The Conservative Party at Prayer

by Anonymous

Ed. This is a third contribution from a well informed anonymous writer who wrote two earlier articles on the topic of Safeguarding in the Church of England.

I had better come clean at the start. I woke up the other day to find that I was part of Liz Truss’ Anti-Growth Coalition. Or rather, I am part of the one that the Archbishops often refer to.  In the CofE, you cannot move for chiding, chivvying or church conferences dedicated to growth, growth, growth. Apparently, Truss is “getting Britain moving”. That is odd, because where I live, nobody is standing still at the moment. We all have jump around on the spot just to keep warm.  Meanwhile, Welby’s chums are “unleashing the laity (etc)”, because as you may recall, the CofE is being held back by its own clergy and needs to be “freed from [such] limiting factors”.

I am against growth for the sake of growth. I protest when Conservative Evangelical churches and HTB plants get all the money and grants for becoming “resource churches” or “missional hubs”. That means all the other churches just pay much more for getting far less. I think lots of these new church ‘start-ups’ cost a lot to set-up, and pay nothing back.  Most of Welby’s experiments have been expensive foibles that we’ve all been forced to fund. But now he’s spent all the money, he’s even taken on £500m of fresh debt in the form of a “growth bond”, which we’ll all have to pay back sometime in the future. Kwasi Kwarteng went to Eton too, you know. Personally, I’d rather see our cash go into much needed repairs and maintenance for churches, vicarages, and perhaps a decent holiday for the clergy. But I am part of that Anti-Growth Coalition. And I have come to realise that the CofE is being run by the Conservative Party at prayer.

The question is, what kind of Conservatives are todays Bishops and Archbishops? Socially, politically and theologically they are conservative, for sure. Gender and sexuality remain difficult issues for any Bishop to speak out on.  They stick to safer terrain: climate change, Ukraine and the other matters that don’t require episcopal attention. It is sad, if not tragic, that at precisely the moment when we might need radical and brave Bishops to speak, we have a bench that is permanently ‘on mute’ until the Comms-Team tells them what to say. 

OK, the Bishops are conservatives with a small ‘c’, but in terms of conduct, this is very much like the current Conservative government under Johnson or Truss. We estimate that over 40 Bishops have CDMs against them at the moment. But like Partygate, the rules they helped make don’t apply to them. They just carry on.  Yet the rules do apply to rest of the clergy, who have to step aside from ministry with the presumption of being guilty-until-proven-innocent. Even if found innocent, your Bishop might decide that you no longer enjoy their favour or confidence. A kind of ‘one-strike and you’re out’ approach.

Other similarities come to mind. General Synod will be briefed about new national CofE initiatives through the media, just like party MPs. The inner-cabinet running everything for the CofE may not bother to consult with the majority of Bishops about policy changes, new initiatives or major expenditure. There is no democracy or accountability, and anybody breaking ranks is swiftly disciplined. Nobody knows when the House of Bishops acquired a system of Party Whips, but nobody is allowed to be “off message”.  General Synod, and most Bishops running their own Diocesan Synods, have far more in common with a Party Conference run by Truss or Johnson. Even fringe events are checked out for potential dissent.  If all else fails, there are still three ways to deal with dissenters from the Handbook of Political Arm Twisting. First, promote the dissenter – so they have to behave. Second, sack and banish them, and remove the whip. Third, smear them, so they have to resign.

So, I choked when I saw that the CofE – Truss-like – was now publishing something called ‘Promoting A Safer Church’.  This was the CofE’s take on over 800 recommendations made in Past Cases Review 2 (PCR2).  When you read PCR2, you have to ask who in the CofE hierarchy pared the 800 down to a couple of dozen, editing them into a very weak set of national recommendations, and by what authority they did this? Somebody pasteurised, skimmed, filtered and strained these 800 recommendations. Who did this, and why?

Bishop Gibbs was on hand to trot out that we are all on some kind of “change-journey”. So like Truss “getting Britain moving”. It is good to know that Gibbs is finally cranking up the safeguarding engine. We have no indications on speed, direction or destination. Gibbs also noted the CofE is “putting in place scrutiny of diocesan safeguarding operations”.  That will be surprising news to many Dioceses. But as Gibbs is a Welbyite speaking to the media, there was no need to check whether anybody was ever consulted. That’s government for you.

