THE HON PETER COSTELLO, MP
TREASURER
ADDRESS TO NATIONAL DAY OF THANKSGIVING COMMEMORATION SCOTS CHURCH
MELBOURNE
7.10 PM
SATURDAY, 29 MAY 2004
When Jesus told his disciples that they would be witnesses in Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria and
the uttermost part of the earth, the known world consisted of the Roman Empire – the
Mediterranean and surrounds.
No one in the Roman world, no one in the Jewish world, knew of Australia. From the then known
world of the Mediterranean, Australia was beyond even the uttermost parts of the earth.
And yet the teaching of Jesus came to Australia. It took nearly 18 centuries. And we can
pinpoint quite accurately the first time a Christian service was held on Australian soil. The
sermon was preached by the Rev. Richard Johnson, Chaplain of the First Fleet. It was preached
on Sunday 3 February 1778 under a large tree in Sydney. His text was from Psalm 116 Verse 12:
“What shall I render unto the Lord for all his benefits toward me?”
The first Australian Christian service was a thanksgiving service. It was thanksgiving for a
safe passage in dangerous sailing ships, on a dangerous mission half way around the world.
Two hundred and twenty six years later we meet tonight to mark a “National Day of
Thanksgiving” for all the benefits rendered to us, in the modern Australia.
Of course, the members of the First Fleet were not the first people to come to Australia. The
Aboriginal people were here long before that. And I am so proud that we have descendants of
those first Australians who are here tonight and who we have just honoured.
But it was the First Fleet that brought the first chaplain and first knowledge of the
Christian faith to Australia. This was the critical and decisive event that shaped our
country.
If the Arab traders that brought Islam to Indonesia had brought Islam to Australia and
settled, or spread their faith, amongst the indigenous population our country today would be
vastly different. Our laws, our institutions, our economy would all be vastly different.
But that did not happen. Our society was founded by British colonists. And the single most
decisive feature that determined the way it developed was the Judeo-Christian-Western
tradition.
As a society, we are who we are, because of that heritage.
I am not sure this is well understood in Australia today. It may be that a majority of
Australians no longer believes the orthodox Christian faith. But whether they believe it or
not, the society they share is one founded on that faith and one that draws on the Judeo-
Christian tradition.
The foundation of that tradition is, of course, The Ten Commandments. How many Australians
today could recite them? Perhaps very few. But they are the foundation of our law and our
society, whether we know them or not.
The first Commandments: Thou shalt have no other God before me; Thou shalt not make any graven
image; Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord in vain; Remember the Sabbath and keep it
holy; are the foundation of monotheism.
The Commandments: Honour thy father and mother; Thou shalt not commit adultery; are the
foundation of marriage and the family.
The Commandment: Thou shalt not to kill; is the basis for respect for life.
The Commandment: Thou shalt not steal; is the basis for property rights.
The Commandment: Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour; and Thou shalt not
covet thy neighbour’s property; is the basis of respect for others and their individual
rights.
These are the great principles of our society. On them hang all of the laws and institutions
that make our society what it is.
When Moses gave the Ten Commandments he initiated the rule of law. From the moment that he
laid down these rules it followed that human conduct was to be governed according to rules –
rules which were objectively stated, capable of being understood and, if necessary, enforced
by the Hebrew judges. Prior to that the people of the ancient world were governed by Rulers
rather than rules. The ruler was much more subject to whim and capricious behaviour. Rulers
were not subject to independent review or interpretation. The rule of law is the basis for our
constitution and justice system.
And so we have the Rule of Law, respect for life, private property rights, respect of others –
values that spring from the Judeo-Christian tradition.
Tolerance under the law is a great part of this tradition.
Tolerance does not mean that all views are the same. It does not mean that differing views are
equally right. What it means is that where there are differences, no matter how strongly held,
different people will respect the right of others to hold them.
I mention this because “The Age” newspaper reported (10 May 2004) that my appearance here
tonight has been criticized by the Islamic Council of Victoria. According to the President of
that Council by speaking here tonight I could be giving legitimacy to parties that the Islamic
Council is suing under Victoria’s Racial and Religious Tolerance Act 2001 (the Act).
It is not my intention to influence those proceedings. But nor will I be deterred from
attending a service of Christian Thanksgiving. Since the issue has been raised I will state my
view. I do not think that we should resolve differences about religious views in our community
with lawsuits between the different religions. Nor do I think
that the object of religious harmony will be promoted by organizing witnesses to go along to
the meetings of other religions to collect evidence for the purpose of later litigation.
