Friday 31 January 2014

England's New Debt Law

It is not for kings to drink wine, or for rulers to take strong drink, lest they drink and forget what has been decreed and pervert the rights of all the afflicted. Give strong drink to the one who is perishing, and wine to those in bitter distress; let them drink and forget their poverty and remember their misery no more. Open your mouth for the mute, for the rights of all who are destitute. Open your mouth, judge righteously, defend the rights of the poor and needy.

Proverbs 31:4-9 (ESV)

Occasionally my two main areas of work, helping people relate well to the power of money and the legal enforcement procedures to recover debt, coincide. Earlier this month, the UK’s Ministry of Justice published the new fees that enforcement agents (currently called ‘bailiffs’) will be able to charge for enforcing courts orders for debt.

The fees are pivotal to the reforms to this area of law to in April because one of the chief aims is to incentivise agents to accept payment, rather than seize property that could be sold to pay the debt.

For the first time, agents will be allowed to make a reasonable profit by taking payment but, after that, the financial incentives are less if they attend premises to ‘take control of goods’ and to remove them for sale.

The people in debt are being encouraged to take the opportunity to pay by the prospect of punitive action that follows if they don’t.

The procedure to ‘take control of goods’ is punitive because it is prescriptive. This was thought to be in the best interests of the people in debt, because it was clear, but it is a two-edged sword. As the agents’ use of discretion is very limited under the procedure, and as the new fees offer them reduced profitability the further along the procedure they need to go, the most cost effective option for them faced with debtors who can’t pay may be to remove what goods they can at the first visit. 

Historically, bailiffs have preferred not to take and sell goods, often seeing it as a sign of their failure to persuade people to pay. But, inevitably, there is always a need to take some people's goods. I have heard estimates of up to 75% of people in debt taking the opportunity to pay under the new procedure. Perhaps. But what of the rest?

As bailiffs deal with millions of cases each year, most on behalf of central and local government, 25% - or, even, just 2.5% - represents a great deal of money owed to central and local government, which cannot simply be allowed to go unpaid. It also represents a great many people, among whom the poor and vulnerable will suffer the most.

Although the new law makes some allowance for certain categories of vulnerable people, such as those who are pregnant, disabled or elderly, it overlooks the vulnerability that debt itself causes. People who are well able to pay what they owe but simply evading their responsibility, and therefore not victim to the vulnerabilities and mental health issues suffered by those struggling to make ends meet, will be best able to resist the enforcement agents until action ceases to be profitable. But the rest could well have their predicament exacerbated by agents working in the most cost effective way.

The poor and vulnerable are also disadvantaged by the absence of accessible remedies when things go wrong. For years, the Government has refused to create a regulator for this important area of public service. If debtors want to take action against erring or unreasonable agents, they must start legal action in the High Court or a county court; if a third party who has no responsibility for the debt wishes to take action because their property is taken by mistake, they must first put up the total amount owed. The poor and vulnerable will be the least able to use these remedies.

Why did the writer of the Proverbs quoted at the start of this Reflection, who may have been King Solomon’s mother, recommend offering ‘strong drink’ and ‘wine’ to the poor and destitute? The answer is, I think, to be found in something her husband, King David, may have written about ‘wine to gladden the heart of man’ (see Psalm 104:15).

Although a gift of alcohol in the right circumstances may distract people from their poverty, and cheer them up for a while, there’s no doubt about its devastating ability to pervert the rights of those less well off in society when indulged in by kings.

I’m not trying to make a political point but a moral one. ‘Judge righteously, defend the rights of the poor and needy’ is a universal obligation that falls to all legislators and public servants.

In my view, law enforcement for profit and paid by results is a fundamentally flawed concept in a capitalist society. The legal obligation on businesses to maximise profit will always trump the desire to act in the public interest, as we know from the scandals about passing off horse meat as beef, phone hacking by journalists, artificially forcing up petrol prices, banking malpractice and the mis-selling of PPI and identity theft protection. Ambitious financial incentives are always fraught with difficulty and when there’s so much at stake, it is the poor and vulnerable who most need the protection of a regulator and accessible means of redress.

I have dedicated a page on my blogspot to an expanded version of this Reflection, which explains in more detail my concerns with the England’s new debt law and its impact on the poor and vulnerable. Click here for the full article England’s New Debt Law.

© All Souls Clubhouse Community Centre & Church and Philip Evans 2014.

Friday 10 January 2014

Social Responsibility

For the kingdom of God is not a matter of eating and drinking but of righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit.

Now to[Christ] who is able to do far more abundantly than all that we ask or think, according to the power at work within us, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, forever and ever. Amen. 

Romans 14:17 & Ephesians 3:20-21 (ESV)

Does being a Christian make a difference to the ways we seek to help people in need and address the problems of society? The first time I remember this issue being floated was when I heard John Kirkby, the founder of Christians Against Poverty, speak at a conference of Christians money advisers about 12 years ago.

Although the subject of my own talk at the conference was legal debt recovery procedures, I took a moment to wonder out loud whether Christian money advisers should do more than just help people in debt to live more comfortably within the consumer society.