Meanwhile, the Independent Safeguarding Board (ISB) is apparently ready to roll out their website. But it has no independent Information Sharing Agreement logged with the Information Commissioner’s Office, so is not GDPR-compliant. Yes, a small detail, but it does mean that the ISB cannot handle data securely or independently.  Gibbs told General Synod the ISB was completely independent of the Archbishops’ Council.  The ISB says it isn’t, and has no legal personality or any kind of independent financial identity outside the Archbishops’ Council. Amazingly, the National Safeguarding Panel and the National Safeguarding Steering Group, both chaired by Meg Munn, claim that the ISB is not a governance issue for them.  So that’s OK then.

So who is running safeguarding in the CofE? But before I answer that, let me point out some of the issues that now bedevil safeguarding in the CofE. First, it is plain common sense (and obvious legally) that in terms of safeguarding, the category ‘vulnerable’ refers either to a child, or to an adult who is known to require protection, and for whom safeguarding measures are already in place. Labelling any other adult as ‘vulnerable’ only after an event would render all adults as potentially vulnerable, with safeguarding then simultaneously becoming everything and nothing.  Yet hundreds of clergy have been hammered by a retrospective and invidious Catch-22 scenario, in which the last visit they made, a sermon they preached or conversation they had is now treated as a “safeguarding matter…because someone has complained”.

Second, whilst I think churches should not be treated differently to other bodies, there is such a thing as proportionality. Many, many church events never have employees or licensed persons present, and so there are no contractual arrangements in place. A church outing to a zoo is an entirely voluntary day trip. It is not like a school trip. If all our church events now need a safeguarding risk assessment, here are some events we currently don’t risk assess: funerals, weddings, baptisms, parish lunches, visiting old people’s homes, coffee mornings, home groups, and more besides. Would we risk assess our home group leader inviting their group to a lunch, or out for tea on a National Trust daytrip? Who would that safeguard? Church is an inherently multi-generational gathering, and it is voluntary, not compulsory. By all means prosecute people who exploit children and vulnerable adults in civil and criminal proceedings.  But nobody can make the context of church “safe”, let alone promote a “safer church” for everyone.

Third, I predict that there will be no safeguarding in 10-15 years. It is a voracious industry-concept, and the churches will not be able to afford it. With fewer paid clergy in the future, reliance defaults to the laity. Bluntly, they won’t do it. It’s time consuming and fraught with huge risk and responsibility – yet no reward. It has no job satisfaction such as maintaining buildings, visiting or hospitality. The laity will just refuse to manage this.  It will eventually dawn on the CofE that:

A: Most denominations outside the British Isles don’t do safeguarding or anything like this. Common sense with due regard to civil and criminal law suffices for everyone else.

B: There is nothing at all to show for safeguarding – teaching, preaching, pastoral care usually produce gratitude and growth – whereas safeguarding literally produces nothing.

C: The actual people being safeguarded are mostly children – with very, very few exceptions. Most children grow up. They seldom record debts of gratitude for their crèche or nursery school.

Social Exchange Theorists would take a cold sober look at this and begin scripting the last rites. Safeguarding is what sociologists call a high-investment-low-reward activity. They would also concur that it is high-risk-low-yield.  Mostly, what we want from our churches is low-investments with high-rewards. You turn up to church, hear a great homily, and experience fabulous liturgy, numinous worship. There is no price on this.

Safeguarding is the opposite: huge outlays of time, energy and work (labour), and literally nothing to show for it at the end (no measurable result), other than a meaningless slogan that has no quantifiable outcome. “Promoting a Safer Church” is akin to “getting Britain moving”. As churches have found to their cost, you can plan as much as you like, but you are still stuck with no power or predictive skills to prevent anyone who exploits your trust. Yet you are left with total responsibility for anything that goes wrong. The answer simply cannot be to adopt the premise that we trust no-one. But that is the ultimate trajectory of safeguarding. No-one is safe. Everyone is potentially vulnerable. Nobody can be trusted. In Welby-World we all need to be risk-assessed, policed, checked and re-checked. If you don’t agree, you can leave. Or you’ll be dismissed.

