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George Bell (bishop)

George Kennedy Allen Bell (4 February 1883 – 3 October 1958) was an Anglican theologian, Dean of Canterbury, Bishop of Chichester, member of the House of Lords and a pioneer of the ecumenical movement.


George Bell
Bishop of Chichester
Bell in 1910
ProvinceCanterbury
DioceseChichester
Installed11 June 1929
Term ended3 October 1958
PredecessorWinfrid Burrows
SuccessorRoger Wilson
Other post(s)Dean of Canterbury
(1925–1929)
Member, House of Lords
(1937–1958)
Orders
Ordination1907 (deacon)
Consecrationc. 1929
Personal details
Born(1883-02-04)4 February 1883
Died3 October 1958(1958-10-03) (aged 75)
BuriedChichester Cathedral
NationalityBritish
DenominationAnglican
ParentsJames Allen Bell
Sarah Georgina Megaw
SpouseHenrietta Livingstone
(married 1918)
Alma materChrist Church, Oxford
Wells Theological College

Early career edit

Bell was born in Hayling Island, Hampshire, as the eldest child of Sarah Georgina Megaw and her husband James Allen Bell (the vicar of the Island and later a canon at Norwich Cathedral). His sister Margorie married Cecil Wood, Bishop of Melanesia (1912-19).[1]

He was elected as a Queen's Scholar at Westminster School in 1896. From there he was elected to a scholarship at Christ Church, Oxford, where he gained a First in Classical Moderations in 1903 and a Second in Literae Humaniores ('Greats') in 1905.[2] He won the Newdigate Prize for English verse in 1904 for his poem, 'Delphi'.[3]

After Oxford he attended Wells Theological College, where he was first influenced by ecumenism, and was ordained deacon at Ripon Cathedral in 1907. He went on to work as a curate for three years in the industrial slums of Leeds. His role there was the Christian mission to industrial workers, a third of whom were Indians and Africans from the British Empire.[citation needed] During his time there he learned much from the Methodists, whose connection between personal creed and social engagement he saw as an example to the Church of England.

In 1910 Bell returned to Christ Church, Oxford, as a student minister and as lecturer in Classics and English, 1910–14; he was a Student (Fellow), 1911–14.[4] Here too he was socially engaged, as one of the founders of a cooperative for students and university members and sitting on the board of settlements and worker-development through the Workers' Educational Association (WEA).

Bell's early career was shaped by his appointment in 1914 as chaplain to Archbishop Randall Davidson, one of the key figures in twentieth century church history. Bell subsequently wrote the standard biography of Davidson. Bell received a special commission for international and inter-denominational relations. In this office he ensured in 1915 that the Lutheran Indians be allowed to continue the work of the Leipzig – and the Goßner missions in Chota Nagpur in India, after the missions' German missionaries had been interned. Until the end of the First World War, he also worked for the Order of Saint John, a supra-confessional group working to help those orphaned by the war and – together with the Swedish Lutheran archbishop Nathan Söderblom, one of his closest lifelong friends – for the exchange of prisoners of war. In this work, he came to see internal Protestant divisions as more and more insignificant.

Inter-war years edit

 
Memorial, Chichester Cathedral

After the war, Bell became an initiator and promoter of the still-young ecumenical movement. In 1919, at the first postwar meeting of the World Council of Churches in the Netherlands, he successfully encouraged the establishment of a commission for religious and national minorities. At the world churches conference in Stockholm in 1925, he helped in the realisation of the "ecumenical advice for practical Christianity (Life and Work)".

External images
  [5] George Bell as Dean of Canterbury Cathedral.
  [6] George Bell as Bishop of Chichester.

From 1925 to 1929, Bell was Dean of Canterbury. During this time, he initiated the Canterbury Festival of the arts, with guest artists such as John Masefield, Gustav Holst, Dorothy L. Sayers and T. S. Eliot (whose 1935 drama Murder in the Cathedral was commissioned by Bell for the festival). Later Bell also received Mahatma Gandhi at Canterbury.

In 1929 Bell was appointed Bishop of Chichester. In this role he organised links between his diocese and of workers affected by the Great Depression. He also took part in the meetings of the National Union of Public Employees, where he was welcomed as "brother Bell".

Ally of the Confessing Church edit

From 1932 to 1934 he was the president of "Life and Work" at the ecumenical council in Geneva, at whose Berlin conference at the start of February 1933 he witnessed the Nazis' seizure of power at first hand.

After 1933, Bell became the most important international ally of the Confessing Church in Germany. In April 1933 he publicly expressed the international church's worries over the beginnings of the Nazis' antisemitic campaign in Germany, and in September that year carried a resolution protesting against the "Aryan paragraph" and its acceptance by parts of the German Evangelical Church (Deutsche Evangelische Kirche, or DEK). In November 1933 he first met Dietrich Bonhoeffer, who was in London for two years as representative of the foreign churches – the two became close friends, and Bonhoeffer often informed Bell of what was going on in Germany. Bell then made this information (and thus what was really happening in Germany) known to the public of Europe and America, for example through letters to The Times.

On 1 June 1934 he signed the Barmen Declaration, the foundational manifesto of the Confessing Church – it proclaimed that Christian belief and National Socialism were incompatible, and condemned pro-Nazi German Christianity as "false teaching", or heresy. Bell reported on 6 June to a gathering of the bishops of the Church of England and clarified the difference between confessing and rejecting, and the separation between a lawful and an illegitimate calling on Jesus Christ. This was the first reaction to the Declaration from the international church.

From 1934 Bell functioned as a president of "Life and Work", when Bonhoeffer and Karl Koch as praeses of the synod of the old-Prussian Ecclesiastical province of Westphalia were invited as representatives of the Confessing Church to the world ecumenical conference in Fanø. As a selected youth secretary, Bonhoeffer was responsible for the related world youth conference. At one morning service, he addressed world Christianity as an "ecumenical council" and called on it to rise against the threatened war. On Bell's suggestion and against protests from the representatives of the pro-Nazi DEK, the world conference expressed solidarity with the Confessing Church and its struggle and again exposed the Nazis' policies, including the concentration camps.

