Holy moly! Scott Morrison has plans for your (and his) own good
- Written by Joshua Black, Political Historian and Administrator Officer, Australian Historical Association, Australian National University
If Scott Morrison’s Plans for Your Good[1] is a memoir, it is in the tradition of Christian autobiography. But unlike St Augustine – the author of the most famous example – Morrison does not have anything to say about a sinful youth. Indeed, confession – so often a feature of the genre – is rather hard to find.
Scott meets his eventual wife, Jenny, at Luna Park on a religious youth group excursion while they are still at primary school. They begin dating towards the end of high school, and marry when he is 21. After 14 painful years of infertility, including unsuccessful IVF treatment, they are blessed with two daughters, who are “the faces of God’s goodness”.
Review: Plans for Your Good: A Prime Minister’s Testimony of God’s Faithfulness – Scott Morrison (Thomas Nelson)
In reality, Morrison’s book, targeted at an explicitly Christian market, belongs more comfortably in the modern motivational or self-help field of publishing. And while he weaves some elements of political memoir around a narrative replete with biblical stories and scriptural quotations, he is coy about any sins he might have committed in politics.
He tells us the political world he faced as prime minister was “a malevolent and often toxic” environment, but there are few hints of any role he might have played in making it that way.
Read more https://theconversation.com/holy-moly-scott-morrison-has-plans-for-your-and-his-own-good-229104