None of this undermines the fundamental  imperative for redress, justice, truth, repentance and integrity, and the urgent need for victims to be fully compensated. That really is a proper task. Safeguarding culture is of its time and has a limited shelf-life. Yet more worryingly, it belongs to a certain kind of hysteria that stems from ‘moral panic’. That is another concept from sociology, that helps to explain how “safeguarding the American way of life” in the 1950s meant every single town searched harder for the Communists, left-handed folk, homosexuals, student radicals and other (so-called) deviants that apparently threatened to undermine the very fabric of American society by brainwashing the unsuspecting into changing their political beliefs or identity.

Child sexual abuse was hidden in our churches for many years. Churches colluded in cover ups, and still do so. But a culture of predictive correction can swing the other way, with the unwary and accused quickly caught in a drama-trap akin to Kafka or Arthur Miller’s The Crucible. McCarthyism found very few reds under the beds of ordinary Americans. Believe me, they looked hard, and frequently in places that had no registered democrat voters, socialist-sympathisers, or any other people to be suspicious of.

Cynics might say that ‘Promoting a Safer Church’ – uncannily reminiscent of  “safeguarding the American way of life” in the 1950s – is just another example of our cultural captivity. Of the church being a slave to contemporary culture. That is probably true, but it comes at a price. We need to remember, and as Jean La Fontaine’s anthropological study discovered, when push came to shove, there were no cases of satanic ritual abuse in places as far apart as Shetland and Nottingham (see: Speak of the Devil: Tales of Satanic Abuse in Contemporary England, 1998). Yet a plausibility structure and a culture of ‘moral panic’ had prevailed, and put the innocent through hell. We also forget that it really rather suited the Conservative government of the 1980’s and early 1990’s to support that kind of moral panic and fear. In the same way, only an innocent would see no evidence of intentional political guile in ‘Promoting a Safer Church’.

Meanwhile, today’s ecclesial culture is being worked over and water-boarded by re-branding the identity of the churches, whose sole purpose has now been reduced to a safety-first machine geared for growth, growth, growth. Take a look at your Diocesan HQ the next time you visit.  It will be open-plan, replete with board rooms and breakout spaces, like some churchy version of Ricky Gervais’ The Office (2001-2002). Episodes in our ecclesiastical adaptation can stick closely to the original, and cover mergers, annual appraisals, company awaydays, growth targets and the like.  (I wish I could say I have never met a version of Bishop David Brent, but in truth, every Diocese has at least one Bishop Brent).

Alas, I do not think this ‘safeguarding culture’ is quite the unfortunate accident it can masquerade as. Like McCarthyism’s campaign against Communism and all-things-deviant, safeguarding is a serious tool of political oppression, and an instrument for intimidation. It stems from a bullying culture that can be quite sadistic. It uses punishment, terrorising and harshness to keep order. It factors in its own randomness. Now anyone could be found wanting. This reflects the elite public school ethos we have seen in our political leaders, and it’s now baked hard into the CofE. Most bishops behave like compliant-cruel prefects.

Most of our Bishops are no longer allowed to care, and have more in common with the brutal chums of Flashman in Tom Brown’s Schooldays [1857]. It is a measure of our bullying culture in the CofE that a Bishop known to be an uncompromising bully effectively destroyed a diocese, but still got ten years’ tenure in post. Elsewhere, a bishop silences critics through ‘lawfare’, destroying colleagues who speak out, and using his comms-team, senior staff and lawyers like some kind of regional mobster with muscle. Critical clergy, or those daring to openly complain of his bullying, will get the threat of a CDM by return. This will destroy the church. But the fish rots slowly from the head.

This bullying culture stems from a school-based context rooted in elitism, class and entitlement.  This culture flows from the God of Wrath that was drummed into heads at summer camps like Iwerne.  God is some Big Headmaster who dwells on high, ruling distantly and possibly benevolently, provided you keep your head down and do exactly as you’re told. Dissidents and troublemakers will be made an example of, and publicly shamed. Bullying is tolerated, even though the edicts against it will pinned-up every week on the school noticeboard and be re-issued at assembly.  The tasks that keep the pupils in order are often repetitive, numbing and pointless. Punishments can be random and cruel. But if you dare to question the system, you are in line for a suspension. 