In 1936 Bell received the chair of the International Christian Committee for German Refugees, and in that role he especially supported Jewish Christians, who at that time were supported by neither Jewish nor Christian organizations. In order to help them to emigrate, he dispatched his sister-in-law Laura Livingstone to Berlin and Hamburg and occasionally let exiles live in his own home. In the same year, he printed a prayer in his diocesan newsletter for Jewish and "non-Aryan" Christians:

Pray for the Jews in Stepney, and Whitechapel, and Bethnal Green [where exiles were often accommodated]; pray for the German Jews; for all who suffer pain, who suffer shame, on account of their race. Pray for those who have a Jewish parent or grandparent and are Christian by belief...

Bell used his authority as a leader in the Ecumenical Movement and from 1938 as Lord Spiritual to influence public opinion in Britain and the Nazi authorities in Berlin, and back those persecuted by the Nazi regime. His public support is said to have contributed to Pastor Martin Niemöller's survival by making his imprisonment in Sachsenhausen in February 1938 (and later in Dachau) widely known in the British press and branded as an example of the Nazi regime's persecution of the church. Thus Hitler backed off from Niemöller's planned execution in 1938.

In winter 1938/39 he helped 90 persons, mainly pastors' families (e.g. Hans Ehrenberg from the Christuskirche at Bochum), to emigrate from Germany to Great Britain who were in danger from the regime and the 'official' church because they had Jewish ancestors or were opponents of the Nazi regime.

Second World War edit

During the war, Bell was involved in helping not only displaced persons and refugees who had fled the continent to England, but also interned Germans and British conscientious objectors. In 1940 he met with ecumenical friends in the Netherlands to unite the churches ready for a joint peace initiative after victory over Nazi Germany had been won. During the 1930s and 1940s, Bell encouraged engagement between the church and the arts. This included supporting the creation of murals by the German refugee and artist Hans Feibusch at St Elisabeth's Eastbourne and Bloomsbury Group members Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant at Berwick, East Sussex.

Opponent of area bombing edit

During the Second World War, Bell repeatedly condemned the Allied practice of area bombing. As a member of the House of Lords, he was a consistent parliamentary critic of area bombing along with Richard Stokes and Alfred Salter, Labour Party Members of Parliament in the House of Commons.

Even as early as 1939, he stated that the church should not be allowed to become simply a spiritual help to the state, but instead should be an advocate of peaceful international relations and make a stand against expulsion, enslavement and the destruction of morality. It should not be allowed to abandon these principles, ever ready to criticise retaliatory attacks or the bombing of civil populations. He also urged the European churches to remain critical of their own countries' ways of waging war. In November 1939 he published an article stating that the Church in wartime should not hesitate

to condemn the infliction of reprisals, or the bombing of civilian populations, by the military forces of its own nation. It should set itself against the propaganda of lies and hatred. It should be ready to encourage the resumption of friendly relations with the enemy nation. It should set its face against any war of extermination or enslavement, and any measures directly aimed to destroy the morale of a population.[7]

In 1941 in a letter to The Times, he called the bombing of unarmed women and children "barbarian" which would destroy the just cause for the war, thus openly criticising the Prime Minister's advocacy of such a bombing strategy. On 14 February 1943 – two years ahead of the Dresden raids – he urged the House of Lords to resist the War Cabinet's decision for area bombing, stating that it called into question all the humane and democratic values for which Britain had gone to war. In 1944, during debate, he again demanded the House of Lords to stop British area bombing of German cities such as Hamburg and Berlin as a disproportionate and illegal "policy of annihilation" and a crime against humanity, asking:

How can the War Cabinet fail to see that this progressive devastation of cities is threatening the roots of civilization?[8]

He did not have the support of senior bishops. The Archbishop of York replied to him in the House of Lords: "it is a lesser evil to bomb the war-loving Germans than to sacrifice the lives of our fellow countrymen..., or to delay the delivery of many now held in slavery".[9]

Supporter of the German resistance edit

As a close friend of the German pastor Dietrich Bonhoeffer Bell knew precise details of German plans to assassinate Adolf Hitler. On 1 June 1942, Bell met Bonhoeffer in neutral Sweden, where the latter was acting as a secret courier for information on the German resistance. This information included the names of the participants from the armed forces in the planned assassination attempt on Hitler and coup against the Nazi regime.

On his return, Bell passed this information on the German resistance movement on to Anthony Eden and tried to gain British government support for them. Bell also asked Eden, at the conspirators' request "to emphatically and publicly explain that the British government and its allies have no wish to enslave Germany, but only to remove Hitler, Himmler and their accessories" – in other words, to make a public declaration that the British would make a distinction between the Nazi regime and German people, so as the conspirators would be able to negotiate an armistice if they were successful. Yet after a month-long silence, Bell received a rough rebuttal, for the allies had concluded at the Casablanca conference to wage war until the unconditional surrender of Germany and to initiate area bombing. Such moves made Bell unpopular in some quarters. Noël Coward's 1943 song "Don't Let's Be Beastly to the Germans", which expressed hostility to any distinction between the Germans and the Nazis, commented "We might send [the Germans] out some Bishops as a form of lease and lend".

After the failure of the first attempt on Hitler's life and the arrest of some of the conspirators, Bell in vain tried to bring about a change in government attitudes to the German resistance. When the final failure came on 20 July 1944, Bell harshly criticised the British government as having made this failure a foregone conclusion, and reproached Eden for not sending help to the plotters in time despite having full knowledge of the plot.

Considered as Archbishop of Canterbury edit

In 1944 the Archbishop of Canterbury, William Temple, died after only two years in the post. Bell was considered a leading possibility to succeed him,[10] but it was Geoffrey Fisher, Bishop of London, who was appointed.[10] Bishops of the Church of England at the time were chosen, ultimately, by the British prime minister and it is known that Winston Churchill strongly disapproved of Bell's speeches against bombing.[11] It has been asserted that Bell would otherwise have been appointed,[11] but this is debatable; there is evidence that Temple had thought Fisher a likely successor anyway.[10] Bell's high posthumous reputation[12][13] may have coloured later opinion. For example, Archbishop Rowan Williams said in 2008 that he thought Bell would have made a better Archbishop of Canterbury than Fisher.[14]

