Wednesday, 27 August 2025
Love in action
Monday, 18 August 2025
Theology and praxis
Over the years I have witnessed many examples of love, compassion, kindness, care, concern, call it what you will, in action. Not only is such activity to be seen in helping individuals at point of need: it is witnessed also in campaigns for systemic change, for social justice, for action to deal with causes of poverty, deprivation, discrimination, marginalisation and exclusion. It is the doing that matters, not the thinking about doing. Doing good is not the preserve of any one group, all can assist and campaign: it doesn't matter if you are white, black, male, female, gay, straight, poor, rich, atheist, humanist, Christian, Muslim etc.
What motivates an individual to show love etc. for others? What is the trigger or experience of an individual that calls them to respond to the needs of others? What ethical/moral considerations come into play?
Some Christians tell us that God is love and this, along with the teachings of Jesus, informs their actions. For them, theology determines praxis. Until very recently I thought along similar lines, now I have my doubts that this is an accurate reflection of how things are. For many people of faith helping others is not determined by prior theological reflection, rather they read back from action to discern theological support for what they are doing. Is the relationship between theology and praxis symbiotic? I believe it is.
We need to free ourselves from the constraint of a theology informing us what we should or should not do when it is based on fundamentalist/literalist interpretation of ancient texts. We need a theology that reflects and responds pro-actively to situations in the world of today, otherwise it will be ignored as being irrelevant. We should understand our theology and scripture through the lens of love.
What the Church of England requires has been well expressed by Revd. Colin Coward, the founder of Changing Attitude England. The CofE should be:
"A Church that refocuses its' teaching and life on the essence of Jesus' life and teaching - 'life in all its fulness'."
So what are my conclusions? Anything I write is provisional as neither I nor anyone else can discern 'truth'. Writing in a Church of England context I consider the church should ditch its fundamentalist, literalist, conservative, evangelical baggage. Instead we should be seeking a church with a theology and praxis that is firmly fixed on the principle of love. A church that seeks to preach and act out the teaching attributed to Jesus to be found in the great commandments, the parables, the Sermon on the Mount and sundry other places in the gospels and understood in the context of their meaning and application in today's world.
What matters is not a set of beliefs. What does matter is behaviour, action, loving neighbour, not as theory but as practical action; helping individuals at point of need and campaigning for systemic change to achieve social justice.
Thursday, 14 August 2025
Texas Theologian
Tuesday, 12 August 2025
More on rules and principles
Here I go, again. In all probability this will be a disjointed ramble through a topic I have considered before. It will lack academic substance, rigour and depth, but then why should I worry?
This article has been sparked by meetings and long conversations with a Church of England Licensed Lay Minister (LLM). LLM has replaced Reader in the nomenclature of the CofE. The subject of our most recent discussion was what is meant by the phrase 'love your neighbour' and how it is/should be applied in parishes.
Our discussion teased out the need for consideration of competing theological positions that have created deep divides within the CoE in both theory and praxis.
I subscribe to the postmodernist ideas of Jacques Derrida: in particular his thesis that words mean what the reader or hearer decides they mean. Such understanding may or may not accord with the intention of the author. Language is fluid, not rigid nor fixed in any timeframe. Thus ideas and concepts may mean one thing to their author: their interpretation and understanding is entirely within the domain of the recipient. It is not contexual within a specific timeframe. This suggests to me that seeking to understand scripture by reference to its historical context is a fruitless exercise, as is the quest for the historical Jesus, or in what is named by Christians as the Old Testament.
Unsurprisingly there is diversity of opinion as to the import of passages of scripture. Can there be a literal meaning? How can we know the intention of the orginal author? Is the bible a sound, unchanging, repository of theological 'truth'. Or is it evidence of past thinking, worthy of study to assist us in grappling with the issues of belief and faith?
Added to the mix is disputation as to style. Is it metaphor, literal, narrative, poetry, prose, allusion, symbolism etc.?
A few quotations:
The Christian story does not drop from heaven fully written. It grew and developed over a period of forty-two to seventy years. This is not what most Christians have been to taught to think...Christianity is an evolving story. It was never, even in the New Testament, a finished story.
