1.6 The clergy standard of care

This course uses the phrase “clergy standard of care” to name what is expected of you as a minister entrusted with authority.

This is not about being perfect. It is about being reliably safe.

A safeguarding-standard minister demonstrates five pillars.

Pillar 1: Seriousness

You treat safeguarding concerns as real, weighty, and urgent enough to act upon.

Seriousness means:

  • you do not minimise disclosures
  • you do not joke, spiritualise away, or dismiss
  • you do not treat safeguarding as inconvenience
  • you hold steady when others panic or pressure you

Pillar 2: Protection-first discipline

You prioritise immediate safety over comfort.

Protection-first discipline means:

  • you think in terms of risk, not reputation
  • you take practical steps that reduce danger today
  • you accept that temporary restrictions are sometimes necessary even before outcomes are known
  • you understand that “doing nothing” is also an action with consequences

Pillar 3: Evidence discipline (do not investigate)

You recognise that safeguarding is harmed by informal inquiry.

Evidence discipline means:

  • you ask only what is necessary to understand immediate risk and next steps
  • you do not conduct interviews, gather “statements”, or question witnesses informally
  • you do not pressure for details, timelines, or proof
  • you record facts and escalate to those responsible for safeguarding process

This protects the vulnerable and protects fairness. It prevents contamination.

Pillar 4: Accountability and lawful compliance

You do not act as a solitary judge.

Accountability means:

  • you use safeguarding channels properly
  • you involve the right people in the right order
  • you follow legal duties where you serve
  • you do not promise secrecy
  • you cooperate with lawful processes

Pillar 5: Boundaries and transparency

You conduct ministry in a way that prevents hidden access and prevents dependency.

Boundaries mean:

  • no secret relationships
  • no “special access” that bypasses oversight
  • no use of spiritual authority to pressure, coerce, or isolate
  • transparent pastoral practice that others can understand and, where appropriate, supervise

Boundary detail is developed in later modules. Here, the standard is stated plainly: clergy must be predictable in safety, not improvisational.