Vale Noel Preston

Here is an early photo that I have of Noel Preston (centre, holding anti-nuclear cartoon by Ron Cobb) during the street marches (1977).
That is Pam Jones beside Noel (holding ‘People before Power Politics’). Mal McKenna is in the shot as well (far right of frame). Mal is holding a placard with ‘Concerned Christians‘ written on it.

The photo was taken outside the South Brisbane watchhouse after the ‘Concerned Christians’ were arrested for singing hymns in Queens Park! It is almost exactly 43 years since Noel and others in the photos were arrested in the largest ever act of defiance against an Australian government where they were taken into custody along with 418 people who opposed the mining and export of uranium ordered by both Petersen (State) and Frazer (Federal) governments.

Noel was a member of the Campaign Against Nuclear Power that organised that rally in King George Square on 22 October 1977.

In that same year, Noel became a founding member of Foundation for Aboriginal and Islander Research Action (FAIRA) along with Bob Weatherall, Les Maelzer, Pam Jones and others. FAIRA pursued the rights of the First Peoples of Australia through research, education and lobby at the local, national and international levels. They helped repatriate to country many aboriginal people placed in museums around the world.

That’s how bad it was then … Noel, Pam, Bob, Les and others fought hard against the hypocritical and repressive Bjelke-Petersen government.

Concerned Christians during street march ban in Queensland 1977

After the Goss government won in 1991, Noel pursued an academic career focused on ethics and social justice.

However I do not think he ever forgot those terrible years under Bjelke-Petersen.

Noel passed away a few days ago after a long fight against cancer.

My condolences to his family, friends and old comrades.

Ian Curr
26 October 2020

Vale Rev Dr Noel Preston – A service of remembrance and thanksgiving for the life of Rev Dr Noel Preston will be held this Friday 30 October 2020 from 1.30pm at West End Uniting Church.

Due to COVID-19 restrictions, attendance is by invitation only.

A public livestream will be available at West End Uniting Church (reserve a seat) and Trinity Uniting Church in Wellington Point (reserve a seat).

The service can also be viewed on YouTube.

2 thoughts on “Vale Noel Preston

  1. David Busch says:

    “So sad to hear of the passing of my dear friend and colleague Noel Preston. He was the Westender’s resident Ethicist for many years, and contributed greatly to the development and implementation of many social initiatives in West End and beyond. Farewell, old friend,” Kerrod Trott

    Obituary from Uniting Church Pastor, David Busch

    Prominent social justice advocate, ethicist, academic, commentator and Uniting Church minister, Rev. Dr Noel Preston, died early on Thursday, October 22, after a long illness. He was 78.

    Noel William Preston was born on 15 December 1941 in Mareeba, North Queensland the first of four children to Methodist minister, the Reverend Arthur Preston, and his wife, Clare (nee Green). Arthur Preston’s ministry at West End (1948-62) – establishing an inner-city mission which gave rise to the Blue Nursing Service, pioneering youth ministries and an influential preaching pulpit – made an indelible impact on Noel in his formative years.

    Noel was educated at West End State School, Brisbane Boys College and Kelvin Grove Teachers College, with a year teaching at Charleville, before Noel was received as a candidate for Methodist ministry in 1962. He served a probationary year at Wavell Heights, had three years of studies at Kings College, University of Qld, and was ordained in October 1967.

    After three years at Mitchelton Methodist, Noel went to the USA to undertake doctoral studies in social ethics at Boston University, where he was taught by leading Christian theologian and ethicist, Dr Reinhold Niebuhr. This set the stage for a vocation dedicated to concerns about national values, public sector ethics, economic justice, all forms of discrimination, Aboriginal rights, refugees and eco-justice. His first wife, Pat, the mother of his three children, was ever supportive during this time.

    Returning to Australia in 1972, Noel became a controversial figure in his advocacy for homosexual unions, Aboriginal self-determination and, as part of the Concerned Christians group the right to protest, issues on which he clashed with the Qld Premier, Joh Bjelke-Petersen. He served as Education Officer with Action for World Development, Executive Director of Social Justice for the Uniting Church in Victoria, and the inaugural convener of the Uniting Church’s national Commission on Social Responsibility (1977-80).

