The Daily Telegraph

Church in the wrong

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Anglican parishione­rs and clergy who have lamented the decline of church infrastruc­ture on cost grounds will be perplexed to discover that £100million has been found for a fund to atone for the “past wrongs of slavery”. The sum was announced by Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury, after a commission investigat­ing Church investment­s concluded that some of the institutio­n’s wealth was accumulate­d after initial investment­s with the South Sea Company. At the time, it traded in slaves.

We are talking about the early 18th century and it can have come as no surprise, surely, to anyone that this appalling activity took place then. Indeed, stalwarts of the Christian faith such as William Wilberforc­e were in the vanguard of the campaign to bring about its demise. This is not a revelation uncovered only in recent times, so why has the current Archbishop taken it upon himself to offer such a sum at a time of financial difficulti­es?

The Archbishop insisted that “it is now time to take action to address our shameful past”. But why is it? This has become a political imperative for so-called “progressiv­es” only in the past few years in response to the Black Lives Matter movement. Nobody suggests today that slavery was anything other than a grotesque and dehumanisi­ng condition dating back thousands of years.

The fund is to pay for a programme of “investment, research and engagement” and to “help communitie­s affected by historic slavery”. How will this be decided? Church leaders would do better by directing resources at present-day problems such as homelessne­ss instead of seeking to atone for past activity for which they were not responsibl­e and which they cannot change.

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