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National
church in jeopardy, says Peers
Letter to parishes reveals financial crisis
DEBRA
FIEGUTH
CW Senior Writer
Winnipeg
The head of the
Anglican Church of Canada, Archbishop Michael Peers, has done the arithmetic
and the numbers dont balance: the national body is faced with about
$2 billion in damages from residential school lawsuits, and only has $10
million to its name.
What is facing
us is that [the residential school system] was not a good system that
had a few bad people, but a fundamentally flawed system with a few good
people in it, Peers said in a May 27 interview in Winnipeg, where
he was attending a regional meeting.
The church has to
take its share of responsibility for the physical, sexual and cultural
abuse that took place in residential schools, Peers admits. We do
not wish to evade our obligations. Its just that we will soon come
to the end of our resources.
The general synod,
the legal entity that runs the church, might have to declare bankruptcy
within the next year. That means that all the programs that are run at
a national levelincluding overseas partnerships, special interest
departments and the Anglican Journalcould well be cut.
All of those
things are in jeopardy, Peers said
Because the national
body exists to help dioceses and parishes to do things jointly which would
be difficult to do separately, there is a very high level of concern
throughout the church for those employees who enable that to happen,
Peers says. At the employee level theres a great sense of
insecurity.
Some are unaware
The parish level
is a different story. Some Anglicans are not aware of what is going on
in the national church, Peers says. So on May 28 the primate distributed
a pastoral letter to be read in every parish across the country.
The purpose
of the letter is simply to say something about where we are at the moment,
and something about where I see Gods hand leading us in the time
ahead, he says.
The letter explains
that there are more than 1,600 claims of varying kinds against the church,
and that litigation would quickly wipe out the churchs resources.
But Peers also wants
Anglicans to know that only the financial assets are at risk, not the
churchs ability to be in relationship, to support and care
for each other
Nothing at
the heart of our faithour desire for wholeness and healing in ourselves,
in our relationships, in our country and in our world is at risk,
he writes. We have these abundant and enduring assets that will
help us continue to do justice and work for healing.
The church has presented
its case to the federal government, says Peers, not to ask for a bailout
but to let the government know there simply are not enough funds to cover
litigation. In the meantime, he says, we do what I think
is the responsible way to follow our Lord, which is one step at a time
and one day at a time.
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