Readers will find that a theme running through this issue of the Journal is authority: the authority to make law, interpret it, purport to act under it, and (if necessary) enforce it. Hill explains that ‘[t]he purpose of the law of and for the church is much the same today as it was in the days of the early church. It is to regulate the functioning of the church and its individual members by a combination of commands, prohibitions, and permissions’.Footnote 1 This speaks to ecclesiastical law's normative character. Like any other legal system, it claims to have a special kind of authority which imposes obligations upon the laity, the clergy, and various other institutions, and thus inform them what they ‘ought’ to do or refrain from doing.Footnote 2
Debates rage about the way in which law claims this kind authority. HLA Hart, in his groundbreaking work 60 years ago, set about dismantling the argument that the normativity of law is explained simply because we comply with rules to avoid the threat of sanction.Footnote 3 Hart's explanation of laws’ normative demands – what sets certain rules apart from mere social habits – can be summarised in this way:Footnote 4
‘What is necessary is that there should be a critical reflective attitude to certain patterns of behaviour as a common standard, and that this should display itself in criticism (including self-criticism), demands for conformity, and in acknowledgements that such criticism and demands are justified, all of which find their characteristic expression in the normative terminology of “ought”, “must”, and “should”, “right” and “wrong”.’
All rules, Hart explains, have both external and internal aspects: the (external) regular behaviour of citizens and officials which we can observe, coupled with an (internal) acceptance that such behaviour is obligatory (rather than optional).Footnote 5 Arguments continue in jurisprudential circles as to why subjects of a legal system might feel compelled to follow certain rules in order to explain this phenomenon.Footnote 6 But Hart's observations about the ‘internal’ and ‘external’ nature of rules is generally regarded as pointing to the way in which rules are treated as valid – and so worthy of obedience – by officials and citizens.Footnote 7
In this issue of the Journal, Bishop Pete Broadbent and Professor Alison Milbank debate the problem of authority, which they perceive the Church of England to be facing. They disagree when it comes to the proposed reforms to the Mission and Pastoral Measure 2011Footnote 8 and the merits of the recommendations of the governance review groupFootnote 9 (Broadbent offering a defence of the proposals, and Milbank a critique). But they join together to criticise the Church of England's response to the COVID-19 pandemic when the House of Bishops issued instructions in March 2022 purporting to prohibit clergy from accessing their churches for the purposes of worship. Both observe that such a direction, falling as it did outside the powers given to individual diocesan bishops under Canon B14A (and in the absence of any other authority to issue the direction), stood in direct conflict with the legal obligations placed on clergy to make provision for services in church pursuant to Canons B11 and B14.
Notwithstanding the fact that the direction from the House of Bishops was ultra vires (and subsequently recast only as ‘advice’Footnote 10), anecdotal experience suggests that many clergy felt the need to comply with it anyway. The Church witnessed a paradoxical situation where the canonical obligations under Canons B11 and B14 (which remained in force as a matter of law) were simply over-ridden by the extra-legal imperatives contained in the House of Bishops’ direction. Canons B11 and B14 lost (to use Hart's label) their ‘internal aspect’ and, with it, for a period, their normative force. The fact that basic principles of legality broke down so easily, such that Canons duly made were so overtly dispensed with – even at a time of national crisis – should be a source of concern to all who practise, study and administer ecclesiastical law.
Carrying on with the theme of authority, Neil Patterson, in his comment piece discussing the decision on jurisdiction in Re Evans (concerning the Clergy Discipline Measure 2003), opines that the purpose of the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction Measure 1963 is now in serious doubt.Footnote 11 The clear implication from his review of the case law is that the 1963 Measure is rather difficult to take seriously, as the jurisdiction it confers (in respect of disciplinary cases concerning matters of doctrine, ritual and ceremonial) is rarely (if ever) invoked and, in light of Evans, seems to have been largely subsumed by the 2003 Measure. If Patterson is right, then we find in the 1963 Measure a set of rules which appear to be losing their normative force by the sheer passage of time and the gradual loss of their ‘external aspect’ – that is, the failure of officials to use them. Whether this will feature in the ongoing review of the clergy discipline regime remains to be seen.
In respect of those who administer ecclesiastical law, and their authority to do so, Clive Hogger adds to the growing scholarship available concerning the role of archdeacons, and the tensions we encounter in trying to define their role and functions. He suggests that much of an archdeacon's power appears to stem from delegated authority, and discusses their surprisingly varied functions and powers, as determined by local custom (as opposed to any kind of codified, coherent, legal framework).Footnote 12 If this is right, it suggests a failure in some instances of rules to crystallise at all (arguably casting doubt on their normative force).Footnote 13
Araba Taylor offers us a critique of the decisions in Rustat Footnote 14 and Re St Peter, Dorchester,Footnote 15 both of which concerned contested heritage. Taylor argues that both decisions indicate that the current Duffield framework applied by consistory courts is in need of reform, and she questions whether it is still appropriate to permit the prioritisation of ‘property over people’ in this context.Footnote 16 The present faculty jurisdiction clearly retains its normative force (insofar as it is routinely used and complied with). But the pastoral consequences arising from this discussion, and whether the present system is sustainable in the context of contested heritage, will be of concern to the wider Church from the perspective of moral, rather than legal, authority.
Finally, Russell Dewhurst provides the inside story to the revision of the Principles of Canon Law Common to the Churches of the Anglican Communion. As Dewhurst notes, the authority of the Principles derives from the fact that they reflect the legislative activity of over 40 autonomous churches in the Anglican Communion, and are descriptive rather than prescriptive in nature.Footnote 17 But that is not to underestimate their potential to take on a more potent kind of normative force over time: as Garth Blake notes, the Principles formed part of the reasoning of the minority opinion in the Wangaratta and Newcastle references considered by the Appellant Tribunal of the Anglican Church of Australia, which was called upon to determine the legality of synodical legislation.Footnote 18 The potential for the Principles to shape the interpretation and application of ecclesiastical law across the wider Anglican Communion appears to warrant further exploration.