Post-war edit

War crimes trials edit

Bell was opposed to the Nazi regime, but subscribed to an understanding of National Socialism that saw the Nazi regime as a freakish aberration from the norms of Western civilization, such that the traditional elites could not have been in any way involved in Nazi crimes. Hence when the British government brought Field Marshal Erich von Manstein to trial for war crimes committed on the Eastern Front in 1949, Bell emerged as one of Manstein's leading champions, stating that it was self-evident that a German Army officer like Manstein could not possibly be a war criminal.[15] For Bell, bringing to trial members of traditional elites in Germany like members of the officer corps and diplomatic corps was morally wrong as Bell simply could not accept that these men had been involved in Nazi crimes.[16] Bell was part of an informal group headed by General Sir Maurice Hankey who strongly opposed war crimes trials of German and Japanese leaders, and campaigned very energetically for the end of war crimes trials and for freedom for those convicted of war crimes like Manstein.[17] The British historian Tom Lawson wrote that Bell was principally concerned with the situation of the Confessing Church in Germany, not with the persecution of the German Jewish community in the 1930s which escalated into a campaign of genocide against all European Jews in the 1940s.[18] Like his ally and friend Pastor Martin Niemöller, what Bell objected to was not the antisemitism of the Nazi regime per se, but rather the attempt to apply the Aryan Paragraph to those German Jews who had converted to Christianity.[19] Lawson argued that this understanding of Nazism as more of an anti-Christian movement than an anti-Jewish movement meant that Anglican clergymen like Bell had only a "superficial" understanding of the Holocaust, which was not a major concern for him.[16]

Visionary for a reconciled Europe edit

A supporter of Protestant ecumenism, Bell hoped after the war for a Europe united by common Christian values.[20] Bell saw the Soviet Union as the principal enemy of Europe, which for him was an "Asian" nation that was not part of the "European family", calling for an Anglo-German alliance to be the cornerstone of a post-war Europe.[21]

Critic of expulsions edit

Bell was also one of the first British bishops to protest against the inhumane treatment of approximately 14 million Silesian, Pomeranian, East Prussian and Sudeten Germans expelled from their homes in Eastern Europe. Around 15 August 1945, he signed an open letter of protest in The Spectator, and signed another protest to a London daily newspaper on 12 September that year alongside Bertrand Russell, the British publisher Victor Gollancz and others.[citation needed]

Nuclear disarmament and the Cold War edit

In the 1950s Bell opposed the atomic arms race and supported many Christian initiatives of the time opposed to the Cold War. In the last years of his life, he became acquainted with Giovanni Montini in Milan through his ecumenical contacts, who in 1963 became Pope Paul VI and brought the Second Vatican Council to its conclusion.

Child abuse allegations edit

In 1995, 37 years after Bell's death, a complaint was made to the then Bishop of Chichester, Eric Kemp, alleging that Bell had sexually abused a girl during the 1940s and 1950s.[22] The complaint was not passed on to police until a second complaint was made to the office of Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury, in 2013, 18 years after the first complaint had been made and 55 years after Bell's death.[22] This was a time of intense public concern over sexual abuse within the Church of England and especially in Chichester Diocese.[23]: 21–22 

In September 2015 the diocese paid compensation to the woman and Martin Warner, the Bishop of Chichester, issued a formal apology to her the following month.[22] This led to a major controversy, as people who respected Bell's legacy found the claims to be incredible, and found the Church's apparent acceptance of them to be unjust.[24][25] Due to the controversy, in February 2016 the woman spoke publicly for the first time under the pseudonym "Carol", in an interview with the Brighton Argus, saying that she was sexually abused from the age of five until her family moved away when she was nine.[26]

In June 2016 the Church of England announced that it would hold an independent review of the procedure used to investigate the church's handling of the allegations (not the truth of the allegations themselves) and in November it announced that Lord Carlile QC would be the reviewer.[27][28][29] Carlile submitted his report to the Church of England in mid-October and on 15 December 2017 the church published it.[23][27]

Carlile found that "there was a rush to judgment: The church, feeling it should be both supportive of the complainant and transparent in its dealings, failed to engage in a process which would also give proper consideration to the rights of the bishop."[27] The report also found that the available evidence did not suggest there would have been "a realistic prospect of conviction" in court, the standard that prosecutors in England and Wales use in deciding whether to pursue a case.[27]

The Church of England released a statement with the report, in which it apologized to Bell's relatives for the way it investigated child abuse claims made against him, acknowledged the mistakes highlighted by the report, and promised to implement all except one of its recommendations.[25][27][30] Archbishop Welby rejected calls to state that the investigation had cleared Bell's name and said that the allegations were handled as a civil matter, not a criminal one.[31]

In late January 2018 the Church of England's national safeguarding team issued a statement saying it had passed 'fresh information' on to Sussex Police that it had recently received concerning Bishop Bell. In April 2018 Sussex Police stated that a proportionate investigation had been carried out to clarify the circumstances. As there were no safeguarding issues and Bell had been dead for sixty years the matter was now closed as far as the Police are concerned.[32]

In March 2018, the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse began examining the handling of allegations of sexual abuse in the diocese of Chichester, including this matter, which it said would unfold over two years.[33] In January 2019 the Church's National Safeguarding Team announced that new allegations by a "range of people", following publication of the Carlile Report, had been reviewed by ecclesiastical lawyer Timothy Briden whose terms of reference did not permit him to investigate the original complaint. He concluded that: "Concentrating exclusively upon the allegations remitted to me, I have decided that they were unfounded".[34] Archbishop Justin Welby apologised for mistakes made after the original allegation while also stating that the original allegation cannot be "ignored or swept under the carpet".[35]

In November 2021, Justin Welby retracted his previous claim that there was a "significant cloud" over Bell's reputation, and announced that a statue of him would be erected on the west front of Canterbury Cathedral.[36]

Veneration edit

George Bell is honoured with a commemoration in the Church of England on 3 October.[37]

Works edit

Primary works edit

  • "A Brief Sketch of the Church of England", 1929
  • "Life of Archbishop Randall Davidson." Biography, 1952 (3rd Edition) London OUP
  • "Christianity and World Order", 1940
  • "The Background of the Hitler Plot", in: Contemporary Review 10, London 1945
  • "The Church and Humanity", 1946 (contains: "The Church's Function in Wartime." November 1939)
  • "The Task of the Churches in Germany", 1947
  • "Christian Unity: The Anglican Position", 1948
  • "The Kingship of Christ: The Story of the World Council of Churches", 1954
  • "Die Kirche und die Widerstandsbewegung (Politisch-historische Vorlesungsreihe der Universität Göttingen)", in: Evangelische Theologie (Zeitschrift) 7, 1957.

Edited (together with J. O. Cobham):

  • "The Significance of the Barmen Declaration for the Oecumenical Church", London 1943.