Back then, what later came to be known as personal financial education was called consumer education because it was designed to do no more than help people be responsible consumers in the consumer society. When I started teaching financial capability skills a few years later, I wanted to do more and to help young people see through the advertising and sales talk, and to resist the peer pressure, so they could make spending decisions that would contribute towards their own development as unique people. But that was still a very limited goal.

A couple of years ago at the All Souls Clubhouse, where I’m based, we were thinking a lot about what it meant for us to be a distinctively evangelistic Christian community centre. Were we to provide the same sorts of services as other community centres, but perhaps with a different motivation or with a different spirit or in a different atmosphere? Or was there something so profoundly powerful and radical in the Christian Gospel that it set us on a different trajectory to other community workers?

In his book, The First Principles of Christian Citizenship, Albert Swift wrote that the Kingdom of God was the goal of Jesus' social endeavour and yet this vision was lamentably lacking in much Christian social concern. ‘With many true and honest workers’, he explained, ‘there seems to be little thought beyond the discovery of a present palliative for a pressing need, and consequently the result of their effort is often futile.’

He added, ‘Here there in its simplest form is the goal of the Christian citizen’s endeavour: a Kingdom in which God’s will is operative in every phase and department of life; His will, the law; His people, the ready and glad administrators thereof.’ He then identified the first verse at the start of today’s Reflection as describing the essence of the social order that Christians should work towards: ‘righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit’.

Where we have sought to do no more that offering a ‘present palliative for a pressing need’, there needs to be deep reflection of how we ought to cooperate with Jesus in reconciling together all things in heaven and earth into the Kingdom of God. I suspect that only then will God be in a position to bless social action by Christians as effectually as he has been known to bless their preaching in revival! But this means using the same resources to fulfil Christian social responsibility as to evangelise.

I invite you to reflect on the following, which is based on something that Mark Prentice said last year, when he was the minister in charge at the Clubhouse.

What difference would it make to the help we give people and to our involvement in social issues if we really believed in our weakness and powerlessness; if we really thought that without Jesus Christ we could do nothing - nothing at all! That we could do nothing in mission, nothing to really help people? And what would it be like if we Christians actually believed God could work though us, doing 'immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to His power at work within us'? What if we really believed that prayer was one of the most important things that we could ever do; that it was an absolute priority; that it was something that we had to dedicate our time and energy to if we wanted to achieve anything practical?

I am certain of two things. First, that just as in Jesus' ministry, social responsibility would be as powerful a means of communicating the Gospel as preaching. Second, that just as in St Paul's ministry, we would not be dependent on money and would need to think about it far less than we do!

Mark is now the Vicar of St John the Baptist Church in Ipswich. You can find Albert Swift’s book, The First Principles of Christian Citizenship, at:


I expect to produce more Reflections next month.

© All Souls Clubhouse Community Centre & Church and Philip Evans 2014. You are welcome to copy these Reflections on a non-profit basis.

Friday 3 January 2014

Social Responsibility

For in [Christ] all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell, and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether on earth or in heaven, making peace by the blood of his cross.

Jesus said to them again, ‘Peace be with you. As the Father has sent me, even so I am sending you’.


Colossians 1:19-20 & John 20:21 (ESV)

Last weekend, I commended the book written by Albert Swift in 1908 called, First Principles of Christian Citizenship. I had already read the book three times, some years apart, before I thought of producing the pdf version. I then had to re-read it again a few times in order to produce an accurate copy and, each time, I realised afresh that it is a field of diamonds; each time, I saw something new or something more clearly than before.

The book’s usefulness is in its simplicity and brevity: Swift understood God’s plan and the need to cooperate with Jesus in his mission and to do so following the same principles that Jesus uses.

While there are many obvious ways in which we can help people, we always need to be cautious that we don’t inadvertently empower them to maintain self-destructive behaviour. We should not, for example, give money to a hungry person if we have good reason to believe they will spend it on alcohol or drugs. Our help needs to be more constructive than that, even to our own personal inconvenience.

Similarly, when we seek to address problems of our society as a whole, such as consumerism and overindebtedness, we need to be aware of inadvertently perpetuating those problems. Our action must always have the Kingdom of God in mind; our method must always be Jesus’ method.

I get the impression that many well-meaning Christians see a social need to be met and, if they can secure the funding, start to help. Their agenda is then set by the availability of funding and, consequently, they are under an obligation to do things the way the funder wants them done. There may be little or no conflict with Jesus’ way but, more often than not (it seems to me), they end up fulfilling the secular agenda of the local authority or corporate giant that pays rather than help Jesus reconcile all things together in the Kingdom of God.

In spite of what we may think or hope, money talks to Christians and what it says is often easier to hear than the voice of God.

I may explore this theme further next weekend. In the meantime, you can find Albert Swift’s book at:


© All Souls Clubhouse Community Centre & Church and Philip Evans 2014. You are welcome to copy these Reflections on a non-profit basis.