Background
Standing order 50 provides for the President to read a
prayer and make an acknowledgement of country on taking the chair on each
sitting day:
50 Prayer and acknowledgement
of country
The President, on taking the
chair each day, shall read the following prayer:
Almighty God, we humbly beseech
Thee to vouchsafe Thy special blessing upon this Parliament, and that Thou
wouldst be pleased to direct and prosper the work of Thy servants to the
advancement of Thy glory, and to the true welfare of the people of Australia.
Our Father, which art in Heaven,
Hallowed be Thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth, as it is in
Heaven. Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our trespasses, as we
forgive them that trespass against us. And lead us not into temptation; but
deliver us from evil: For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory,
for ever and ever. Amen.
The President shall then make an
acknowledgement of country in the following terms:
I acknowledge the Ngunnawal and
Ngambri peoples who are the traditional custodians of the Canberra area and pay
respect to the elders, past and present, of all Australia's Indigenous peoples.
The prayer has been the same since it was adopted by the
Senate on 26 June 1901, some 6 weeks after the first sittings of the
Parliament. The requirement for an acknowledgement of country was added on 26
October 2010.
Reference
On 27 June 2018, the Senate referred the committee for
inquiry and report a proposal to replace the requirement for a prayer with an
invitation to prayer or reflection; proposing to amend standing order 50 as
follows:
(a) in
the first paragraph, omit all words after "following", substitute
"invitation to prayer or reflection:
Senators, let us in silence pray
or reflect upon our responsibilities to all people of Australia and to future
generations"; and
(b) omit
the heading to standing order 50, and substitute, "Prayer or reflection
and acknowledgement of country".
As background to the inquiry, the committee noted a paper by
a researcher with the Senate department, published in 2015[1],
which sets out the history of the adoption of the prayer by the Senate in 1901
and the details of previous proposals for change. The committee also had regard
to the information set out in that paper concerning the practices of each of
the Australian legislatures which, with one exception, all commence their
proceedings with a prayer.
The committee invited public submissions, which are
published on the inquiry's web pages[2]
except where withheld on request. The committee also received responses from
five senators, which are similarly published online. The committee thanks all
those who contributed their views.
Summary of submissions
This inquiry received a relatively high number of
submissions, primarily from individuals. Of approximately 820 submissions
received, approximately half were form letters or variations of form letters[3].
The vast majority of submissions do not support replacing the prayer. All of
the approximately 390 form letters opposed the change. Of the substantive
submissions, 359 opposed the change, compared with 73 in favour.
There were five responses from senators (Senators Collins,
Kitching, Reynolds, McGrath and Anning), all in favour retaining the prayer.
Submissions in favour of change
Submitters that supported the proposal to replace the prayer
put forward arguments including:
- Australia is a ‘secular nation’, was founded on
secular principles, including the separation of church and state, and therefore
one religious perspective should not be given special treatment by government.
(See submissions from Sydney Atheists; Council of Australian Humanist
Societies; Monique Mayze)
- Australia is a multicultural and religiously
diverse country, and saying a Christian/Anglican prayer in Parliament is
unrepresentative, discriminatory and exclusionary of people of other religions
and people who have no religion. (Council of Australian Humanist Societies;
Rationalist Society of Australia; Monique Mayze)
- According to the last census, an increasing
number of people in Australia have no religion. (Council of Australian Humanist
Societies; National Secular Lobby)
- Other recent surveys indicate that a majority of
Australians consider it important to separate personal religious belief from
the business of government. (Stuart Mynard; National Secular Lobby)
- Saying a Christian prayer infringes on human
rights such as freedom of religion and freedom from discrimination. (A/Prof
Luke Beck; Feminist Legal Clinic; National Secular Lobby; ACT Humanist Society)
- Section 116 of the Constitution constrains the
Commonwealth from making laws with respect to religion; this constraint should
extend to Senate standing orders requiring the prayer. (A/Prof Luke Beck, p. 4;
Victorian Secular Lobby; National Secular Lobby)
- The prayer is not simply a Christian prayer but
a Protestant prayer (and was introduced in response to lobbying from churches)
(A/Prof Luke Beck)
- Symbolism and tradition are important, but these
should not be promoted at the cost of excluding people (Rationalist Society of
Australia; Max Wallace)
- An invitation to prayer and reflection
recognises diversity in spiritual and religious beliefs, is more inclusive, and
will focus senator’s minds on their responsibilities to all Australians
(Catholic Women’s League Australia; Atheist Foundation of Australia)
- When non-believing parliamentarians say the
prayer (or give it ‘hypocritical lip service’), it is undermined for people for
whom the prayer is meaningful (Feminist Legal Clinic; Philip Zylstra).
