Thanks for your comments and research Rob.  I had written them off for some
fundamentalist clone of American Religious Right Politics.  I note that one
of the commentators in the SMH made the same summary in this morning's
edition.

Your reference to family:  I frequently make comment about Jesus being
anti-family (being rhetorical as Jesus so often is rhetorical) and have half
my church-going listeners jump down my throat.  I conclude that we read the
Bible with a thick epidermis around us and only let in those bits that
accord with our pre-existing expectations.  "Jesus is anti-family" just
doesn't make the pass.

Tom

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Rob Bos
Sent: Monday, 11 October 2004 7:53 AM
To: insights-l
Subject: Family First

Interesting development in Saturday's election: up to 250,000 
Australians voting for the Family First party. Their senator may even 
hold the balance of power!
My fist reaction was: what a strange name for an overtly Christian group 
(primarily AOG) in the light of some of the less than complimentary 
things Jesus said about families (Luke talks about the demands of 
discipleship entailing hating your father, mother etc!) And are we not 
called to seek first, not family, but the kingdom of God!? That may mean 
not necessarily signing up to the values of society (economic growth, 
national security, the nuclear family etc as ulimate goods), but being 
committed to the outcasts and forgotten ones, as Jesus was. My 
understanding of the reign of God and baptismal living have always 
pushed me to voting for the left end of the political spectrum.
I then wondered if this was another "family values" push that would give 
single mums, gays, those incapable of having children etc a hard time? 
And what would an overtly Christian group say about families of other 
faiths?
So I checked out their website: http://familyfirst.org.au/policy.php. 
Indigenous Australians, refugees and asylum seekers, the war Iraq and 
the environment were some of the bits I checked out. While many of their 
policies are vague and obviously need lots of development, they do 
actually talk about social justice etc. A surprise for me was the 
acknowledgement of a diversity of beliefs, traditions and values in 
Australian society.
I suspect that dialogue rather than caricature may be more productive.
Does anyone have any more first hand experience of the party and its 
leaders? Did any Insights list members vote for them? Should some of us 
join, encourage further theological reflection and help them to sharpen 
their policies? Are there aspects we should warn people about?
Rob Bos

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