I let go of the notion that the Bible is a divine product. I learned that it is a human cultural product, the product of two ancient communities, biblical Israel and early Christianity. As such it contained their understandings and affirmations.
An observation byJohn Dominic Crossan:
My point is not that these ancient people told literal stories and we are not smart enough to take them symbolically, but that they told them symbolically and we are now dumb enough to take them literally.
I turn to consideration of rules and principles. Both seek to determine behaviour and may interact. We are all governed by rules. There is hardly any aspect of our lives not the subject of rules, regulations, canons etc., driving, marrying, employment, claiming benefits, club membership...the list in almost endless. Adherence to the rules is achieved by the potential for sanctions, punishment etc. imposed by the organisation responsible for monitoring and applying the rules. There are those who will seek to circumvent rules by finding loopholes or lacunae. Thus tax evasion is illegal, but tax avoidance by means of a gap or loophole in the rules is legal. In the Old Testament the Law was circumvented by tortuous interpretation of rules to justify actions that on the face of literal interpretation were not permitted. The overall effect of rules is limiting and, unless altered, are not susceptible easily to reflect societal changes in the areas they cover. As society changes the rules may not be in step, appear anchronistic and eventually become the subject of ridicule and desuetude.
The CofE is pulling itself apart over the issue of same-sex marriage blessings, never mind same sex marriage. There are those who assert biblical teaching on marriage forbids any recognition of same-sex relationships. Thus the CoE is out of step with secular law and opinion that permits same-sex civil marriage. The Church is having great difficutly in changing its rules (canons) on this matter as its internal rules on adopting change make it extremely difficult to achieve. Has impasse been reached? Is the Living in Love and Faith process dead in the water?
Those favouring acceptance by the Church of same-sex marriage etc point to the principle that God's love extends to all in a committed relationship. Following this principle would enable the current restrictive rules to be abolished.
The command attributed to Jesus to 'love your neighbour' is a principle. Indeed the bible states Jesus as claiming that all the law and prophets are subsumed by this and the commandment to love God. The bible is to be read and understood through the lens of love and this principle overrides earlier rules and regulations. Principles usually are broad statements and capable of fluid interpretation and application. They enable escape from narrow restrictive rules, in theory.
In English law once a principle is established there are those lawyers who will beaver away to apply rules to the principle in order to limit its application. Others will seek to expand the principle beyond what might have been the original intention of them formulating the principle. It becomes an ongoing battle, hence the fluidity of principles.
There are denominations that ignore the command to love your neighbour, choosing instead to preach the carrot of eternal life and the stick of hell as part of their doctrine, dogma and custom. There are Christians who will accept the principle of love your neighbour but hedge it with the dreaded 'but', thereby not being inclusive but excluding and marginalising particular individuals or groups.
So what are my conclusions? Anything I write is provisional as neither I nor anyone else can be certain of the 'truth'. Do I have faith, belief or opinion? Probably the last of these. Writing in a CofE context I consider the church should ditch it fundamentalist, literalist, conservative, evangelical baggage. Instead we should be seeking a church with a theology and praxis that is firmly fixed on the principle of love. A church that seeks to preach and act out the teaching attributed to Jesus to be found in the great commandments, the parables, the Sermon on the Mount and sundry other places in the gospels but understood in the context of their application in the context of our world. Praxis should be grounded in theology.
Wednesday, 6 August 2025
Note the difference
Thursday, 31 July 2025
I know
Saturday, 19 July 2025
Beware!
Beware sentinels, sentries, guardians, gatekeepers protecting the 'truth' and those peddling opinions claiming authority for their statements: politicians, journalists, theologians. This is not to say one should ignore opinions or claims of truth but be wary, do not accept them without careful consideration. Be watchful of misinformation published on social media. If my university education was of any value it was that it taught me to firstly evaluate evidence and then consider opinions drawn from the evidence. In other words be questioning, critical but open-minded.
