An
ex- oil executive as Archbishop of Canterbury? Seems deeply symbolic
of the new Britain
Priority
one for the next Archbishop of Canterbury: Get the books in holy
order
8
November, 2012
As
the next Archbishop of Canterbury in all but name made his way into
the Houses of Parliament, a police officer made a point of
congratulating him on his new post. The response of Bishop Justin
Welby was to laugh and raise his hands self-deprecatingly in defence.
It
is a gesture that the former oil executive, who was in Westminster to
sit on the parliamentary commission on banking standards, may have to
repeat frequently in the months to come as his response to a
succession of difficult questions and thorny issues comes under close
scrutiny.
The
current Bishop of Durham will have to grapple two schism-threatening
doctrinal headaches in the shape of women bishops and gay marriage
following today’s expected announcement from Downing Street and
Lambeth Palace that he is to be the 105th head of the Church of
England.
But
of equal, if not greater, importance is the peril posed to the CofE
by its finances, which currently lie in a predicament that will not
be made up by the cascade of bets on Bishop Welby that earlier this
week prompted bookmakers to close their book on the next Archbishop
of Canterbury.
As
wags pointed out that David Cameron will soon not be the only Old
Etonian in charge of an arm of the state seeking to reverse an
unsustainable deficit, Bishop Welby, 56, who studied at both Eton and
Cambridge, must fix a hole in the pension fund for retired clergy
estimated at £500m.
When
placed alongside a structural and financial to-do list that ranges
from church maintenance bills to debt-riddled dioceses and reform of
the CofE’s governing body, the General Synod, it is not hard to see
why the panel choosing the head of the established church alighted on
a man whose CV boasts considerable experience outside Anglicanism in
the sharp-elbowed world of big oil.
Christian
Rees, a member of the General Synod, said: “He is someone who is
going to have deal with the realities of finance. The Church has
weathered the economic crisis pretty well but we have to pay
attention to our finances and he’ll be able to lead us very well on
that - he understands that world.”
Others
quibble with the idea that the Church has ridden out the financial
crash well. Through the Church Commissioners, it presides over
holdings of about £4bn and has met criticism of the decision by its
fund managers to invest much of its £1.1bn pension holdings into
riskier assets such as shares and property with respectable returns
of 7.1 per cent over the last three years.
But
a recent report on the Clergy Pension Scheme found that its deficit
has risen from £262m to £507m a year ago. It is estimated that the
shortfall, which funds modest retirement funds for 32,000 clergy and
lay workers, remains around £500m, prompting the General Synod to
warn that it might have to abandon its final salary scheme for
clergy.
Another
synod member said: “There are several elephants sitting in the
corner for the Church and Anglicanism as a whole but one of the
biggest is how we live within our means. No Anglican clergyman is
going to be rich in retirement but we have to remember pensions are
paid for by parishioners, who they aren’t getting younger or, in
the present climate, richer.”
Indeed,
dioceses, who are reliant for much of their income on the £1bn that
the church receives each year in donations, pay pension contributions
of nearly 40 per cent salaries and that figure is likely to have to
increase at a time when congregations have shrunk by half in the last
40 years to about 1.1m a week.
A
newly-anointed Archbishop Welby, an outspoken critic of the lack of
social value in Britain’s banks, will also be confronted with
questions about the Church’s investment strategy after it emerged
this summer that it has placed £60m with hedge funds, an arm of
global finance frequently criticised for its ethical record and
sky-high rewards.
The
ability of filthy lucre to dominate the early moments of Bishop
Welby’s prelacy was underlined last night when the Church appeared
to lay blame for the leaking of his name as the new archbishop - and
therefore a late flurry of bets - on Westminster.
Reverend
Arun Arora, spokesman for the Church, it would have been “surprising”
if the leak had come from with the 16-member Crown Nominations
Commission entrusted with recommending the new archbishop, adding:
“It may be more likely that, once it entered the political process,
a wider group of people would have had access to the name.”
Last
night, the former Archbishop of Canterbury George Carey warned his
successor that “nothing he has ever done before” can prepare him
for the challenges ahead, which include convincing traditionalists
that he will protect their interests while managing the aspirations
of modernisers.
Bishop
Welby, an evangelical who is in favour of women bishops but indicated
he is a traditionalist on the issue of gay marriage, has previously
made clear he is under no illusions about how being chief executive
of global Anglicanism differs from his previous life in business.
He
once said: “Making decisions in the oil industry is far easier than
in the Church."
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