George Hale (minister)


George Ernest Hale, early in his career referred to as G. Ernest Hale, was a Unitarian minister in South Australia.

History

Hale was born in Geelong, Victoria, a son of William Henry Hale and Martha Jane Hale
He was a student at the Baptist College 1905–1906
Hale graduated BA from the University of Melbourne, after a career described as brilliant, and served as minister of the Baptist Church at Murrumbeena, Victoria 1910–1914.
He was invited to serve as temporary minister of the Unitarian Free Church at Wellington, New Zealand in 1914, and remained there for six years, then accepted a call to the Unitarian Christian Church, Wakefield Street, Adelaide to succeed the Rev. Wyndham Heathcote.
Hale preached his sermons at the Adelaide church at 11 am and 7 pm on or before 20 February 1921.
He conducted his last service in Adelaide on 30 December 1945.
Hale was noted for his sermons: thoughtful, original, well-prepared and delivered without notes of any kind. He was praised for his oratorical skills: clear perfect diction and a pleasant voice, slow and deliberate and rising in pitch for emphasis. His sermons would have been taxing for the uneducated but deeply satisfying for the academically inclined, as he assumed some knowledge of History, Mythology, Psychology and Classical languages from his audience, but withal punctuated by a lively sense of humour. The subjects of his Sunday sermons were always clearly defined and often topical, and posted on a large notice board in front of the church early in the week.
Hale opposed participation in the war of 1938–1945. Pacifism was not a tenet of the Unitarian denomination, and many men from the Wakefield Street church were posted overseas, more than a few losing their lives. His sermon of Sunday evening 8 October 1939 This or Any Other War: Where I Stand and Why must have ruffled a few feathers:
This then is where I stand and why. I know how fateful is my decision. It is quite possible that by some I shall be judged a fool, by others a knave. I may fall very far short of my ideal, but at least I shall try. I shall seek to love everybody and remember that a man in uniform may be as true to his light as I am to mine. Nevertheless on I must go.

If any listening to me are disposed to make a similar stand, let them pause and consider the cost. I think it will be very high. The deliberate downright pacifists will, along with the soldier, have much to suffer, but he will be sustained with the thought that, as God lives and the way of Christ is the way where the light dwelleth, his witness is grandly worth while

Long after he retired, Hale would on occasion return to the Wakefield Street pulpit.
His 25 years' service to the Adelaide church was only exceeded by that of John Crawford Woods.

Other activities

George Hale married Florence Elizabeth Picken daughter of William Thomas Picken Their children included:
During his ministry they lived in the Unitarian manse at 7 Trevelyan Street, Wayville, and on his return to Adelaide, at 33 Rochester Street, Leabrook.
Hale had sister and a brother: