by Martyn Percy
First in a series of four reflections
I have written about respair before, and it is a term that is ripe for revival. As a noun, respair means “the return of hope after a period of despair”. As a verb, respair means “to have hope again”. Although both forms are rare and obsolete, they seem ripe for reviving.
Most readers will be more familiar with the term despair – the verb, noun and experience. I despair of my football team. I despair of the government. “I despair, therefore I still am, just about…I think…?” (with apologies to Descartes). Despair is, oddly the place we end up in when there is nowhere else to go. The heart already broken into a million pieces cannot be broken into more. We are one step away from returning to our form as dust.
Yet despair is a place, and strange though this may sound, it is a temporary state and place for most of us, whilst we are gradually repaired. It is a time for some self-compassion, and that requires honesty and realism. The things that have brought us to this place may still be in place. But we cannot escape from despair by trying to make ourselves happy. The repair that can come out of despair must face the darkness that has surrounded us. Until we know this – and by that, I mean understanding and accepting – we will struggle. We will tell ourselves that if we can avoid despair there may be hope. On the contrary, the despair has to be unpacked and owned before it can be left.
In an age when feelings have been elevated to a level of existential status, we need to ask if we are still able to educate one another, or only able to score points off each other from the comfort of our swivel-chairs.
The Church of England has retreated – ever-so-slowly – into its own echo chamber. It was once a support-based institution, but has collapsed into a members-only organisation. Local clergy and chaplains heroically resist this trend, and do what they can to continue serving their constituencies and communities, despite the demand to focus on membership drives. Here, the leadership of the Church of England has been seduced by faddish managerialism and brand-strategizing.
With a sharp decline in affiliation (of any kind) to the Church of England, and a rising tide of cultural disenchantment with its leaders, a serious crisis is emerging. In recent decades, the Church of England has invested significant time, energy and money in branding, marketing, mission and re-organisation. Every initiative has resulted in greater public distancing from the Church of England, and a steeper decline in attendance.
The Church of England leadership now functions like some unaccountable executive in a political party (communist, pre-Berlin wall) that cannot step outside its own bubble. Speeches at conferences get longer, the agenda less relevant, and the procedural motions riddled with minor points of minutiae. Party loyalists are rewarded, and dissenters quickly distanced. Or, if they persist, denounced and denigrated. There is a whiff of dictatorship in the wind.
Culturally, we have reached a moment when even in the churches, dissent and disagreement are treated as disloyalty. Asam Ahmad writes in the magazine Briarpatch (March 2nd 2015) that:
In the context of call-out culture, it is easy to forget that the individual we are calling out is a human being, and that different human beings in different social locations will be receptive to different strategies for learning and growing. For instance, most call-outs I have witnessed immediately render anyone who has committed a perceived wrong as an outsider to the community. One action becomes a reason to pass judgment on someone’s entire being, as if there is no difference between a community member or friend and a random stranger walking down the street (who is of course also someone’s friend). Call-out culture can end up mirroring what the prison industrial complex teaches us about crime and punishment: to banish and dispose of individuals rather than to engage with them as people with complicated stories and histories.
Asam Ahmad added to these reflections in a follow up article for Briarpatch (August 29, 2017) he notes:
“…But sometimes the only way we can address harmful behaviours is by publicly naming them, in particular when there is a power imbalance between the people involved and speaking privately cannot rectify the situation….”.
He then concludes:
“It is important to note here that there is often a knee-jerk reaction to name many instances of conflict as abuse: the word “abuse” can end up referencing a range of harm, from sexual and physical violence to gaslighting and even straightforward meanness.
But at the same time, we must listen to survivors of sexual and/or physical violence, particularly when they tell us they have not been able to receive accountability through private interactions alone. Survivors publicly naming their abuser are often met with a refusal to listen to their stories, and with tone policing, gaslighting, and/or generally being dismissed. This, despite the fact that survivors going public often do so at an incredible personal cost, and often after years of having tried to privately rectify the situation.
When we insist that all of these conversations must remain in the private sphere, we are insisting that accountability is always a private matter. The history of our movements very clearly shows the opposite is often the case. People continue to take the side of those with more power, more privilege, and more capacity, and often these people are never held accountable for the harm they have caused. This is precisely why call-outs [sometimes] need to happen.”
General Synod is in an occasional long-distance commuting relationship with reality. The public no longer trust a body that is not credible or relevant to their daily lives. Operating inside a culture of privilege and patrimony, and even unaccountable to loyal members, will not win new converts to the cause.
Aspects of the Church of England still constitute an important of our collective national treasure. At local levels, parish ministry and chaplaincy continue to be cherished and valued, making appreciable differences to community and civic life. Yet that is translating less and less into church attendance. The more the central governance of the church tries to invent new initiatives to address its own numerical anxieties and other neuroses, the more the public back away.
Yet the leadership of the Church lives in denial. And General Synod is an echo chamber for convincing the leadership that there is progress, when in fact the external evidence all points to disrepair and decline. If we were to conduct a cultural weather forecast for the future of the Church of England, the climate change will – Canute-like – swamp it within the next fifty years. Already drowning in irrelevance, it can neither resist rising cultural tide-changes.
What is needed here is serious collective self-criticism. I doubt however, that General Synod, the Archbishops or the Archbishops’ Council can manage that. Fear of loss (face, support and control) means the grip only gets tighter, and the politics and practices meaner. Asam Ahmad (02-03-15) in Briarpatch notes:
It isn’t an exaggeration to say that there is a mild totalitarian undercurrent (even in) how progressive communities police and define the bounds of who’s in and who’s out. More often than not, this boundary is constructed through the use of appropriate language and terminology – a language and terminology that are forever shifting and almost impossible to keep up with. In such a context, it is impossible not to fail at least some of the time. And what happens when someone has mastered proficiency in languages of accountability and then learned to justify all of their actions by falling back on that language? How do we hold people to account who are experts at using anti-oppressive language to justify oppressive behaviour? We don’t have a word to describe this kind of perverse exercise of power, despite the fact that it occurs on an almost daily basis in progressive circles.
