*** DEBUG START ***
*** DEBUG END ***

C of E needs a clear national policy on HIV

by
28 November 2025

As World AIDS Day approaches, Philip Baldwin calls for a new study to be commissioned that challenges stigma

Philip Baldwin, who lives with HIV, is a General Synod member

Philip Baldwin, who lives with HIV, is a General Synod member

WORLD AIDS DAY falls annually on 1 December. As an elected member of the General Synod, I reflect at this time on my own identity as a gay Christian man living with HIV. It is a time for remembering those whom we have lost to AIDS, but also for thinking about how the Church can confront the challenges posed by HIV nationally and throughout the Anglican Communion.

In 2024, there were an estimated 113,500 people living with HIV in the UK. The majority of new diagnoses were among straight women and men, and they disproportionately affected people of global-majority heritage. In 2024, there were 26.3 million people living with HIV in the World Health Organization African Region, and a total of 40.8 million globally. About 40 per cent of all people living with HIV in the UK are in London. These figures are taken from the Terrence Higgins Trust and UNAIDS websites.

Surprisingly, the last time that the Church of England commissioned a report or substantive policy document on HIV was in 2004, accompanied by a Synod debate. In 2002, the Anglican Primates met in Canterbury, where a statement was issued, which emphasised: “We now wish to make it clear that HIV/AIDS is not a punishment from God.”

On social media, in 2025, however, I am still told by various people that my HIV is a punishment from God.


THE 2004 report was ambitious in scope: a 57-page Synod paper looking at HIV across the Anglican Communion. It did not discuss HIV in England at all. Then, as now, there remains a moral panic about HIV in some faith communities, which potentially triggers speculation that HIV may have been acquired through pre-marital, extramarital, or queer sex, whereas the focus should be on supporting the individual without judgement.

There may also have been a reluctance to address the English context in 2004, because, back then, more than half of the diagnoses were among gay or bisexual men. This has created a spiritual and pastoral vacuum, as senior clergy stay comparatively quiet on the issue.

In terms of policy, the House of Bishops still refers to the ethos and recommendations of the 2004 report as guiding best practice in our churches today. This was so when I asked a question in the Synod in February 2022. Most English clergy below the age of 45 are probably unaware, however, that the 2004 document exists. It is not available online, although it can be obtained from the Lambeth Palace Library archives and is on some central databases.

Reflecting the medical knowledge of the time, the report discusses treatment and prevention separately, whereas now it is recognised that treatment is a form of prevention. Someone who is living with HIV and is on treatment cannot pass the virus on. This Undetectable equals Untransmittable (U=U) knowledge has been at the forefront of many HIV campaigns since 2018.

Antiretroviral medications, now even more advanced than in 2004, taken as a daily single pill or even injectable, mean that people living with HIV, if they have access to them, besides not passing the virus on — during pregnancy as well as at other times — can expect a normal lifespan.


WHAT should a new Church of England report include? It could discuss HIV in the Anglican Communion. In 2024, a UNAIDS report emphasised the central part that churches play globally in HIV awareness, testing, and care. It noted that, in some African countries, 30 to 70 per cent of all health-care services were provided by faith-based organisations.

Any study also needs to discuss HIV as it is experienced by English Christians in Church of England churches. Perhaps English churches can learn from what has been taking place in the Anglican Communion. A new study would be an opportunity to emphasise the part that English churches could play in testing and challenging stigma and to cite examples of lived experience from our congregations.

There has been high-profile activity in English churches in relation to HIV. This includes: the Revd Jide Macaulay’s participation in a series of Terrence Higgins Trust campaigns (Features, 26 November 2021); Southwark Cathedral’s HIV/AIDS chapel (Comment, 24 June 2022); Oasis Church, in Waterloo; St Anne’s, Soho; St Bride’s, Liverpool; and the work of Catholics for AIDS Prevention and Support, alongside numerous other examples.

In 2004, the Church of England was participating at the highest level in the global response to HIV. For World AIDS Day 2025, I would like the Church of England to consider having a clear national, as well as international, policy on HIV.

Philip Baldwin is a General Synod member for London diocese.

Browse Church and Charity jobs on the Church Times jobsite

Letters to the editor

Letters for publication should be sent to letters@churchtimes.co.uk.

Letters should be exclusive to the Church Times, and include a full postal address. Your name and address will appear below your letter unless requested otherwise.

Forthcoming Events

Church Times Festival of Preaching 2026

13 - 15 September 2026

An event to inspire, nurture, and celebrate all who are called to proclaim the gospel today.

tickets available now

English Mystics Series course

26 January - 25 May 2026

A short course at Sarum College.

tickets available now

 

This year, the Church Times is also delighted to sponsor two events: 

National Cathedrals Conference  Bristol, 18 to 21 May 2026

An event aimed at developing cathedrals as important places of prayer, inspiration, education, challenge, and debate. Find out more at nationalcathedralsconference.org

Public Faith Common Good  a day symposium at St John’s College Cambridge, Tuesday 21 July 2026

Speakers to include the former Archbishop of Canterbury Lord Williams; the Bishop of Chelmsford, Dr Guli Francis-Deqhani, Nick Spencer, and Anna Rowlands.

This event is free, but booking is required. Find out more at elydatabase.org/events

 

Visit our Events page for upcoming and past events

The Church Times Archive

Read reports from issues stretching back to 1863, search for your parish or see if any of the clergy you know get a mention.

FREE for Church Times subscribers.

Explore the archive

Welcome to the Church Times

To explore the Church Times website fully, please sign in or subscribe.

New to us? Non-subscribers can read up to four free articles a month. Simply sign up for a free account to receive the Church Times newsletter, plus exclusive offers and events, straight to your inbox. As a thank you for joining us, we are also currently offering a £5 discount for the Church House Bookshop online (valid for one order of £30 or more). See your welcome email for details.