
Bob Mellows: Caring About Safety At Work
Contemplating a horrendous disaster, Bob Mellows recognised that people had to live out the words of Scripture in order to truly respect and honour the human dignity and safety of workers, particularly in dangerous occupations like mining.
A smouldering fire in a timber pumphouse deep underground led to one of the most terrible mine disasters in Australian history. It also led to one of the greatest rescues — a triumph of human determination and cooperation.
More than a century ago, on 12 October 1912, the day’s shift of copper miners headed deep into the bowels of Mount Lyell in Tasmania. Forty-two of the men would never make it ‘topside’ again.
When the fire started, nearly a hundred workers were trapped below it. Unable to find a passage to the surface, they urgently needed breathing equipment to have any hope of surviving. And the nearest suitable gear was in the gold-mining towns of Bendigo and Ballarat in Victoria — on the far side of Bass Strait.
Breaking all existing shipping and railway-speed records, the breathing apparatus reached Tasmania’s west coast in time to save over fifty miners, who were finally brought to the surface four days later.
Not all of those trapped beneath the ground had been saved, though. Many people across Australia who’d prayed for the men were grieved at the tragic losses. A Royal Commission was ordered into the safety practices at the mine, but mining remained a very dangerous occupation for decades to come.
Love One Another
Eighty years later, Bob Mellows, a manager at the Cornwall Coal Mine in Tasmania’s Fingal Valley, concluded that a Royal Commission alone was not the answer to workplace health and safety. He felt that the law of the land was not as good as God’s law: having genuine love and concern for other people’s wellbeing.
Bob convinced his employers and the people who worked for him that their dangerous workplace could be vastly safer — if they started treating each other differently. He looked to the teaching of Jesus: ‘Do to others as you would have them do to you.’ (Luke 6:31)
Bob Mellows explored Jesus’ teachings on love and shared his understanding of Scripture with the mine workers. He helped them to understand that real safety would come with genuine respect, care and love for their fellow human beings. In 1998, he said, ‘It is not because of legalism that Jesus Christ told us to love God and love one another. It was because He knew it was essential to our wellbeing in all aspects of life.’ He went on to say, ‘The foundation of safety is loving one another (and ourselves).’
Immediate Impact
Sharing this teaching with his co-workers made a huge difference. In the decade between 1980 and 1990, about 200 accidents a year had been reported at the Cornwall Mine. Many people had been hurt in these accidents, and the mine managers often had to pay large sums of money to people who had been injured.
But when Bob Mellows’ Scripture-inspired values were taken on board, and people started caring about each other’s safety at work in a deeper and more meaningful way, the accident rate plummeted. By 1993, it was almost zero.
Stephen Baxter, another Tasmanian Christian, had this to say:
‘Here we see a clear picture of how the values of Jesus work in the real world, and the result when one person takes Jesus seriously and becomes salt and light in the community.’

Occupational health and safety is something that many employers are deeply concerned about — partly because they need to obey the laws about workplace safety, and partly because accidents cost companies money when people need to be paid compensation for injuries, when valuable work time is lost or when equipment is damaged.
But the most important reason to be concerned about workplace safety is caring for the people in the workplace!
Bob Mellows was able to bring an entirely new perspective to this issue when he pointed out that Jesus, the carpenter of Nazareth, knew about hard physical work and manual labour. Jesus never suggested that governments should make laws to force people to care about each other in the workplace — or anywhere else for that matter. Instead, He knew that only God’s law of real love for others can change people’s hearts and make that a reality.
___
Originally published at Did You Know? Education. Photo by Yury Kim.
Recent Articles:
24 June 2026
4.8 MINS
After scoring the sixth-fastest goal in FIFA's 2026 World Cup, Christian footballer Felix Nmecha dropped to one knee and symbolically laid his crown at the feet of Christ. It's a gesture that captures everything about him: faith first, football second.
24 June 2026
2.9 MINS
If you’re a parent or a grandparent, you probably worry about what your child or grandchild is learning at school. In the first of its kind in Australia, a survey has been launched to measure parent attitudes to Respectful Relationship sessions in schools.
24 June 2026
5.9 MINS
Nation First looks into Keir Starmer’s resignation and why Anthony Albanese should be worried by the same policy failures now haunting Labor at home.
24 June 2026
4.1 MINS
Rupert Lowe has just released The Rape Gang Inquiry Report. Occurring over decades, some 250,000 girls were raped, tortured, and abused, with some even killed. Yet authorities and the media covered up these diabolical crimes in the interests of not being 'racist' and 'Islamophobic'.
24 June 2026
9.8 MINS
Starmer’s reign was characterised by periods of unrest and violence, massive scandals and a two-tiered justice system that targeted Brits while giving special treatment to Muslim immigrants. The Rape Gang Report alleges Starmer allowed 13,000 Muslim rapists go with letters of warning, while Brits who spoke up against the injustice were penalised.
23 June 2026
5.4 MINS
Gabbard released 1,600 pages of declassified documents on her final day in office revealing how the intelligence community built a protective structure around Fauci and defended it in the name of national security.
23 June 2026
4 MINS
Christian, captain and soccer legend Lionel “Leo” Messi is giving all the glory to God as he makes FIFA 2026 World Cup headlines. The Argentinian is widely respected for his integrity, humility and the way he carries himself on and off the pitch.





