to atone for slavery is an almost perfect summary of what is wrong with
modern Britain. It’s all here, in this one report: historical
illiteracy, bureaucratic carelessness with other people’s money,
national self-loathing, importation of American culture wars, lack of
interest in outcomes.
Let’s start with the most basic objection.
If you want to rank the heroes and villains of the slave trade, then in
my view the Church of England stands (alongside Quakers and Methodists)
close to the top of the heroes’ table.
William Wilberforce, who
pushed through the legislation to extirpate the foul business, was moved
by his Anglican faith. So was John Newton, the former slave trader who
repented, composed Amazing Grace and ended his days as a Church of
England curate.
Thanks to them, and to hundreds of thousands of
ordinary churchgoers who lent support to their campaigns, Britain not
only abolished slavery in the parts of the world it controlled, but
poured its blood and treasure into a long, gruelling and ultimately
successful war against the slave trade everywhere else.
But, of
course, that story would never do. It smacks too much of patriotism and
of white saviour complex. So the Church Commissioners set out to find evidence of guilt.
It turns out that, in the early 18th century, some of the church’s
finances were invested in the South Sea Company, which shipped 34,000
enslaved people across the Atlantic.
Does that mean that the
Church of England was pro-slavery? Obviously not. Many ministers were
constantly sermonising and agitating for abolition, and its bishops
voted for and against the abolition of the slave trade in the House of
Lords.
Does it mean, then, that the Church was hypocritical, or at
least careless? Not necessarily. Can you say for sure whether your
pension fund invests in, say, Volkswagen, which cheated on its engine
emissions tests and which maintains a highly controversial plant in
Xinjiang?
So what, you might say. Whether its servants were
heartless or simply thoughtless, the Church still profited from human
misery. Does that not create a debt?
Well, if it did, the debt has
been settled many times over. It was settled by the young men,
motivated by religious conviction, who gave their lives to hunting down
slave ships after 1807. It was settled by the Anglican missionaries who
penetrated the African interior, often dying of tropical diseases,
seeking to persuade local potentates to free their chattels.
It was settled, not least, by British taxpayers,
who gladly approved the spending of 1.8 per cent of GDP annually
between 1808 and 1867 on global eradication; arguably the most expensive
moral foreign policy in human history.
That was meaningful
restitution. Britain had been a player in the slave trade in the 17th
and 18th centuries. When, like John Newton, it saw that it had been
wrong, it sought to make good that wrong by liberating as many remaining
slaves as it could, diverting ships to hunt down the Guineamen even at
the height of its life-and-death struggle with Napoleon.
The
Church Commissioners, by contrast, want to make a symbolic rather than a
practical repentance through gestures like “investments into Black-led
businesses”.
Never mind whether the leaders of those businesses
are descended from slaves or slave-owners, for this does not seem to be
about compensation. It appears instead to be about fashion –
specifically the fashion for racialising every question, a fashion we
have imported from the United States.
“African chattel enslavement
was central to the growth of the British economy of the 18th and 19th
centuries,” declares the report. Despite repeated efforts to prove this
claim, however, it remains thoroughly dubious. It still seems more
likely that the growth of the British economy was driven by independent
courts and secure intellectual property rights. These things enabled the
Industrial Revolution and thus, ultimately, rendered slavery
economically obsolete as well as morally repugnant.
The cost of
eradicating slavery was quite likely greater than any previous national
profit, making talk of reparations nonsense. And we know, in any case,
that no settlement would be treated as final. There would always be new
demands, for we are dealing with a state of mind, not a legal claim.
Hence
the arbitrary figure of a billion pounds. We are in a world of
gestures, of virtue-signalling, of ostentatious religiosity. “The
Pharisee stood and prayed thus with himself, ‘God, I thank thee, that I
am not as other men are, extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even as
this publican’.”
A billion pounds is roughly equivalent to the sum
raised annually by all the Church of England’s parishes. The
churchgoers who stump up that cash could hardly be less like the
virtue-signalling Pharisee. If anything, they more closely resemble the
penurious widow recalled in Mark’s Gospel who “threw in two mites”.
