1.9 Personal formation: the interior life of a safeguarding minister

Safeguarding is not only outward policy. It is inward formation. The interior disciplines of a safeguarding minister include:

Humility

You accept that:

  • you can be wrong
  • you can be manipulated
  • you can miss warning signs
  • you need accountability and supervision

Humility is a protection.

Self-knowledge

You recognise your vulnerabilities:

  • need to be liked
  • conflict avoidance
  • flattery response
  • saviour complex
  • fear of scandal
  • anger or impulsivity
  • overconfidence in your discernment

A safeguarding minister does not pretend to be above temptation or bias. He builds safeguards because he is human.

Emotional sobriety

Safeguarding requires calm presence. Emotional sobriety means:

  • you can hear distress without becoming chaotic
  • you can act without needing to be the hero
  • you can hold steady without freezing
  • you can tolerate ambiguity whilst process unfolds

Prayer that does not replace action

Prayer belongs in ministry. But prayer is not a substitute for reporting, safety planning, record discipline, or lawful cooperation. Prayer and action belong together.