Friday, September 3, 2010

Bishop John Hazlewood (1924 - 1998) R.I.P.




Today is the year's mind of Bishop John Hazlewood SSC MA, the bishop who inspired me, ordained me, and allowed me to be part of the spiritual adventure of his time in the Diocese of Ballarat. Bishop John nurtured many vocations to the priesthood, and drew thousands of young people to the Lord Jesus. A man who knew that in human life, "Joy and woe are woven fine" (Blake), he also believed that all of it is redeemed in Christ.

There is not much on the internet about Bishop John. So I have put some items here that will help you to appreciate a little of what God did through him.


BISHOP JOHN HAZLEWOOD - A TRIBUTE
My article in the All Saints' Gazette, October 1998

"The passing of an era" is how the Ballarat Courier summed up the Requiem Mass offered at the funeral of Bishop John Hazlewood on Wednesday 9th September, 1998.

The Anglican Cathedral of Christ the King was unable to be used because of repairs being made to the roof. And so, in a quirky twist that Bishop John would have enjoyed, the Anglican Diocese accepted the Roman Catholic Church's invitation to use St Patrick's Cathedral for the occasion.

The Ballarat Courier went on to describe Bishop John's funeral as "a fitting end to a rich and unusual life", and continued: "One suspects that this extraordinary service for an extraordinary man would have sat as comfortably with Bishop Hazlewood as his mitre."

Principal celebrant of the Mass was the Rt. Rev'd. David Silk, Bishop John's successor. Roman Catholic Archbishop of Melbourne, Dr George Pell, whose friendship with Bishop John was well-known, sat with Bishop Connors of Ballarat, and the Primate of the Anglican Church of Australia, Archbishop Keith Rayner.

Almost 100 clergy filed into the Cathedral to say farewell to a greatly loved Father-in-God. They were joined by local political leaders, and, to quote the Courier again, "the hundreds of others who had been touched in some way by the flamboyant Bishop Hazlewood".

Bishop John had left strict instructions about his funeral, and so it was that, under the direction of Father Bill Edebohls (who had just resigned the Deanery in Ballarat) the Mass was celebrated from the Missal, using the ancient Roman Canon. Father Peter Treloar, who had been Bishop John's chaplain, preached a wonderful sermon/eulogy.

Before six priests who had been ordained by him carried Bishop John's body from the cathedral, the Regina Caeli was sung, honouring Our Lady, and rejoicing in the glorious resurrection of her Son - the victory over death that he shares with his people.

John Hazlewood was born on 19th May, 1924 in London and raised in New Zealand. He served in the RAF during World War II and then read theology at Kings College, Cambridge. Following priestly training at Cuddeston Theological College, he was ordained deacon in 1949 and priest in 1950, both in Southwark Cathedral. He served the parish of St Michael and All Angels, Camberwell in London. 

After a short curacy in Sydney (St Jude's Randwick) and a couple of years in Dubbo, N.S.W., he returned to Camberwell where he remained until being appointed Vice Principal of St Francis College, Brisbane, in 1955. It was during this time that he preached and said Mass regularly at All Saints' Wickham Terrace as an honorary assistant priest to Father Peter Bennie. At the time of my induction there were still parishioners who remembered the dashing Father Hazlewood sometimes riding his motorbike from St Francis College to All Saints, clad in soutane and biretta!)

From 1960 to 1968 he was Dean of Rockhampton. During this period he married Dr Shirley Shevill, sister of the Bishop of North Queensland. In 1968, John Hazlewood was appointed Dean of Perth, where his innovative and exuberant style brought him into national prominence. Thousands of young people flocked to hear Dean Hazlewood preach the Gospel in a way that was fresh, relevant and arresting at the famous rock Masses. 

In 1975 John Hazlewood was elected seventh Bishop of Ballarat, and embarked on a programme of catholic renewal, promoting the ministry of lay people, supporting youth ministry, encouraging lay education programmes, and attracting many men to the priesthood. He proclaimed the Blessed Virgin Mary to be patroness of the Diocese under her English title "Our Lady of Walsingham", and links were formed between the Diocese and the shrine in Norfolk. 