Those
who fill the pews, however sparsely, don’t mind kicking a third of
their annual billion pounds upstairs, even as their church buildings,
yew-hemmed and echoing, crumble. They likely imagine that their cash is
helping to spread the gospel rather than filling the pension pots of
diocesan diversity officers.
There are many ways in which a
billion pounds could be ethically invested, either in Britain or in
Anglican communities overseas. If slavery is your issue, a billion
pounds could help complete the Church’s abolitionist mission by taking
the campaign to the countries where human bondage is most prevalent
today: North Korea, Eritrea, Mauritania and the like. But that does not
carry the kudos of self-reproach.
Many British institutions are split between the poor bloody infantry and the woke top brass. The CofE is no exception.
During lockdown, parish priests showed exemplary leadership, organising
food deliveries, ministering to people in isolation, uniting their
communities. Too many bishops, by contrast, demanded the closure of
church buildings and roused themselves to make a collective statement
only to condemn Dominic Cummings. Not once did they think to declare
that fear of death should not prevent us from living; that, indeed, a
life properly lived should remove the fear of death.
It is often
said that identity politics is more like a religion than a political
doctrine. Its tenets are articles of faith, and dissenters are
excommunicated rather than debated. Our national church has adopted this
newer trinity of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, forming a syncretic religion, dogmatic and proselytising.
The
new faith has little interest in real-word results. There is no
evidence that treating entire groups of people as victims produces just
outcomes. Indeed, there is a great deal of evidence to the contrary.
In
his forthcoming book Black Success, Tony Sewell shows how woke policies
“make the black community out to be helpless and hapless – people with
no agency in the world around them”. Telling the other side of the
story, he thinks, the story of black entrepreneurs, is a surer way to
raise expectations and realise ambitions.
Where did the future
Lord Sewell first stumble upon this insight? How did he transcend the
racism of the 1970s? “Some would say I was lucky, others that I was just
thick-skinned. But the real saviour was Sunday School and those
instructive stories from the Good Book. They took me away from race and
reminded me of my greater humanity.”
That was what a black boy
heard in a largely white Anglican church in Penge half a century ago:
the uplifting message that skin colour matters no more than hair colour.
“There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there
is neither male nor female: for ye are all one in Christ Jesus.” It was
that conviction that motivated the abolitionists in the first place. How
unutterably sad to see it replaced by the new dogma of racial
categorisation.
Let’s start with the most basic objection. If you want to rank the heroes and villains of the slave trade, then in my view the Church of England stands (alongside Quakers and Methodists) close to the top of the heroes’ table.
William Wilberforce, who pushed through the legislation to extirpate the foul business, was moved by his Anglican faith. So was John Newton, the former slave trader who repented, composed Amazing Grace and ended his days as a Church of England curate.
Thanks to them, and to hundreds of thousands of ordinary churchgoers who lent support to their campaigns, Britain not only abolished slavery in the parts of the world it controlled, but poured its blood and treasure into a long, gruelling and ultimately successful war against the slave trade everywhere else.
But, of course, that story would never do. It smacks too much of patriotism and of white saviour complex. So the Church Commissioners set out to find evidence of guilt. It turns out that, in the early 18th century, some of the church’s finances were invested in the South Sea Company, which shipped 34,000 enslaved people across the Atlantic.
Does that mean that the Church of England was pro-slavery? Obviously not. Many ministers were constantly sermonising and agitating for abolition, and its bishops voted for and against the abolition of the slave trade in the House of Lords.
Does it mean, then, that the Church was hypocritical, or at least careless? Not necessarily. Can you say for sure whether your pension fund invests in, say, Volkswagen, which cheated on its engine emissions tests and which maintains a highly controversial plant in Xinjiang?
So what, you might say. Whether its servants were heartless or simply thoughtless, the Church still profited from human misery. Does that not create a debt?
Well, if it did, the debt has been settled many times over. It was settled by the young men, motivated by religious conviction, who gave their lives to hunting down slave ships after 1807. It was settled by the Anglican missionaries who penetrated the African interior, often dying of tropical diseases, seeking to persuade local potentates to free their chattels.
