Mervyn Stockwood

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Mervyn Stockwood

Mervyn Stockwood (left) on Friday Night, Saturday Morning
Born Arthur Mervyn Stockwood
May 27, 1913(1913-05-27)
Bridgend, Wales
Died January 13, 1995 (aged 81)
Occupation Bishop of Southwark

Arthur Mervyn Stockwood (27 May 191313 January 1995) was Anglican Bishop of Southwark from 1959 to 1980.

Stockwood was born in Bridgend, Wales. Originally curate of St Matthew's, Moorfields, in 1955 he was appointed as vicar of Great St Mary's, Cambridge [1]. A flamboyant figure, he was for a time a Labour councillor.

Stockwood was encouraging of both the radical and conservative wings of the church. On the one hand he encouraged priests wearing jeans in public, marches against racism and the training of "worker priests" in the Southwark Ordination Course, yet he was also the first English diocesan bishop to preach at the National Pilgrimage to the shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham, of which he later became an honorary guardian.

Stockwood is particularly remembered for his appearance on the BBC chat show Friday Night, Saturday Morning, alongside Christian broadcaster Malcolm Muggeridge, arguing that the film Monty Python's Life of Brian was blasphemous. He memorably told John Cleese and Michael Palin at the end of the discussion that they would "get their thirty pieces of silver".

Stockwood was a celibate gay bishop. He in fact mildly rebuked a parish priest for blessing a same-sex union in the 1970s[citation needed].

In his autobiography On Chanctonbury Ring, Stockwood claimed to have had numerous paranormal experiences. [2] A supporter of the Churches' Fellowship for Psychical and Spiritual Study, he said of the matter "Our job is to examine the evidence without presupposition or jumping to conclusions. The weakness of the Church has been its refusal to consider the evidence and discuss it."

Michael De-la-Noy's biography of him, Mervyn Stockwood: A Lonely Life, paints him as a socialist who loved the trappings of wealth, privilege and royalty.

Religious titles
Preceded by
Bertram Fitzgerald Simpson
Bishop of Southwark
1959–1980
Succeeded by
Ronald Oliver Bowlby

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