Bishop John worked tirelessly to renew parishes in a vital evangelical catholicism, placing the Eucharist at the heart of each community. He was responsible for the renovation of the Cathedral and the building of an impressive Diocesan Centre. Great diocesan rallies were held at Portland and Warnambool.

In 1978 he established a Joint Diocesan Commission with the Roman Catholic Diocese of Ballarat, "to work and pray towards the reunion of our churches."

Throughout his episcopate Bishop John was one of the few real champions of catholic orthodoxy within Australian Anglicanism, thus resisting the liberal protestant insistence on the ordination of women.

In 1988 he entered into a Communion relationship with Archbishop Louis Falk and the Anglican Catholic Church in Australia, and in retirement participated in the consecration of bishops for that body, as well as administering the sacrament of Confirmation for them.

John Hazlewood retired in 1993, continuing to live in Ballarat where his wife Shirley was a popular General Practitioner. She and their son Paul predeceased him. He is survived by his younger son, James.

Bishop John inspired countless young men to offer their lives to Jesus and the Church as priests. He was not without his faults - some of them conspicuous! - but his time as Bishop of Ballarat is widely regarded as having been a great spiritual adventure. Those of us who were nurtured by him and ordained by him regard ourselves as blessed indeed.

Bishop John maintained his affection for All Saints' Wickham Terrace down through the years. He encouraged me to accept the parish in 1995, and was a most helpful advisor in the delicate discussions that led to my appointment. He visited five times after my induction, and, before his health deteriorated, had seriously considered moving to Brisbane to be near old friends.

It is fitting that under the magnificent portrait of Bishop John in the foyer of the All Saints' Wickham Terrace Parish Centre are the words: 

"He kept the Faith - and he loved us."

Some All Saints' parishioners will remember the Midnight Mass sermon to which Father Peter Treloar referred in his sermon  (see below) well as the extraordinary Holy Week Bishop John preached for us in 1996.

The obituary Father Treloar wrote for the media concluded with these words:

"A man of letters and history, of art and drama, of music and gardens, Bishop Hazlewood was anything but dull. He had lunched with T.S. Eliot and Elton John, Princess Margaret and Mick Jagger. His reputation as a theological conservative masked a keen and open mind. Most of all, he was a man who lived by the love he proclaimed. The Rock Mass for Love stood at the centre of his career and as the focus of his beliefs. He is thus mourned by his opponents as well as by his friends." 

+ Give him eternal rest, O Lord, and may your light shine on him forever.


(AUDIO) EUCHARISTIC PRAYER
FROM THE 1971 "ROCK MASS FOR LOVE"
St George's Cathedral, Perth, with the Rock Group "Bakery"


INTERVIEW WITH JOHN HAZLEWOOD 
May, 1975, when he was Dean of Perth Go HERE

PHOTO OF JOHN HAZLEWOOD AS DEAN OF PERTH
WITH PRINCESS MARGARET
Go HERE



THE GLORY OF GOD 
IN THE WEAKNESS OF HUMAN FLESH
Sermon preached by Fr Peter Treloar 
at Bishop Hazlewood's Funeral Mass, 
Wednesday 9th September, 1998

Let me begin with the obvious: John Hazlewood was once the Dean of Perth. He burst like a Roman candle (no pun intended, your Grace) onto the somnolent scene of Australian Anglican church life.

Teenagers climbing the pillars of St George's Cathedral to get a look at the groovy Dean. Monday Conference with Phillip Adams. Lunch with Elton John. And disapproving letters from Sir Marcus Loane. For all its Camelot qualities, it was a chapter in Australian Church history which stimulated a sea change in the way we communicated the Faith.

Some, no doubt, were attracted by the showman. And that he most certainly was. The tallest mitres this side of the Council of Trent. The ability to captivate an audience of growling heathen teenagers. Continue . . .