Those who have gone through, or started on the road, to deconstuction have questioned the protectors of the truth, have evaluated evidence and have drawn their own conclusions, or are in the process of so doing. For me the journey to deconstruction started with my blog. As I wrote down my thoughts I published them. My conclusions have changed as I progressed through over 400 blog posts. Having set off as a doubting liberal evangelical I am now a humanistic atheist in my opinions. The message attributed to Jesus and my long-standing support for liberation theology has confirmed my political standpoint of being a socialist.
Now I am firmly of the opinion that what matters is not a set of beliefs. What matters is behaviour, action, loving neighbour, not just as theory but as practical action, helping individuals at point of need and campaigning for systemic change to achieve social justice.
So, dear friends, this is where I am. A good juncture to sign off my blog. Should you be so minded my blog posts are available on Facebook at John Hopkinson Personal Theology Blog.
Friday, 11 July 2025
More reading
In addition to the two books referred to in my previous post I am reading again the seminal work of Gustavo Gutierrez: A Theology of Liberation. I acquired the book having read a reference to liberation theology in the Church of England's report Faith in the City that was published forty years ago.
The report and the book had a profound effect on my thinking and action. Since those far off days other theologians have been influential in my evolving ideas of God, Jesus and Christian living. To name a few: Bonhoeffer, Moltmann, Boff, Borg, Bruegemann, King, Romeo, Meyers, Rohr, Holloway and Cupitt. More recently I have been exploring anew postmodernism and secular theology. Caputo's book: What to believe? Twelve brief lessons in radical theology has set me thinking in new directions.
Above all I am interested in what it means to follow the way of Jesus, both in theory and in praxis. My reading has included a book by Aaron Stauffer: Listening to the Spirit: The Radical Social Gospel, Sacred Value, and Broad-based Community Organisations. Set in a USA context it nevertheless has much of value applicable in other contexts.
I digress. Returning to Gutierrez. He places an emphasis on the preferrential option for the poor, the gospel's demand for social justice and the need for liberation to come from within and articulated by poor communities. It is this latter point that he uses to distinguish liberation theology from progressive theology. Liberation theology is not "the radical, political wing of European progressive theology."
Gutierrez writes of an 'irruption of the poor' by which he means 'the poor turning into active agents of their own destiny and beginning a resolute process that is changing the condition of the poor and oppressed in this world'. Liberation theology is concerned not only with economic poverty: it is concerned with social poverty, racial and feminist discrimination and sexual discrimination.
He emphasises the holistic approach. It is not enough to describe poverty and oppression: its causes must be determined. "Structural analysis has played an important part in building up the picture of the world to which liberation theology addresses itself." It is important, Gutierrez tells us, that being poor (or oppressed) is a way of thinking, loving, praying, believing, hoping, spending leisure time and struggling for a livelihood". It is about health, environmeent, housing, education, social norms, bigotry and ignorance.
Once the causes of poverty and oppression have been identified there should arise calls from the poor and oppressed for social justice. Our praxis should be solidarity with the poor and oppressed, encouraging them to find a voice. However such calls, or demands, will be resisted by those who benefit or have an interest in retaining existing structures, a point well argued by JK Galbraith.
The preferrential option for the poor denies exclusiveness. It is vital to express God's univeral love for all, as expressed in Jesus, and also his predilection for those on the lower rungs of society. The phrase indicates the first with whom Christians should be in solidarity but that, importantly, we must not lose sight of God's love for all.
I will conclude this very short and inadequte reflection on A Theology of Liberation with a few words from Gutierrez on praxis.
"The praxis on which liberation theology reflects is a praxis of solidarity in the interests of liberation and is inspired by the gospel."
Monday, 7 July 2025
Latest reading
Two books have been gathering dust on my shelves for a number of years. I have dusted them down and started re-reading them.
The first is 'Secular Theology - American radical theological thought' edited by Clayton Crockett. It is a reader containing fourteen articles by a number of authors.
The second book is 'The Postmodern God - A theological reader' edited by Graham Ward. Seventeen contributors.
As I slowly plough my way through the books, seeking to understand what I am reading, it will mean inevitably that my Facebook posts will be reduced considerably.
Tuesday, 1 July 2025
Saving Jesus from the Church.
