February 2026 – Part 2

The second half of February was devoted to my ministry and family visiting travels to Perth and Adelaide. First off, after flying across the country, was a day with my clergy colleague Rev. Sarah Walker. Sarah’s ministry is helping lead the global spiritual practice of Logopraxis. We spent some time at Sorrento Beach, where some high school students were having their Swimming Carnival, this time at the beach, and had dinner together.

My ministry activities in Perth started with an informal discussion class at the home of Ros and David Walker, the leader of the NCIA group there, with whom I stayed for a few days. There are two groups of Swedenborgian/New Church folks in Perth, one affiliated with the NCIA and the other with the General Church, and they come together quite frequently. The photo of me about to start the class about “What Is Heaven Like?”, and the top of the right panel, are from that class, followed by afternoon tea. The next day was a more formal presentation about “When Swedenborg Is Antiquated: How Readers Interpret Difficult Texts” followed by lunch at the restaurant – second photo on the right panel. By Sunday I had moved over to stay with Mary Smuts, the leader of the General Church group. We all worshiped and celebrated Communion/Holy Supper together, in the rented space where the group usually meets, and then enjoyed morning tea. The final photo in the right panel is from that occasion. I was able to do a bit of a pastoral visit with one of the congregants over lunch and a walk in Kings Park, a beautiful preserve right along the Swan River. Below are photos from a few walks and touristy outings in Perth.

Every trip along my travel and ministry path, I like to explore somewhere that I’ve never been before. This year it was the Margaret River region of Western Australia, locally known as “Margs.” It’s the premier tourist and wine production region in Western Australia, located south-west of Perth. Mary Smuts, Ros Thwaites and I were the three “church ladies” that took a little holiday to explore and enjoy. The first touristy stop was the longest timber jetty in the Southern Hemisphere, also second longest in the world, the Busselton Jetty in Geographe Bay. I took the train out to the end of the jetty, and walked the 1.8 kms/1.14 miles back.

When not out touristing, the church ladies were staying in a cottage at a Holiday Park in Marybrook, WA. The beach was a short walk from our cottage. I saw several stingrays in the water, which convinced me that it was a good place for boating or walking along the edge of the water (my favourite activity) but definitely not swimming!

Left to right: A view of Yallingup, near our cottage; the church ladies out for dinner; we had to look out for kangaroos and slower animals crossing the road, especially in the evenings; being at the end of the summer, the grass everywhere was brown and dry.

My travel and ministry path in February ended with a short visit in Adelaide, South Australia. As usual, I spent some time with my brother and sister-in-law, and cousin in Adelaide, but this time did not travel further in SA to visit other extended family members. Again this year, I managed to be in Adelaide on a weekend that the Adelaide Christian New Church was not holding a worship service, as they now meet every other Sunday 🙁 But June Johnson, the lay leader, assured me that they would be happy to have me lead worship (I don’t like using “preach” to describe all that a minister does during a worship service) if I can co-ordinate my travel better next year! She and I went with my brother Stephen to pay a pastoral visit to a congregation member and dear friend, Michael Delbridge, who has been a core member of the Adelaide church and is now living in a long-term care facility.

Travel in NSW and SA

Right before New Years, I took a picturesque train trip to Gosford and Tumbi Umbi, just north of Sydney in NSW to visit friends. Jen is a friend from high school and is a recent reader of Swedenborg, although she has been aware of the Swedenborgian/New Church since we were pre-teens. Mike and Kerry Lockhart are friends from my teen years in the Hurstville New Church, now retired near the beach. Ask me how Jen and Mike previously met if you want to hear an entertaining story!

Jen and I got caught up on about a decade of life, and chatted about my ministry and how Swedenborgian theology has helped me. After spending a relaxing day with Mike and Kerry, including an evening beach walk which Kerry had never done, Kerry and I had breakfast at a beach cafe and surveyed morning activity on Tumbi Umbi beach. From there it was a train trip back to Sydney to meet my friend Cliff for New Year’s Eve fireworks on Sydney Harbour (see the “Joy in NSW” post.)

After connecting with dear friends in the Roseville (Sydney) congregation on New Years Day, my next stop was Adelaide, South Australia. My maternal grandfather Rev. C. D. Brock was the minister for the Adelaide Christian New Church (current name) for 23 years. Seeing his photo and name at the church when I stay there connects me to my faith and ministry roots in Australia. My vision for ministry in the Swedenborgian Church of North America included returning to Australia to serve as needed in the New Church in Australia, grounded in my roots there.