Secondary works edit

  • Franz Hildebrandt (Ed.), 'And other Pastors of thy Flock': a German tribute to the Bishop of Chichester, Cambridge, 1942
  • Ronald C. D. Jasper: "George Bell, Bishop of Chichester." Oxford University Press, 1967.
  • Kenneth Slack: "George Bell". SCM Book Club 204, 1971
  • Eberhard Bethge: "Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Eine Biographie." Christian Kaiser Verlag München, 1978, ISBN 3-459-01182-3
  • Jaakko Rusama: "Unity and Compassion. Moral issues in the life and thought of George K.A. Bell." Helsinki 1986. ISBN 951-95207-6-7.
  • Annegret Winkler-Nehls / Andreas Nehls: "They find themselves between the upper and the nether millstones". Bischof Bells Nachlass zum Problem nichtarischer Flüchtlinge, 1933–1939. Eine Dokumentation. Beiträge zur Diakoniewissenschaft 152, Heidelberg 1991.
  • Edwin Robertson: "Unshakeable Friend. George Bell and the German Churches". London: CCBI 1995. ISBN 0-85169-234-6.
  • Andrew Chandler: "Brethren in Adversity. Bishop George Bell, The Church of England and the Crisis of German Protestants, 1933–1939". Woodbridge 1997.
  • Stephen A. Garrett: "Ethics and Airpower in World War II. The British Bombing of German Cities." New York 1997
  • Paul Foster (Ed.): "Bell of Chichester: A Prophetic Bishop." Otter Memorial Paper No. 17, February 2004, ISBN 0-948765-84-4
  • Jeremy Haselock: "George Kennedy Allen Bell, Bishop of Chichester and Pastoral Liturgist." Studia Liturgica Vol 35, 2005.
  • Lawson, Tom (2006). The Church of England and the Holocaust : Christianity, memory and Nazism. Woodbridge, UK: Boydell & Brewer. ISBN 1-84383-219-4. OCLC 64966225.
  • Peter Raina: "George Bell: The greatest churchman – a portrait in letters." London: Churches Together in Britain and Ireland 2006. ISBN 0-85169-332-6 & ISBN 0-85169-334-2.
  • "George Bell, Bishop of Chichester, on the Morality of War". Anglican and Episcopal History 58 (1989): 498–509.
  • Peter Webster, 'George Bell, John Masefield and "The Coming of Christ": context and significance', Humanitas. The Journal of the George Bell Institute, 10;2 (2009). Available online in SAS-Space
  • Chandler, Andrew (2016). George Bell, Bishop of Chichester: Church, State and Resistance in the Age of Dictatorship. Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. ISBN 9780802872272. LCCN 2015038505.
  • http://www.spartacus-educational.com/GERbellG.htm
  • http://www.joric.com/Conspiracy/Bell.htm
  • George Bell in the Dictionary of National Biography (subscription required)

References edit

  1. ^ "Church Times: "Obituary: Barbara Whitley", 1 January 2021". Retrieved 2 January 2021.
  2. ^ Oxford University Calendar 1913, Oxford : Clarendon Press, 1913, pp.152, 208.
  3. ^ Oxford University Calendar 1913, Oxford : Clarendon Press, 1913, p.99.
  4. ^ Who Was Who, 1951–60, London : A. & C. Black, 2nd. ed., 1964, p.87.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 December 2012. Retrieved 2013-01-24.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 17 October 2012. Retrieved 25 January 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  7. ^ Paul Johnson, A History of Christianity, Macmillan, 1976, quoted on page 493.
  8. ^ George Kennedy Allen Bell: The Church and Humanity (1939–1946), Green Longmans 1946, p. 140
  9. ^ Maynard, Bennett and the Pathfinders (1996) p198
  10. ^ a b c Webster, Alan (2004). "Fisher, Geoffrey Francis, Baron Fisher of Lambeth (1887–1972), archbishop of Canterbury". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/31108. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  11. ^ a b Chandler and Hein, p. 45
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 10 October 2010. Retrieved 2010-09-04.
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on 17 November 2010. Retrieved 2010-09-04.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 17 November 2010. Retrieved 2010-09-04.
  15. ^ Lawson 2006, p. 159-160.
  16. ^ a b Lawson 2006, p. 168.
  17. ^ Lawson 2006, p. 150.
  18. ^ Lawson 2006, p. 35.
  19. ^ Lawson 2006, p. 38-39.
  20. ^ Lawson 2006, p. 131.
  21. ^ Lawson 2006, p. 157.
  22. ^ a b c "Bishop of Chichester George Bell's sex abuse victim gets compensation". BBC News. 22 October 2015. Retrieved 22 October 2015.
  23. ^ a b "Bishop George Bell: The Independent Review" (PDF). Church of England. 15 December 2017. p. 44. Retrieved 29 July 2018
  24. ^ . The George Bell Group. Archived from the original on 29 January 2022. Retrieved 29 January 2020.
  25. ^ a b Sherwood, Harriet (15 December 2017). "Anglican church 'rushed to judgment' in George Bell child abuse case". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 January 2018.
  26. ^ "Victim describes how she was abused by bishop George Bell". The Guardian. 3 February 2016. Retrieved 7 February 2016.
  27. ^ a b c d e Cowell, Alan (15 December 2017). "Church of England Unfair to Dead Bishop, Abuse Inquiry Finds". New York Times. Retrieved 1 August 2018.
  28. ^ "Lord Carlile named as independent reviewer in George Bell case". Church of England. 22 November 2016. Retrieved 22 November 2016.
  29. ^ "Bishop George Bell case: Lord Carlile to lead review". BBC News. 23 November 2016. Retrieved 27 November 2016.
  30. ^ "Church apology over Bishop George Bell abuse inquiry". BBC News. 15 December 2017. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  31. ^ "'Abuse' bishop not to be cleared". BBC News. 2018.
  32. ^ Rudgard, Olivia (22 April 2018). "Bishop George Bell investigation dropped by Sussex Police". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 27 April 2018.
  33. ^ Church of England faces 'deep shame' at child abuse inquiry, The Guardian, 2 March 2018, "This month’s hearings will focus on abuse in the diocese of Chichester, where there have been multiple allegations of sexual abuse, some dating back many years".
  34. ^ (PDF). Church of England. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 February 2022. Retrieved 2 July 2019.
  35. ^ "Bishop Bell statue to be installed at Canterbury". BBC. 26 January 2019.Retrieved 1 February 2019
  36. ^ "Personal statement from Archbishop Justin Welby on Bishop George Bell". The Archbishop of Canterbury. 17 November 2021. Retrieved 18 November 2021.
  37. ^ "The Calendar". The Church of England. Retrieved 8 April 2021.

