On another day, Reg’s funeral would have dominated my
thinking yesterday (as it did until the evening). It’s not every funeral service that
begins with a preamble from the departed laying out his thinking behind how
it’s put together and the spirit with which we should all approach it. His
outline notes include the instruction ‘Eulogy (if deserved)’: I have no idea
what one does to ‘deserve’ a eulogy, and it’s not my place to decide anyway.
The love and honour in which Reg was held was palpable, as was his sense of
gratitude and joyousness – though shot through with the extremity of the way he
died. I spoke to one of my predecessors as Rector for whom Reg had served as
churchwarden in the 1960s: his
predecessor had told him how ‘this is such a good parish. You’ll love them into
heaven.’
As an antidote, in the evening I went with our treasurer to
a meeting about the new Parish Share system the diocese is proposing. Now, this
is all a bit complex, but bear with me. The Diocese of Guildford derives more
of its £11.7M income from its parishes than any other Church of England
diocese, 94% (in Lincoln it’s just over 40%), because it lacks the historic
endowments and landholdings the older dioceses have. This means that if
churches are subsidised for any reason, the money basically has to come from
all the other churches, essentially reallocating resources from a handful of
larger evangelical churches to smaller ones. The distortions arising from this
system have in recent years been mitigated by a complex arrangement of caps and
floors on the annual changes in the sum the diocese demands from each parish.
It all means that how the figure for any parish is arrived at is opaque to say
the least. The diocese also reckons that the actual cost of each stipendiary
clergyperson has been significantly underestimated. ‘It’s not fair!’ the Bishop
outlined at the start of the meeting: the system should not ‘penalise growth or
reward decline’.
So there is to be a new system. Each parish’s quota will be
calculated on what it gets (a vicar,
for instance, calculated as costing £55K per year), a share of the common costs
of the diocese, and an adjustment based on the relative prosperity of the
parish. There will continue to be cross-subsidies, but they will be apparent
and transparent rather than covert, and seen explicitly as ‘an investment for
growth’. In the future, if a parish in Guildford Diocese is subsidised, it’ll
know it.
Well. It struck me that this shift marks another stage in a
huge process of centralisation which has gone on for decades. Once upon a time
each parish in the Church of England was a virtually independent unit,
financially and administratively; occasionally a bishop would turn up to
confirm people or to discipline a naughty Anglo-Catholic clergyman but that was
basically it. Then in the 1960s clerical incomes were standardised as the
parishes handed their historic endowments over to the dioceses to be put into a
central pool, possibly the greatest single act of Christian charity in this
country’s history and one that nobody really talks about. Gradually clergy also
began sending their fees for marriages and funerals into the diocesan pot as
well. This financial centralisation should be seen alongside the long effort by
the bishops to get more control over the patronage process, that is, who has
the right to present a candidate to be incumbent of a parish; and the abolition
of the Parson’s Freehold, the incumbent’s absolute security of tenure which is
now (except for those who, like me, were already in place) replaced by licences
for a term of years. Freehold gave clergy the freedom to innovate without
worrying about being slapped over the wrist, but it also gave them the freedom
to be alcoholics, depressives, oddballs, or plain idle buggers. Put all this
together and the picture that emerges is of a massive and decades-long process in
which the parish ceases to be the strategic unit for the mission of the Church
of England, and is replaced by the diocese. The diocese’s hand may still be
relatively light and respectful of the traditions of each parish, and bishops
certainly tend not to behave with the brutal high-handedness that some once
did, but the striking thing is that it has a hand at all. This is a shift from
a situation in which parishes are given a priest and then left essentially to
get on with it, to one in which strategic direction is set centrally and then
implemented locally.
I said this, and the chaps from the diocesan offices didn’t
like it at all, which suggests to me that I’m on to something. I didn’t at the
time take the further step of summarising the proposed change, which I
characterise – possibly caricature – as a shift from saying ‘every parish needs
a priest and we will provide one’ to saying ‘every parish will have a priest if
it earns one, and, if it can’t pay, we will decide what “earning” means’.
The change probably won’t cripple Swanvale Halt church. I
and the treasurer guess that, when the new system comes in, we’ll have to find
another £5-10K per annum, a challenging but not impossible amount. But far
worse and more depressing than the shift in balance from parish to diocese, which
is perhaps an inevitable process, is the managerialist and results-driven ideas
behind the bishop’s statement about ‘penalising growth and rewarding decline’.
What morally pejorative terms those are. The assumption is that a church can
grow if only it tries, and therefore if it’s not growing it must be complacent
and idle. This new model is very much ‘salvation by works’ rather than
‘salvation by grace’ – payment by results, rather than needs. It works entirely
against everything we tell people about their essential value, about God
valuing the lowly and weak. Whether centrally-directed strategy and
incentivisation will ‘work’ better than hands-off universal provision, or will
just accelerate decline, is an open question.
And it’s on God that I try to focus. Ultimately my value
comes from him, from what I am in his eyes, not in the eyes of the Church of
England. It doesn’t make me feel that good, though.
I expect you may have watched "Rev," on the BBC a few years ago...
ReplyDeleteOh, one got the impression that there was a lot of catharsis to the writing of *Rev*!
ReplyDelete