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Bill Hughes
Church Archivist
REVEREND J H GOBLE
1862-1932
| "His
life was a period of delightful ingenuousness, touching kindness
and healing sympathy. His heart was overflowing with love and good
cheer." - The Mail, Footscray, Saturday 6 February 1932. |
W hen
240 delegates met at the Burton Street Baptist Tabernacle in Sydney on 25
August 1926 to form the Baptist Union of Australia, they unanimously
elected Joseph Hunter Goble as the first President of the Union. He was
the Minister of the Footscray Baptist Church and initially, along with Dr
F W Norwood and later Rev Peter Fleming, he had played a major role in
forging Baptist federation.
It was the Baptist Union of Australia (BUA), under
Rev Coble's leadership, that negotiated with the Commonwealth Government
for a grant of land on which to build the first Baptist Church in the new
federal capital. The BUA appointed Dr Waldock, who was to become the
church's first Minister, to select the site and raise the funds to build
the church and the manse.
Rev Goble unveiled the church's foundation stone on
21 March 1928 and later officiated at the Canberra Baptist Church's
opening ceremonies on the weekend of 23-24 February 1929. It is likely
that few people who pause to read the foundation stone today will be
aware of the remarkable and saintly man whose name is recorded thereon.
No stranger to poverty
On Sunday 3 March 1895, Rev Goble was to preach his
first sermon at Footscray Baptist Church as its new Minister. He intended
to make an impression, but a burglar stole the new outfit he had bought
for the occasion and he preached to his congregation in "his shabby
old suit". It seems to me that this incident foretold the type of
ministry he was to have among the people of Footscray for the next 3 7
years. He was not to be aloof from them. He was to live at their level,
experiencing their hardships, their sadness and their joys. He was to
share fully in the day-to-day reality of their lives. And as a result
there was to emerge a rare and mutual love and respect between Goble and
Footscray's people.

Joseph Hunter Goble was born in Belfast, Port
Fairy, Victoria, on 18 February 1862, the son of a prosperous flourmill
owner, who apparently abandoned Goble's mother, Maria Ballantine, and her
two children. Goble lived in poverty at Port Melbourne and Fitzroy and
had to leave school at a young age to work in factories and on the
railways. In his early years unemployment, poverty and charity handouts
were very much a part of his personal experience.
In the 1880s he obtained an apprenticeship as a
compositor andjoined the Printers Union, later rising to the position of
President of the Printers Union.
A true democratic
socialist
For fifty years from 1891 onwards, unemployment and
poverty were inseparable parts of Australian working class experience.
These were Goble's times. John Lack, in his History of Footscray,
says of him:
| "He brought with
him a worker's and staunch trade unionist's ideals of the dignity
of labour and the brotherhood of man, and a Christian's ideal of
practical Christianity derived from the example of the Good
Sarnaritan." |
Goble practised a personal socialism. He limited
his consumption, took a minimal stipend and discreetly distributed most
of his money to the poor. He openly supported the Labor movement's reform
programs and struck a remarkable chord among working men and women, many
of whom, during the depression years, associated Christianity with social
respectability, demeaning charity and political conservatism. The ideals
and brotherhood of unionism remained with him all his life, but neither
union office nor the enticement of a political career with the Labor
Party could draw him away from his primary calling - Christian ministry.
Converted to Christianity
at age 15
Goble was converted to Christianity at the age of
15 years as a result of kindly treatment he had received at the Port
Melbourne Seamen's bethel. He began preaching in Baptist Churches at a
young age and built up a reputation as a preacher. He began his pastorate
at the Paisley Street Baptist Church in Footscray on 3 March 1895. The
congregation soon outgrew the church, and during his 37 years there it
had to be extended twice. By the early 1900s he was attracting a
congregation of 2,000. In its heyday the Paisley Street Church had an
orchestra of 20 people and a large choir. Apparently if the faithful did
not get to the church by 6.30 at night for the 7.00 pm service they did
not get in to the evening service.
A stirring and dramatic
preacher
He was described as a "stirring and dramatic
preacher totally devoid of self importance" and he attracted workers
normally indifferent to formal religion. Dr J F Wilkin, in a tribute in
the Australian Baptist of 9 February 1932, said of him:
| Not in abstruse
speculations, not with excellency of speech or of wisdom, but in
simple forceful words he urged on the notice of men the unchanging
truths of divine love, and of the sacrifice of the Cross. Because
he loved the saviour he loved men for whom the saviour died. |
Another of his contemporaries, Rev Robert Helmore
(who "lost [his] faith in the war" and who Goble later
nevertheless convinced to go to Whitley College) described Goble as
"a big man, about 18 stone ... a magnificent man".