Though we still lack a word for this, I could hardly put it better myself.
To be wrenched out of your place of belonging, a home, a job, a community, is indeed a bleak place of despair. My God, my God, why have you forsaken me.
Looking back there was mercifully only one day at a time to live through, though sleep was broken too. Respair is a new word for me, but I think I’m beginning to understand what it might mean.
On the outside it becomes a lot clearer how many others there are living (just about) in their own personal wrenchings It’s a new community, but a fragmented one. Yet somehow I dare to wonder if God is here too.
God is very much here: ‘Come to Jesus, outside the camp.’
I was going to suggest ‘rule by shibboleth’, but it’s clumsy. ‘Rulespeak’ (with a nod to Orwell’s ‘Newspeak’)?
I think the last thing the church needs to do is revive any more pretentious words that alienate and undermine people’s confidence in themselves.
I remember years ago a DSA writing to me saying something ‘wasn’t germaine to the situation’. Do what I thought, having left school at 15 with no GCSE’s.
The church needs to speak plainly, use common language, not try and hide meanings behind words that some people won’t understand and then feel smug about having superior knowledge.
Can’t really agree Trish. I’m savouring the opportunity to learn more from Martyn.
Fair enough Steve the world is always a safer place when there is debate. I simply did not see any purpose in starting off with a word that no one had ever heard of because it immediately creates a power dynamic that some readers of this blog may find trigger difficult feelings as it did in me. The purpose of this site is to create a safe space for people and though I am pleased you liked learning something from it I felt alienated by it.
Both points of view are valid and feeding back comments allows the author to reflect on what they are wanting to achieve by writing.
Sorry you were triggered Trish. Some of us using flowery language often started off in a different place. Value your thoughts, S
You can’t rebrand an organisation to hide the fact it protects sex abusers and bullies and persecutes the innocent. You can try, but no one will believe in the new shiny organisation. The fact that time, energy and money is going into rebranding and not real culture change is telling us that the only thing of importance are appearances. And please don’t bother to tell me there is culture change. At least not whilst I am still waiting, after seven months for assistance to file cdm because I am blind. Breaching the Equality Act whilst talk of changing liturgical rubrics to be more inclusive of persons with disabilities feels like utter contempt to someone who was forbidden to access church with their guide dog because harassment was having a profound and debilitating effect on a highly trained and valuable animal.
Mary – I am so sorry you have experienced this.
Thank you. I have complained again and am being told help may finally be on its way. As this is the third time I have been told this I am not holding my breath, particularly as the first help I got was being told I could not file cdm so repeatedly and forcefully that it amounted to being bullied to stop me doing so. I wonder what scheme they have lined up for me next. As the senior cleric who has failed to comply with the law for seven months will be the one dealing with my cdm should the Church ever enable me to file it, I have no hope of a fair and just outcome. However not pursuing it would be tantamount to permitting the Church to once again ignore House of Bishop’s guidelines, so I continue. Did someone say at Synod that things are improving?
The new Clergy Conduct Measure, of which I have seen a draft (my partner is on the General Synod) looks to be a great improvement on the CDM. Very best of luck meanwhile.
Thank you Catherine, I’m pleased to hear it. However the senior cleric has still not replied to my email saying the person tasked with assisting me is ignoring my emails and is not assisting me to file cdm. I have been waiting over eight months for assistance to file cdm against my Bishop and Rector. Senior clerics and a safeguarding Bishop know the situation. One was trying to claim it was not the fault of the Church of England so I have asked if the senior cleric has gone over to Rome. I am sure your partner did not hear the reality of the current state of safeguarding at synod. It really does not matter what they say to members in General Synod, or what changes they make. The truth is they are obviously contemptuous of the law and their own guidelines and are effectively blocking cdms. The leopard has not changed its spots but is making speeches to distract members from noticing they are still there. Instead of having the mind of Christ our shepherds seem to be competing with public figures as to who has the greater lack of integrity.
They’re very slow to realise we’ve seen that the emperor has no clothes. It’s pathetic.
I agree Janet. I feel very sorry for these people. They are failing to hide their misconduct, and failing to hide that survivors and others are being badly mistreated despite enormous efforts to do so. Despite all that is in the public domain, and without obvious embarrassment, they deliberately make public statements trying to hide their collusion in scandalous processes knowing the real suffering many endure and that some are driven to suicide or thoughts of suicide. As you say it is pathetic. As a reasonably intelligent person I genuinely feel pity at their attempts. As a Christian I worry for their souls and feel pity that they have chosen a path which leads them away from our creator. Unfortunately unlike the board of a cricketing organisation they will not resign. Their lust for power and status means everything to them which is why, all these years after iicsa, they are unwilling to comply with their publicly stated guidelines, intimidate and bully people into ndas, and break our law. I find it difficult to believe they can put on their silly hats and robes to strut about without understanding how ludicrous they appear. Putting on an orange (?) robe does not turn you into a dhala lama, it would just make you look silly and pretentious. Putting on a mitre and clerical collar looks equally ridiculous when you have made it obvious that you have no intention of behaving like a Christian. I find it pathetic and embarrassing.
Mary – would you be able to pm me via Facebook Messenger to continue this conversation? There may be other sources of help available to you.
Catherine, sorry, I am unable to do that. But please ask Stephen for my email and we can communicate that way. Looking forward to hearing from you.