Steve Drinkall in Brisbane has launched Postcard Radio, a podcast site focusing on emerging missional church in Queensland, sponsored by the Churches of Christ, Queensland Baptists and Uniting Church in Australia.
Postcard Radio is committed to discovering and interviewing those brave souls who are finding innovative new ways to communicate an old message. All of the people interviewed on the site live, serve, work and play in South East Queensland and all have a passion for helping ordinary Australians connect with the person of Jesus.
I’m one of the first three interviewees, along with two Baptists…
Billy Williams is serving and reaching urban aboriginal people in Brisbane’s northern suburbs. As the founders and leaders of Dhiiyaan , Billy and his wife are reinventing what it means to be the church at a park on any Sunday afternoon.
Mick Cross, youth pastor at Reedy Creek Baptist on the Gold Coast, has taken the challenge of multiplication seriously in his youth ministry. He has restructured everyone into “Tribes” and allowed student interests to dominate where they meet, what they do and who will lead them.
Some of the ideas here are small, some are large. Some involve thousands of people, some involve just a handful. Some require lots of resources and some are completely free. We hope that these stories and ideas will create a new movement of innovation in living and sharing the message of Jesus with people in our region. Tune in, switch your brain on and imagine what else we could do…
Jim Wallis, here in Australia to promote his book, “God’s Politics”, was interviewed on ABC Radio Brisbane this morning, in the conversation hour. Richard Fidler. The conversation is available on the ABC web site in ASX, RAM and MP3 formats.
Also in the conversation is Michael Franti, a musician with band Spearhead, who engages with issues such as media monopolisation, corporate globalisation and incarceration.
From the ABC summary of the interview:
Jim Wallis is a Christian leader campaigning for social change. Thirty years ago he founded ‘Sojourners’ - Christians for justice and peace - and he continues to serve as the editor for Sojourners magazine, covering faith, politics and culture. He’s also the best-selling author of God’s Politics: why the right gets it wrong and the left doesn’t get it.
Jim believes there a few different reasons the ‘religious right’ is ‘getting it wrong’. “I don’t think God is an American,” he says. “I know that’s a shock!… The right reduce everything to one or two hot social issues… I insist that fighting poverty, protecting the environment, the ethics of war are fundamental religious and moral issues as well.”
Other groups are starting to demand answers, however. “The monologue of the religious right is finally over,” says Jim. “A new discourse has become a moral discourse on politics that we all need, and we’re all needed for. A new generation want an agenda for the rest of their lives… We’re talking about taking back the faith - how did Jesus become pro-rich, pro-war and pro-American?”
Jim was part of a group of religious leaders who met with President Bush after he was elected, to talk about these issues. “We had a frank conversation. We said, ‘Surprise us - be a Republican who leads on the issue of poverty.’ He said, ‘I don’t get it. I haven’t been around poor people… How do I get it?’ I said ‘You’ve got to listen to poor people and those who work with poor people.’
“His inaugural address talked more about poverty than anyone for a long time - a good start - but then it turned the other way. Poverty has risen every year for the last five years.”
Steve Austin, an ABC radio presenter in Brisbane, hosts a regular podcast review by Jo Leutton on his Thursday night show after 8.30 pm. Just recently the focus was on religion, philosophy and ethics. Jo reviewed six podcasts:
The reviews are online in a shortened form at ABC Brisbane, including XML feeds for the podcasts. It’s a pity the show wasn’t made available as a podcast!