THE BALLAD OF HAZLEWOOD JOHN
by Fr Andrew Neaum
composed for Bishop Hazlewood's retirement dinner

Ichabod! The sun is set!
Our glory's waned and gone!
As I'll relate, recite, narrate
In this Ballad of Hazlewood John.

An aesthete from the wild west
To Ballarat he came.
To Ballarat sedate, refined,
To Ballarat the tame.

An arty dilettante and dean,
Fond of wit and wine
Full of style and high church guile
And eloquence divine. Continue . . .



Thursday, September 2, 2010

The New Guinea Martyrs


Just to the north of Australia is Papua New Guinea, one of the great battlegrounds of World War II. The Anglican Church in PNG has had a proud history which includes heroism, faith and martyrdom. Catholic and evangelical at the same time, as well as firmly embedded in local culture, she remembers today those who gave their lives for Jesus and his people.

Anglican missionaries first arrived on the north coast of eastern New Guinea, near Dogura, on August 10, 1891. Teaching and medical missions were gradually established along the north coast and in the inland mountain villages.

Following the Japanese invasion of the north coast in March 1942, some 333 church workers of all denominations died for their faith. Of these, twelve were associated with the Anglican Missions, coming mostly from around Popondetta - at the villages of Gona, Sangara and Isivita.

The village of Sangara is slightly to the north of Kokoda, another New Guinea village that features prominently in the Australian history of the war because of the sacrifices made by both Australians and Papuans on the track between Port Moresby and Kokoda - their opposition to the Japanese advance at that time probably averted the direct invasion of Northern Australia.

The ten Anglican Martyrs recognized in 1946 were:-

Henry Matthews, priest, and
Leslie Gariadi, his Papuan assistant;

Henry Holland, priest from Isivita;
John Duffill, builder/carpenter from Isivita;

Vivian Redlich, priest from Sangara;
Sister Margery Brenchley, nurse from Sangara;
Lilla Lashmar, teacher from Sangara;
Lucian Tapiedi, Papuan teacher/evangelist from Sangara;

Sister May Hayman, nurse from Gona, fiancée of Fr Vivian Redlich;
Mavis Parkinson, teacher from Gona.

The two priests from the New Guinea Islands (Diocese of Melanesia until 1949), were:-

John Barge, priest;
Bernard Moore, priest.

These two, who were killed in the New Guinea Islands, were added to the list of Anglican Martyrs from New Guinea in 1949 and 1992, respectively.

Fr Matthews and his assistant Leslie Gariadi were killed when the boat they were on was sunk between Port Moresby and Daru and the survivors machine-gunned. Lucian Tapiedi was axed to death by a collaborator from his own people when he stood up for the Missionaries from Sangara and Isivita whom he was accompanying. The five Lucian was with were beheaded shortly afterwards on Buna Beach. The two Gona missionary sisters were bayonetted to death at Jegarata, near Popondetta. All these deaths occurred around or during August, 1942. Bishop Strong later proclaimed September the 2nd as the Feast for the Commemoration of the New Guinea Martyrs.


COLLECT FOR NEW GUINEA MARTYRS' DAY
by Bishop Philip Strong (Bishop of New Guinea from 1936 to 1962)

O Almighty God,
who didst enable thy missionary and Papuan martyrs, in New Guinea,
in a day of sore trial and danger,
to be faithful to their calling and to glorify thee by their deaths:
Grant we humbly beseech thee
that, by the witness of these thy martyrs,
thy whole Church may be enriched and strengthened
for the gathering into thy fold of thy children in all lands;
and that we thy servants,
following the example of their steadfastness and courage,
may labour the more fervently for the coming of thy kingdom,
and may so faithfully serve thee here on earth
that we may be joined with them hereafter in heaven.
Through thy Son Jesus Christ our Lord,
who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Ghost,
ever one God, world without end. Amen.

***********

For Canon Maynard's 1942 sermon on the New Guinea Martyrs go HERE.

For Bishop Strong's 1981 sermon, containing his personal reminiscences, go HERE.