The church of critical race theory

Mar 6, 2024 by

by Alka Sehgal Cuthbert, spiked:

The Church of England is prostrating itself before a divisive racial identity politics.

The Church of England has been captured by identitarian activists.

You can see this most clearly in the church’s determination to pay reparations for slavery. Last year, the General Synod – the church’s legislative body – announced that it would set aside £100million to investigate its historic links to slavery and provide reparations for the descendants of slaves. Yet apparently, this huge sum was not enough to appease the ever-growing identitarian faction within the church. This week, a report demanded that the offer be expanded to an eye-watering £1 billion.

Church leaders have agreed in principle to this new demand, though they will not release the money immediately from church coffers. Instead, they have agreed to raise the extra £900million from external sources, such as parish donations. Geetha Tharmaratnam, who is advising the church, has suggested that the shortfall could be made up by wealthy families who want to atone for their slave-trading ancestors.

Astonishingly, this £1 billion reparations plan isn’t the sum total of the church’s spending on racial initiatives. Just as the reparations debate has been brewing, the C of E’s Birmingham diocese has embarked on a hiring spree to fill all the posts in its West Midlands Racial Justice Initiative. Roles it is hiring for include an ‘anti-racism practice officer’, who will ‘deconstruct whiteness’, and a development worker, who would help to ‘eliminate racism within church youth groups’. All posts have a salary of £36,000.

Beneath the benign-sounding talk about fighting racism, the jargon about ‘deconstructing whiteness’ makes it clear what the purpose of these roles really is – namely, to force lay members and clergy alike to get on board with the Church of England’s wholesale adoption of critical race theory (CRT).

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