Perhaps the most depressing aspect of all this is that it you can see it so clearly. Tens of millions of pounds are being wasted every year on ‘Promoting a Safer Church’.  Yet few victims of abuse are ever helped. The keyword is ‘promoting’. This is an exercise in the dark arts of spin and PR. But the money spent on this “change-journey” could be given to victims of actual abuse who are not being compensated.  We know that the CofE entirely lacks a leadership with wisdom, courage and compassion. Yet the ‘safeguarding culture’ grows evermore obese with each passing month.

Herewith a fine example.  The Makin Review that deals with Smyth’s abuse, so touches on what the odd Archbishop and a few Bishops may or may not have known, said and done to stop this.  The Review is around 850 days late. Mr. Makin was only given two days per week in the published Terms of Reference to get to the bottom of this barrel. He started in 2019, but is known to have increased his time commitment to three or four days per week. The combined cost of him and his associates is estimated at around £1400 per day, plus VAT.  Add in transcription costs, lawyers fees and the like, and the costs might rise to £2500 per day. The total cost of this Review is coming in at somewhere between £1.25 to £1.5 million.

The punchline in this is Makin has yet to interview Channel 4’s Cathy Newman, and most of the investigative team who broke the story of John Smyth’s abuse. It is also believed that in the three-plus years of the Makin Review, the relevant Archbishop and Bishops have yet to be seen. As Churchill might have said, never in the field of ecclesial conflict has so much money been spent on defending the few – yet at the expense of the many.  The many victims of Smyth won’t get a fraction of what the Makin Review costs.  And there is, as yet, nothing to show for this. Where successive Conservative governments have gone with whitewash and exonerating ‘independent internal tribunals’, the CofE has followed with their ‘lessons learned reviews’.

One primary function safeguarding is maintain the position of those in power, so Makin’s Review will never see the light of day if it so much as dares to criticise an Archbishop or Bishop. The Comms-Team will never let that be published. The other primary function of safeguarding is perpetrating processes and perpetual terrorisation to keep the clergy in their place.  But as their numbers thin-out, age, and many just leave, it is only the laity that remain.  Yet the laity don’t have to do as they are told. The laity don’t have to put up with uncaring prefects or headmasters who preside over this toxic version of Erving Goffman’s total institution, or Michael Foucault’s carceral system and panopticon. The laity can vote with their feet and don’t have to submit their CV’s into some safeguarding portal just to help out the Vicar with home visits, or serve on another rota.

I predict the laity will vote with their feet. By the time we get 2050, you will have to look up the term “safeguarding” in a dictionary. People will scratch their heads and ask “what, who and why?”. In the meantime, we are set to be run ragged by this Conservative Party at prayer.

About Stephen Parsons

Stephen is a retired Anglican priest living at present in Cumbria. He has taken a special interest in the issues around health and healing in the Church but also when the Church is a place of harm and abuse. He has published books on both these issues and is at present particularly interested in understanding how power works at every level in the Church. He is always interested in making contact with others who are concerned with these issues.

9 thoughts on “The Conservative Party at Prayer

  1. The problem in the c of e isn’t safeguarding.

    Proper safeguarding protocols are deeply embedded in UK state schools. Every Child Matters embedded policy improvements after the death of Victoria Climbié, and there are attempts made to improve practice in schools, social work, and care homes, and other places where children and vulnerable adults can be at risk.

    All the evidence points to the fact that safer recruitment practices, DBS checking and reference checking, probationary periods and a culture where safeguarding is embedded across the school/church and is seen to be EVERYONE’s responsibility AS WELL AS having clear, accessible and publicised lines of reporting – all these things contribute to the PREVENTION of harm to children and vulnerable adults

    Unfortunately we will always have true evil with us in the form of people who abuse children and vulnerable adults in the worst ways. These people (mostly men but women do also abuse occasionally) will ALWAYS try to gain access to children via schools, churches, scouts, etc. The only thing public bodies can do to prevent abuse is to embed proper professional ACTUALLY INDEPENDENT safeguarding protocols across the board. There is so much evidence now that shows that abusers abuse WHERE THEY HAVE THE OPPORTUNITY.

