Australia: When Prime Ministers Pray
It’s not every
week that the Prime Minister of a Western nation stands before a church
congregation and leads spontaneous community prayer. But on September 30, new
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison did just that. While visiting Planetshakers,
a large Pentecostal church in Melbourne, Mr Morrison ascended the worship
platform and led prayers for the victims of the Indonesian earthquake and
tsunami and also for Australian farmers locked in the grip of drought-induced financial
crisis.
Refugee debates
Scott Morrison
replaced Malcolm Turnbull as Prime Minister in late August after Mr Turnbull
lost the confidence of his governing Liberal Party. Mr Morrison has served a
number of roles in recent Australian governments, but was especially prominent
in enforcing the “Stop the Boats” policy under former Prime Minister Tony
Abbott. This policy involved the detention on the Pacific Islands of Nauru and
Manus Island of thousands of newly-arriving asylum seekers who had sought
refuge in Australia through people-smuggling channels. Around two thousand had
drowned at sea during the two phases of the asylum-seeker boat arrivals since
the year 2000.
The reception
by Christians of Mr Morrison as Prime Minister has been mixed. He is an active
churchgoer in the Australian Christian Churches, the Pentecostal denomination
in Australia. Many Christians saw his appointment to the highest position in
Australia as a blessing from God. One correspondent to the Anglican newspaper
“Eternity” declared: “I am so glad that, finally, we have a true Christian who
will rely on our God for his direction on how to run this country.” Another
similarly declared “Praise God for this man and his dependence on the living
God for leading the country back to the One and Only.”
However, some
other Christians responded badly to Mr Morrison’s appointment, with one
correspondent calling on him to adopt a more welcoming refugee policy: “I have
been dismayed by … the dismissive and disdainful way he has treated real
refugees and spoken of them. They are also made in the image of their Creator.
We can do better.” He also attracted opposition from some Christians who did
not look kindly on his Pentecostal connections. One labelled him as “happy-clappy”
and lamented: “Next we will have the Parliament highjacked by Evangelical
Pentecostal values.”
Public prayer
When Mr
Morrison came forward to lead prayers for earthquake-struck Indonesia and
Australia’s drought-stricken farmers on September 30, the event was certainly
newsworthy. After all, such behaviour is out of keeping with the increasingly
humanistic political leadership in the West.
However,
Australia’s mostly secular population barely noticed this event, being
preoccupied with football grand finals and the balmy spring weather. But some
Christians did notice Mr Morrison’s prayers, captured by a member of the
congregation and posted on Facebook. Some railed against him. One Christian
reader commented: “When refugees on Manus and Nauru pray and the Prime Minister
of Australia prays, I know which one God listens to. FYI it’s not the PM.”
Another Christian with a similar sense of certainty about the mind of God
wrote: “His behaviour is very un-Christian, but God will be the judge of that in
the end.... (although I think we already know what God will say).”
The invective
against the Prime Minister by Christians since his public prayer has been
acute. He has been variously labelled as “a great pretender”, “a wicked man”,
and “an unfathomable hypocrite”, with most of these comments directed to his
staunch opposition to people-smuggling and asylum boats.
Tall poppies
On the whole,
Christians in Australia seem to be divided about having a believer Prime
Minister. No doubt many of those who oppose him do so on the grounds of refugee
policy with which he has been associated. It should also be said, however, that
Australia’s inglorious “tall poppy syndrome” no doubt has a role to play in the
response to Mr Morrison. That syndrome is based on the notion that when one of
the herd rises above the pack, he should be brought down with a withering
barrage of criticism.
Mr Morrison
sees himself simply as an ordinary believer, and his public prayer on September
30 was meant to be no more than a simple act of worship and supplication. It
seems that many Christians in Australia smell an agenda where there may well
have been none.
First published in “Evangelicals Now”
(http://www.e-n.org.uk/), November 2018, page 7.