Fonds
Board for Mission and Unity
Catalogue reference: BMU
What’s it about?
This record is about the Board for Mission and Unity dating from 1972-1995.
Is it available online?
Maybe, but not on The National Archives website. This record is held at Lambeth Palace Library.
Can I see it in person?
Not at The National Archives, but you may be able to view it in person at Lambeth Palace Library.
Full description and record details
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Reference (The unique identifier to the record described, used to order and refer to it)
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BMU
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Title (The name of the record)
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Board for Mission and Unity
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Date (When the record was created)
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1972-1995
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Description (What the record is about)
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Papers of the Board, its Committees and Sub-Committees, and in relation to the work carried out under its Terms of Reference. Includes minutes of meetings, documents and papers circulated to Board or Committee members ahead of meetings, correspondence - both internal and external, and reports and articles used for background information on particular areas of interest. The collection also includes some material created by its predecessor, the Missionary and Ecumenical Council, with dates bakc to the 1940s, and of its successor, the Board of Mission, dating to 1995. Committees and Groups were often referred to in correspondence and minutes by acronym, the main ones are listed below. FOAG - Faith and Order Advisory Group ACCM - Advisory Council for the Church's Ministry ACRCR - Archbishop of Canterbury's Commission on Roman Catholic Relations CRCR - Committee on Roman Catholic Relations ARCIC - The Anglican-Roman Catholic International Commission IFCG - Inter-Faith Consultative Group CWMC - The Community of Men and Women in the Church ACUPA - Archbishop's Commission on Urban Priority Areas MTAG - Mission Theological Advisory Group PIM - Partners-In-Mission PWM - Partnership for World Mission NSBP - Not Strangers But Pilgrims (note: often there was overlap between the staff of BMU, will often more than one member working on a particular topic. This method of working is reflected by duplication of some material within certain files. However, while duplicate, the particular it was often the case that the particular staff member would add annotatations or alterations to the material in question.)
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Note (Additional information about the record)
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Records of BMU predecessor, Missionary and Ecumenical Council, can be found at OrderNo MEC Publications acquired with the BMU archive are held at the Church of England Record Centre but are awaiting inclusion in Lambeth Palace Library's printed books catalogue. The material includes both publications produced by BMU and external publications acquired by the Board for reference.
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Arrangement (Information about the filing sequence or logical order of the record)
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General International Standard Archival Description (ISAD[G]), 2nd edition, 1999.Largely retains the arrangement created by an archivist in the 1990s. This follows a departmental structure of the central Board and its sub-committees, and the papers of the Board Secretary and Assistant Secretary. Generally within series files are arranged chronologically.
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Held by (Who holds the record)
- Lambeth Palace Library
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Former department reference (Former identifier given by the originating creator)
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BMU
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Language (The language of the record)
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English
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Creator(s) (The creator of the record)
- Board for Mission and Unity
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Physical description (The amount and form of the record)
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3 volumes, 1513 files
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Access conditions (Information on conditions that restrict or affect access to the record)
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Material less than 30 years old has been closed in line with Data Protection Act (1998). This material will be released at the appropriate point.
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Administrative / biographical background (Historical or biographical information about the creator of the record and the context of its creation)
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Established to replace the Missionary and Ecumenical Council (MEC), the first meeting of the new Board took place at Church House, Westminster, London, on the 26 January 1972, with the Earl of March as Chair. At the meeting it was stated that the 'responsibilities of the new Board were considerably wider than those of the old Missionary and Ecumenical Council and more complex and technical', and the four broad areas of work were to be: mission at home; mission overseas; unity at home; and unity overseas. These aims were, later in 1972, extrapolated as below; a, To advise the General Synod and the dioceses on the Church's responsibility for mission and unity. b, To be the link between Synod and - the Anglican Consultative Council; - individual provinces and dioceses of the Anglican Communion; - United Churches incorporating former Anglican dioceses; - The missionary societies. c, To be the principal channel of communication between General Synod and - The World Council of Churches; - The Conference of European Churches; - The British Council of Churches; - All other Churches as home and abroad. d, (i) To be the link between the General Synod and the mission agencies and the Partnership for World Mission; (ii) To present the annual report of the Partnership for World Mission. e, To service committees and commissions engaged in unity discussion with other Churches. The Board was constituted of a Chairman and twenty members, with the Chair being a member of the General Synod.The remaining members consited of ten members drawn from General Synod, three members of the Partnership for World Mission, four persons chosen for their knowledge of mission and unity, and three members co-opted by the Board. Members held office for a fixed term of five years in line with Synod. The Board came into being at what was considered to be 'a time of crisis in ecumenical affairs' (BMU/8/73). Fuelled by boredom with questions of institutional church union, and loss of postion of the Church of England of prominence in the reunion movement, the 'crisis' was also magnified by the growing responsibility for mission to deal with the 'widespread quickening of interest in the person of Jesus and a fresh experience of the renewing power of the Holy Spirit'. It was also conceived to be the Board's duty that it should try and maintain a balance between the four aspects of its responsibilities, and towards this end it was thought a good idea that members specialized in one or other of the four aspects, which were: mission at home; mission overseas; unity at home; and unity overseas. Chairmen: - Rt. Hon. the Earl of March 1972-1977 - Bishop of Guildford, 1978-1982 - position vacant 1983 - Miss D. Wales, 1984-1988 - Bishop of Lichfield, 1989-1991 Secretaries: - Revd. P.B. Hinchliff, 1972 - Very Revd. John Arnold, 1972-1978 - Canon Martin A. Reardon, 1978-1989 - Canon Philip D. King, 1989-1991 Deputy Secretary: - Canon P.G. Bostock, 1972-1976 - Revd. R.R. Huddleson, 1976-1981 - Revd. I.T. Holdcroft, 1982-1986 Home Secretary: - Rev. Austin Masters, 1972-1978 - Rev. Keith Huxley, 1977-1983 - Canon Derek George Palmer, 1983-1987 - Canon C.J.V. Drummond, 1988-1991 Study Secretary: - Mrs M.D. Fraser, 1972-1982 - Mrs (Dr.) M. Tanner (from 1988-1989 Theological Secretary and 1990-1991 Deputy Secretary), 1983-1991 In 1991 the Board was renamed to become The Board of Mission.
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Publication note(s) (A note of publications related to the record)
- The material was appraised in line with the Lambeth Palace Library/Record Centre appraisal policy when cataloguing took place in 2014/2015. This catalogue was created following the generous awarding of a grant by the Andrew W Mellon Foundation via the National Cataloguing Grants Programme for Archives.
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Record URL
- https://beta.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/id/bd35ea17-1b9e-4563-935c-fb6bb640ed48/
Catalogue hierarchy
This record is held at Lambeth Palace Library
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Board for Mission and Unity