    The problems in the c of e are multitude. But the main issue is that its allowed to do it’s own safeguarding – (or what is referred to as”safeguarding” but actually isn’t) – in a way that public bodies are not. Headteachers and teachers are answerable to safeguarding protocols. bishops and clergy are not. That’s insane

    There needs to be proper independent safeguarding in the c of e in line with all other public bodies

    Then we would see the changes we need

    I was a teacher for a decade. I am a lay safeguarding advisor in a different denomination from the c of e. I don’t think it’s true that lay ppl ‘wont do this.’ I think those of us who actually care about the wellbeing of the most vulnerable and have strong secular experience of safeguarding are well able to do this, and do it well.

    In a large “inclusive” c of e church where a vicar perpetrated online homophobic hate against me, which I reported to police, the current “safeguarding” officer is the wife of a current ordinand. His career needs signing off by the clergy team. Think she’ll EVER be able to raise safeguarding concerns effectively? Of course not. That’s why they chose her

    It’s that kind of nonsense that goes on under the name of “safeguarding” in the c of e that needs a complete culture change.

    I am very doubtful we’ll get the change we need in the c of e. but bringing churches completely in line with statutory bodies would be a great start

    1. Completely agree with this comment at a church in my diocese the vicar is the parish safeguarding officer! In my own case the PSO was the HR manager of the diocese and PCR2 nor the diocese could see a problem with this. The structure is completely broken.

  2. I really welcome this analysis; it helps me understand the unease I felt reading the PCR 2 and subsequent ‘smoothing’ over, or, let’s be frank, the ‘gaslighting’ certainly evident in the national ‘handling’ of the report and in recorded messages by bishops in certain dioceses.
    Again, this is similar to the overt ‘gaslighting’ from the Truss team – ‘nothing to see here’ and ‘not [really] to do with us’ so the overt denial of responsibility for what is happening, plus projecting out onto anyone who queries this as disruptive and destructive.

    An added aspect to the analysis of bishops’ behaviour and the bullying culture in the church is what can be clearly detected in some of the situations well known to readers of SC – and, again, let’s be frank and call it what it is – it’s sadism. As anonymous writes, such ways of behaving are probably learnt from the bullying school-based culture, and then somehow honed by the expectations, pressures, and mores of the hierarchical culture.

    Actual sadism and a sadistic way of thinking and responding to events, is about mastery of the other person or group of people – through power and control, with the aim of opposing and thwarting, obstructing their will and needs. It’s obviously destructive, can be very unpleasant, but driven by a barely conscious belief that it is essential for the sadist or the sadistic way of thinking to rub out and negate the wishes of the survivor(s) and those disclosing. The ultimate outcome is to fix, freeze or even petrify what is alive – the aim is inertia. And sadly that is where the C of E currently stands …

  3. Thank you, Stephen, for posting this interesting article by Anonymous.

    I have been thinking about this statement within the article: ‘Labelling any other adult as ‘vulnerable’ only after an event would render all adults as potentially vulnerable, with safeguarding then simultaneously becoming everything and nothing.’

    I realise that some clergy have suffered horrendously and unjustly because of safeguarding allegations, but the issue with this sentence is that it denies situational vulnerability. Particularly when we assess cases of bullying, this is often the crucial factor, in that the bully is able to play upon the power imbalance in their relationship with the victim.

    Say a ‘lesser status’ individual meets alone with a bishop, or someone discerning for licensed ministry meets alone with a senior clergyperson, and an incident happens. That individual might not be of themselves vulnerable in an everyday sense, but if such an incident was to occur, the power dynamics in that situation may well make it difficult for them to report such a situation, e.g. it might have implications for their career / vocation, the Church is likely to give higher value to the viewpoint of the person with a higher status in the Church, etc. Think also that it is probably likely that the person of lesser status will attend the meeting in the space belonging to the person of higher status, so there is a spatial dimension surrounding all this in how such encounters work.

