Thinking Anglicans

House of Bishops meeting March 2025

The Church of England’s House of Bishops met yesterday and issued the following press release.

House of Bishops meeting March 2025
11/03/2025

The House of Bishops met online on March 11, 2025.

Bishops spent time discussing the recent meeting of General Synod in London, including reflecting on responses to the vote on safeguarding independence.

The House then discussed proposals for work by the Liturgical Commission – the body responsible for the Church of England’s worship – and commissioned future work.

The House considered the ongoing work of the Diocesan Finance Review and agreed that work should continue on ways to raise clergy stipends subject to recommendations to be developed by the Triennium Funding Working Group.

Bishops then discussed the process of discernment leading to ordination and agreed that Assessments for Psychological Wellbeing, already widely in use across the Church of England, should become a mandatory part of the Shared Discernment Process from later this year.

The House also spent time in groups, praying and reflecting on a passage from Isaiah 55.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

16 Comments
Oldest
Newest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Another James
Another James
30 days ago

The news about the psychological assessment of candidates for ordination becoming mandatory is welcome, but there is no word as to who will be undertaking these assessments? Let’s hope that these assessments will be conducted by properly trained and regulated professionals. I also hope that this development means the end of the so-called ‘traffic light document’, a tool so obviously open to manipulation and abuse (potentially by both interviewers – often working alone – and candidates) that it is staggering that it was ever given serious credence within the Church of England. Introducing compulsory psychological assessments is something that other… Read more »

Last edited 30 days ago by Simon Sarmiento
Susanna (no ‘h’)
Susanna (no ‘h’)
Reply to  Another James
30 days ago

Don’t pop your champagne cork too soon .i completely agree with you in principle but looking at the total pig’s ear they have made of safeguarding by forming it in their own image and running for cover at any suggestion of the I word let’s wait to see whether they partialise the assessment tool still further and carry on doing it in house
( for confidentiality purposes of course ).

Another James
Another James
Reply to  Susanna (no ‘h’)
30 days ago

No champagne corks being popped here, Susanna! As you say, it remains to be seen what the proposed alternative will look like in practice, and the extent to which it is fit for purpose. Crucially for me, will qualified and regulated psychologists be used, or will this be something else which the Church tries to keep in-house?

EagletP
EagletP
Reply to  Another James
30 days ago

Indeed this is good news – back in the day during my own discernment process I was assessed by a psychologist, which was standard in my own diocese but quite rare across the C of E. Having grown up in a complicated family environment – significant early bereavement, parental divorce etc etc – it picked up a number of areas that clearly were not healed and needed some ‘deep work’ therapy. Nearly 2 decades later, with first-hand knowledge of the emotional challenges of ordained ministry I can’t imagine that I would still be in ministry without having gone through that… Read more »

Another James
Another James
Reply to  EagletP
30 days ago

Thank you for this, EagletP, and I think you write eloquently of the benefits of such properly-conducted psychological assessments.

Unfortunately, this is not the case in all dioceses, and I can speak at first hand about the manipulative ways in which the traffic light document was used in a diocese which did not engage professional / regulated psychological assessors on the basis of financial cost.

Last edited 30 days ago by Another James
Janet Fife
Janet Fife
Reply to  Another James
29 days ago

What is the ‘traffic light document’? I haven’t heard of it before.

Janet Fife
Janet Fife
Reply to  Another James
28 days ago

I don’t have a CT subscription. Can you give a brief description? Or at least its proper title?

Simon Dawson
Simon Dawson
Reply to  Janet Fife
28 days ago

I hope Church Times won’t object to my cutting and pasting one or two paragraphs from a larger article under fair use. It is a tool for DDOs to use when exploring a candidates suitability and vocation. “all candidates also face questions based on a “traffic-light” document supplied to DDOs by the Ministry Division, which sug­gests various lines of enquiry, including man­age­­ment of finances, experience of power dynam­­ics in relationships, boundaries in pas­toral situations, as well as intimate relation­ships, divorce, and sexual behaviour. The document, written with the help of a psychotherapist and a former member of the selection team,… Read more »

Janet Fife
Janet Fife
Reply to  Simon Dawson
27 days ago

Thank you, Simon.

Janet Fife
Janet Fife
Reply to  Another James
27 days ago

Thank you, James

David Lamming
David Lamming
29 days ago

Presumably the House approved the minutes of their January meeting, in respect of which they issued a summary on 20 January 2025:House of Bishops meeting – January 2025 | Thinking Anglicans. However, those minutes are not yet on the House of Bishops page of the C of E website: House of Bishops | The Church of England. The minutes of the HoB meetings in 2024 were only placed on the website shortly before the February meeting of General Synod, seemingly, as I suggested in a comment on TA on 10 February (House of Bishops minutes | Thinking Anglicans), in response… Read more »

Helen King
Helen King
Reply to  David Lamming
26 days ago

David, those minutes for January are now up, on https://www.churchofengland.org/sites/default/files/2025-03/hb25m1_20_january.pdf
They make very interesting reading; not least, on the 5GPs, the claim that the independent reviewer went beyond her remit? The agenda for March is also up.

Helen King
Helen King
Reply to  Helen King
26 days ago

And I am assuming the independent reviewer’s report to which they refer is this one, https://www.churchofengland.org/sites/default/files/2024-04/independent_reviewer_report_-_watch_re_blackburn_appointment_process.pdf

Malcolm Dixon
Malcolm Dixon
Reply to  Helen King
25 days ago

Presumably the remit for the independent reviewer was to produce a report exonerating all those involved in running the appointment process, whereas she had the temerity to point out some faults!

16
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x