Our Policy

Privacy Policy

Data Privacy Notice

CARE Ministry

1. Your Personal Data – What Is It?

Personal data relates to a living individual who can be identified from that data. Identification can be by the information alone or in conjunction with any other information in the data controller’s possession or likely to come into such possession. The processing of personal data is governed by the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).

2. Who Are We?

Christ Ambassadors Reaching Everywhere (CARE) is the data controller (contact details below). This means it decides how your personal data is processed and for what purposes.

3. How Do We Process Your Personal Data?

CARE Ministry complies with its obligations under the GDPR by keeping personal data up to date; by storing and destroying it securely; by not collecting or retaining excessive amounts of data; by protecting personal data from loss, misuse, unauthorized access, and disclosure, and by ensuring that appropriate technical measures are in place to protect personal data.

We use your personal data for the following purposes:

  • To administer church records.
  • To promote the interests of the charity.
  • To liaise with anyone who serves at CARE Ministry.
  • To inform you of news, events, activities, and services connected to CARE Ministry or important information pertaining to the aims and objectives of CARE Ministry.
  • To help you integrate into CARE Ministry and keep track of your involvement in the church/relationship to the church.

Information We May Collect From You – We may collect and process the following information about you:

  • Your contact details.
  • Your attendance at events and meetings run or hosted by us.
  • Your participation in events or as a volunteer for our ministry.
  • Information contained in emails or other correspondence from you and records of telephone calls or meetings with you.
  • Your marital status, age, gender, and information about your immediate family.
  • Details of money that you give to the ministry.
  • Information contained in checks provided by the Disclosure & Barring Service.
  • Information that you share with us for the purposes of pastoral care, encouragement, training, and prayer.
  • Medical information where necessary to ensure that the care and hospitality that we provide for you are appropriate to your needs.

     

 

4. What Is the Legal Basis for Processing Your Personal Data?

Explicit consent of the data subject is needed so that we can keep you informed about news, events, activities, and services and keep you informed about connected events. Processing is necessary for carrying out legal obligations in relation to Gift Aid or under employment, social security, or social protection law, or a collective agreement. The processing relates only to those who have regular contact with CARE Ministry or have an interest in the ministry of CARE.

There is no disclosure to a third party without consent.

5. Sharing Your Personal Data

Your personal data will be treated as strictly confidential and will only be shared with authorized leaders in the ministry to make contact for the reasons outlined in section 3. We will only share your data with third parties with your consent.

6. How Long Do We Keep Your Personal Data?

We keep data on record for as long as deemed appropriate. There will be a biannual assessment made by the communications leader, and any personal data that is deemed as unnecessary will be erased. You can request that your personal data be erased from our central database at any time.

7. Your Rights and Your Personal Data

Unless subject to an exemption under the GDPR, you have the following rights with respect to your personal data:

  • The right to request a copy of your personal data that CARE Ministry holds about you.
  • The right to request that CARE Ministry corrects any personal data if it is found to be inaccurate or out of date.
  • The right to request your personal data is erased where it is no longer necessary for CARE Ministry to retain such data.
  • The right to withdraw your consent to the processing of your information at any time.
  • The right to request that the deacon over communications provides the data subject with his/her personal data and, where possible, to transmit that data directly to another data controller (known as the right to data portability) [Only applies where the processing is based on consent or is necessary for the performance of a contract with the data subject, and in either case, the data controller processes the data by automated means].
  • The right, where there is a dispute in relation to the accuracy or processing of your personal data, to request a restriction is placed on further processing.
  • The right to object to the processing of personal data.
  • The right to lodge a complaint with the Information Commissioner’s Office.

     

8. Further Processing

If we wish to use your personal data for a new purpose, not covered by this Data Protection Notice, then we will provide you with a new notice explaining this new use prior to commencing the processing and setting out the relevant purposes and processing conditions. Where and whenever necessary, we will seek your prior consent to the new processing.

9. Contact Details

To exercise all relevant rights, queries, or complaints, please contact the Director over Communications/Overseer of Data Protection at contact@careministry.org.

You can contact the Information Commissioner’s Office on 0303 123 1113 or via email at https://ico.org.uk/global/contact-us/email/ or at the Information Commissioner’s Office, Wycliffe House, Water Lane, Wilmslow, Cheshire, SK9 5AF.

Giving Policy

Every need of this ministry will be obtained through prayer. We may share our ministry vision with others and even make known to them the specific tasks that the Lord has laid on our hearts to do, but we may not raise support through prodding or manipulating our brothers and sisters in Christ. If this ministry is of the Lord, then He will be our Provider. If He is with us, He will direct His people to give, and we will prosper. If He is not with us, we will not and should not succeed.

We will never enlarge or sustain this ministry by contracting debts. This is contrary to both the letter and the spirit of the New Testament. In secret prayer and God helping us, we will carry the needs of this ministry to the Lord and act according to the direction that He gives.

We will not compete with other biblical evangelistic ministries but will use the resources that God has given to us to work in partnership with them. If the Lord directs, we will sacrifice our own goals and resources in order that other evangelistic works may be helped and the Kingdom of God increased.

Staff that are employed in this ministry are worthy of their labor. They should be afforded that which is required to live with dignity and to demonstrate that the Lord is gracious to supply the needs of His servants. To neglect their welfare would give an excuse for the ungodly to bring unjust accusations against the Lord, that He is either uncaring or unable to meet the needs of His servants. However, those involved in this ministry or whom this ministry supports shall not be given so much as to waste the Lord’s resources, acquire luxury, or live above those who so graciously give to the Lord’s work. To seek wealth, luxury, or ease of life in the ministry is to deny the call.

We will not measure the success of this ministry by the amount of money given. Rather, we will judge our usefulness to the Kingdom by our faithfulness to the Scriptures in doctrine and practice.

Our goal is not to enlarge ourselves or to become a key figure in the Great Commission but to be faithful and obedient stewards according to the grace that is given to us.

These financial principles are based in part upon “The Principles of the Institution,” established by George Muller to govern the activities of the Bristol orphanages (The Autobiography of George Muller, Whitaker House, 1984, pp. 59-61).

After much deliberation and prayer, we have determined that while it is not in keeping with the Scriptures to solicit funds by prodding or manipulating God’s people, it is also not proper to hide the needs of others from our supporters. Therefore, it is within God’s will for us to share our missionary vision and specific work with other Christians and publish reports of God’s faithful dealings with us.