Diocese of Rochester
Reform and Renewal
in every generation
Rev Angus MacLeay and Mr Philip French, General Synod
Rochester Diocesan Synod, Saturday 14th March 2015
with thanks to:
David Jennings, Resource Strategy & Development Unit, National Church Institutions
William Fittall, Secretary-General, General Synod
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1. The challenge – facts, figures and projections
2. The vision ◦ Discipleship (GS1977)
◦ Resourcing Ministerial Education (GS1979)
◦ Discerning and Nurturing Senior Leaders (GS1982)
3. The mechanics ◦ Simplification (GS1980)
◦ Resourcing the Future (GS1978)
◦ Church Commissioners' Funds (GS1981)
• The average decline in Church attendance has been 1.3% per annum for the past 30 years.
• The average parish in the Church of England has 79 people attending.
• This means that the average parish has been declining by around one person per year.
• The average age of our congregations is more than ten years older than that of the population as a whole.
1. The Challenge - a national perspective
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0
10
20
30
40
50
60
1979 1984(estimate) 1989 1994(estimate) 1998 2005
Average Age (All Age Groups)
Church Census England All UK National Data
10.5 yrs
C of E Age Profile trend
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Under the ‘Steady State Model’ the
number of new entrants at age 18
remain at 2007 level, otherwise no
losses other than through death.
Under the ‘Decline Model’ the number of
new entrants at age 18 declines at a rate
of 1% pa; above age 18 net leavers by age
follow trends from the previous 8 years.
Assumed rates of net new members in ‘Growth Scenario’:
Ages 18-25: 3%; Ages 26-45: 2%; Ages 46-55: 1%
Ages 56-65: 0.5%; Over 65: Nil
0
5,000
10,000
15,000
20,000
25,000
30,000
35,000
Rochester Parishes
Growth
Steady State
Decline
Attendance Projections - Rochester
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Is the ambition realistic?
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Stipendiary Clergy Projections
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Clergy Projections: Rochester
Age Distribution of Stipendiary Clergy
Average Age (2012): 52.9
Average Age (2021): 54.4
Average age at retirement 65.0
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70
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Newly Ordained Stipendiary Clergy
Average Age 42.9 Number per year 5.0
2. The Vision
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Discerning and Nurturing Senior Leaders (GS1982)
A. What do we want our leaders to do?
B. How are we going to train them beforehand for these roles?
2. The Vision
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Discerning and Nurturing Senior Leaders (GS1982)
The intention of the programme is to enhance the priestly and prophetic, theological and apostolic ministries of those called to demanding leadership roles in the Church, forming them more deeply in their responsibility to shepherd - in ways that are properly collegial – those churches, communities and organisations under their care and to lead them in the mission to which the Church is called.
2. The Vision
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Resourcing Ministerial Education (GS1979)
The Church of England as a whole needs to make a significant shift from a passive approach to vocations work to a proactive approach to seeking the numbers and quality of candidates the Church requires.
How effective and cost effective is our present ministerial education?
2. The Vision
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Resourcing Ministerial Education (GS1979)
Our vision as a Task Group is … to see: • every minister equipped to offer collaborative leadership in mission
and to be adaptable in a rapidly changing context • a cohort of candidates for ministry who are younger, more diverse
and with a wider range of gifts to serve God’s mission • An increase of at least 50% in ordinations on 2013 figures sustained
annually from 2020 • the rapid development of lay ministries • a continued commitment to an ordained and lay ministry which
serves the whole Church both geographically and in terms of church tradition.
2. The Vision
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Developing Discipleship (GS1977)
A revised Catechism
The present Catechism is a faithful summary of Anglican belief yet is written primarily as a resource for children growing up into the faith in a predominantly Christian society rather than as a resource for children and adults aiming to live out their discipleship in a complex and changing world.
2. The Vision
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Developing Discipleship (GS1977)
Ten marks of a diocese committed to developing disciples
1. A lifelong journey of discipleship and growth in Christian maturity 2. The importance of discipleship in daily life is affirmed 3. Gatherings for worship celebrate the discipleship of all the baptised 4. Disciples are equipped to help others to become followers of Jesus 5. Diocesan work on vocations is based on all the baptised are called 6. Good practice in facilitating learning and formation is developed 7. Gifts of leadership are recognised and developed among all 8. Innovation and experiment are encouraged 9. Specific diocesan policies and plans promote discipleship development 10. Diocesan resources are committed for the whole people of God.