I think religious leaders should be free to express their doctrines and their comparative view
of other doctrines. It is different if a religious leader wants to advocate violence or
terrorism. That should be an offence – the offence of inciting violence, or an offence under
our terrorism laws. That should be investigated by the law enforcement authorities who are
trained to collect evidence and bring proceedings.
But differing views on religion should not be resolved through civil law suits.
My view on this is not new or recent. In 1994 I opposed a proposed Commonwealth Bill on Racial
Vilification on the following grounds:
“The legislation is going to make certain subjects very difficult to discuss in an open way.
It is going to vest a large supervisory role in Government appointees over exactly what can or
cannot be said.”
At the time I was worried that ‘vilification’ legislation would inhibit free discussion of
important political issues. Since then the Victorian Parliament has passed the Act dealing
with racial and religious ‘vilification’. No one likes vilification.
We are an open and tolerant society. But if rival camps start sending informants to rival
meetings so they can take legal proceedings against each other in publicly funded tribunals we
shall not enhance our openness or tolerance.
The proceedings which have been taken, the time, the cost, the extent of the proceedings, the
remedies that are available all illustrate, in my view, that this is a bad law.
We would be better to forget the litigation and work to reinforce the values drawn from the
tradition that underlies our society – respect for individuals, tolerance within a framework
of law, and mutual respect.
This is the legacy of our Judeo-Christian tradition.
Unfortunately today we see that legacy fraying all around us. It is almost as if the capital
deposit has been drawn down for such regular maintenance that the capital is running out. The
maintenance demands are unending. But we are not building up the capital required to service
it.
We do not have to look far to see evidence of moral decay around us. We can see it and hear it
in entertainment like rap music, in songs which glorify violence or suicide or exploitation of
others.
As we speak drug barons compete for the distribution rights to sell drugs to our children in
Melbourne. These rights are so lucrative that they are prepared to kill to protect their
profits with 24 or 25 unsolved gangland murders in Victoria since 1998.
These barons sell young people into addiction. Drugs break up families and marriages. Many
addicts end up in prostitution or burglary. These outcomes are the very antitheses of all
those values set out in the Ten Commandments about how to order society.
People well known to the police apparently live in luxury with no visible means of support or
explanation as to how they maintain their lifestyles.
And it seems to me that as a society we have become complacent about this issue, in some
cases, the media has glamourised it.
A few weeks ago I called for a sense of outrage about what is happening in our midst. And I
pledge that if Federal Tax authorities can assist in tracking and taxing the flow of money
that sustains the lifestyles of these drug barons then everything that can be done will be
done. We stand ready, anxious, to assist.
We have such a rich heritage. But in so many ways it is being run down. The values which it
has given us - respect for life, respect for others, for property, respect for family - seem
to be undermined in many ways.
What should we do?
At this point it is usual for some leading churchman from some well known denomination to
appear in the media to call on the Government to fix things.
I do not want to suggest that there are no initiatives the Government should take. And what
Government can do, it should do. But I do want to suggest something much more radical and far
reaching. I want to suggest that a recovery of faith would go a long way to answering this
challenge. A Government should never get into religious endeavours. But if our church leaders
could so engage people as to lead them to genuine faith we should be much richer and stronger
for it.
The Bible tells the story of the Prophet Elijah who got despondent about the state of decay
all around him. He was running for his life. He fled out to the wilderness. He sat under a
juniper tree and asked to die. He felt alone and let down. He had no supporters. He thought he
was the only person left that was true.
But the still small voice of God came to him and lifted him and told him that there were still
thousands that had not lowered the knee to the spiritual and moral decay all around him. (1
Kings, Ch 19)
And this is the point I would like to make to those who have gathered here tonight. There are
many that have not, in their hearts, acquiesced to the kind of decay which is apparent around
us. They do not believe it is right. They earnestly pray for the expansion of faith and yearn
for higher standards.
They will get up tomorrow and go to their places of worship in suburbs and towns across the
country, affirm the historic Christian faith, and go to work on Monday as law-abiding citizens
who want their marriages to stay together, their children to grow up to be healthy and useful
members of society, and their homes to be happy. They care deeply about our society and where
it is going.
These people will not get their names in the media. They will not be elected to anything. They
will not be noisy lobbyists. But they are the steadying influence, the ballast, to our society
when it shakes with moral turbulence. They give strength and stability and they embody the
character and the traditions of our valuable heritage. It is their inner faith which gives
them strength. Our society won’t work without them.
All citizens share in the heritage and the blessings that heritage brought to our country,
something for which we can all give thanks. We should not take these blessings for granted. We
should not become complacent. We should genuinely give thanks because we have been genuinely
blessed. And each, to our own ability, should nurture the values which were so important in
bringing us to where we are today and which we need so badly to take us on.
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© Commonwealth of Australia 2000