Saturday, 5 April 2014

History is written by the military conquerors. In a similar way the Snapshots article ‘Exploring Holy Ground’ reflects only the voices of Cathedral clergy as it charts the transition from Nightchurch (NC) to Holy Ground (HG). It feels like some well crafted Anglican institutional propaganda. I am therefore offering an alternative perspective. After all there were 4 Gospel accounts to help us consider a fully informed picture of events. I was part of NC for over three years. I therefore write as a witness to what took place after Mark Rylands left and Anna Norman Walker replaced him. In reality what then occurred was the displacement of an egalitarian ecumenical emerging church by a group of hierarchical Anglican Cathedral clergy. An information gathering exercise re: the nature and ethos of NC was conducted with a selected minority. However, there was no open and honest discussion about the way we should move forward together in which everyone was involved. It was a transparent divide and rule tactic. The final solution was brought to pass through a deceptive sleight of hand that no casual or uninformed observer would be aware of. The way the transition was handled also raises some fundamental questions regarding the use and abuse of ecclesiastical authority in fresh expressions within hierarchical institutional church structures.  

NC was far from perfect and there were tensions and difficulties.
Changes were needed. However these were not any more serious than those experienced by most fresh expressions and churches-if they have reached any degree of honesty and integrity in their life together. Should those churches be closed down? Yet in the article these commonplace tensions are presented as the reasons that NC needed to be brought to an end. It also must be stated clearly that this was done without seeking the permission of NC. The Community had no say in its future. This is because it was entirely unaware of what was being planned for it. In a deceptive and very misleading way HG was presented by the clergy as a continuation of NC after a summer break. People were not informed of the move from weekly to monthly until a few weeks before things were due to begin again. NC had not agreed this way forward. There simply was no communication or group discussion about it.

What was then presented at HG’s first event was something entirely different in ethos and style. The greatest change was that the role of priests had become central and they directed the event  from the front. People sat in rows instead of interacting in circles of informal activity. There were outside ‘professional’ speakers with a nod towards Q & A instead of open source community conversations. Only one person from NC (who was Cathedral staff) was involved in the main service and its planning and preparation. What had been an egalitarian ecumenical community had been replaced with an Anglican event. The relational, communitarian and Gospel ethos of NC had been usurped by an imposed Anglican hierarchy.    

The article makes the presumption that the Cathedral held the rights to decide the future of NC. Yet one of its outstanding achievements was inclusiveness. It was not primarily staffed, resourced or made up of Cathedral attendees or Anglicans. There were a wide range of people involved that included Catholics, Anglicans, Baptists, Methodists, Quakers, Buddhists, Pagans and Atheists. The paid p/t co-ordinator was originally a lapsed Methodist who was later replaced by a lapsed Baptist. The Cathedral provided the time/support of the Canon Missioner, the use of its sacred space and sought funding for the project on the basis of providing training and community development. NC celebrated a Gospel difference and inclusiveness in a unique way. It was therefore perhaps open to being misunderstood and misrepresented by a church hierarchy with a myopic understanding of Christian leadership as dominance.    

NC was a work of all the people of God not just Anglican professionals and priests. It had a genuine sense of partnership. There was a strong sense of inclusiveness and diversity in the way authority and leadership were expressed. Denominational leaders perhaps find this difficult to tolerate. Their solution is often just to resolve this tension by removing it. The article also seeks to undermine the diversity of NC as an attempt to be too broad. This is presented as the reason for falling numbers. Yet whilst it made decision making slower and more complex, it also provided a creative tension and stimulated and allowed experimentation. This engendered a sense of ownership and belonging. People were not being directed by a set of religious professionals. They were involved in the creation and expression of their own faith. They were not co-opted into an Anglican and therefore Christendom identity. Nor was their faith outsourced to institutional religious professionals.         

Why were less people attending NC?  
The biggest tension for NC was balancing its ministry to homeless people and its own needs as a community. A sizeable group of homeless people had begun to overwhelm NC. This drained time, energy and resources. It was the primary reason that less people were attending. The decision to make the ongoing work with homeless people separate from the gathering was entirely justified. There were also other groups already involved in meeting the needs of homeless people locally who were better equipped and more professional. However, this decision was not made by NC itself. It was not allowed autonomy or self determination regarding this issue or its future. 

In the Snapshots article the reason given re: the closure of NC is implied as; ‘Consumerist Christians can both exhaust parish clergy and wreck exploratory and creative work with non-Christians’. This is a gross distortion and misrepresentation of the facts. It’s also an insult to the group of volunteers who tirelessly gave of their time, energy and resources. Their lives were in fact challenging the consumerism perpetuated by Anglican institutional attitudes to worship, authority and service. Surely it is the consumerist nature of HG itself and its re-imposition of Anglican authority and identity that has ‘wrecked a truly genuine and exploratory creative work with non-Christians?’ The fact that relationships are even described in this way reveals an inherently dualistic attitude. It is one rooted in a misunderstanding of church and mission that emerges from an obtuse Christendom mindset.  

