The Diocese of Oxford Official Home Page
Home
Site Map
Search
Communication
Communication

The vulnerable should be world Anglican priority, says international safeguarding group

Date Added: Friday 25th July 2008

The Anglican Communion should be leading the way in safeguarding children and all other vulnerable people against abuse in societies around the world.

This was a primary message emerging from a meeting in Woking of international delegates from seven Anglican Provinces, to discuss strategies for safeguarding the vulnerable in Church and society. The international Anglican ‘Creating a Safer Church’ event was timed to coincide with the opening of the Lambeth Conference in Canterbury.

The three day event was an opportunity for senior international Church safeguarding practitioners to listen to the experience of different branches of the Anglican Communion and to reflect together on standards of accountability and future strategies.

“There is no doubt that the Church can do better,” said Garth Blake, a senior Sydney barrister and Chair of the Professional Standards Commission of the Anglican Church of Australia. “There is a need common to all of us around the world – and not just in the First World either – to get beyond ‘risk management’, and recognise the care of the vulnerable as being a core element of the Gospel we proclaim and live.

“This conference is a response to the Anglican Communion’s desire to lead the way internationally in the safeguarding of vulnerable people. It effectively gives birth to a new network for advocacy, better professional standards, and mutual learning in all areas of safeguarding.”

While ‘abuse’ is perceived by many as having only emerged as a major issue in the past 20 to 30 years, speakers highlighted how the mistreatment of children and other vulnerable members of society was endemic in all societies throughout history.

“Historically, faith communities were gatekeepers of both the moral imperative and the  judicial process,” said Canon Dr John Higgins a former Church of England national advisor on Child protection. “We are committed to the complete safety of children and all vulnerable people so why are we now on the back foot? Why aren’t we leading the charge?  This is a message we will be presenting to the Lambeth Conference on July 29th  and to the wider Anglican community.”

He added: “What we are here to talk about should be top of the agenda for the Bishops at the Lambeth Conference. What they are actually discussing should be farmed out to a few sub-committees!”

Dr Higgins stressed that in the past Christians and the Church led the way in securing the welfare of children and other groups within society: “The agenda now has to honour the primacy of the welfare of children in particular and the vulnerable in general. It has to facilitate giving a voice to victims, delivering justice wherever possible, and appropriately restraining abusers. In all this the demand is that it must act with competence and integrity alongside others who affirm the welfare imperative for the young and vulnerable.”

“I’ve been impressed by the knowledge and diversity drawn from around the world.” said David Spicer, a Barrister and Vice Chair of the British Association for the Study and Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect. “This conference has highlighted the need for greater collaboration and consistency and it has demonstrated that mechanisms for identifying and dealing with abuse are not as good as they could be. It has also identified the necessity for clarity of separation between pastoral, investigatory and disciplinary functions. All processes should be freed from ambiguities for the good of everyone.”

“I see that we are moving forward,” said the Revd Pearl Luxon, conference host and   National Safeguarding Advisor for both the Church of England and the Methodist Church: “It’s my hope also that this conference will be the start of a formal Anglican Communion network that will grow much more diverse from this modest starting point.

“Together, we will be learning how to build vigilant communities concerned for the safety and nurture of all individuals – but in which the church is a consistently competent and reliable partner with the statutory and voluntary agencies in all communities around the world. 

“It’s my view that the church is more true to the Gospel when it listens and learns from those who are vulnerable for whatever reasons, and where individuals in positions of authority in all church communities offer a Christ-like model of power.”

                                                        ENDS  702 wds not inc. title line

For further information, please contact the Revd Mark Rudall, Diocese of Guildford, on 07779 654975.

ISSUED ON BEHALF OF THE international Anglican ‘Creating a Safer Church’ event

 

 

Copyright © 2008 Oxford Diocesan Board of Finance Credits Privacy