    Becoming an ecumenical tertiary chaplain and part-time ethics lecturer at two campuses in Brisbane in 1982 set him on an academic career through the 1980s and 90s, as Senior Lecturer, Associate Professor and Adjunct Professor in the fields of ethics, applied ethics and governance at Qld University of Technology and Griffith University. He continued his activism in such causes as industrial rights for electricity workers in Qld, and as co-founder of People for Nuclear Disarmament.

    The 1980s Fitzgerald Inquiry into corruption in Qld’s police force saw Noel engage in grassroots activism against corruption, as well as high-level political, public service, parliamentary and institutional initiatives towards embedding ethical principles and enhanced oversight and accountability mechanisms into public life in Qld. Noel became a national leader in the evolving field of public sector ethics. In 1992, he returned to the USA to study administrative and legislative ethics and ethics education programs, and he was a founder and the second national president of a new peak body of ethics educators and practitioners, the Association of Professional and Applied Ethics. A prolific writer, Noel’s published works included five books on ethics, including the acclaimed text Understanding Ethics (Federation Press, 1996, now in its 4th edition), Ethics and Political Practice (co-editor, 1998), Ethics: With or Without God (2015), and his memoir, Beyond the Boundary (2006).

    In 2002, Noel returned to work for the Uniting Church as founding director of Uniting Care Qld’s Centre for Social Justice. In his three years prior to retirement, the Centre issued three major research reports – on vulnerable children, family homelessness, and prison release policy.

    Environmental concerns gained prominence in Noel’s ethical framework through the 1990s and 2000s. This wider lens of eco-justice – placing the earth, rather than humanity alone, at the centre of ethical and religious concern – became a defining paradigm for the rest of Noel’s life, in his advocacy, his organisational involvements through the Earth Charter initiative, and his personal spiritual sensibilities. This was very much a shared vision with his second wife, Coralie.

    In June 2004, Noel became a Member of the Order of Australia for services to the community in the field of ethics.

    Noel was drawn to progressive Christian theology and connected with St Mary’s Catholic Church, South Brisbane (later to become St Mary’s in Exile), while maintaining active involvements at West End UC and Trinity UC, Wellington Point. He described his spirituality in terms of being eco-centric, not anthropocentric; inclusive, not exclusive; mystical rather than literalist; and shaped by an over-riding sense of the goodness of life rather than its undeniable tragedy. Being a founding member of Redland City U3A meditation group was an expression of this.

    In 1990, doctors discovered Noel’s first malignancy. Thereafter, cancer would become Noel’s episodic companion. In 2004, he wrote about “the dawning realisation of my mortality both gradually unhinged and enlightened me … for me, living in the shadowy uncertainty of cancer has been an ongoing, at times traumatic, boundary encounter. As well, it has become a classroom for learning what love is and why loving is what matters most.”

    As late as 2013, Noel, with his third wife, Olga, was active in founding Redlands for Refugees at Wellington Point, a response to Australia’s punitive policies towards asylum seekers and a further expression of Noel’s conviction that each of us must share responsibility for creating the kind of global community we want to live in – and shutting the door on people in need is not an option.

    Noel is survived by Olga, his three children Lisa, Kim and Christopher, and 6 grandchildren. His love of music, sport and simple family pleasures in their company always gave him the balance and joy he needed.

    SERVICE OF REMEMBRANCE

    A service of remembrance and thanksgiving for the life of Rev Dr Noel Preston will be held this Friday, October 30, at 1:30 pm at West End UC (Sussex St). The family regrets that, due to COVID restrictions, attendance is by invitation only.

    Two venues will offer a public livestream but seats need to be reserved: West End UC hall (book here) and Trinity UC, Marlborough Rd, Wellington Point (book here). Or view the livestream at home on YouTube.

  2. Noel Preston's funeral says:


    Vale Rev Dr Noel Preston – A service of remembrance and thanksgiving for the life of Rev Dr Noel Preston will be held this Friday 30 October 2020 from 1.30pm at West End Uniting Church.


    Due to COVID-19 restrictions, attendance is by invitation only.


    A public livestream will be available at West End Uniting Church (reserve a seat) and Trinity Uniting Church in Wellington Point (reserve a seat).


    The service can also be viewed on YouTube.

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