It has been a pleasure to read two books by Robin R Meyers:
Saving Jesus from the Church, and
The Underground Church
The former is subtitled: How to stop worshiping Christ and start following Jesus. The latter book is subtitled: Reclaiming the subversive way of Jesus.
For those with a liberal and/or progressive understanding of the bible and theology these two volumes give shape and clarity to non-fundamentalist understanding of doctine and non-literalist ways of reading the bible. Along with Adrian Alker's: Is a radical church possible?, Marcus J Borg's: The Heart of Christianity and Richard Holloway's Doubts and Loves they form an excellent exposition of what is entailed in following Jesus and how it relates to the organisations called 'church'.
In Saving Jesus from the Church Meyers sets the tone by observing that in the Sermon on the Mount there is not a single word about what to to believe, only words about what to do. "It is a behavioural manifesto, not a a propositional one." By the time of the Nicene Creed there is not a single word about what to do, only words about what to believe. For Meyers Christianity has become a search for individual salvation, for a passport to heaven, for individual victory over debt, obesity or low-esteem instead of being a radical movement for a collective victory over injustice, poverty, war or environmental degradation. In other words, the Kingdom on earth.
Following the Way of Jesus is not about individualistic, selfish, self-interest. It is about community, tackling social issues of poverty, exclusion, marginalisation, all issues on which Jesus showed radical concern and action.
However I do have reservations. Meyers explains the importance of seeking to discern in the bible the historical Jesus, the Jesus of the Way and differentiate him from the post-Easter Christ taken up in Pauline writings, a move away from doing to believing. A sensible differentation, but is it possble to identify the historical Jesus with any degree of clarity or centainty? I have my doubts.
As my blog readers well know I do not consider the bible to be a manual of behaviour to be followed slavishly. It is a guide to a body of thinking attributed inter alia to a person known as Jesus. That, I contend, is all we need to know. What persuades individuals to seek to emulate the teaching of Jesus may, or may not, be by what some consider to be divine inspiration? Is there an element of panentheism, is it purely a matter of biology, or the interplay of human experience and our minds?
Saturday, 28 June 2025
I wouldn't start from here.
There is an old joke, one version goes like this:
A tourist lost in the countryside asks a local the way to the city. The answer: Well sir, if I were you, I wouldn't start from here.
I was reminded of this whilst reading a book by Adrian Alker: Is a radical church possible? Adrian has been a Church of England priest for over 35 years, founded the St Mark's Centre for Radical Christianity in my home city of Sheffield and was Chair of the Progressive Christianity Network Britain of which I am a member.
Whilst there is much to commend in the book I finished my reading with a sense that it failed to convince that a radical, as distinct from a liberal/progressive, church is possible. The author accepts the thesis of Marcus Borg (amongst others) that the bible is a purely human construct. The author engages in what I consider to be a forlorn and unnecessary attempt to scrutinise the bible to seek out the historical or 'real' Jesus. He draws out very well the way the books of Matthew and Luke state the central thesis of the teaching ascribed to Jesus, namely that the commandments to love God and love neighbour are the underlying principles of the Jewish scriptures and are to be followed in preference to the restrictive rules of the Law. However the influence of postmodernism is not as evident as I expected, in particular the application of the ideas of Jacques Derrida to reading, understanding and applying language. Don Cupitt’s ideas in respect of Kingdom are considered.
For me, the starting point of my journey is not with an understanding of the historical Jesus, nor the intricacies of the development of principles from rules. What matters are the principles themselves, how to apply them now and hope as to how they will be applied in the future. Understanding the source and biblical commentary underlying the principles, whilst of interest, is not a prerequisite for their application.
The Christian faith for many is no longer the stick of the fear of hell, nor the carrot of eternal joy in heaven. In its place is a desire to follow the principles ascribed to Jesus in a document called the bible. Who Jesus was (is?) and who (plural) composed the text of the bible is interesting but it is not where I start my journey to the Kingdom.
Monday, 23 June 2025
A sense of disappointment.