During my grandfather’s ministry in Adelaide, Helen Keller reportedly paid a visit to the congregation in 1948 when she visited Adelaide. She gifted them with this autographed photo, with the inscription “God is Light.” This year, the congregation was not meeting in January, but we did get together for morning tea at the home of the Leader June Johnson. She has asked me to send written and video sermons to use in worship services.

It was so good to see my brother Stephen and sister-in-law Soula in Adelaide, after three years of pandemic! A highlight for me was seeing “The Mousetrap” with them, the longest running show in the world, on its world tour. Also faves for me while in Adelaide this time: watching birds and relishing gum trees in the Oaklands Estate Reserve, catching up with friends and church members over coffee or on the phone, beach time, and finding a monument to a Women’s Suffrage leader in South Australia.

South Australia, like many parts of Australia, has been affected recently by La Nina conditions, which has resulted in near-record rainfall and flooding. During drought times, the Murray River in SA can get down to a trickle. Not now! On my way to visit Brock rellies in Tintinara, SA (AKA Tinty) I stopped at a cafe that I’ve often frequented, on the Murray. This is the highest I’ve ever seen the river. On the way back I saw trees under water in the town of Murray Bridge, with water lapping at homes and sheds on the waterfront.

On the way back from Tinty to Adelaide, I stopped at “Old Tailem Town, ” a recreated pioneer town that I had passed many times and promised myself I would see “some day.” My parents and brother had recommended it years ago. Pictured below are some of the highlights for me: the interior of a small house that I told my kids was a “pioneer granny flat” (since I now live in one!), a farmhouse that is similar to the one my Dad lived in as a child, a one-room school like the one he attended, a hotel that probably is like the ones my paternal grandfather worked with as a leasing agent before he became a farmer during the Great Depression, and a row of shops typical of Australian country towns in earlier days. Not long after that I crossed the “old bridge” in Murray Bridge and again was amazed at seeing a flooded Murray River.

Stepping out in Oz 2019

It’s always an emotional moment for me when the Australian coastline comes into view. The emotion of homecoming, the excitement of starting a new chapter in my journey, the inevitable questions and anxieties about what lies ahead.

Literally within an hour of getting settled for my overnight stay in Sydney at Baringa, the Hurstville New Church’s office and guest house, these two lovely friends whisked me away. Thanks Jenn and Lori for a lovely lunch at the Rising Sun Cafe and shopping and touring in Sydney for the afternoon!

After resting my foot which had survived the long flights and Sydney excursion remarkably well, and enjoying the company and environment of the church property where I had grown up many moons ago, I was off the next afternoon (Saturday) to Adelaide, 1375 km/850 miles west on the southern coast of Australia. Stepping out to start my month of ministry in the Adelaide Christian New Church. My grandfather Rev. C. Douglas Brock had pastored the church for decades, and my parents were married in it before it moved out to the suburbs into its current building, designed by my architect cousin Jeffrey Brock. Last year the congregation had created a small flat within the church, where I have been staying again this time.

By now it’s a small congregation that meets fortnightly, but somehow the memo hadn’t quite made it to everyone that there was no worship service on the day after I had arrived. After a leisurely morning I was just getting out of the shower when two members arrived early for church! Definitely a first for me, possible a first for all clergy for all time! But within 20 minutes we were in the sanctuary starting an impromptu worship service, based on a Home Church in Bryn Athyn service that was saved on my computer and a worship programme from a previous service in the church. We even managed morning tea after the service! Since then we’ve had two more worship services in which I’m both worship leader and organist, ongoing jewelry making classes as a community outreach, my class on Pastoral Care in response to members’ experiences supporting a congregant who had recently passed, and several morning teas and shared lunches. At an open Committee (Board) meeting, the congregation affirmed their interest in my coming back next year for three months, so I will be submitting a formal proposal.

A major focus of the congregation at the moment is preparing for the 175th anniversary of the founding of the church by a group of the earliest settlers in South Australia, lead by Rev. Jacob Pitman, whose brother Sir Isaac famously invented shorthand. The anniversary celebration coincides with “South Australia’s History Festival,” which runs for a whole month starting 27 April. Museums, libraries, churches and other organisations hold open houses, displays, tours and other special events. The photos show a work in progress! Of historical note, the Adelaide congregation was the first in Australia to have a female lay leader, since 2015.