A Cardiff Wicker claimed thousands of pounds for him and his wife that he did not work and founded a “Breakaway” church, a tribunal found.
According to a church in the Wales Tribunal, 35 -year -old Ryan Four claimed money while overseeing the civil church in the city.
Mr. Four also installed an app, which allowed users to see the names of the children participating in the church, which included children in care, dissolving the rules.
He accepted the allegations and was ordered to go through training before returning to his role.
In a statement, Mr. Fore said that he accepted the responsibility for the allegations and regretted the mistakes made by him.
Mr. Fore moved to Wales in 2020 and a priest was built a week later, which was made in charge of Citizen Church in Cathese.
The church, which mainly completes students and a small congregation, was active on YouTube and Instagram.
But Mr. Fore, who was described as a “talented and charismatic young priest”, was claiming that he was not entitled to the disciplinary tribunal.
It was also found that “support, supervision and guidance” received from the church was “quite absent”.
Mr. Four resigned from the church in Wales in April 2024.
The tribunal found that Mr. Four paid himself £ 300 per month for “services for services”, and arranged for his wife to obtain £ 500 per month in the “Pastor Husband -wife allowance” between October 2020 and February 2024.
It was found that these were not “legitimate expenses”.
The tribunal also said that Mr. Fore installed a mobile app, which featured children’s names, including their church, including children’s care.
He said that despite “security risk” and data security issues, he refused to take the app down.
Mr. Four also installed a “Breakaway” church, the church in the cardif, which operated outside the church in Wales without consent.
The tribunal heard that the payment was not hidden to Mr. Fore, and he organized a “real, though misguided faith”, which he was allowed, “saw the same practices used in previous churches that he worked”.
Mr. Four told the Tribunal that he took “full responsibility” to allow the use of the app, and said that this period was “especially difficult times” for him and his wife.
He said that the establishment of an alternative church was a “hurting, vulnerability and a crisis of faith in the Anglican Communian” was an action “.
According to the tribunal judgment, Mr. Fore was asked to go to Wales during the final year of training.
It was found that he recalls the structured support of a formal curacy “because he was immediately placed in an inconsistency-tier post by the former Bishop of the landfoff”.
It also found the Kovid epidemic “limited opportunities for oversite and mentoring”.
The Tribunal contributed significantly to the Tribunal “Sun” in the Citizen Church, “Shree Four appeared before the Tribunal.
But it was found that even with “the failures of supervision, support and advice”, Mr. Fore was designed to ignore the rules – and chased the courses of action that they should realize that they would have brought the church into dislocation in Wales “.
It was found that he was “not enough prepared enough” and “support, supervision and guidance were quite absent” for her role in the Civil Church.
The tribunal ordered a “monsion”, a formal warning or caution for all allegations.
This means that Mr. Fore cannot hold a “relevant post” unless he has protected the training and supervised for two years.
Tribunal conclusions come in Wales after a few months after a few months.
In June Wells archbishop retired After the publication of reports highlighting the alleged financial mismanagement and security issues in Bangore Cathedral.
The then archbishop did not treat unfairly.
In a statement, Mr. Fore said that he accepted the responsibility for the allegations and regretted the mistakes made by him.
“It has been a painful season, but I have learned a lot through it,” he said.
He said: “After 20 months from the ministry – a season of reflection and development – I and my family are now ready and are eager to return to England and have returned to share Jesus’ hope that has held us the entire this season.”
On his Instagram page, Mr. Fore published the church in the Wales Judgment and a statement said that his family tolerated “gossip, rumors and online trolling”.
He said that the civil church “grew up, we grow rapidly, we found things wrong and we increased through it”.
He said: “I made mistakes, I do not make any excuse for them. I have learned from him too.”
In Wales, the church said it did not want to comment.