‘A chaplain who lost his job at a Church of England school has given evidence to a tribunal that ātruth, Christian faith, freedom of faith and speechā were āridden roughshod overā as the school disciplined him and eventually made him redundant.
Today, Rev. Dr Bernard Randall told East Midlands Employment Tribunal that Trent College, where he worked as a chaplain, that the school had shown āabsolutely no regard for the concern [he] had for those upset or confused by the implementation of Educate and Celebrateā ā a charity that provides training āto embed gender, gender identity and sexual orientation into the fabricā of their organisations.
Staff training from Educate and Celebrate
In the summer of 2018, Dr Randall became aware thatĀ Educate and CelebrateĀ was due to lead a staff training session at the Church of England school. When he visited the charityās website to understand what the session would involve, he saw that itĀ āwent beyond a neutral stance of inclusivity, into active promotion of ideasā.Ā Alarmed by the groupās intention toĀ āsmash heteronormativity,āĀ its promotion of identity politics and āmisleadingā claims, Dr Randall considered writing to the Head, suggesting that the invitation be delayed until there was time to address his concerns.
However, Dr Randall decided instead to attend the Educate & Celebrate training when it took place in September. Although he had no objection to some of what was taught by Ms Elly Barnes, the charityās founder, he āconsidered some areas impossible to reconcile with Christian principles, and therefore with the stated objects of the schoolā.
This includedĀ āthe notion that ālove is loveā, without further definitionāĀ andĀ āhaving the staff chanting about the need to āsmash heteronormativityāā.
Dr Randall challenged Ms Barnes over āselectiveā use of statistics about intersex/Differences in Sexual Development. āI pointed out that, contrary to the list produced by E&C, gender identity is not a protected characteristic, to which Ms Barnes smiled and responded, āWell, it should beāā.
Implementing Educate and Celebrate
After the training session, Dr Randall spoke to his line manager and the Head to explain his concerns. They gave assurances that they had not known the full content of the session and were also concerned by the chanting. They said that they āwould not simply implement the entire Educate and Celebrate programme as presented, but would make selective use of whatever fitted with the Trent ethos.ā
Dr Randall was told that he would be part of a group looking at what aspects of Educate and Celebrateās programme the school would use. However, in November, after mentioning the lack of meetings he was told he had ānot been invited to discussions because [he] āmight disagree with it.āā He later discovered that the school had since committed to pursuing the charityās gold award by implementing their entire programme.
Sermon
Dr Randall picked up on concerns among the school community about aspects of the programme. āSome objected to elements on religious grounds; others found the aggressively political approach concerning, feeling that beliefs were being forced on them; others were simply confused about what they could, or could not, believe.ā
When one child asked if he could use a sermon to address the questionĀ āHow come we are told we have to accept all this LGBT stuff in a Christian schoolā, he carefully wrote anĀ explanatory, moderate sermonĀ emphasising the importance ofĀ ārespecting those with whom we disagreeā.
He gave the sermon twice in chapel, once with minor alterations, and spoke to various members of staff and pupils. Dr Randall recalled, āThey broadly said the message was interesting, enjoyable, and thought-provoking. None seemed to have been upset.ā
He even spoke to a pupil who was public about his homosexuality, who also spoke positively. āAt no stage did any member of staff or pupil give me any indication of wanting to express negative views, or ask to meet with me to discuss what I had said.ā
Safeguarding meeting
Nevertheless, within a week, Dr Randall had been asked to attend a meeting with the schoolās Designated Safeguarding Lead. He was given a glancing look at concerns which Dr Randall says āwere from people who simply disagreed with Church teaching, or disagreed with it being taught.ā He explained that there were factual errors in the complaints about what he had said, but this was brushed aside and Dr Randall was questioned about Church of England doctrine.
Asking what they considered was wrong with his presentation, Dr Randall said that two issues were raised: first, they incorrectly contended that gender identity was a protected characteristic; second, they claimed that psychology textbooks say there are three genders. But the real problem, according to the school was not what Dr Randall had said but how the sermon made people feel.
Dr Randall felt ambushed. While being accused of lacking empathy, he says he āwas shown absolutely no empathy during the course of the meeting ⦠There was absolutely no regard for the concern I had expressed for those upset or confused by the implementation of Educate and Celebrateā.
Suspended
Dr Randall soon found himself suspended.’https://christianconcern.com/news/school-rode-roughshod-over-christian-chaplain-after-sermon-on-identity/