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145 Law & Just. - Christian L. Rev. 21 (2000)
The New Clergy Discipline Measure of the Church of England

handle is hein.journals/ljusclr145 and id is 23 raw text is: THE NEW CLERGY DISCIPLINE
MEASURE OF THE CHURCH
OF ENGLAND
DR. G.R. EVANS
The Church of England General Synod of November 2000 gave final approval to
the Draft Clergy Discipline Measure which, if Parliament approves it, will replace
the Measure of 1963.1 The Measure began as a follow-up to the Report Under
Authority, which was produced by a working party chaired by Alan Hawker then
Canon of Chichester, now Archdeacon of Malmesbury. The recommendations of
that Report were then progressively altered, at some points quite radically so.
The old legislation has been used very little in cases of clergy discipline. There
are a mere half a dozen examples where a case has gone to the Consistory Court.
One reason for that has been the comparative ease with which a bishop could
remove the licence of a priest-in-charge. Only in the case of beneficed clergy who
refused to resign has the Consistory Court been 'needed', and one cleric at least has
alleged that the threat of 'being taken to court' in this way was used by his bishop as
an incentive to get him to sign a letter of resignation. An excellent innovation in the
new Measure is the requirement (in s.8(2)) that priests who do not have benefices
but merely licences from the bishop cannot have their licences taken away without
due process, as could only too easily happen in the past. The concept of a 'cooling-
off' period is also introduced in the new legislation, the Draft Clergy Discipline
Measure, 2000, s.16-1(2), though in another connection.
The debate of November 2000 came before a new General Synod, whose
members, as Archdeacon Hawker recognised, were being asked to vote on a major
piece of legislation, without involvement at an earlier stage. It is, moreover,
technically quite complex material in terms of provisions for the fair trial of clergy
accused of a disciplinary offence.
In the debate of November 2000 two contradictory areas of concern about the
new Measure emerged. Some speakers were strong on the need for means of calling
'an erring priest' to account; others were more concerned to avoid unfairness in the
new legislation, even if that might mean that a guilty priest might escape
condemnation on a technicality. Throughout the process of framing this new
legislation these two overriding concerns have tended to tug in opposition to one
another. On the one hand a diffuse and diffused outrage at episodes of alleged high-
1. For a useful recent background article, see Peter Boulton, 'Twentieth-century revision of
canon law in the Church of England', Ecclesiastical Law Journal, 5 (2000), 353-68.

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