Hostname: page-component-745bb68f8f-lrblm Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2025-02-06T00:58:44.153Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

To Proclaim Afresh: Declaration and Oaths for Church of England MinistersThe Faith and Order Commission of the Church of England Church House Publishing, London, 2022, ix + 35 pp (paperback £6), ISBN: 978-1-78140-254-2

Review products

To Proclaim Afresh: Declaration and Oaths for Church of England MinistersThe Faith and Order Commission of the Church of England Church House Publishing, London, 2022, ix + 35 pp (paperback £6), ISBN: 978-1-78140-254-2

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2022

Stephen Coleman*
Affiliation:
Assistant Director, Centre for Law and Religion, Cardiff University
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical Law Society 2022

The Declaration of Assent and the Oaths of Allegiance and Canonical Obedience have a certain significance for all who are called to exercise ministry in the Church of England. Made and taken at ordinations, at consecrations and at the outset of a new ministry, they fundamentally express what it means to exercise ministry within the unique polity and legal framework of the Church of England. Yet, in spite of this significance, there is little modern-day commentary or analysis on what making the declaration and taking the oaths means theologically or in terms of the practical exercise of ministry.

This short booklet from the Faith and Order Commission of the Church of England is thus welcome. It is separated into three chapters: commentary and analysis of the declaration and oaths are found in the first two chapters respectively; the third examines the significance of these proclamations in a public, liturgical setting. The first chapter, on the Declaration of Assent, begins with a historical introduction, succinctly tracing its development back to the requirement to subscribe to the Thirty-Nine Articles of Religion. There is then some helpful line-by-line commentary on the preface to the Declaration of Assent, which is rich in both its theology and ecclesiology. Many of the phrases found in the Declaration itself, such as ‘catholic creeds’ and ‘only the forms of service which are authorized or allowed by Canon’ are examined in this commentary on the preface, though the reader is left thinking whether a line-by-line commentary on the Declaration itself and the oaths would have enhanced this publication further. The second chapter, on the oaths, does not have a specific historical introduction, but there is an insightful analysis of the relationship between allegiance and obedience. However, it would have benefited from an explanation of what in law an oath actually is. For both oaths there is a helpful discussion placing them in context, and it is valuable that each section deals with issues which can be problematic: in the commentary on the Oath Of Allegiance there are questions posed, such as ‘Can republicans minister in the Church of England?’, and in the chapter on canonical obedience there is a good evaluation of the limits of clerical obedience.

This is therefore a practical document for those about to be ordained or begin a new ministry. Furthermore, each chapter ends with a number of questions for discussion which makes it a useful teaching resource. The final chapter, on the Declaration of Assent as an ‘enacted performance’ both deals well with the significance of making the declaration during public worship and also serves as a reminder that, while new ministry means new relationships, there is constancy in the foundations of ministry within the Church of England.

To Proclaim Afresh should be read by everyone in ministry, and by those discerning such a call. Rich in theology and ecclesiology, and succinct and practical, it will assist all in deepening their understanding of what it means to minister in the Church of England.