Anglican Clergy Ready To Assist In Queensland
THE ANGLICAN CHURCH IN AOTEAROA, NEW ZEALAND AND
POLYNESIA
MEDIA RELEASE – SATURDAY JANUARY 15
Anglican Clergy Ready To Assist In
Queensland
Anglican clergy from New Zealand are prepared to fly across the Tasman to assist with funerals and pastoral care of flood victims in south Queensland.
Archbishop David Moxon, of the Anglican Church in Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia (with the support of his fellow Archbishops, Brown Turei and Winston Halapua) has conveyed this offer to Archbishop Philip Aspinall of Brisbane.
The Diocese of Wellington, which is a companion diocese of Brisbane, has offered three priests, while the Diocese of Waikato is ready to send one. It’s hoped that Brisbane Anglicans will feed and accommodate them. Stipends and airfares, however, will be met by Anglicans in New Zealand.
“Archbishop Aspinall is taking our offer very seriously and will indicate soon whether such support is needed,” Archbishop Moxon said. “There’s a concern that further rain will worsen the crisis in Queensland. If so, local churches may be grateful for the help of extra clergy.”
Archbishop Moxon also has called on Anglicans here to pray for the rescue effort.
“The loss of at least 15 people – some of them children – is a tragedy we all feel deeply,” he said. “We uphold all the people of Queensland and beyond in our hearts and prayers as they struggle through the aftermath of the flooding.”
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