Sources edit

  • Chandler, Andrew; David Hein (2012). Archbishop Fisher, 1945–1961. The Archbishops of Canterbury. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-4094-1233-5.

External links edit

  • Bell's papers are held at Lambeth Palace Library


george, bell, bishop, other, people, named, george, bell, george, bell, disambiguation, george, kennedy, allen, bell, february, 1883, october, 1958, anglican, theologian, dean, canterbury, bishop, chichester, member, house, lords, pioneer, ecumenical, movement. For other people named George Bell see George Bell disambiguation George Kennedy Allen Bell 4 February 1883 3 October 1958 was an Anglican theologian Dean of Canterbury Bishop of Chichester member of the House of Lords and a pioneer of the ecumenical movement The Right ReverendGeorge BellBishop of ChichesterBell in 1910ProvinceCanterburyDioceseChichesterInstalled11 June 1929Term ended3 October 1958PredecessorWinfrid BurrowsSuccessorRoger WilsonOther post s Dean of Canterbury 1925 1929 Member House of Lords 1937 1958 OrdersOrdination1907 deacon Consecrationc 1929Personal detailsBorn 1883 02 04 4 February 1883Hayling Island Hampshire EnglandDied3 October 1958 1958 10 03 aged 75 BuriedChichester CathedralNationalityBritishDenominationAnglicanParentsJames Allen BellSarah Georgina MegawSpouseHenrietta Livingstone married 1918 Alma materChrist Church OxfordWells Theological College Contents 1 Early career 2 Inter war years 2 1 Ally of the Confessing Church 3 Second World War 3 1 Opponent of area bombing 3 2 Supporter of the German resistance 3 3 Considered as Archbishop of Canterbury 4 Post war 4 1 War crimes trials 4 2 Visionary for a reconciled Europe 4 3 Critic of expulsions 4 4 Nuclear disarmament and the Cold War 5 Child abuse allegations 6 Veneration 7 Works 7 1 Primary works 7 2 Secondary works 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksEarly career editBell was born in Hayling Island Hampshire as the eldest child of Sarah Georgina Megaw and her husband James Allen Bell the vicar of the Island and later a canon at Norwich Cathedral His sister Margorie married Cecil Wood Bishop of Melanesia 1912 19 1 He was elected as a Queen s Scholar at Westminster School in 1896 From there he was elected to a scholarship at Christ Church Oxford where he gained a First in Classical Moderations in 1903 and a Second in Literae Humaniores Greats in 1905 2 He won the Newdigate Prize for English verse in 1904 for his poem Delphi 3 After Oxford he attended Wells Theological College where he was first influenced by ecumenism and was ordained deacon at Ripon Cathedral in 1907 He went on to work as a curate for three years in the industrial slums of Leeds His role there was the Christian mission to industrial workers a third of whom were Indians and Africans from the British Empire citation needed During his time there he learned much from the Methodists whose connection between personal creed and social engagement he saw as an example to the Church of England In 1910 Bell returned to Christ Church Oxford as a student minister and as lecturer in Classics and English 1910 14 he was a Student Fellow 1911 14 4 Here too he was socially engaged as one of the founders of a cooperative for students and university members and sitting on the board of settlements and worker development through the Workers Educational Association WEA Bell s early career was shaped by his appointment in 1914 as chaplain to Archbishop Randall Davidson one of the key figures in twentieth century church history Bell subsequently wrote the standard biography of Davidson Bell received a special commission for international and inter denominational relations In this office he ensured in 1915 that the Lutheran Indians be allowed to continue the work of the Leipzig and the Gossner missions in Chota Nagpur in India after the missions German missionaries had been interned Until the end of the First World War he also worked for the Order of Saint John a supra confessional group working to help those orphaned by the war and together with the Swedish Lutheran archbishop Nathan Soderblom one of his closest lifelong friends for the exchange of prisoners of war In this work he came to see internal Protestant divisions as more and more insignificant Inter war years edit nbsp Memorial Chichester Cathedral After the war Bell became an initiator and promoter of the still young ecumenical movement In 1919 at the first postwar meeting of the World Council of Churches in the Netherlands he successfully encouraged the establishment of a commission for religious and national minorities At the world churches conference in Stockholm in 1925 he helped in the realisation of the ecumenical advice for practical Christianity Life and Work External images nbsp 5 George Bell as Dean of Canterbury Cathedral nbsp 6 George Bell as Bishop of Chichester From 1925 to 1929 Bell was Dean of Canterbury During this time he initiated the Canterbury Festival of the arts with guest artists such as John Masefield Gustav Holst Dorothy L Sayers and T S Eliot whose 1935 drama Murder in the Cathedral was commissioned by Bell for the festival Later Bell also received Mahatma Gandhi at Canterbury In 1929 Bell was appointed Bishop of Chichester In this role he organised links between his diocese and of workers affected by the Great Depression He also took part in the meetings of the National Union of Public Employees where he was welcomed as brother Bell Ally of the Confessing Church edit From 1932 to 1934 he was the president of Life and Work at the ecumenical council in Geneva at whose Berlin conference at the start of February 1933 he witnessed the Nazis seizure of power at first hand After 1933 Bell became the most important international ally of the Confessing Church in Germany In April 1933 he publicly expressed the international church s worries over the beginnings of the Nazis antisemitic campaign in Germany and in September that year carried a resolution protesting against the Aryan paragraph and its acceptance by parts of the German Evangelical Church Deutsche Evangelische Kirche or DEK In November 1933 he first met Dietrich Bonhoeffer who was in London for two years as representative of the foreign churches the two became close friends and Bonhoeffer often informed Bell of what was going on in Germany Bell then made this information and thus what was really happening in Germany known to the public of Europe and America for example through letters to The Times On 1 June 1934 he signed the Barmen Declaration the foundational manifesto of the Confessing Church it proclaimed that Christian belief and National Socialism were incompatible and condemned pro Nazi German Christianity as false teaching or heresy Bell reported on 6 June to a gathering of the bishops of the Church of England and clarified the difference between confessing and rejecting and the separation between a lawful and an illegitimate calling on Jesus Christ This was the first reaction to the Declaration from the international church From 1934 Bell functioned as a president of Life and Work when Bonhoeffer and Karl Koch as praeses of the synod of the old Prussian Ecclesiastical province of Westphalia were invited as representatives of the Confessing Church to the world ecumenical conference in Fano As a selected youth secretary Bonhoeffer was responsible for the related world youth conference At one