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ThePetitor
Like others, I welcome the current review, but I think OSCR will have their work cut out on this one. Let’s say for example that they recommend that Struthers should look into a particular complaint. I can see them setting up a panel to do that and interviewing people. Let’s say for example the complaint is against Diana and there are two witnesses X and Y. They set up a panel of Grace Gault and Jennifer Jack and they listen to the complaint and the evidence. They then listen to Daina’s evidence, which is that God told her to do this. Ah, the panel decides, we know there is evidence from these misguided humans X and Y, but we have evidence form God Himself – how can we argue with that? The complaint is not upheld.
So, while I welcome the review, I am not yet convinced that it will have any real impact. There is a real danger that Struthers simply go through the motions and set up all of the processes and procedures, but the underlying decision-making is still the same.
Hi The Petitor
I get the the point you are making; yet I think there is still substantial reason to be very, very hopeful something major is happening here.
For about 55 of the last 60 years (as recently celebrated) the Struthers organisation has been effectively under no external accountability whatsoever. When it became a charitable company in 2007 (a change that possibly seemed a better idea at the time than it does now) it signed up to a massive raft of requirements and laws designed to ensure opennesss, transparency, accountability, trustee expertise and above all that their operating as a charity led directly to clear and provable benefit to the public.
OSCR have been established to make that happen across the Scottish charity sector and in my view are doing a seriously impressive job of ensuring laws and guidelines are complied with. A lot of detailed work is being done and OSCR are rightly taking on and challenging the parts of the sector which have been abusing their status.
So I don't think that Struthers will be allowed to agree with OSCR they will investigate complaints, but then get off with dismissing them because “God told them to”. The guidelines make it clear that such an approach will not place Struthers in a position of compliance with charity requirements.
So we shall see what happens but I believe having read the guidelines, that the very least they will now be required to do is set up a fair and transparent complaints procedure. They have already had to do this for the school part of their charity because they know no one would pay them any fees if they didn't have one.
So if that is put in place then I can only envisage 2 possible outcomes – both very positive:
1 They set up a decent and proper complains procedure as agreed with OSCR. And it will be in their interests to resolve complaints very quickly and to the complete satisfaction of those feeling aggrieved. If they don't then these complaints can still be taken to OSCR for adjudication – threatening their charity status on an ongoing basis.
or
2 They run a complaints procedure but in the way you describe above.
Personally I would be fine with that too - at last there would be documented honesty.
I say that because historically they take people who they are supposed to be leading to God and tell them God is unhappy with their lives (usually in vague and unclear ways) then tell them they are banned from attending public meetings in Struthers or are no longer someone the pastor will even speak to. Doing that in a quiet room face to face with a hurting and devastated person is one thing. Having to say that in a formal written form “we have considered your complaint and God has told us not to speak to you” will be documentary proof that these people are off the scale bizzare and beyond all sanity and reason. That would not be seen as apostolic church government. It would be seen as the actions and words of nutters.
Add the fact that these documents, as public pronouncements of the charity's policy, will – whether they like it or not - be shared on this forum, in other public places or passed to the press. That will ensure that any reply to a complaint of that type from Struthers would be rightly held up to mockery and ridicule from any and all other secular and Christian organisations, and likely bring despair to most of their own members. And the 6 directors who support and enable this approach will not after that be sitting happily with their christian brothers and sisters in inter-church groups pretending they are sane and mainstream. That party will be over. And the likelihood of anyone subsequently joining a Struthers church will have been reduced by roughly 99%.
If they want to be a private club with secret rules whose leaders are above answering questions that avenue is open to them. However as it currently stands the 6 Struthers charity directors have voluntarily placed the church under the authority of OSCR to gain huge financial advantages. Those advantages come with responsibilities to the public and for the first time ever people they have to answer to.
We have been asking for Struthers to resolve the issues raised on this forum for two and a half years. They have not yet made any attempt to do so. It may be that they should consider what they can and should now do before others take those decisions for them.