Title: The Church of Scotland
1The Church of Scotland
2The Church of Scotland
- national
- established, therefore with distinctive
privileges and challenges - territorial - presbytery based
- urban, county, rural, island
- parish-based
- induction not to congregation but to church and
parish
3The Church of Scotland
- reformans semper reformanda reforming and
always in need of being reformed constant
reassessment of itself and its task marking
time usually means going backwards
4The Church of Scotland
- why? a church which relates to its setting in
mission and service, through ministers and
congregations deployed in viable and workable
units, some financially self- sufficient, some
not
5The Church of Scotland
- Change
- when people, communities and society change,
gradually or quickly, the church must adapt, like
a piece of machinery constantly being re-aligned
to maintain its effectiveness
6Parish Appraisal
- Responsible for implementing legislation on
planning, appraisal of vacancies and vacancy
procedures - Act IV 1984
- Acts VII VIII 2003
- Agreeing with Presbyteries where New Charges be
developed or alternative location for existing
place of worship
7Parish Appraisal
- Vision of the former Board of National Mission
- That the people of Scotland in all its parts
might hear clearly the Gospel of Jesus Christ,
see the life of his Spirit among his people and
come to know the love of God the Father
8Parish Appraisal
- seeks to assist Presbyteries and congregations
to achieve a fair distribution of Ministers,
Deacons, Parish Assistants and Project workers to
fulfil the ministry and mission of the Kirk
throughout Scotland and in the Presbytery of
England
9Act VII 2003
- Every Presbytery to prepare a Plan by May 2006,
after consultation with each congregation - Assembly Committee to consider and concur with
Plan - Presbytery then to implement Plan at appropriate
opportunities
10The Presbytery Plan
- not less than ten years
- rolling forward with annual appraisal by
Presbytery - concurrence by Assembly Committee every five
years (and where increased staff in any charge)
11The Presbytery Plan
- will specify
- duration of Plan
- number, nature and pattern of every charge and
all other appointments at end of period - indication of likely demographic changes
12For each charge
- either
- no adjustment foreseen during lifetime of Plan
- immediate adjustment
- adjustment when next vacant
- adjustment effected after next vacancy (possible
Interim Ministry) - appraisal and any adjustment deferred until next
vacancy
13Forms of adjustment
- union of two or more congregations
- linking of two or more congregations
- deferred union or deferred linking
- New Charge Development
- transportation
- Parish Grouping
- dissolution
- alteration in number of ministers
- other form of ministry, in consultation with
Assembly Committee
14Instruments for Adjustment Planning
- reviewable tenure - 3 main forms
- continued vacancy
- transference to another Presbytery
- demission in the interests of adjustment
15Procedure
- Develop and agree general principles
- Consultation with congregations - individually or
in groups - Draft Plan
- informal discussion with Assembly Committee
- approval by Presbytery
- concurrence by Assembly Committee
16Presbytery Plan
- is a statement of intent
- congregation may state concerns or lodge appeal
at time of approval of Plan by Presbytery - but
not dealt with until adjustment falls to be
implemented - congregations maintain their rights
17National Guidelines for Deployment of Ministries
- A scheme for a just and equitable deployment of
ordained ministry throughout Scotland
18National Guidelines
- requested by General Assembly
- commitment to territorial ministry
- not an attempt to move ministers from one area to
another - not a scheme to address recruitment of new
ministers
19National Guidelines
- scheme to provide each Presbytery with a
proportion of the total number of ministries
available to serve in the parish ministry - purpose to redress imbalances in current
provision of ministry - mainly geographical and
sociological - to be the guiding background to current
presbytery planning requirements
20Principles(approved by General Assembly 2004)
- provides percentage for each Presbytery of total
number of ordained ministers available - is an agreement between Presbyteries - a tolerant
framework not an Act of Assembly but set of
regulations - has a realistic implementation period
- assumes a reasonable percentage of vacancies
21The tools
- Population statistics from 2001 Census
- Committees experience and knowledge of
presbyteries - practice elsewhere
- priority areas
- ministry projections
22Basis of Calculation(approved by General
Assembly 2004)
- Population
- National Census and based on postcode returns
- total population of Presbytery
- less
- all indicating affiliation or affinity to other
denomination or faith group - equals
- net population for National Guidelines purposes
23Basis of Calculation
- Geographical factors
- Density / Sparsity according to type of
Presbytery 6 types - city
- predominately urban
- urban / rural
- rural / urban
- scattered rural
- island
Geographic factors relate to integral nature of a
presbytery, not to its proximity to or remoteness
from Central Belt
24Basis of Calculationgeographic factors
- city virtually all urban charges and where
geographic distance or barriers between
congregations do not pose real difficulties in
deploying ministry - Edinburgh, Glasgow, Dundee, Aberdeen
- Weighting 1.0
25Basis of Calculationgeographic factors
- predominately urban mostly urban charges,
possibly one or two more rural but where
geographic distance or barriers between
congregations do not pose real difficulties in
deploying ministry - West Lothian, Kirkcaldy, Dunfermline, Lothian,
Falkirk, Irvine Kilmarnock, Ayr, Hamilton,
Greenock Paisley, Dumbarton - Weighting 1.0
26Basis of Calculationgeographic factors
- urban / rural presbyteries where bulk of
population is in comparatively large towns but
where there is also significant number of rural
charges - Buchan, Angus, Moray, Perth, Inverness,
Ardrossan, Stirling, Melrose Peebles, Lanark,
Dumfries Kirkcudbright, St. Andrews, Kincardine
Deeside - Weighting 1.5
27Basis of Calculationgeographic factors
- rural / urban presbyteries with a relatively
compact area, with a number of small towns with
substantial rural hinterland and where population
is more balanced between town and country - Gordon, Annandale Eskdale, Jedburgh, Wigtown
Stranraer, Caithness, Ross, Dunkeld Meigle,
Duns - Weighting 2.0
28Basis of Calculationgeographic factors
- scattered rural presbyteries with small
population, across large area, with considerable
distances between communities and/or where there
are significant natural barriers as a factor in
deployment - Lochcarron-Skye, Abernethy, Lochaber, Sutherland
- Weighting 3.0
29Basis of Calculationgeographic factors
- island presbyteries in whole or part
characterised by remote communities where air or
sea transport is major factor in deployment - Shetland, Orkney, Argyll, Lewis, Uist
- Weighting 3.0
30Basis of Calculation
- Geographic factors
- Density / sparsity weightings
- city 1
- predominately urban 1
- urban / rural 1.5
- rural / urban 2
- scattered rural 3
- island 3
31Basis of Calculation
- Poverty / deprivation factor
- the fifty-four neediest parishes in the country
(as defined by Priority Areas Committee) - - Parish net population
- multiplied by 2
- (Glasgow 39 Edinburgh 2 Dundee 5 Irvine
Kilmarnock 1 Hamilton 2 Greenock Paisley 2
Inverness 1 Ardrossan 1 Stirling 1)
32Example
- Assume 1,100 ministries
- city predom. urban presbytery would have 1
ministry for every 4,000 - urban / rural presbytery 1/2,600
- rural / urban 1 / 2,000
- scattered rural island 1/1,300
- (before taking deprivation factor into account)