The Venerable Philip Down |
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Archdeacon of Ashford Joint Acting Archdeacon of Canterbury |
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Diocese | Diocese of Canterbury |
In office | 13 March 2011–present |
Predecessor | first archdeacon |
Other posts | Archdeacon of Maidstone (2002–2011) |
Orders | |
Ordination | 1982 (Uniting Church in Australia minister) 1989 (Anglican deacon and priest) |
Personal details | |
Born |
Australia |
28 March 1953
Nationality | Australian and/or British |
Denomination | Anglican (formerly Methodist) |
Parents | Keith and Ivy Down |
Spouse | Christine Oakley (m. 1972) |
Children | One son, three daughters |
Profession | Pathologist; academic (ethics) |
Alma mater | Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology |
Philip Roy Down (born 28 March 1953) is a senior priest in the Church of England and the first and current Archdeacon of Ashford. Since 6 December 2015, Down has also been Joint Acting Archdeacon of Canterbury, alongside Stephen Taylor, Archdeacon of Maidstone.
Down was born and raised in Australia – his parents were Keith and Ivy Down. From 1971 until 1976, he was a pathologist at the Austin Hospital, Melbourne. He received a Diploma in Applied Science from the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology in 1976. In 1972, he married Christine Oakley. They have one son and three daughters. Down moved to Macleod Pathology Services in Melbourne, where he remained until 1978. Afterwards, he studied for ordained ministry at the Melbourne College of Divinity, graduating BTheol and being ordained a Uniting Church in Australia minister in 1982. He became minister in Brighton, Victoria from 1983 until his emigration and was awarded a MTheol degree by the same college in 1988.
Upon moving to the United Kingdom, Down became an associate Methodist minister and part-time chaplain at Scunthorpe General Hospital until 1989, in which year he was ordained as a deacon and then a priest of the Church of England. He then became an assistant curate (until 1991) and then team vicar (until 1995) in Grimsby, during which time he was awarded his MA in 1993 by the University of Hull, where he lectured in medical ethics. While in North Lincolnshire, he chaired the Research Ethics Committee of the regional NHS trust.