I have been reading The Heart of Christianity by Marcus J. Borg. His analysis of the two paradigms is interesting and persuasive. The earlier paradigm sees Christianity as grounded in divine authority. Divine authority for Protestants resides in the bible: for Catholics there is in addition the authority of the church. The later or emerging paradigm sees the bible as historical, metaphorical, sacramental, relational and transformational.
Stark differences, central to which is the opinion (or belief) that the bible is a divine product with divine authority or, contra, it is a human response to God.
Readers of my blog understand I am in the latter camp, the bible is not to be understood as statements of literal fact laid down by God or inspired by God, nor is faith a matter of living life in the belief that we are saved for a heavenly afterlife. Instead the bible is a human guide to living our lives in service to humanity, to bring His kingdom on earth, a kingdom of love and support for the less fortunate, the deprived, the excluded and discriminated against.
My overall impression of the thesis advanced by Borg is one of admiration for a clear exposition of the emerging paradigm. However, there is also a nagging doubt that manifests itself in my sense of disappointment at the emphasis he places on the importance of the bible.
Wednesday, 11 June 2025
Never heard a sermon on this.
The Church of England's Book of Common Prayer contains a service entitled Evening Prayer, although it may be known in some parishes as Evensong or Choral Evensong. Readers of this blog understand that I do not subscribe to most of the doctrines of the CofE in their literal sense but recognise their value as metaphor, symbolism and myth.
Following the reading from the Old Testament the congregation say or sing Magnificat taken from Luke 1: 46-55. I have never heard a sermon based on these verses either in the CofE or any other denomination.
The BCP states verses 52-53 as follows:
He hath put down the mighty from their seat: and exalted the humble and meek.
He hath filled the hungry with good things: and the rich he hath sent empty away.
The New International Version of the bible has it thus:
He has brought down rulers from their thrones but has lifted up the humble.
He has filled the hungry with good things but has sent the rich away empty.
The Message puts it like this:
He knocked tyrants off their high horses, pulled victims out of the mud.
The starving poor sat down to a banquet, the callous rich were left out in the cold.
Powerful stuff. A call for inclusion, for justice. Highly political and theatening to the established order of religion and state. But it was not new, it reflects a major strand of thinking in what Christians call the Old Testament. For those of us who seek systemic change in society to achieve social justice the words quoted above are but one part of a range of teaching on inclusion and justice attributed to Jesus by the writers of the synoptic gospels.
Saturday, 31 May 2025
Nowt else t'say?
Friday, 23 May 2025
Into the long grass?
The Salvation Army's International Headquarters published material in 2018 entitled Let's Talk..About Sexuality and Relationships. So here we are in 2025 and we are informed that in the United Kingdom & Ireland Territory there is to be an eighteen month period for faciliated conversations on the issues of bride price, dowry, divorce & remarriage, married life, partner abuse, pornography, same-sex relationships, sex outside marriage and singleness.
To what end is all this talking directed? What action may ensue? A clue from this week's Salvationist.
"International policy isn't changing as a result of these conversations, but they have the power to change relationships at a local level, to impact how people live their lives and relate to each other."
No encourgement then for those seeking equality of treatment for LGBTQ+ individuals apart from let's be nice to each other. Shameful.
Wednesday, 21 May 2025
On faith and scripture
Monday, 19 May 2025
Very sad
Wednesday, 14 May 2025
The way of Jesus
Wednesday, 7 May 2025
The unsung army.
Up and down the land there are thousands of individuals who are directors, trustees, governors, treasurers or secretaries of voluntary organisations. All are unpaid, yet have major legal responsibilities for the organisations they administer, in some cases even standing to lose their personal assets should things go awry. Many serve 'below the radar', receiving little or no recognition for the work they do. Without them the voluntary sector would collapse. They are an unsung army, planning, organising, maintaining and monitoring services not provided by the statutory sector. (In some instances, such as school governors, they are part of statute-based organisations. Some voluntary organisations are commissioned to undertake work on behalf of the statutory sector.) Think of them who are responsible for sports clubs, foodbanks, lunch clubs, homelessness charities, mental health charities, community groups, arts organisations, church councils to mention just a few.
