and students!

Both volumes are available from the NCCA (02 9229 2215)

$22 - Stages on the Way
$30 - Stages on the Way II

Monday, 01 June 2009 18:17

About Us

About Us
Monday, 01 June 2009 18:15

About NATSIEC

The National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Ecumenical Commission (NATSIEC) was the peak ecumenical Indigenous body in Australia. It was a commission of the National Council of Churches in Australia (NCCA).  With NATSIEC’s guidance, the churches worked together for a fair deal for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians, and for the healing of our nation. NATSIEC activities ceased in 2016.

Read the NATSIEC Mandate

Commission members of NATSIEC were all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, the first peoples of this land and sea. They represented a cross-section of church-related Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander groups from the Anglican Church of Australia, the Churches of Christ, the Lutheran Church, the Roman Catholic Church, the Salvation Army and the Uniting Church in Australia.

We Are What We Are - Spirit People

We Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples believe that the Creator has always been with our people since the beginning of time. Our connection to this land Australia and the stories from long ago emphasise this and reveals to us our ongoing relationship to the Creator. We know that the Spirit is always close to us and within us. The Spirits of our ancestors are always around us looking out for us and showing us the path we should travel. We are surrounded by a cloud of witnesses.

We have been given a gift to offer the rest of humanity; the importance of relationships. The Creator still has a strong relationship with us and helps us build stronger relationships with one another. These relationships also cover everything around us, for it is through the land, water and air that we are continually reminded of this. It is not just the symbol of the rainbow that reminds us about the covenant between the Creator and humanity. There are signs all around us that continually reminds us of the Covenant.

Our peoples are generous, caring and compassionate towards each other and other Australians. We have survived many negative things yet we still reach out our hand in reconciliation. This is the message of long ago from our roots and also the message through the Christian Bible. It has been the message passed down from generation to generation from parent to children since time began.

The Spirit lives on through us and we must continually foster this relationship through acts that remind us of this great truth. These acts are ceremonies, which help us to draw closer to our creator who has left the Spirit with us. Through them we retell and relive the great stories of our past.

Since the coming of the Western Culture, there has been a breakdown in our relationship with the Creator. Our ways have been under threat and this has led us to move away from our roots and into a foreign way of thinking. This has caused hardships within our communities as we struggle to find our way. Sometimes we have failed to recognise the Spirit present with us. We looked to the new culture to show us the way forward and it has led to more confusion and loss of direction. This culture has failed our people. It has shown it cannot satisfy our deepest yearnings.

This culture wanted us to look for the Creator through their eyes. They have failed to see that the Creator exists within our culture. While Abraham was wandering in the desert our peoples had been for many generations living in close relationship with our Creator. We have an Old Testament, which we can now accept as part of our salvation history.

How short sighted Western Culture was to think they had the monopoly on the Creator and how blinded were we to believe this was true. It is up to us to reclaim our beliefs. Our Creator yearns for us to come back. Our relationship has been tested and made stronger because of the many mistakes along the journey because we have learnt so much from the experience. We now know about Christ. This story from the Western Culture has touched and had an impact on our lives.

We did not have Jesus amongst us as the Apostles did but he left us the Spirit of the Creator with us. We know this Spirit to be the same Spirit who is with us now because of what it has done and continues to do. This Spirit of relationships reminds us about our responsibilities to one another and creation and that we all come from the same source of life. This Spirit is also the Spirit of the Rainbow Serpent, the Brolga, the Emu, the Stars, the Fish, the Plants, the mountains and much more. We must hold on to and strengthen our Spiritual heritage.

As a Minority we stand as the strength of this Land.
We affirm our belief in the Creator Spirit who created us.
It is in our connection to this deep sense of belonging that our Identity lives.
Our Culture can never be broken.
We embrace our past. We are alive in the present and have hope in the future.
The Creator Spirit calls us into a search for a deeper relationship with himself and each other.
The Creator Spirit calls us to renewal.

Statement by NATSIEC commissioners - 2003

 

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