morning service he addressed world Christianity as an ecumenical council and called on it to rise against the threatened war On Bell s suggestion and against protests from the representatives of the pro Nazi DEK the world conference expressed solidarity with the Confessing Church and its struggle and again exposed the Nazis policies including the concentration camps In 1936 Bell received the chair of the International Christian Committee for German Refugees and in that role he especially supported Jewish Christians who at that time were supported by neither Jewish nor Christian organizations In order to help them to emigrate he dispatched his sister in law Laura Livingstone to Berlin and Hamburg and occasionally let exiles live in his own home In the same year he printed a prayer in his diocesan newsletter for Jewish and non Aryan Christians Pray for the Jews in Stepney and Whitechapel and Bethnal Green where exiles were often accommodated pray for the German Jews for all who suffer pain who suffer shame on account of their race Pray for those who have a Jewish parent or grandparent and are Christian by belief Bell used his authority as a leader in the Ecumenical Movement and from 1938 as Lord Spiritual to influence public opinion in Britain and the Nazi authorities in Berlin and back those persecuted by the Nazi regime His public support is said to have contributed to Pastor Martin Niemoller s survival by making his imprisonment in Sachsenhausen in February 1938 and later in Dachau widely known in the British press and branded as an example of the Nazi regime s persecution of the church Thus Hitler backed off from Niemoller s planned execution in 1938 In winter 1938 39 he helped 90 persons mainly pastors families e g Hans Ehrenberg from the Christuskirche at Bochum to emigrate from Germany to Great Britain who were in danger from the regime and the official church because they had Jewish ancestors or were opponents of the Nazi regime Second World War editDuring the war Bell was involved in helping not only displaced persons and refugees who had fled the continent to England but also interned Germans and British conscientious objectors In 1940 he met with ecumenical friends in the Netherlands to unite the churches ready for a joint peace initiative after victory over Nazi Germany had been won During the 1930s and 1940s Bell encouraged engagement between the church and the arts This included supporting the creation of murals by the German refugee and artist Hans Feibusch at St Elisabeth s Eastbourne and Bloomsbury Group members Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant at Berwick East Sussex Opponent of area bombing edit During the Second World War Bell repeatedly condemned the Allied practice of area bombing As a member of the House of Lords he was a consistent parliamentary critic of area bombing along with Richard Stokes and Alfred Salter Labour Party Members of Parliament in the House of Commons Even as early as 1939 he stated that the church should not be allowed to become simply a spiritual help to the state but instead should be an advocate of peaceful international relations and make a stand against expulsion enslavement and the destruction of morality It should not be allowed to abandon these principles ever ready to criticise retaliatory attacks or the bombing of civil populations He also urged the European churches to remain critical of their own countries ways of waging war In November 1939 he published an article stating that the Church in wartime should not hesitate to condemn the infliction of reprisals or the bombing of civilian populations by the military forces of its own nation It should set itself against the propaganda of lies and hatred It should be ready to encourage the resumption of friendly relations with the enemy nation It should set its face against any war of extermination or enslavement and any measures directly aimed to destroy the morale of a population 7 In 1941 in a letter to The Times he called the bombing of unarmed women and children barbarian which would destroy the just cause for the war thus openly criticising the Prime Minister s advocacy of such a bombing strategy On 14 February 1943 two years ahead of the Dresden raids he urged the House of Lords to resist the War Cabinet s decision for area bombing stating that it called into question all the humane and democratic values for which Britain had gone to war In 1944 during debate he again demanded the House of Lords to stop British area bombing of German cities such as Hamburg and Berlin as a disproportionate and illegal policy of annihilation and a crime against humanity asking How can the War Cabinet fail to see that this progressive devastation of cities is threatening the roots of civilization 8 He did not have the support of senior bishops The Archbishop of York replied to him in the House of Lords it is a lesser evil to bomb the war loving Germans than to sacrifice the lives of our fellow countrymen or to delay the delivery of many now held in slavery 9 Supporter of the German resistance edit As a close friend of the German pastor Dietrich Bonhoeffer Bell knew precise details of German plans to assassinate Adolf Hitler On 1 June 1942 Bell met Bonhoeffer in neutral Sweden where the latter was acting as a secret courier for information on the German resistance This information included the names of the participants from the armed forces in the planned assassination attempt on Hitler and coup against the Nazi regime On his return Bell passed this information on the German resistance movement on to Anthony Eden and tried to gain British government support for them Bell also asked Eden at the conspirators request to emphatically and publicly explain that the British government and its allies have no wish to enslave Germany but only to remove Hitler Himmler and their accessories in other words to make a public declaration that the British would make a distinction between the Nazi regime and German people so as the conspirators would be able to negotiate an armistice if they were successful Yet after a month long silence Bell received a rough rebuttal for the allies had concluded at the Casablanca conference to wage war until the unconditional surrender of Germany and to initiate area bombing Such moves made Bell unpopular in some quarters Noel Coward s 1943 song Don t Let s Be Beastly to the Germans which expressed hostility to any distinction between the Germans and the Nazis commented We might send the Germans out some Bishops as a form of lease and lend After the failure of the first attempt on Hitler s life and the arrest of some of the conspirators Bell in vain tried to bring about a change in government attitudes to the German resistance When the final failure came on 20 July 1944 Bell harshly criticised the British government as having made this failure a foregone conclusion and reproached Eden for not sending help to the plotters in time despite having full knowledge of the plot Considered as Archbishop of Canterbury edit In 1944 the Archbishop of Canterbury William Temple died after only two years in the post Bell was considered a leading possibility to succeed him 10 but it was Geoffrey Fisher Bishop of London who was appointed 10 Bishops of the Church of England at the time were chosen ultimately by the British prime minister and it is known that Winston Churchill strongly disapproved