The massive irony here is that the whole ethos of HG is built around religious consumerism. It relies on attracting people by using entertaining outside speakers with professional or celebrity status. Its liturgy is highly stage managed and priest-centred. This increases nominal attendance to a monthly event. Yet in terms of creating a community of people learning to follow Christ in a pluralist society the impact is negligible. Attendees just turn up and feed off the menu provided by clergy. Whatever may be said of NC at least it provided holistic spiritual formation. It was a highly committed group of people who were working out the meaning and practice of their faith together. NC formed followers of Christ with practical commitment, integrity and authenticity who were learning to hold a wide range of diversity in tension. NC modelled love of neighbour and discipleship in an open and pluralist society. It successfully subverted a middle class, hierarchical, Anglican  monoculture. It modelled an alternative and egalitarian way of life and truth.           

Lies and numbers?
The article states that there were only 15 people still involved in NC at its closure. This is untrue. At the final gathering there were approximately 30 people. This is an attempt by clergy to undermine and misrepresent what was occurring in NC in order to justify its shutdown. Most Fresh Expressions are fairly small in size I would guess. In a video on the FX Pioneer website Anna Norman Walker admits that one of her motivations for setting up HG was that the Bishop of Exeter wanted a ‘success’ story. Of course the Anglican idea of ‘success’ is dictated by a very different set of assumptions than the ones that informs most fresh expressions. This motivation is also a deplorable reason for dismantling an active and fully functioning contemplative community with a firmly established identity. Perhaps all fresh expressions should be dismantled for not being ‘successful’? This attitude expresses the hubris inherent in so much of Anglican culture that undermines the communitarian ethos of new expressions of church. 

Who is disconnected?
3 of the leaders of HG are Cathedral Canons. All of the team are on the Anglican payroll or married to staff. In a very clever move the team meets on Friday mornings when others who are not Cathedral clergy or church employees are unable to attend. This allows centralised and hierarchical control but significantly undermines grassroots participation and wider involvement and democracy. In this way the Cathedral staff perpetuate disconnection. Disconnection is also hard wired into the role of ‘priest’ in a highly bureaucratised church culture. Its passively  accepted and justified as an occupational hazard. 

The article states that NC had ‘been disconnected from the rest of Cathedral life than was healthy.’ Once again this is not true. If there was disconnection then regrettably it was on the part of the Exeter Cathedral staff.  There was little sympathy with NC after Mark Rylands left. Staff were routinely invited to NC Leadership Community meetings and Friday gatherings. Eucharist at NC also required a priest to preside. There was a functional relationship while NC awaited Mark’s replacement. NC was also beginning to foster stronger links with the Anglican Franciscans at Hilfield Friary. Groups were beginning to attend retreats there on a regular basis. This connection with the tradition goes unacknowledged. True to their Christendom ethos and modus operandi the solution of the Cathedral Canons was to usurp NC entirely. They replaced its lay leadership with clergy and paid staff. There would no longer be a ‘disconnection’- just complete domination. The voices of NC were silenced.  

I write this response to raise awareness of the issues of institutional clergy using deception and misusing authority in new expressions of church. In any such endeavour clergy inevitably have rights and organizational authority in a way that no other unpaid community members do. Clergy always exercise greater authority in groups purely on the basis that they are paid by the institution. This is important because the sociologist Linda Woodhead has evidenced that the majority of people in UK society have rejected hierarchical and institutional forms of authority. Therefore fresh expressions, like HG, that model this approach will appeal primarily to a conservative minority. Probably the diminishing Anglican minority. Hierarchical leadership also significantly undermines the essentially communitarian and egalitarian nature of the Gospel that fresh expressions are seeking to reinvigorate.

I suspect that what happened with NC is not an isolated incident in Anglican new church initiatives. The very structure of Anglican ordination and training perpetuate a confusing message regarding authority and leadership. Anglican institutionalised culture only reinforces this. The poor example of the priests at Exeter Cathedral in relation to NC also casts a shadow over the ability of clergy to honour the notion of a mixed economy of fresh expression and inherited church. Surely in order for new expressions of church to thrive clergy need to let go of hierarchical leadership models and learn the arts of participative community and voluntary mutual submission. They also need to learn to be transparently honest with new communities as an essential starting point in re-establishing trust. The difficulty is that Anglican ordination training is based on a set of very different values. It  demands allegiance to a system of leadership that is rooted in hierarchy and administered through bureaucracy. In such a system the leadership rights and responsibilities of the ordained are reinforced and taken for granted.      

In closing its worth considering the words of Tony Benn. As Occupy were camped in protest outside the steps of St.Paul’s Cathedral, he said ‘There is more Christianity on the steps of St Paul’s than there may be inside St Paul’s’. Something similar could be said regarding the Exeter Cathedral hierarchy who also prosecuted key members of Occupy Exeter for trespass not long after the NC shutdown. The actions of these priests raise a fundamental question. Are fresh expressions going to capitulate to an Anglican model of corporate and hierarchical leadership? This is an approach that is deeply rooted in Christendom with all its attendant abuses of authority. No wonder the divisive history of Christian cultural dominance goes on repeating itself. It has to….no one listens.

Francis Rothery
TSSF.