My focus is on the voluntary sector's engagement in issues of poverty, discrimination, marginalisation and exclusion, particularly in areas of multiple deprivation.
At the outset I wish to point out the dangers of cultural appropriation whether in terms of ethnicity or class. The UK is a multi-ethnic society and also one of rampant class distinction. Generalisations are easily made, but they do not reflect the mosaic, inter-connectedness and differences within society. It is impossible to pin down a precise definition of working class, lower middle class, upper middle class and so forth. We attach meaningless labels to individuals and groups.
So, what is an area of multiple deprivation in England? The country is divided into what are known as Lower-layer Super Output Areas (LSOA) and typically cover an area of between 400-1,200 households equating to between 1,000 and 3,000 residents. The Indices of Deprivation applied to each area cover seven factors:
Income, Employment, Skills & Training, Health & Disability, Barriers to Housing and Services, Living Environment.
LSOA's enable statutory and voluntary organisations to identify areas of need. They are not fool-proof, as very small pockets of deprivation in urban and especially rural areas may not be identified.
For faith groups and secular voluntary bodies wishing to engage in support for individuals in areas of multiple deprivation SLOA's provide an excellent basis for understanding the problems of an area and what services should be targeted towards them. Foodbanks, lunch clubs, soup kitchens, clothes banks, advice, and so forth can be directed to areas of need. However such provision is a mere palliative. The real need is for faith and secular organisations to foster community engagement, for the people of an area to be encouraged to demand systemic change to policies affecting the deprivation scores in their area. Whilst many of the necessary changes require decisions by central government nevertheless local government and health trusts have it within their power to redistribute funding to improve conditions in specific local areas. Such changes do not have to be expensive. Small gains can have significant impact.
Friday, 2 May 2025
A lurch to the right. We should be worried.
Yesterday's local government elections in England witnessed a lurch to the right in British politics. The Conservatives were virtually wiped out in areas where they had previously been strong. Labour also suffered major losses, particularly in areas where until recently they had a stranglehold, areas such as the fomer mining and industrial areas of Northumberland, Durham, Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire. Are the results a protest vote against the policies followed by the Conservative and Labour parties, or is there a much more deep-seated and possibly enduring reaction to years of failure by the parties to understand the concerns of people?
Sadly, both the Conservatives and Labour between them have ramped-up the anti-immigration rhetoric, have attacked those forced to survive on benefits, pensioners, LGBTQ+, homeless individuals. In other words the vulnerable members of our society have become fair game for financial cuts whilst at the same time there is a failure to deal with the causes of poverty, discriminaton and marginalisation. The right in British politics has not been slow to identify whom to blame, aided and abetted by the failure of Labour and Conservatives to tackle and remedy the causes of social injustice, a failure to initiate and carry through systemic change.
So, yes, I am worried about the future direction of political decision making in this country. Will the political parties pander to the false narrative that those suffering social injustice are to blame for the economic mess the country is in?
I seek to follow the injunction of Jesus to love my neighbour There is precious little love on display from the political right. We need a sea-change in the policies of government, embracing systemic change, not seeking to outbid the right in its nastiness. Now is the time for political bravery and also for faith groups to speak out.
Wednesday, 16 April 2025
Part 401. Finale
Well, I have had a good run. Four hundred posts on my blog since November 2022. All available on Facebook at:
John Hopkinson Personal Theology Blog
My Facebook group: Theology and Social Justice,
and
my Facebook page: Progressive and Deconstructivist Theology
have become an imposition on my time and energy. Time to retire methinks, so goodbye dear friends.
Saturday, 12 April 2025
Part 400. Simple, not simplistic
When I started my blog in November 2022 the title of my first post was: A simple faith or a simplistic theology? By 'simple faith' I sought to convey the idea that faith can be described in simple terms, without using theological jargon. Simplistic theology was a reference to the 'it's in the bible so it must be correct' genre so beloved by bible literalists and fundamentalists.
In the intervening time I replaced faith, first with belief and now with opinion. I hold now to the simple or straightforward opinion that it is our duty to love our neighbour. This equates to loving all humanity and caring for the environment, leading us to campaign for social justice and protection of the environment. In other words, activism.