of Bell s speeches against bombing 11 It has been asserted that Bell would otherwise have been appointed 11 but this is debatable there is evidence that Temple had thought Fisher a likely successor anyway 10 Bell s high posthumous reputation 12 13 may have coloured later opinion For example Archbishop Rowan Williams said in 2008 that he thought Bell would have made a better Archbishop of Canterbury than Fisher 14 Post war editWar crimes trials edit Bell was opposed to the Nazi regime but subscribed to an understanding of National Socialism that saw the Nazi regime as a freakish aberration from the norms of Western civilization such that the traditional elites could not have been in any way involved in Nazi crimes Hence when the British government brought Field Marshal Erich von Manstein to trial for war crimes committed on the Eastern Front in 1949 Bell emerged as one of Manstein s leading champions stating that it was self evident that a German Army officer like Manstein could not possibly be a war criminal 15 For Bell bringing to trial members of traditional elites in Germany like members of the officer corps and diplomatic corps was morally wrong as Bell simply could not accept that these men had been involved in Nazi crimes 16 Bell was part of an informal group headed by General Sir Maurice Hankey who strongly opposed war crimes trials of German and Japanese leaders and campaigned very energetically for the end of war crimes trials and for freedom for those convicted of war crimes like Manstein 17 The British historian Tom Lawson wrote that Bell was principally concerned with the situation of the Confessing Church in Germany not with the persecution of the German Jewish community in the 1930s which escalated into a campaign of genocide against all European Jews in the 1940s 18 Like his ally and friend Pastor Martin Niemoller what Bell objected to was not the antisemitism of the Nazi regime per se but rather the attempt to apply the Aryan Paragraph to those German Jews who had converted to Christianity 19 Lawson argued that this understanding of Nazism as more of an anti Christian movement than an anti Jewish movement meant that Anglican clergymen like Bell had only a superficial understanding of the Holocaust which was not a major concern for him 16 Visionary for a reconciled Europe edit A supporter of Protestant ecumenism Bell hoped after the war for a Europe united by common Christian values 20 Bell saw the Soviet Union as the principal enemy of Europe which for him was an Asian nation that was not part of the European family calling for an Anglo German alliance to be the cornerstone of a post war Europe 21 Critic of expulsions edit Bell was also one of the first British bishops to protest against the inhumane treatment of approximately 14 million Silesian Pomeranian East Prussian and Sudeten Germans expelled from their homes in Eastern Europe Around 15 August 1945 he signed an open letter of protest in The Spectator and signed another protest to a London daily newspaper on 12 September that year alongside Bertrand Russell the British publisher Victor Gollancz and others citation needed Nuclear disarmament and the Cold War edit In the 1950s Bell opposed the atomic arms race and supported many Christian initiatives of the time opposed to the Cold War In the last years of his life he became acquainted with Giovanni Montini in Milan through his ecumenical contacts who in 1963 became Pope Paul VI and brought the Second Vatican Council to its conclusion Child abuse allegations editIn 1995 37 years after Bell s death a complaint was made to the then Bishop of Chichester Eric Kemp alleging that Bell had sexually abused a girl during the 1940s and 1950s 22 The complaint was not passed on to police until a second complaint was made to the office of Justin Welby the Archbishop of Canterbury in 2013 18 years after the first complaint had been made and 55 years after Bell s death 22 This was a time of intense public concern over sexual abuse within the Church of England and especially in Chichester Diocese 23 21 22 In September 2015 the diocese paid compensation to the woman and Martin Warner the Bishop of Chichester issued a formal apology to her the following month 22 This led to a major controversy as people who respected Bell s legacy found the claims to be incredible and found the Church s apparent acceptance of them to be unjust 24 25 Due to the controversy in February 2016 the woman spoke publicly for the first time under the pseudonym Carol in an interview with the Brighton Argus saying that she was sexually abused from the age of five until her family moved away when she was nine 26 In June 2016 the Church of England announced that it would hold an independent review of the procedure used to investigate the church s handling of the allegations not the truth of the allegations themselves and in November it announced that Lord Carlile QC would be the reviewer 27 28 29 Carlile submitted his report to the Church of England in mid October and on 15 December 2017 the church published it 23 27 Carlile found that there was a rush to judgment The church feeling it should be both supportive of the complainant and transparent in its dealings failed to engage in a process which would also give proper consideration to the rights of the bishop 27 The report also found that the available evidence did not suggest there would have been a realistic prospect of conviction in court the standard that prosecutors in England and Wales use in deciding whether to pursue a case 27 The Church of England released a statement with the report in which it apologized to Bell s relatives for the way it investigated child abuse claims made against him acknowledged the mistakes highlighted by the report and promised to implement all except one of its recommendations 25 27 30 Archbishop Welby rejected calls to state that the investigation had cleared Bell s name and said that the allegations were handled as a civil matter not a criminal one 31 In late January 2018 the Church of England s national safeguarding team issued a statement saying it had passed fresh information on to Sussex Police that it had recently received concerning Bishop Bell In April 2018 Sussex Police stated that a proportionate investigation had been carried out to clarify the circumstances As there were no safeguarding issues and Bell had been dead for sixty years the matter was now closed as far as the Police are concerned 32 In March 2018 the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse began examining the handling of allegations of sexual abuse in the diocese of Chichester including this matter which it said would unfold over two years 33 In January 2019 the Church s National Safeguarding Team announced that new allegations by a range of people following publication of the Carlile Report had been reviewed by ecclesiastical lawyer Timothy Briden whose terms of reference did not permit him to investigate the original complaint He concluded that Concentrating exclusively upon the allegations remitted to me I have decided that they were unfounded 34 Archbishop Justin Welby apologised for mistakes made after the original allegation while also stating that the original allegation cannot be ignored or swept under the carpet 35 In November 2021 Justin Welby retracted his previous claim that there was a significant cloud over Bell s reputation and