
“You Meant Evil Against Me, But God…”
From the evil practice of blackbirding, exploiting South Pacific islanders as cheap labour on Queensland’s sugarcane plantations in the late 1800s, sprang a marvellous harvest of souls for Christ, a wonderful grace for which their descendants give thanks.
In 1994, more than 100 people commemorated a centenary. In the grounds of Fairymead House in North Bundaberg, over 100 church leaders gathered to acknowledge the centenary of one man’s return to his home. The church leaders were from the South Sea Evangelical Church in the Solomon Islands, and they were joined by Solomon Islands political leaders in a great outpouring of thanksgiving.
Kanakas
Since too few of us Australians know of this event, or of its historical foundations, let me explain. In the 1870s and 1880s, South Pacific islanders were brought to the sugarcane fields of Queensland to provide labour for hot and hard farm work.
Some have described this as slave labour — those who too readily identify the interactions of colonial-era white people and dark-skinned people in terms of master-slave relationships — but it was far more complex than that.
Some of those 15,000 Solomon Islanders may have been taken to Queensland against their will; some may have been offered inducements like blankets, tools, and weapons; some may have signed up for specific periods of indentured labour; and some may have had exploitative ‘masters’, while others had kindly employers.
At Fairymead Plantation, Florence Young was visiting her brothers before sailing to what she expected would be a lifetime of mission work in China with Hudson Taylor. Florence recognised the mission field on her brothers’ plantation, and began teaching the islander men to read and write, using the Bible as her textbook. Before long, many of those young men came to faith in Jesus Christ, embracing freedom from the darkness and fears of their animistic Melanesian religion.
Mustard Seed
In 1894, one of those young men, Peter Abu’ofa, having completed his term of indentured labour, returned to his homeland of Malaita Island. He went with one clear purpose: to present the Gospel message and to see the transformation of his people. From this small beginning, the South Sea Evangelical Church would develop and become the third-largest church in the Solomon Islands. Today, almost 20% of Solomon Islanders belong to the SSEC.
So, this was the reason for commemorating a centenary in 1994. One hundred years earlier, one man with an unshakeable faith in the one true God had returned to his homeland with one powerful message. Jesus Christ forgives sin, saves sinners, and transforms cultures!
As I stood with the crowd on that centenary day in 1994, I noticed something very significant. While the Australian dignitaries who were present spoke about being sorry for the actions of our forebears and offered apologies for the wrongs of the past, the Solomon Islanders — both secular leaders and church leaders — emphasised the good that came to their people because of the Pacific Island labour program of the 1870s and 1880s. Echoing the attitude of Joseph in Genesis 50:20, they declared that God had brought truth, light, and life to the Solomon Islands. There was forgiveness; there was thanksgiving; there was no sense of victimhood; and there were no demands for reparations.
This is the attitude that we need today! Yes, wrongs have been done in our nation’s history, but the life-changing message of Jesus Christ brought healing and hope to all peoples, regardless of their ethnic heritage. Let’s not be locked into the wrongs of the past and become perpetual victims. Let’s see the hand of God in our history, and say with Joseph,
“As for you, you meant evil against me, but God meant it for good in order to bring about this present result, to preserve many people alive.” (Genesis 50:20)
___
Photo: Wikimedia Commons
One Comment
Leave A Comment
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.
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.
23 June 2026
3.2 MINS
The Australian Christian Freedom Index documented 74 Acts of Parliament that have restricted Christian freedom over the past 25 years. Which parties and worldviews restrict Christian freedoms in Australia — and why?
22 June 2026
2.7 MINS
Australia still has a blasphemy law architecture that goes by a new name — namely, our vilification and anti-discrimination framework. These laws have striking parallels to Australia’s old blasphemy laws, with the exception that they serve a new god and are more readily enforced than the old ones.
22 June 2026
2.7 MINS
Rupert Lowe has released a document titled the Rape Gang Inquiry Report into organised child sexual exploitation across parts of England, following a series of public hearings with victims, whistle‑blowers, and former officials.
22 June 2026
4.4 MINS
I fell for the idea that I could make myself to be female. I took cross-sex hormones, had numerous surgeries and identified as female. I came to realise that none of it changed my male body — with it's 30 trillion cells with XY chromosomes — into a biological female.
22 June 2026
3.4 MINS
Turning hearts of dads to their children, and the hearts of the children to their dads, is at the core of what Dads4Kids is all about.






Thank you Brian. Our God is amazing Satan sows evil where ever it goes and Jesus Christ simply breathes…..and responds to those of us who call on His name.