Friday, 18 January 2008

Ed: Another manouevre towards the checkmate of Christianity in the public arena?

TRADITIONAL religious charities will not have to modernise their beliefs to prove that their work is of benefit to the public, the Charity Commission said this week.

On Wednesday, the Commission, the independent regulator for charitable activity in England and Wales, published guidance spelling out what steps charities, including religious charities and schools, must take to show how the public benefits.

Until the Charities Act 2006, religious charities were assumed to be of public benefit. Now they will have to be able to demonstrate that explicitly.
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