Rev C J Tinsley wrote of the first sermon he heard
Goble preach:
| Mr Goble's text was
Hebrews 7:25 and [it] was a rich, warm-hearted, gripping
exposition of the Gospel he loved, that went home to the hearts of
the congregation. It revealed the qualities that have endeared him
to the people of Footscray and made his ministry there so
successful. Whenever I have thought of him it has been with the
background of that sermon in my mind. |
Goble of Footscray
His name became synonymous with self-denial,
charity and good hum our. He loved Footscray and its people and was an
avid supporter of the Footscray Football Club. He said that when they
opened up his heart there would be engraved on it the word
"Footscray" and he was referred to locally as "Goble of
Footscray". In some circles he was called the "Bishop of
Footscray".
Although he had suffered much during his life,
those who knew him say that he was always cheerful and uncomplaining.
By the early 1930s he was an exhausted man, having
given himself fully to his calling, and an accident accelerated his
physical decline. His death on 31 January 1932 shocked both Footscray and
Baptist circles and his funeral was the biggest seen in Footscray. The
local newspaper reported that the city of Footscray "was immediately
plunged into mourning and "Flags were flown at half mast throughout
the district". The newspaper went on to say: "The body laid in
the church from 10 am on Tuesday, and all day there was a constant stream
of citizens paying homage to a great and loving man. The Mayor and
councillors were the first to pay their respects, and from then on folk
from every church, from every public and semi-public body and from all
sections of the business and sporting life of the city paid their last
tributes".
Hundreds of returned soldiers led the hearse
followed by hundreds of cars. Thousands lined the route, including a
thousand from Paisley Street Sunday School. The list of pallbearers at
his funeral provides evidence of the esteem in which he was held in the
wider community. They were the Commonwealth Postmaster-General (Mr
Fenton), State Education Minister (Mr Lemmon), Mr Prendergast MLA, the
Mayor of Footscray (Cr. E. Hanmer), Mr J Hicks (Church Secretary), Mr W
Ellingworth (Baptist Home Mission Committee) and Mr A C Joyce
(Vice-President of the Baptist Union of Victoria). The last named
provides another link between Rev Goble and Canberra Baptist.
Footscray raised a monument to Rev Goble, financed
by public donations, and placed it near his home and church. The statue
remains today and is located on the side of Geelong Road close to the
intersection with Barkly Street in Middle Footscray.

It contains the following inscription:
Rev Joseph Hunter
GOBLE
Born 18 February 1862.
Died 31 January 1932.
Pastor Baptist Church 1895-1932.
A tribute of gratitude for a life of faithful service.
From the citizens of Footscray.
"Well done good and faithful servant"
"Come to the prayer
meeting"
Among the copies of documents kindly provided to me
by the Footscray Baptist Church was a copy of Rev Goble's final letter to
his church. It gives an insight into his love for others, especially the
unconverted. The letter, which was written from his hospital bed, reads:
| Never before have
I been consumed with such a spiritual passion in my heart that the
visit of God's honoured servant, the Rev C J Tinsley of NSW in
connection with my 370'church birthday shall be characterised by a
MIGHTY OUTPOURING OF GOD'S HOLY SPIRIT upon church and people,
resulting in the deepening of the spiritual life of Christians and
the salvation of precious souls from the powers of darkness and
sin. This is the only objective worth praying and working for.
1 believe that this spiritual objective can
only be reached by GOD'S PEOPLE MEETING TOGETHER IN ONE ACCORD IN
ONE PLACE. That meeting place for us is the WEDNESDAY NIGHT PRAYER
MEETING. 1 beg of you for the sake of Christ and precious souls -
for your old pastor's sake - 1 beg of you to come to this means of
grace and bring others with you.
My strength is ebbing. I can write no more.
My last words are "Come to the prayer meeting".
(The emphasis, as reproduced above, is as it
was in Rev Goble's original letter.) |
After reading a good deal about Rev Goble and his
life, it seems to me that he achieved the remarkable things that he did
achieve by being someone through whom people could actually see,
experience and receive the love of Christ. In his presence people could
relax and hear and appreciate his simple and genuine message. Above all,
however, it is evident that he recognised that he was but an instrument.
And through prayer - regular personal and community prayer with his
church - he was able to witness in Footscray an extraordinary release of
the power of the Holy Spirit. His faith was in his God, not in his own
abilities. As a result he achieved what is all too rarely achieved in
Christian ministry. Perhaps there are lessons we can learn from the
humble life of Joseph Hunter Goble that are relevant in today's modern,
sophisticated and cynical world.
Source: John Lack, A
History of Footscray., "One hundred - and seventy five", in
National Baptist, March 200 1, p 5; The Mail, Saturday 6
February 1932, p 1 & 9; Rev Goble's final letter to his church;
Roslyn Otzen, 1991, Whitley: The Baptist College of Victoria
1891-199 1; The Australian Baptist, 2 February 1932; and The
Australian Baptist. 9 February 1932. 1 gratefully acknowledge the
assistance I was given in obtaining these documents by Mr Lloyd Drayton
(Treasurer at Footscray Baptist) and Mr Ron Robb (Archivist, NSW Baptist
Union).
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