Family background
Dally Raymond Messenger is the grandson of Dally Messenger, a rugby player. Charles Amos Messenger, his great-grandfather, was a sculling champion in Victoria who established the first boatshed onEarly life and education
Born in Sydney in February 1938, Dally Messenger III is the son of Dally Messenger Junior and Dorothy (née Davidson). His upbringing took place in Sydney, with most of his school years spent in Katoomba in the Blue Mountains at St Bernard's College. He completed his final year of secondary schooling at Marist Brothers, Parramatta. Subsequently, he worked in banking and wholesale for several years before entering a seminary at the age of twenty-one, beginning his studies for the Catholic priesthood at St Columba's College, Springwood, NSW, and later completing them at St Patrick's College, Manly. Messenger earned his degree (Sacrae Theologiae Baccalaureus (STB)) in 1964, along with teaching qualifications in 1965, before being ordained a priest in 1966. During the post-Career
Messenger served as the founding editor and publisher of Dance Australia Magazine, established in 1980. Messenger's contributions to the magazine earned two national arts awards. The first, awarded for "Services to Dance," was presented during the inaugural National Dance Awards at the Sydney Opera House in May 1997. The second was an Australian Dance Award for "Outstanding Achievement in Dance Education" in 2008, presented at the Arts Centre in Melbourne on June 15.Civil celebrant
Messenger has been involved in the civil celebrant program, initially within Australia and subsequently in other English-speaking countries. On 26 January 1970, Messenger was the first individual to apply for the position of a Civil Marriage Celebrant under the provisions outlined in the Commonwealth Marriage Act of Australia of 1961. In the 1970s, he was an advocate for civil marriage reform, supporting the Whitlam Government's Attorney-General Lionel Murphy who, on 26 July 1973, by appointing Lois D'Arcy, had introduced civil marriage celebrants into the Australian cultural scene. Messenger was appointed as a Civil Marriage Celebrant by Murphy in February 1974. Murphy appointed him first secretary of the Association of Civil Marriage Celebrants of Australia (ACMCA). Messenger was a founder and inaugural president of Funeral Celebrants Association of Australia. In January 1994 he was elected the foundation president of the Australian Federation of Civil Celebrants Inc who, on 26 May 1996, honoured him with Life Membership. Messenger was prosecuted for violating Victorian consumer law, accused of attempting to manipulate the fees charged by civil celebrants for funeral services. Messenger contended that his intention was not to fix fees but to pressure funeral directors into raising the fixed fees established through long-standing collaboration among themselves. In 2007, he pleaded guilty to attempting to induce individuals to contravene section 45(2)(a)(ii) of the Competition Code of Victoria and was fined $46,000, in addition to covering his own legal costs amounting to $20,000. Messenger and his supporters persist in asserting that the Australian public is poorly served by a system that grants funeral directors significant control over the conditions and compensation of celebrants. Messenger was an early advocate for the legalisation of same-sex marriages. As early as 1979, he introduced commitment ceremonies for same-sex couples. In the 1990s Dally Messenger was active in spreading the civil celebrancy movement to New Zealand and the UK, countries where it was less well established. He was invited to New Zealand as guest keynote speaker at three annual conventions in the 1990s and in 2000. These were in Christchurch, organised by celebrant Frank Crean on 27 June 1998; inHonours
On 8 May 2014, Messenger was made a Life Member of the ''Celebrants and Celebrations Network'' (CCN) in recognition of his services to celebrants. The citation with this life membership calls Messenger "The Don of Celebrancy" and refers to "his unique contribution to the development of civil celebrancy in the Western World."Books
* ''Ceremonies for Today'', 1979.Messenger, Dally; ''Ceremonies for Today'', Zouch, Melbourne, 1979. & . * ''Ceremonies and Celebrations'', 2003.Messenger, Dally; ''Ceremonies & Celebrations'', Hachette-Livre, Sydney, 2003. . Also published as an eBook, . * Messenger, Dally, ''So Mum and Dad have Separated'', Listen & Learn, Melbourne, 1981 1980 . * ''Being a Chum was Fun'' Listen & Learn Melbourne, Victoria Australia, 1979 . * >Messenger, Dally, ''The Master...'',References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Messenger, Dally, III 1938 births 20th-century Roman Catholics Living people Australian Roman Catholic priests