It was settled, not least, by British taxpayers, who gladly approved the spending of 1.8 per cent of GDP annually between 1808 and 1867 on global eradication; arguably the most expensive moral foreign policy in human history.
That was meaningful restitution. Britain had been a player in the slave trade in the 17th and 18th centuries. When, like John Newton, it saw that it had been wrong, it sought to make good that wrong by liberating as many remaining slaves as it could, diverting ships to hunt down the Guineamen even at the height of its life-and-death struggle with Napoleon.
The Church Commissioners, by contrast, want to make a symbolic rather than a practical repentance through gestures like “investments into Black-led businesses”.
Never mind whether the leaders of those businesses are descended from slaves or slave-owners, for this does not seem to be about compensation. It appears instead to be about fashion – specifically the fashion for racialising every question, a fashion we have imported from the United States.
“African chattel enslavement was central to the growth of the British economy of the 18th and 19th centuries,” declares the report. Despite repeated efforts to prove this claim, however, it remains thoroughly dubious. It still seems more likely that the growth of the British economy was driven by independent courts and secure intellectual property rights. These things enabled the Industrial Revolution and thus, ultimately, rendered slavery economically obsolete as well as morally repugnant.
The cost of eradicating slavery was quite likely greater than any previous national profit, making talk of reparations nonsense. And we know, in any case, that no settlement would be treated as final. There would always be new demands, for we are dealing with a state of mind, not a legal claim.
Hence the arbitrary figure of a billion pounds. We are in a world of gestures, of virtue-signalling, of ostentatious religiosity. “The Pharisee stood and prayed thus with himself, ‘God, I thank thee, that I am not as other men are, extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even as this publican’.”
A billion pounds is roughly equivalent to the sum raised annually by all the Church of England’s parishes. The churchgoers who stump up that cash could hardly be less like the virtue-signalling Pharisee. If anything, they more closely resemble the penurious widow recalled in Mark’s Gospel who “threw in two mites”.
Those who fill the pews, however sparsely, don’t mind kicking a third of their annual billion pounds upstairs, even as their church buildings, yew-hemmed and echoing, crumble. They likely imagine that their cash is helping to spread the gospel rather than filling the pension pots of diocesan diversity officers.
There are many ways in which a billion pounds could be ethically invested, either in Britain or in Anglican communities overseas. If slavery is your issue, a billion pounds could help complete the Church’s abolitionist mission by taking the campaign to the countries where human bondage is most prevalent today: North Korea, Eritrea, Mauritania and the like. But that does not carry the kudos of self-reproach.
Many British institutions are split between the poor bloody infantry and the woke top brass. The CofE is no exception. During lockdown, parish priests showed exemplary leadership, organising food deliveries, ministering to people in isolation, uniting their communities. Too many bishops, by contrast, demanded the closure of church buildings and roused themselves to make a collective statement only to condemn Dominic Cummings. Not once did they think to declare that fear of death should not prevent us from living; that, indeed, a life properly lived should remove the fear of death.
It is often said that identity politics is more like a religion than a political doctrine. Its tenets are articles of faith, and dissenters are excommunicated rather than debated. Our national church has adopted this newer trinity of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, forming a syncretic religion, dogmatic and proselytising.
The new faith has little interest in real-word results. There is no evidence that treating entire groups of people as victims produces just outcomes. Indeed, there is a great deal of evidence to the contrary.
In his forthcoming book Black Success, Tony Sewell shows how woke policies “make the black community out to be helpless and hapless – people with no agency in the world around them”. Telling the other side of the story, he thinks, the story of black entrepreneurs, is a surer way to raise expectations and realise ambitions.
Where did the future Lord Sewell first stumble upon this insight? How did he transcend the racism of the 1970s? “Some would say I was lucky, others that I was just thick-skinned. But the real saviour was Sunday School and those instructive stories from the Good Book. They took me away from race and reminded me of my greater humanity.”
That was what a black boy heard in a largely white Anglican church in Penge half a century ago: the uplifting message that skin colour matters no more than hair colour. “There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor female: for ye are all one in Christ Jesus.” It was that conviction that motivated the abolitionists in the first place. How unutterably sad to see it replaced by the new dogma of racial categorisation.