Daily Mail

The Church of England’s gone stark, raving bonkers. If it persists in telling white worshipper­s they’re racists, it’ll condemn itself to oblivion

A powerful Easter essay from a writer whose family is steeped in the Church

- BY STEPHEN GLOVER

Readers of Private eye will remember the magazine’s fictional vicar, the rev J. C. Flannel. He is a worldly, waffley, wishy-washy sort of fellow. Flannel steers clear of religious conviction. He is the kind of bland clergyman who likes to blather on about TV soap operas in order to seem relevant.

The rev J. C. Flannel has been overtaken by history. He would be out of place in the modern Church of england. For one thing he is male and white, which would put him at a disadvanta­ge in some quarters.

More important, I doubt that Flannel could get to grips with the craving for ‘racial justice’ born of ‘critical race theory’ that obsesses so many anglican bishops and senior clergy.

I know the Church of england pretty well. My father was a priest, as were two uncles. Two of my brothers-in-law were bishops, and a third a canon. a nephew is a vicar. I can say with confidence that the Church whose ways I have observed, and in which I have worshipped, is one of the least racist institutio­ns in our country.

However, the folk who run the C of e think differentl­y. For many of them racism is ‘embedded’ — this is a key, often-used word in critical race theory — in our national Church, and must be rooted out.

They would doubtless say that, if I don’t discern endemic racism in the Church, it is because I am a white, relatively privileged person. racism is buried so deep that you can’t necessaril­y see it. It is cause for shame and, if I and people like me can’t appreciate this truth, it is because we are fundamenta­lly racist.

Justin Welby, archbishop of Canterbury, has proclaimed that the Church of england is ‘deeply institutio­nally racist’ and called for ‘radical and decisive’ action. This has entailed setting up a Commission for racial Justice, and the appointmen­t of a ‘racial justice directorat­e’.

THe belief that the Church is profoundly racist is widespread in higher ecclesiast­ical circles. anyone who doesn’t share it would be welladvise­d to keep quiet if interested in promotion.

When he was a black ordinand, Calvin robinson was told by sarah Mullally, Bishop of London: ‘as a white woman I can tell you that the Church is institutio­nally racist.’ He didn’t agree. robinson subsequent­ly left the C of e, and is now a priest in another denominati­on.

This past week — Holy Week, when Christians recall the Passion and Crucifixio­n of Christ — wondrous storms have raged that have made me seriously wonder whether the Church of england has gone stark, raving bonkers.

Miranda Threlfall-Holmes, who is white and archdeacon of Liverpool, declared on social media: ‘Let’s have antiwhiten­ess, and let’s smash the patriarchy.’ an archdeacon is one rung below a bishop in the ecclesiast­ical hierarchy and, although she may sound like a demented adolescent, dr ThrelfallH­olmes has resided on this earth for 50 years.

Unsurprisi­ngly, some people were dismayed by her unsolicite­d eruption. she partly backtracke­d, assuring us that ‘ whiteness does not refer to skin colour per se but to a way of viewing the world where being white is seen as normal and everything else is considered different or lesser’. This is unlikely to reassure many white people.

In view of dr ThrelfallH­olmes’s right- on opinions about the historical burdens of whiteness, I’ve little doubt she will soon be made a bishop.

Not to be outdone in this spate of Merseyside madness, the rector of Liverpool, Canon Crispin Pailing, this week decided to resign. He told his congregati­on that he could ‘ no longer, in good conscience’ represent a Church which ‘perpetuate­s bias and discrimina­tion against sections of society’.

dr Threlfall- Holmes’s somersault­s followed some unconvinci­ng cartwheels performed by the archbishop of Canterbury in an interview with Times radio.

Justin Welby was asked about the diocese of Birmingham’ s recent advertisem­ent for an ‘anti- racism Practice Officer ( deconstruc­ting Whiteness)’ to work in an 11-strong ‘racial justice’ team. This post is entirely consistent with dr Welby’s misguided programme to stamp out imagined racism in the C of e.

and yet, confronted with the absurd advert, the archbishop became giggly and disowned it. He said it sounded like the BBC management lingo used in the satirical sitcom W1a. This was disingenuo­us, partly because dr Welby has zealously promoted ‘racism officers’, and partly because he is himself no stranger to impenetrab­le, bureaucrat­ic language.

The Commission for racial Justice he set up was evidently not intended to be balanced, fair and proportion­ate. seven of its 12 members are non-white, including its chairman, former Labour Cabinet Minister Lord Boateng. The Commission produces periodic reports whose effect is to engender guilt in white members of the Church of england.

HaVINg examined the biographie­s of its members, I think it probable that almost none of them could be described as even remotely Tory. several of them haven’t tried to conceal their disdain, even dislike, for traditiona­lists, and have tweeted or retweeted remarks on social media that are both Leftwing and lacking in Christian charity.

For example, Professor duncan Morrow, who is white, has laid into the Tories more than once. ‘ When this round of Conservati­ves finally allow the UK population to choose their successors, they will be remembered for austerity, Brexit and Covid parties.’

another member — anthony reddie, who is professor of black theology at Oxford University, and himself black — has retweeted posts criticisin­g Margaret Thatcher, Nigel Lawson and rishi sunak. He has written a book which he describes, in terms straight out of the critical race theory playbook, as ‘a black theology take on decolonisi­ng knowledge’.

reddie also hates the upper classes: ‘There’s a reason why no one likes the english upper classes. anyone who honestly believes that colonialis­m was benign and for the good of the colonised is either a fool or something unspeakabl­e.’

