Notes
- While
many figures in this booklet have been rounded, totals, percentages and
averages were calculated before rounding.
Hence row and column totals will not always agree exactly with the
sum of the stated amounts.
- Membership,
attendance and finance figures reported in this booklet have been collated
from the annual parochial returns completed each year by parishes on behalf
of Parochial Church Councils.
- Among
the 13,000 parishes of the Church of England there are around 600
Local Ecumenical Partnerships in roughly half of which there is a
congregation and a ministry shared between the Church of England and certain
other churches.
In such circumstances it is not always possible (or indeed desirable)
to isolate the Anglican component of the congregation. The parochial
statistics will therefore include a small element which may appear also in
the statistics of other churches.
- Figures
for cathedrals and the
Diocese in Europe are included as far as possible. Their inclusion
is most frequently inappropriate in the finance tables.
- The
figures for stipendiary clergy (which include those outside the
clergy share system) and for lay workers are based on statistics derived
from the central Church payroll.
- Details
of chaplains and other ministers working outside the parish
framework, and of non-stipendiary clergy, are based on statistics
derived from the database used to compile Crockford’s Clerical Directory.
Where possible they have been cross-referenced with material produced
by organising bodies.
- Unrestricted
income
is income that may be used by the PCC for general church expenses.
Restricted income is
income which may not be used for any purpose other than as specified by the
donor.
(Income which a PCC designates for a specified purpose is considered
to be unrestricted, since the PCC and not the donor is determining how it is
to be used.)
- Recurring
income
includes direct giving, other voluntary income and
any other recurring income.
One-off income includes
non-recurring grants, legacies, special appeals, insurance claims and the
sale of fixed assets.
- Recurring
expenditure
includes donations to charities, parish share/quota, clergy expenses, church
running costs, costs relating to trading, salaries and support costs.
Capital expenditure
includes major repairs, redecoration and new building work.
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