Complaints and Discipline
- from September 2008
The need of the Methodist Church for a complaints and discipline
process stems from the imperfect nature of human beings. The Church
is a fallible community and its members on occasion behave in ways
which are damaging to themselves and others and which undermine the
credibility of the Church's witness. A complaints and discipline
process is one of the means by which the Church recognizes that all
human beings are made in the image of God and are entitled to be
treated as such, and by which it maintains its witness to the new
life in which we are called through Christ.
Through the complaints and discipline process members of the
Methodist Church are accountable to the Church in matters of faith
and behaviour. The Church seeks to enable healing and
reconciliation to take place through that accountability whenever
possible. The Church also responds to the call through Christ for
justice, openness and honesty, and to the need for each of us to
accept responsibility for our own acts.
The complaints and discipline process therefore seeks to embody
the following principles:
- the initiation of complaints should not be limited to members
of the Church;
- there should be no difference in principle between ordained and
lay people in
the way in which complaints against them are dealt with;
- the possibility of reconciliation should be explored carefully
in every case in
which that is appropriate;
- help and support should be offered both to the person making
the complaint
and to the person complained against at every stage during the
process;
- the process should be fair;
- the person or body making the decision at each stage should be
competent to do so;
- there should be a means of correcting any errors which may be
made;
- there should be a means on ensuring compliance with any
decision;
- there should be appropriate requirements relating to
confidentiality and record-keeping.
As the Body of Christ the Church seeks to embody justice, and to
challenge injustice. Complaints and discipline procedures are one
means of searching for truth. Justice involves loving, honouring
and respecting others, and ensuring that processes and procedures
are accessible, consistent, fair and transparent. Justice is also
dynamic, implying an active concern for those who are vulnerable,
marginalised, or oppressed.
Every Methodist circuit has a local complaints officer appointed.
In most cases this would be the superintendent minister of the
circuit. Contact information can be accessed via the website www.methodist.org.uk
or by making contact with the Methodist Church in a locality.
Enquiries can also be made via Methodist Church House
through Sharon Hassanali, The Methodist Church, 25 Marylebone
Road, London NW1 5JR. Direct line 020 7467 5141 or hassanalis@methodistchurch.org.uk
Details of the procedures are contained in The Constitutional
Practice and Discipline of the Methodist Church (CPD) Volume 2 2010
which can be obtained from Methodist Publishing at www.methodistpublishing.org.uk
- quote reference PB882 -CT-10 Price £22. Part 11 Complaints
and Discipline as a separate document may be obtained
via Sharon Hassanali(see above).
The following information is available for free download:
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