New South Wales Council Of Churches
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New South Wales Council of Churches was a body of leaders from the evangelical Christian churches, and for a time the
Church of England The Church of England (C of E) is the State religion#State churches, established List of Christian denominations, Christian church in England and the Crown Dependencies. It is the mother church of the Anglicanism, Anglican Christian tradition, ...
, of the city of Sydney and the Australian state of New South Wales. It was formed to present a unified front to influence public discourse and government policy, and also served to increase communication and cooperation between rival churches with similar aims and philosophies. This article traces the history of the body through its presidents and other officeholders.


History


First incarnation

Rev. John Walker founded and was secretary of the first Council of the Churches in 1889, apparently called by him to fight relaxation of the laws governing public entertainment on Sunday. Delegates, 32 in all, were appointed by the Sydney churches of the participating denominations: Church of England, Presbyterian, Wesleyan Methodist, Baptist, and Primitive Methodist. The rules provided for no president; a chairman was elected from the delegates at each meeting, held monthly in the YMCA hall. In 1895 Walker resigned, to be replaced by William Allen, who was replaced in 1896 by Rev. Theophilus Parr. Apart from the secretary, no mention has been found of any other continuing office, although William George Taylor has been mentioned as president of the New South Wales Council of the Churches in 1899. and
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, Baptist preacher, sometime around 1905, but these may refer to a different body: *In 1899 the Congregational and Baptist churches founded the "Evangelical Council of New South Wales", supported by William Allen with the same aims and similar membership. The Evangelical Council ceased to exist with the eighteenth Christian Conference at the Petersham Town Hall in 1914. *An independent Council of Churches was formed in Newcastle in 1897 By 1899 the council was a spent force; one problem as outlined by Professor Rentoul was that the great churches had no more rights than "miserable little sects". Great umbrage was taken, however, at the formation of the rival Evangelical Council.


Second incarnation

In 1924 a new council was formulated by representatives of the Anglican, Presbyterian, Methodist, Baptist, and Congregational Churches, the Associated Churches of Christ, the Salvation Army, and the Society of Friends, but its institution was held up by Anglican Church red tape. * F. H. Rayward was the first secretary and president *1925 D'Arcy Irvine Dr Carruthers elected secretary. Victor C. Bell followed as secretary
In this year the NSW Council joined with those of other States in hosting evangelist
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in 1926. *1926 Archdeacon Boyce *1927 P. J. Stephen (Methodist) *1928 Dr A. J. Waldock (Baptist) *1928 P. J. Steven *1929 Victor C. Bell (Methodist/Presbyterian) *1930 Albert Edward West (c. 1863–1945) (Congregational) Council approved establishment of an AM radio station *1931 D. J. Davies (Anglican) *1932 D. J. Davies *1933 T. E. Rofe *1934
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(Society of Friends) *1935 W. H. Jones (Methodist) In 1936 the Church of England formally withdrew its support for the Council. *1936
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*1937 Wilfred L. Jarvis Changes following Anglican withdrawal *1938 Frank Bell, of the Salvation Army *1939 Rupert J. Williams, Methodist *1940 C. A. White (2nd term) *1941 C. Bernard Cockett *1942 Dr H. Whitmore Dart *1943 J. H. G. Auld *1944 A. C. McLean (of Churches of Christ) *1945 T. Manning Taylor *1946 S. Arthur Eastman (Presbyterian) Anglican Church rejoins council *1947 S. A. (A. S.?) Eastman *1948 S. Barton Babbage (Dean of Sydney) Courtenay Thomas secretary *1949 Major Nicholson *1950 H. W. K. Mowll *1951 S. W. McKibbin (McKibbon ?) *1952 Cumming Thom R. G. Fillingham secretary *1953 Cumming Thom (Presbyterian) *1954 Cumming Thom See also *
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* Margaret Rodgers (deaconess) *
Josiah Thomas (politician) Josiah Thomas (28 April 1863 – 5 February 1933) was an Australian politician. He was elected to the House of Representatives at the inaugural 1901 federal election, representing the Labor Party. Thomas served as a minister in Andrew Fishe ...


Notes


References

{{Reflist 1924 establishments in Australia Evangelical organizations established in the 20th century Evangelical parachurch organizations Christian organizations established in 1892 20th-century church councils Christian organisations based in Australia