My blog posts have referred on a number of occasions to the point that we should not consider issues in a vacuum or adopt a silo mentality. Our world, our understanding of the world, is a consequence of many factors interacting with each other. We should seek to understand the relationships between politics, economics, law, religion, science, history, geography, etc. The interplay of these factor has shaped the world, our communities, our lives, our identity, our fears, our hopes, our expectations. It is a matrix.
Do we understand the fluidity and ever-changing landscape we are part of? How do we react?
Friday, 11 April 2025
Part 399. Theology and social justice.
As I deconstructed my beliefs it became clear to me that what really mattered was how we treat humanity and the environment. I was drawn to the teaching attributed to Jesus to love your neighbour. Alongside that I concluded that the kingdom of god on earth required a commitment to promoting ideas of social justice. It is this that kindled my support for the concepts of liberation theology and ideas to be found in feminist and black theology. It led me to campaign also on poverty issues and issues creating and sustaining areas of multiple deprivation.
It became obvious to me that Christianity has no claim to uniqueness in its concern for such matters. Other faiths, and those with no religious belief, hold similar concerns close to their hearts. We journey together, our different starting points an irrelevancy. Thus my Facebook Page: Theology and Social Justice, contains posts from purely secular organisations campaigning for social justice. I admit to a paucity of posts from faiths other than Christianity. It is not a deliberate choice: it is a reflection of the starting point of my journey.
Wednesday, 9 April 2025
Part 398. It's as easy as A, B, C (+D) isn't it?
The concept of community development has been around for many years. In the UK, to assist the process of making it a reality, there was published Achieving Better Community Development, a handbook setting out a framework for evaluating community development. A stablemate is a framework called Asset Based Community Development. (Tons of material on the net.)
Faith groups should be encouraged to study the documents as they set out a blueprint for community engagement. A word of caution. What appears in plans, blueprints etc may not be reflected on the ground. Long lasting sustainable community development requires very hard work, is beset by setbacks, and the whims of participating individuals and organisations. However there is is no excuse for not seeking to empower individuals to improve their communities and lives. Small gains are to be celebrated and setbacks a driver to do better.
For faith groups, to follow the injunction of Jesus to love your neighbour should leave no doubt concerning the necessity for community engagement, both in seeking resolution of problems and building for a better future. Get out into the community, seek participation by individuals outside the faith group, identify issues and aspirations, but above all do something. Build relationships and trust with individuals and public and voluntary organisations. Go with the flow, do not seek to dominate or control.
Above all, seek to engage in small projects with a reasonable chance of success. It helps build street-cred no end.
Friday, 4 April 2025
Part 397. Distract and divert
Public bodies are required to consult the public, including voluntary organisations, on a range of issues. The consultations most often are on-line. The presentation of the issue and the accompanying questionnaire may well be loaded. A consultation is just that. It is not binding and responses may be ignored. It is often a cosmetic exercise to satisfy a legislative requirement.
Some voluntary organisations spend money and effort in raising petitions to statutory bodies. Again, they can be and are ignored: or simply receive condescending responses from the organisations to whom they are addressed.
Sometimes aggrieved consultees and petition originators seek judicial review should they believe the public body concerned has failed to give sufficient weight to representations. However judicial review is very expensive and whilst it may be successful, the eventual outcome is usually simply to delay matters rather than overturn the decision of the public body.
A favourite wheeze is to set up a consultative body meeting on an on-going basis to consider issues. Such bodies usually are talking shops and have little effect on the eventual decision making process. However churches waste, time, energy and resources in participating in such farces.
A few examples from personal experience.
Connexions.
PACT. Partners and Communities Together. In some areas known as Police and Communities Together.
CLSP. Community Legal Service Partnership
CP. Strategic community plans.
Compact.
Surf the internet for more information on these bodies. They all have in common the pretence of participation is the decision making process, of having significant influence on decision makers. At best they provide a safety valve for individuals and voluntary organisations to let off steam.
However there are two important beneficial aspects to such consultative arrangements.