Submissions in favour of retaining the prayer
As has been noted, however, the vast majority of submissions
favoured retaining the prayer in its current form. Arguments put forward
included the following:
- The prayer is a valuable part of Australian
heritage and tradition; both in that it has been said since federation, and in
continuing the Westminster tradition. (See form letters; submissions from the
Canberra Declaration; Warwick & Alison Marsh/Australian Christian Values
Institute)
- Australia and its system of government were
founded on Christian values, such as being inclusive, tolerant and
compassionate, respecting the rule of law and upholding individual freedoms,
and the prayer is a reminder of these values. (See form letters; submissions
from FamilyVoice Australia; Rev Paul Clark)
- Removing the prayer will create division, and
will make Christians uncomfortable to talk about their values in public. (See
form letters from Australian Family Association)
- The preamble to the Constitution still includes
reference to the states “humbly relying on the blessing of Almighty God”. (See
submissions from the Canberra Declaration; Warwick & Alison
Marsh/Australian Christian Values Institute)
- The prayer encourages senators to consider themselves
answerable to a higher power, reminds them to look beyond their own
self-interest to the welfare of others, and encourages humility. (Australian
Christian Lobby; Australian Catholic Bishops Conference)
- An invitation to reflection is a ‘weak’ or
‘insipid’ alternative to the current prayer, and will not remind senators of
their responsibilities to serve Australians. (Australian Family Coalition)
- Some submitters note that they chose to migrate
to Australia because it is a ‘Christian country’, and that replacing the prayer
would erode this. (Anna Soh; Varkey Kaithakulam)
- Christianity is still the majority religion in
Australia (52% in the most recent census), and 60% of Australians have a faith
– the prayer ensures these people are represented by parliament and publically
acknowledges the value of their faith. (FamilyVoice Australia; Australian
Catholic Bishops Conference)
- Calls to discontinue the prayer have not
succeeded in the past, and senators should not be forced to defend matters
which relate to their personal religious convictions (See submission from
FamilyVoice Australia).
Committee's views
The motion referring the matter asked that the committee
hold public hearings. Generally the committee does not operate that way: its
purview is the Senate's standing orders and it typically deals with technical
questions about their application and interpretation. An argument was made that
the standing order relating to prayers is different; that it holds more
significance in the community. The committee formed the view, however, that the
opportunity to present submissions had afforded the community an opportunity to
comment and that hearings would add little to the its consideration of the
matter. Partly this reflects the nature of the inquiry. For most committees,
investigating bills or matters of public policy, inquiries are deliberative and
therefore aided by technical evidence, or evidence from those affected. In this
matter, the outcome goes to senators' own opinions as to whether the procedure
requiring an opening prayer ought be replaced. The submissions provide
interested senators with a range of community views which may influence their
consideration of that question.
Essentially the same matter was referred to the Procedure
Committee in 1997. On that occasion, the committee reported:
It is clear that many senators
who join in the prayer regard its retention as important, but among those who
do not join in the prayer there does not appear to be a strong view that its
proposed abolition is a significant question which should occupy the time of
the Senate.
A motion to amend the standing order was subsequently moved
and negatived, without division.
The submissions put to the committee on this occasion, and
the views of committee members and their colleagues, suggest that opinions
about the prayer are not significantly different in 2018 than during the 1997
inquiry, nor indeed than when the prayer was first adopted. Those in favour of
the prayer strongly favour its retention, while those opposed to the prayer are
less vocal and less concerned to see it changed.
Recommendation
The committee does not consider, on the evidence before it
and after its own deliberations, that there is a momentum for change. The
committee therefore does not recommend that the amendments proposed in the
reference should be adopted.
In reaching this conclusion, the committee also considered
whether an invitation to personal prayer or reflection could be inserted
alongside the current prayer. The committee did not reach a conclusion on this
question, but notes that the Senate could achieve this by inserting a preamble
to the traditional prayer along the following lines:
Senators, I invite you, as I read
the prayer, to pray or reflect in your own way on your responsibilities to the
people of Australia and to future generations.
As has been observed elsewhere, for the most part it remains
a personal matter for senators whether to attend for the prayer, or join in the
prayer, at the start of sittings. One exception, of course, is that the
standing order requires the President to be present to read the prayer. The
committee notes that some jurisdictions provide the option of the presiding
officer inviting another member to read the prayer. The Senate may wish to
consider whether that option should be made available through a change to the
standing orders. Again, the committee makes no recommendation on this matter.
Senator Sue Lines
Chair
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