Peter Forster


Peter Robert Forster is a British retired Anglican bishop. He was the Bishop of Chester in the Church of England and a Lord Spiritual.

Early life and education

Born in Solihull, the son of Thomas Forster by his marriage to Edna Russell, Forster was educated at the town's Tudor Grange Grammar School. He stated in the House of Lords on 8 February 2016 that he had spent his gap year making Land Rover Defenders and was auto-enrolled into the TGWU. He studied at Merton College, Oxford, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in chemistry, promoted to Oxford Master of Arts in 1973. At the University of Edinburgh, he graduated as a Bachelor of Divinity in theology in 1977 and as a Doctor of Philosophy in 1985.

Ordained ministry

He was ordained a deacon at Petertide 1980 and a priest the next Petertide, both times by David Sheppard, Bishop of Liverpool, at Liverpool Cathedral. From 1980 to 1982, Forster was assistant curate of the Mossley Hill Parish Church in Liverpool. He was senior tutor at St John's College, Durham, from 1983 to 1991 and became the vicar of Beverley Minster in 1992.

Episcopal ministry

In 1996, Forster was appointed the 40th Bishop of Chester. He was consecrated a bishop during a service at York Minster, by David Hope, Archbishop of York, on 13 November 1996. He was enthroned on 11 January 1997 and in 2001 took his seat as a Lord Spiritual in the House of Lords.
In 2003, Forster raised controversy when he was investigated by the police for an alleged "hate speech" after suggesting that homosexual people should seek psychiatric treatment. However, no charges were made, and the police were satisfied that no offence had been committed.
He was one of nine bishops who signed a letter disagreeing with the decision of Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury, not to block the appointment of Jeffrey John as Bishop of Reading in 2003.
In 2012, amid controversy over the amount of expenses claimed by bishops for attending the House of Lords, it was revealed that Forster had claimed more than any other bishop in 2010/11. In that year he was a member of two select committees.
He had claimed £34,909 and had attended on 97 days.
In March 2019, he called for Parliament to agree to Theresa May's Brexit deal during a debate in the House of Lords.
In March 2019, Forster faced calls to resign following the cover-up of a child sex abuse scandal in the diocese. A priest who had been accused of sex offences 35 years earlier, wrote confidentially about the allegations in a letter to the diocese in 2009. Chester diocese failed to tell police, and allowed him to act as a retired priest for a further five years. The letter came to light during a police investigation in 2017 of a previous Bishop of Chester, Victor Whitsey, who has been named in abuse cases as a paedophile. Following a meeting with John Sentamu, Archbishop of York, Forster formally delegated all diocesan safeguarding responsibility to Keith Sinclair, Bishop of Birkenhead. Sir Roger Singleton CBE, interim director of the Church's National Safeguarding Team, instigated a Church Disciplinary Measure process against Forster, which can result in a tribunal if evidence of malpractice is found. The Bishop claimed that he acted in accordance with the policy guidance which applied in 2009, and vigorously contested the allegation by the Interim Safeguarding Director. The Church also announced plans for an independent review to identify any lessons that can be learned.
In April 2019, Forster announced that he would retire on 30 September 2019.

Personal life

Forster married Elisabeth Anne Stevenson in 1978, and they have four children. His brother-in-law, Kenneth Stevenson, was also a bishop.

Styles