    I think that this is the root of why increasingly, many secular organisations (such as universities and health bodies) and indeed other Christian denominations (e.g. the United Reformed Church) are moving towards preferring the term ‘adult at risk’ rather than ‘vulnerable adult’ in their approaches towards safeguarding. This former definition includes space to recognise the power dynamics which might impact upon a person where there is a power differential within a relationship, and which might not be recognised if we are simply to assess situations based on perceived health needs. I say ‘perceived’ as some disabilities may well be hidden, undisclosed, etc., so it cannot simply be assumed that an individual is not ‘vulnerable’ just because we do not recognise them as such.

    The point which I am trying to make is that abuse can happen to individuals who are not necessarily ‘vulnerable’ in their everyday activities, but rather, who can be rendered ‘at risk’ in particular situations because of the power dynamics to which they are subjected and which can make reporting and being believed more difficult.

    For what it is worth, I fear that there might be more cases which are not reported, or disregarded because of power dynamics, than the couple of high profile cases where sermon content has been treated as a safeguarding matter.

    I hope that this point doesn’t detract from what I believe is otherwise an important and valuable viewpoint from Anonymous, but I feel that it is…

    1. … something worth noting.

      (Apologies, this was included in my original comment and then cut off upon posting!)

  4. This article raises issues deserving debate in a thought-provoking way. However its scope is so wide and the number of issues it raises so many, that readers may well agree with some points made while strongly disagreeing with others.

    Just taking a few points to do with Smyth, since that case is raised:
    None of us, not even Keith Makin himself?, can know the COMPLETE story for at least the following reasons:
    – many key witnesses, eg Mark Ruston, David Fletcher, Simon Doggart, John Smyth and others have died, taking secrets to the grave
    – many key contemporaneous witnesses may not have come forward at all or else not volunteered much evidence when they did (e.g. Anne Smyth)
    – a significant proportion of the 30? beaten in the UK are ordained in the C of E and appear unwilling to ‘rock the boat’ for, potentially, a whole host of reasons, some of which may be understandable
    – some contemporaneous witnesses claim to have ‘recollection issues’
    – some contemporaneous witnesses do have ‘recollection issues’
    – some survivors are still too traumatised to recollect fully (assuming they want to)
    – some survivors never want to open that chapter of their lives again, quite understandably so

    Nevertheless one assumes KM will confirm lots of what is already known (by the many insiders), will clarify things that many thought were true but didn’t have proof of, and reveal new truths, unknown to almost everyone. Furthermore one assumes that his report will bring this into the open, so there is no longer the current distinction between those who know a lot, those who know a little, those who think they know a lot (usually based on incorrect/incomplete ‘social media’ material), and many who know nothing at all, i.e. sunlight is the best disinfectant.
    Although I believe it is out of KM’s scope, a great scandal for me has always been not just the 30? Individuals from fee-paying schools, largely in SE England (even though some suffered trauma that they have never recovered from for the rest of their lives), but the cold blooded decision by the church and school leaders of the time to ‘export’ the problem to Africa, out of sight/out of mind. The quite frankly racist/classist views that underpin that decision should have been as abhorrent then as they are today. They were, and they remain, profoundly unbiblical and yet these decisions were made by people ordained as priests ordained in the C of E. Perhaps 5? of the 30? U.K. victims were underage, perhaps 100% of the 100? African victims were under age, and one of them lost his life.
    However the single biggest issue for KM is surely not who did what in the 1970/80s but the coverup that began in February 1982 and has been active ever since, particularly since 2013 (Watergate all over again).
    We have to wait for his report to understand how extensive that was and is.

    FAOD: I gave evidence to KM early in 2020. I have no knowledge of any other evidence or how my or other evidence will be dealt with in the…

  5. .. in the report.
    (Was how my comment finished in the original).
    Like James above, and previous contributions of mine, the end of my comment was cut off.
    I made particularly certain to be well inside the character count this time so it seems clear that there is a fundamental problem with the character count software.

    Note to self (and others?): never risk going beyond 2900 characters rather than the claimed 3000 character limit

  6. A challenging article from Anonymous, which I need to reread and absorb. (I write as a parish safeguarding officer!) However, if I may comment solely on the first two paragraphs, the writer may like to investigate, if not already aware of it, the Save the Parish movement (savetheparish.com). He or she would be among friends.

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