Tag Archive for: australia

Why the Census matters to Christians in Australia

By: CMAA

Every five years, the Census gives Australia a shared moment to reflect on who we are and how we live.

Read more: Why the Census matters to Christians in Australia

It is more than a statistical exercise. The Census helps governments, institutions and communities understand how Australia is changing, and how to plan funding, services and support for the years ahead.

For Christians in Australia, this matters.

Our faith is not simply a private belief. It shapes how we worship, serve, gather, raise families, care for others, build community and contribute to public life.

When the Census asks about religion, it is asking a question that connects directly with identity, belonging and the role faith continues to play in Australian society.

More Than a Box to Tick

For many Christians, answering the religion question may feel straightforward.

If Christian faith is part of your life, your worship, your community and your understanding of who you are, then the Census is one way that identity is recognised in the national picture.

But the question still matters.

The Census does not measure the depth of anyone’s faith. It cannot capture prayer, discipleship, service, church life, generosity, conviction or devotion.

What it can do is record how many people in Australia identify with Christianity.

That makes the question important, because what is recorded helps shape how Australia understands its communities.

Faith Has a Public Presence

Christianity in Australia is lived out in many visible ways.

It is seen in churches, schools, hospitals, aged care, charities, chaplaincy, community services, crisis support, family life and everyday acts of service.

It is present when Christians gather for worship, care for neighbours, support the vulnerable, educate children, visit the lonely, pray in times of hardship and serve their local communities.

The Census helps show that faith is not absent from Australian life. It remains part of the story of who we are.

Why Visibility Matters

Census data informs how governments, organisations and communities understand the nation.

Religious identification data contributes to the broader picture used in planning services, understanding community needs, supporting cultural and social research, and recognising the role different communities play in public life.

If Christian identity is under-recognised in the data, the contribution and presence of Christian communities can become less visible in the national conversation.

This is not about seeking special treatment.

It is about truthful representation.

Answering With Clarity

For Christians, the Census is an opportunity to answer clearly and thoughtfully.

The religion question is not asking how often you attend church, how strong your faith feels, or whether you meet someone else’s standard of religious commitment.

It is asking how you identify.

For those who identify as Christian, the answer matters because it contributes to a fuller and more accurate picture of Australia.

Helping Others Understand the Question

Many Christians also have family members, friends or neighbours who may have a connection to Christianity, even if they are unsure how to answer the religion question.

Some may have been shaped by Christian family, schooling, community, prayer, tradition or values, but may not immediately think of themselves as “religious”.

This is not something to force or assume.

But it may be something worth discussing gently and honestly.

The aim is not to persuade people to choose an answer that does not feel true. It is to help people understand the question and respond in a way that reflects their own story.

A Moment for Reflection

The Census gives each person a simple but meaningful opportunity to reflect.

What is my faith?

How do I identify?

What story does my answer tell?

For Christians, this is a chance to be counted clearly as part of the national picture.

Not defensively. Not politically. Not to make a point.

Simply truthfully.

A Broader Picture of National Identity

Australia is changing, and so is how people understand belief and identity.

The Census doesn’t resolve these complexities, but it does record them. Those records shape how Australia understands itself over time.

For Christians, this isn’t about defending a position. It’s about being clear on how our identity is communicated in the public square.

Because in the end, the Census is not just about categories.

It is about people, stories, and how a nation learns to understand itself.

And that is something worth getting right.


Article supplied with thanks to Christian Media & Arts Australia.

Pokies, Sports Betting and Kids: How Gambling Is Harming Australians

By: Bec Harris

Reverend Tim Costello, Chief Advocate for the Alliance for Gambling Reform, reveals the staggering scale of gambling harm in Australia. From pokies to sports betting, Australians are losing billions, and the consequences are devastating.

The Scale of Gambling Losses

Australia loses $32 billion each year to gambling, the highest per capita in the world. Tim explained: “The nation that comes second in gambling losses is 30% less than us. The world looks at us and asks, how did we allow this?”

Pokies account for $17 billion, sports betting $6 billion, with horse racing and greyhounds adding more. Even more shocking: “We have 20% of all the world’s pokies, but 75% are in pubs and clubs. Everywhere else, pokies are only in casinos.”

Unlike casinos, pokies are everywhere: in pubs, clubs, and even shopping areas. Australians often gamble unintentionally, with machines designed for predatory addiction.

The Impact on Families and Young People

The reach of gambling goes beyond adults. Tim highlighted a growing problem among youth: “Influencers are paid by the pokies industry to show how fun it is to feed cash into machines.”

Combined with 900 gambling ads a day on free-to-air TV, many children are absorbing adult gambling behaviours. “Eighty per cent of ten-year-olds now know the odds on AFL and NRL games,” Tim said. “The normalisation is devastating.”

What Can Be Done?

Advocacy is key. Tim outlined practical steps:

  • Pokies: Lobby state politicians. Each state has jurisdiction.
  • Sports betting: Contact federal representatives, especially the Communications Minister.

“Get boots on the ground. Send letters. Touch base with your politicians,” Tim urged. Western Australia sets a strong example, with no pokies in pubs or clubs and much lower gambling losses.

A Call for National Reform

Despite bipartisan support for a national gambling regulator, recommendations remain ignored. “We need to treat gambling as a health issue, not a sports issue,” Tim said. “Where there’s gambling in a family, there’s four times more domestic violence.”

Public support is overwhelming: 80% of Australians want gambling ads banned, yet action is lagging. “Politicians need to listen. The public has spoken,” Tim added.


Article supplied with thanks to Sonshine.

Bush Church Aid is Keeping Outback Churches Alive

By: Justin Rouillon

Coober Pedy’s Catacomb Church is unlike most other churches in Australia, carved out of a hillside in the opal mining capital of the world.
Read more

Being Safe, Being Welcomed Top Priority for Refugees

By: Laura Bennett

When George left Syria as a refugee, he wasn’t sure what to expect from Australia: would it look like the postcards with koalas, kangaroos and beaches?
Read more

Election Day: Making an Informed Choice – Your Guide to Voting with Purpose

By: Joni Boyd

With the big day happening tomorrow May 3, 2025, Australians are making their final decisions about who they’ll vote for. Read more

May 3: Australia Votes

By: Joni Boyd

Australians will head to the poll booths on May 3, 2025.
Read more

From ‘No Religion’ to ‘Christianity’ – The Australians Turning to Faith

By: Kourtney Smith

When it comes to religion and spirituality in Australia, particularly Christianity, public discussion is often surface-level. Read more

After Alfred: Risk and Recovery

By: Mike Crooks

Alfred may be gone, but the effects of the ex-tropical cyclone are still being felt in south-east Queensland and northern NSW. Read more

Building Connection Between First Nations and Non-Indigenous Aussies

By: Steve Dunster 

Imagine a society where First Nations and non-Indigenous Australians enjoy flourishing relationship with one another. Read more

What It’s Really Like to Live With a Disability

By: Helping Hands TV

When asked if Aussies really understand life with a disability, Laura Cowell, the Australian CEO of TLC Disability Services, says there’s room for improvement. Read more