1. Networking and making contact with potential allies
2. Identifying key players in the organisations making decisions.
This post may give the impression that I am a cynic. Spot on, I have the scars to show from involvement in such bodies. The conclusion I drew then is that for a church to promote and campaign for change requires determination to secure allies and then to communicate directly and forcefully with the decision makers in an organisation.
On a different tack, I doubt the effectiveness of demonstrations as having any long-term major influence. I marched on the huge anti Iraq war demonstrations in London that had nil effect on the determination of the government to invade Iraq. Direct action such as blocking roads, disrupting sporting events may well be counter-productive.
Thursday, 3 April 2025
Part 396. Be pragmatic.
Wednesday, 2 April 2025
Part 395. Parish woes and blessings
Tuesday, 1 April 2025
Part 394. Who needs scripture?
Who needs scripture? Certainly those who believe the bible in the inerrant, infallible word of god. They hang on every word. One could go so far as to say that such individuals are more interested in the words of a book than living out the message of Jesus.
I choose to follow the underlying message of the bible as summarised by Jesus: to love my neighbour. I read the bible as an aid to understanding, not as an instruction manual. Loving neighbours is not restricted to the Christian faith. People of other faiths, or of no religious conviction, act is similar fashion seeking to assist others and campaign for social justice.
Love is expressed in the here and now. It seeks to improve life on earth, not by waiting for some cosmic event to occur in the future, but by working for it now, by tackling concrete issues. Love is not engaging in attempting to secure a place in the hereafter so beloved by the scripture fundamentalists.
Saturday, 29 March 2025
Part 393. How to protest for social justice.
Social justice will most likely involve systemic change and therefore require action by government both in terms of legal provision and the granting of financial resources. In other words, redistribution and changed priorities. Truth must speak to power so it is useless to direct campaigns at those without power. Campaigns have to be honed to hit the target, usually ministers and members of the ruling political party.
The problem is that too many faith and secular organisations, passionate and dedicated as they are to advancing social justice, are too polite and ineffective in their campaigning. You have to get under the skin, be a nuisance, keep pressing, to have any chance of success. Polite letters, petitions, learned dissertations, social media, detailed reports of themselves do not produce change. There has to be a catalyst to persuade those in power to make changes.
Work out who are the relevant ministers and members of parliament, demonstrate outside their constituency offices, go to their surgeries. Keep the local press and other social media informed of your campaign and the reactions you receive: keep them onside. Above all be a confounded nuisance should early contact be unproductive. Be prepared for the long haul. Be seen, keep your campaign in the public eye.
I wish national faith and secular organisations would work together and coordinate local action. I do not hold much store by big national demonstrations: for the most part they do not result in the change desired by the demonstrators.
My final thought is make sure the campaign is positive: seek social justice for the people you wish to support. What matters is what you are for, not what you are against.
Friday, 28 March 2025
Part 392. Peaceful civil disobedience.
On 27th March 2025 twenty uniformed police officers, some equipped with tasers, forcibly entered the Quaker Friends Meeting House in Westminster and set about arresting six women holding a meeting in a hired room. According to the Metropolitan Police the arrests were on the ground of suspicion of conspiring to cause a public nuisance.
The alleged crime relates to the activities of Youth Demand who are planning 'swarm roadblocks' in London as an element of opposition to the government supplying arms to Israel and also the need for urgent action to counter the climate change crisis, a crisis already causing the deaths of marginalised people worldwide.
Make no mistake, this police action is an attempt to stifle, hinder, threaten, call it what you will, the ability of people to publicly protest against government policies by peaceful acts of civil disobedience. The state is using the police to deter criticism, backed up by legislation placing restrictions on meeting in public places.
The recent decisions of the government to reduce benefits for disabled people, the ending of the automatic winter fuel allowance and failure to address the causes of poverty and destitution have fuelled discontent, not just with the current government, but with the political process. Seeking to restrict civil protest plays into the hands of right wing political organisations, as witness the rise of Reform in the UK and the success of far right parties in Europe.
It is time for more civil disobedience, to show contempt for the failure of the political system to tackle social injustice. It is not enough to pussyfoot around with petitions and hand-wringing letters. Direct action is needed.