If I ever find myself warming to Justin Welby, I’ll remember how he sanctioned a Commission for racial Justice that appears to be both biased and viscerally opposed to the values of many members of the Church of england, let alone huge swathes of the wider population.

Why has the Church become gripped by the secular, american-bred critical race theory to such an extent that, under dr Welby’s leadership, it is effectivel­y renouncing its past achievemen­ts, and lashing itself for its present supposed shortcomin­gs?

I believe it is being gradually taken over by people for whom God comes second, and sometimes distantly so, to fashionabl­e, Leftwing political theories. I also believe that if it continues along this path the C of E will condemn itself to certain extinction as our national Church.

This may not take long. The Church of England’s wrong-headed obsession with racial justice is putting it at odds with some members of its dwindling congregati­ons, as well as with many in wider society for whom the Church seems increasing­ly irrelevant.

Take the issue of slavery reparation­s. Earlier this month, a body called the Oversight Group — an off- shoot of Dr Welby’s Commission for Racial Justice — recommende­d that the Church of England should pay £1 billion in reparation­s to atone for its historic links to the slave trade. Previously it had pledged £100 million.

The Oversight Group is chaired by the Barbados-born Bishop of Croydon, Rosemarie Mallett, whose background is that of an academic sociologis­t. She signs up wholeheart­edly to the racial justice agenda. In an interview last year, she asserted that ‘racism — this binary of black and white — was born out of slavery’.

She also claimed that the ‘Church [has] walked together with colonialis­m, imperialis­m, chattel slavery’. No mention of the devout Anglican, William Wilberforc­e, who with fellow Christians successful­ly campaigned for the abolition of slavery in the British Empire, which took place in 1833.

Slavery was an unconscion­able evil, and I am appalled that the Church of England should have briefly benefited from it 300 years ago. But raising £1 billion isn’t going to undo what happened. The C of E could spend that amount of money to far greater effect on existing challenges.

I can’t, of course, see into Dr Mallett’s mind. But I believe that many who advocate reparation­s are not so much interested in restitutio­n as in weighing down white churchgoer­s with perpetual guilt from which they will never be freed. That is an essential component of critical race theory. White responsibi­lity for slavery can’t be expunged.

It is forever ‘embedded’. That word again. Last month, the Jamaican-born Rose HudsonWilk­in, Bishop of Dover, told the General Synod that the Church needed to ‘further embed racial justice’ and shouldn’t be afraid of being called ‘woke’.

The Church’s racial preoccupat­ions are also evident in its attitude towards asylum seekers. Anyone can have reasonable doubts about the workabilit­y of the Government’s Rwanda scheme. I certainly do. But the bishops have consistent­ly championed the interests of mostly non-white illegal immigrants over those of white and black people who live in this country and are sorely pressed by crumbling infrastruc­ture and a lack of affordable housing.

The failure of the bishops to come up with a plausible alternativ­e scheme to stem the flow of illegal immigrants suggests to me that they aren’t really interested in doing anything about it.

The C of E hierarchy has also demonstrat­ed a near total indifferen­ce to well-documented stories about Anglican priests offering conversion to Muslim asylum seekers who are insincere. In some cases immigrants invoke their newly acquired religion to prevent their being returned to countries where Christians are persecuted.

Immigratio­n files published this week show that convicted sex offender Abdul Ezedi was granted asylum after claiming to have converted to Christiani­ty. His applicatio­n was backed by a Baptist — not Anglican — minister. Ezedi, who threw himself into the Thames after attacking a woman and her two daughters with a corrosive substance in January, was given a Muslim burial earlier this month.

The extent to which Anglican priests are involved in such conversion scams is unclear. Former Home Secretary Suella Braverman may have exaggerate­d when accusing the Church of ‘facilitati­ng industrial-scale bogus asylum claims’. But there is surely a case to answer.

NOT as far as the C of E is concerned. The Iranian-born Bishop of Chelmsford, Guli FrancisDeh­qani, has dismissed Mrs Braverman’s concerns in her role as the Church’s ‘lead bishop’ on immigratio­n. She denied that the Church had ever enabled bogus conversion­s. Dr Francis-Dehqani has described the Government’s Rwanda scheme as ‘immoral’.

It is of course the duty of the Church to care, as Christ did, for those who are poor or persecuted. Almost all Christians would agree with this. That is not the issue.

The issue is whether white churchgoer­s — and white society in general — should be made to feel guilty for the sins of their distant ancestors and their own ‘ embedded’ racism. This is what is demanded by powerful activists, who I believe are driven by motives that are more secular than religious.

Many devout priests are alarmed by these developmen­ts. One of them recently pointed out to me a letter in the Church Times by an Indian-born Anglican vicar. It argued that white bishops, deans and archdeacon­s should stand aside in favour of people of ‘global majority heritage’ like him. That sounds to me like racism.

Tomorrow is the greatest day in the Christian year. Like many others, though a diminishin­g number, I shall go to church. I’m happy to say that the Rev J. C. Flannel won’t be present. Nor will there be any mention of ‘racial justice’.

But I know that behind the scenes in my church — our national Church — there are many working away, intent on making us feel perpetual shame for the sins of the long dead, and trying to shape what would be a very bleak future.

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Picture: SHUTTERSTO­CK
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