A Church of England bishop said on Friday that he was stepping down to enter into full communion with the Catholic Church.
The Rt. Rev. Jonathan Goodall, the Anglican bishop of Ebbsfleet, explained that he had taken the decision “after a long period of prayer.”
“I have arrived at the decision to step down as Bishop of Ebbsfleet, in order to be received into full communion with the Roman Catholic Church, only after a long period of prayer, which has been among the most testing periods of my life,” he said in a statement on Sept. 3, the feast of St. Gregory the Great, the sixth-century pope who launched a mission to convert England to Christianity.
“I trust you all to believe that I have made my decision as a way of saying yes to God’s present call and invitation, and not of saying no to what I have known and experienced in the Church of England, to which I owe such a deep debt.”
The 60-year-old bishop has served as bishop of Ebbsfleet since 2013, a role in which he acted as a provincial episcopal visitor, or “flying bishop,” supporting Church of England congregations that do not recognize women priests and bishops.
Goodall is the second bishop of Ebbsfleet to seek full communion with the Catholic Church. In 2010, the Rt. Rev. Andrew Burnham stepped down after 10 years in the post.
Full story at Catholic News Agency.
May God bless this good man and his family. It’s always encouraging when people follow the truth, Who is our Lord, even when led to unexpected places. Like most other Church of England “bishops” who’ve entered the Catholic Church, he realizes he will never again serve as a bishop. It’s infinitely more important to follow the truth than have any title or authority.
Praise the Lord. Everybody keep praying for full communion of all Christian believers in the Catholic Church.
Welcome home, Rt. Rev. Jonathan Goodall.
Always great to see people join Christ’s true Church. God bless him.
I don’t know why he would there’s no difference now between the Anglican church and the Roman Catholic Church all the same.
Valid Holy Orders and Sacraments would be a good place to start (when thinking of differences). I thought you were a Roman Catholic. If you don’t believe there’s a difference, you might as well attend an Anglican parish. Am I mistaken that, among other things, you want to receive the Body and Blood of our Lord, God and Savior Jesus Christ in the Eucharist?
I think it was some of RA anti-Catholic snark.