Record PERTH, WA: January 11, 1996
PRINT POST APPROVED PP602669/00303
Number 2979
POST ADDRESS: PO Box 75, LEEDERVILLE, 6902, WA LOCATION: 587 Newcastle Street, Cnr Douglas St (near Loftus St)
TELEPHONE: (09) 22 77 080
FAX: (09) 22 77 087
PRICE 60c
What's Inside... Media bishop criticises proposals for an Australian Catholic-inspired pay-TV service and dissents from his episcopal brothers - Page 3 Missionaries of God seek to take Pope John Paul at his word on evangelisation - Page 2 Two pages of video ratings and reviews for the school holidays - Pages 10 and 11 Francois Mitterand's final thoughts - Page 13
Religious retrace steps of the pioneers
Celebrations for the 150th anniversary of the arrival of the Sisters of Mercy and the Benedictines in Perth began last Tuesday at Victoria Square. Right: Dom Christopher Power and Sister Sheila Sawle re-lived for several hundred participants and onlookers the first impressions of the orders' founding members, (top): remembering those who have gone before now buried in the convent grounds beside Mercedes College and, below, Premier Richard Court looks on as Archbishop Hickey and Fr David OSB intone a Psalm. More pictures - Page 6
Catholics join religion suntey By Peter Rosengren Later this year you might be asked a lot of questions about your religious belief and practice - and all in perfect anonymity Your answers are what the Christian churches of Australia will be particularly interested to discover from the 1997 National Church Life Survey. The survey, to be conducted in August, was announced by its project director, Dr Peter Kaldor, last week. Dr Kaldor said the survey would be conducted as close to the next official census as possible and that up to 800,000 churchgoers in a given week will be asked about their involvement in their church and the wider community, and about their values, attitudes and beliefs. The Australia Catholic Bishops' Conference decided at its November meeting to participate in the survey - a joint project of the Uniting Church Board of Mission and
the Anglican Home Mission Society. The participation of the Catholic Church means that Australia's largest religious denomination will now be participating alongside approximately 20 other Christian denominations, increasing the size and, hopefully, the accuracy of the data base that will be generated. And just as statistics about populations and emerging trends for planning purposes are the most sought-after information by every organisation from small businesses to national governments, so the churches in Australia are seeking the raw data that will enable them to discern what the attitudes, beliefs and factors are that affect the lives of ordinary Christians throughout Australia. Australian Catholic Bishops Conference secretary, Father Michael McKenna, said the decision of the Catholic Church to participate was a vital step in thinking about how to relate effectively to a changing and diverse Australia. "We expect that the survey will yield reliable information about the actual beliefs
and practice of church-goers. This will be understand changes among Catholics. The a welcome replacement for existing anec- bishops said the survey would help the Catholic Church "recognise those signs of dotal evidence and guesswork," he said. Several major benefits are expected to growth which are obscured by falling emerge from the survey. Each church will attendances." Dr Kaldor said that the survey would be able to gain a clearer picture of what their own adherents feel and think - all enable Churches "to take an honest look important in the field of responding to reli- at where they are heading as they move into the next century." gious and evangelical issues. The survey would build and expand the It is also hoped that a clearer overall picture of Christianity in Australia will data base established by the 1991 survey emerge and that churches will be better which, he said, is considered to be the able to respond to the challenges facing largest and most comprehensive in the them singly and collectively into the world. "Over the last few years the 1991 data future. This year's survey will be only the sec- has received considerable attention," he ond to have been conducted in Australia. said. "It has become a standard reference The first was held in 1991 and involved point for planning both by church leaders over 300,000 responses from more than interested in overall trends and local 6,000 congregations in nineteen non- churches who get key data on their own Catholic denominations throughout the particular situations." He said that over the last four years country. According to their conference bulletin, National Church Life Survey staff had preAustralia's Catholic bishops believe the sented over 130 workshops to thousands 1996 survey will help bishops and other of church leaders based on information Church leaders to recognise, quantify and from the 1991 survey.