announced that a statue of him would be erected on the west front of Canterbury Cathedral 36 Veneration editGeorge Bell is honoured with a commemoration in the Church of England on 3 October 37 Works editPrimary works edit A Brief Sketch of the Church of England 1929 Life of Archbishop Randall Davidson Biography 1952 3rd Edition London OUP Christianity and World Order 1940 The Background of the Hitler Plot in Contemporary Review 10 London 1945 The Church and Humanity 1946 contains The Church s Function in Wartime November 1939 The Task of the Churches in Germany 1947 Christian Unity The Anglican Position 1948 The Kingship of Christ The Story of the World Council of Churches 1954 Die Kirche und die Widerstandsbewegung Politisch historische Vorlesungsreihe der Universitat Gottingen in Evangelische Theologie Zeitschrift 7 1957 Edited together with J O Cobham The Significance of the Barmen Declaration for the Oecumenical Church London 1943 Secondary works edit Franz Hildebrandt Ed And other Pastors of thy Flock a German tribute to the Bishop of Chichester Cambridge 1942 Ronald C D Jasper George Bell Bishop of Chichester Oxford University Press 1967 Kenneth Slack George Bell SCM Book Club 204 1971 Eberhard Bethge Dietrich Bonhoeffer Eine Biographie Christian Kaiser Verlag Munchen 1978 ISBN 3 459 01182 3 Jaakko Rusama Unity and Compassion Moral issues in the life and thought of George K A Bell Helsinki 1986 ISBN 951 95207 6 7 Annegret Winkler Nehls Andreas Nehls They find themselves between the upper and the nether millstones Bischof Bells Nachlass zum Problem nichtarischer Fluchtlinge 1933 1939 Eine Dokumentation Beitrage zur Diakoniewissenschaft 152 Heidelberg 1991 Edwin Robertson Unshakeable Friend George Bell and the German Churches London CCBI 1995 ISBN 0 85169 234 6 Andrew Chandler Brethren in Adversity Bishop George Bell The Church of England and the Crisis of German Protestants 1933 1939 Woodbridge 1997 Stephen A Garrett Ethics and Airpower in World War II The British Bombing of German Cities New York 1997 Paul Foster Ed Bell of Chichester A Prophetic Bishop Otter Memorial Paper No 17 February 2004 ISBN 0 948765 84 4 Jeremy Haselock George Kennedy Allen Bell Bishop of Chichester and Pastoral Liturgist Studia Liturgica Vol 35 2005 Lawson Tom 2006 The Church of England and the Holocaust Christianity memory and Nazism Woodbridge UK Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 1 84383 219 4 OCLC 64966225 Peter Raina George Bell The greatest churchman a portrait in letters London Churches Together in Britain and Ireland 2006 ISBN 0 85169 332 6 amp ISBN 0 85169 334 2 George Bell Bishop of Chichester on the Morality of War Anglican and Episcopal History 58 1989 498 509 Peter Webster George Bell John Masefield and The Coming of Christ context and significance Humanitas The Journal of the George Bell Institute 10 2 2009 Available online in SAS Space Chandler Andrew 2016 George Bell Bishop of Chichester Church State and Resistance in the Age of Dictatorship Grand Rapids MI Wm B Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 9780802872272 LCCN 2015038505 http www spartacus educational com GERbellG htm http www joric com Conspiracy Bell htm George Bell in the Dictionary of National Biography subscription required References edit Church Times Obituary Barbara Whitley 1 January 2021 Retrieved 2 January 2021 Oxford University Calendar 1913 Oxford Clarendon Press 1913 pp 152 208 Oxford University Calendar 1913 Oxford Clarendon Press 1913 p 99 Who Was Who 1951 60 London A amp C Black 2nd ed 1964 p 87 Archived copy Archived from the original on 8 December 2012 Retrieved 2013 01 24 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Archived copy Archived from the original on 17 October 2012 Retrieved 25 January 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Paul Johnson A History of Christianity Macmillan 1976 quoted on page 493 George Kennedy Allen Bell The Church and Humanity 1939 1946 Green Longmans 1946 p 140 Maynard Bennett and the Pathfinders 1996 p198 a b c Webster Alan 2004 Fisher Geoffrey Francis Baron Fisher of Lambeth 1887 1972 archbishop of Canterbury Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 31108 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b Chandler and Hein p 45 The Archbishop of Canterbury Sermon at Chichester Cathedral commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of the death of Bishop George Bell Archived from the original on 10 October 2010 Retrieved 2010 09 04 The Archbishop of Canterbury University of Chichester Bishop George Bell lecture Archived from the original on 17 November 2010 Retrieved 2010 09 04 The Archbishop of Canterbury University of Chichester Lecture Question and Answer session Archived from the original on 17 November 2010 Retrieved 2010 09 04 Lawson 2006 p 159 160 a b Lawson 2006 p 168 Lawson 2006 p 150 Lawson 2006 p 35 Lawson 2006 p 38 39 Lawson 2006 p 131 Lawson 2006 p 157 a b c Bishop of Chichester George Bell s sex abuse victim gets compensation BBC News 22 October 2015 Retrieved 22 October 2015 a b Bishop George Bell The Independent Review PDF Church of England 15 December 2017 p 44 Retrieved 29 July 2018 George Bell Group The George Bell Group Archived from the original on 29 January 2022 Retrieved 29 January 2020 a b Sherwood Harriet 15 December 2017 Anglican church rushed to judgment in George Bell child abuse case The Guardian Retrieved 2 January 2018 Victim describes how she was abused by bishop George Bell The Guardian 3 February 2016 Retrieved 7 February 2016 a b c d e Cowell Alan 15 December 2017 Church of England Unfair to Dead Bishop Abuse Inquiry Finds New York Times Retrieved 1 August 2018 Lord Carlile named as independent reviewer in George Bell case Church of England 22 November 2016 Retrieved 22 November 2016 Bishop George Bell case Lord Carlile to lead review BBC News 23 November 2016 Retrieved 27 November 2016 Church apology over Bishop George Bell abuse inquiry BBC News 15 December 2017 Retrieved 15 December 2017 Abuse bishop not to be cleared BBC News 2018 Rudgard Olivia 22 April 2018 Bishop George Bell investigation dropped by Sussex Police The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 27 April 2018 Church of England faces deep shame at child abuse inquiry The Guardian 2 March 2018 This month s hearings will focus on abuse in the diocese of Chichester where there have been multiple allegations of sexual abuse some dating back many years In the matter of the late Bishop George Bell PDF Church of England Archived from the original PDF on 4 February 2022 Retrieved 2 July 2019 Bishop Bell statue to be installed at Canterbury BBC 26 January 2019 Retrieved 1 February 2019 Personal statement from Archbishop Justin Welby on Bishop George Bell The Archbishop of Canterbury 17 November 2021 Retrieved 18 November 2021 The Calendar The Church of England Retrieved 8 April 2021 Sources editChandler Andrew David Hein 2012 Archbishop Fisher 1945 1961 The Archbishops of Canterbury London Routledge ISBN 978 1 4094 1233 5 nbsp Saints portalExternal links editBell s papers are held at Lambeth Palace Library Church of England titles Preceded byWinfrid Burrows Bishop of Chichester1929 1958 Succeeded byRoger Wilson Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Bell bishop amp oldid 1215424016, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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