In what is believed to be a first, a father and son, both former Anglican clergy, have been ordained as Catholic priests and are now working for the same archdiocese, Birmingham.
Father Dominic Cosslett, 36, and his father, Father Ron Cosslett, 70, were both ordained by Archbishop Vincent Nichols, pictured above by Peter Jennings. Nichols is the favourite to succeed Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor as Archbishop of Westminster when he steps down early next year and the latest ordination of Father Dominic on 20 December shows he is continuing in the tradition of true Catholicity to which the British church has so long been witness.
Father Dominic was formerly an Anglican priest at the Church of Christ the King at Lourdes in Coventry. His father, Father Ron Cosslett, aged 70, also a former Anglican priest, was ordained as a Catholic priest by Nichols 3 July 2005. He is now priest-in-charge harge at St Joseph’s, Darlaston in the West Midlands.
Father Dominic, who is not married, has from a young age felt called to a celibate lifestyle. “Although as an Anglican marriage was open to me the way I live my life is naturally a celibate one,” he told me yesterday. His mother converted five years ago at the same time as his father and his sister and their children followed them over about a year ago.
Father and son concelebrated, celebrating the eucharist at the older Father’s parish, for the first time at Christmas. [article]
The rest of the article has some nice quotes on the journey to Rome. I guess we have to thank Anglicanism for showing the silliness of the three branches theory, though it at least had some surface plausibility before. The new branches theory is that without the Pope as the Vicar of Christ and the magisterium you will keep branching off and branching off forever.
7 comments
It may be a first for the two to be working in the same diocese and be former anglican clergy but it is certainly not the first father and son team. We have a priest in our diocese, ordained about 9 years ago, whose father (a widower) has been a priest a while longer than that. He may be retired by now, I am not sure.
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Fr Steven Fisher
Ramsgate, Kent, UK
So i want to be a priest in the future but i’m still in high school i shool i supose to do now
So i want to be a priest in the future but i’m still in high school i shool i supose to do now
So i want to be a priest in the future but i’m still in high school i shool i supose to do now
So i want to be a priest in the future but i’m still in high school i shool i supose to do now
So i want to be a priest in the future but i’m still in high school i shool i supose to do now
So i want to be a priest in the future but i’m still in high school i shool i supose to do now