3. The Mechanics – Simplification (GS1980)
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The Simplification report, the product of a Task Group led by the Bishop of Willesden, proposes a wide range of changes to the Church’s rule-book, valuing missionary licence over excessive regulation. Amongst the reforms proposed are: • easier means to make fixed-term appointments (e.g. for ‘turnaround’ interventions in
failing parishes, when a vacancy arises); • simplification of the lengthy consultation procedures for pastoral reorganisation; • more flexible arrangements for team and group ministries (particularly in rural areas, as
recommended in GS Misc 1092, Released for Mission – Growing the Rural Church); • streamlining Bishops’ Mission Orders.
3. The Mechanics – Simplification (GS1980)
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It will be for the Archbishops’ Council and the House of Bishops to decide whether to bring to Synod in July the amendment of Clergy Terms of Service Regulation 29, to make it easier for short-term appointments to be made. The more wide-ranging changes proposed to the Mission and Pastoral Measure will require fresh primary legislation which cannot, in practice, be introduced until early in the life of the General Synod which will meet for the first time in November 2015. The proposals in the report will be the subject of detailed consultation first. In addition, the Optimising the Role of the National Church Institutions report canvassed the idea of a new enabling measure which would make it significantly easier in future to change Church legislation. (Comparison with parliamentary practice shows greater use of secondary legislation such as Statutory Instruments for secular law.)
3. The Mechanics – Resourcing the Future (GS1978)
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This report, which was presented in characteristically barnstorming style by Canon Dr John Spence CBE (chair of the finance committee of the Archbishops’ Council), is concerned primarily with how Church Commissioners’ funds are to be allocated between dioceses. The objective, strongly endorsed by General Synod, is couched as “removing the current formula systems which provide mechanical, ineffective subsidy and replacing them with investment focussed on fulfilling dioceses’ strategic plans for growth, with a strong bias towards the poor”. General Synod requested that consultations with dioceses and other parties on this and related reports (e.g. GS1979 Resourcing Ministerial Education) be carried out swiftly but thoroughly, and that detailed implementation proposals should return (via the Archbishops’ Council and House of Bishops) to Synod for approval.
3. The Mechanics – Resourcing the Future (GS1978)
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The key points in the report include the following. • There is a widespread desire among dioceses to have more leaders (lay and ordained)
and to make other changes which will facilitate the Church’s mission and growth. • The current ways by which the Church’s national funding is distributed have only a
superficial link to growth and have failed the poorest communities. A large amount of money is subsidising decline.
• In future, all of the funding distributed to dioceses should be investment for mission and growth. Half of the sum available should be earmarked for the support and development of mission in the poorest communities. Half should be for the pro-active investment in new growth opportunities.
• The funding to support and develop mission in deprived communities should be distributed to dioceses through a process involving objective measures of need and through conversations with dioceses. This will ensure targeting on the poorest and effective cohesion with diocesan plans.
• The funding for pro-active investment in growth should be available for all dioceses to apply for, on a matched funding basis, with a bias in the distribution to the poorest.
3. The Mechanics – Church Commissioners' Funds (GS1981)
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GS1978 Resourcing the Future also stated that: • The transition to the new funding arrangements should be done carefully over a ten
year period, but we hope that additional distributions from the Church Commissioners can be found to accelerate the build-up of funding available for proactive investment in growth.
• We hope also that additional national funding can be made available to provide extra investment across the Church for recruiting and training church leaders. In addition there should be greater investment in national Church infrastructure and activity which can improve the mission of the whole Church.
Andreas Whittam Smith CBE, the First Church Estates Commissioner, presented the thoughtful report GS1981 to General Synod. Since the damage caused to the Church Commissioners’ assets in the early 1990s by over-generous income distribution, a close watch has been kept on their investment portfolio. The guiding principle has been ‘inter-generational equity’, i.e. retaining the real value of the endowment in perpetuity.
3. The Mechanics – Church Commissioners' Funds (GS1981)
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The Commissioners’ approach has paid dividends (literally), with excellent investment management achieving returns in excess of RPI+5% consistently over the past twenty years, resulting in a portfolio now valued at some £6.1B. This funds annual expenditure of approximately £210M (of which, around £120M goes towards paying clergy pensions). Recognising that maintaining the real value of the endowment against a backdrop of 1.3% annual decline in numbers may not actually be a long-term survival strategy, the Church Commissioners are keen to support the reform programme. Specifically, they are willing to consider a time-limited increase in annual distributions, given clear linkage to mission and growth. That will mean deliberately breaking the iron rule of inter-generational equity, this time with eyes wide open and with due safeguards. General Synod warmly welcomed this approach. It is now for the Church Commissioners to consider the basis on which they might, for a period, release additional funds. Specific requests would need to be made by the Archbishops’ Council, in consultation with the House of Bishops and the dioceses in the light of the emerging conclusions on the various elements of the reform programme.