Father Geoff Hilton, a priest of the Salford Diocese in England, is pictured at the Red Lion Crown Green Bowling Green in Westhoughton in mid-June. Father Hilton will be serving as chaplain to athletes competing in the 2012 Olympic Games in London. CNS photo/Simon Caldwell

Deacons, nuns, laity and even athlete-priests to be Olympic chaplains

By  Simon Caldwell, Catholic News Service
  • June 30, 2012

MANCHESTER, England - Some people are simply gifted at sport; they excel at any challenge involving a ball, a stick or a physical contest nearly as soon as they turn their hands to it.

One such person is Father Geoff Hilton, a priest from Salford Diocese in the north of England, who will be serving as a chaplain to athletes competing in the 2012 Olympic Games in London.

It was because of his sporting prowess that the former police officer from Manchester was hand-picked to become one of 16 official Catholic chaplains appointed by the Olympics organizing committee.

Over the years, Father Hilton has distinguished himself as a badminton player on a national level -- losing in the men's final in Madrid when he was a seminarian at the English College in Valladolid -- as a soccer and a rugby league player, and later as a rugby league referee, working in two World Cups.

Now, at the age of 55, he takes time from his duties as pastor of St. Osmund Church, Bolton, to compete as a professional crown green bowler, a sport usually played only in the north of England.

For him, the chance to minister to athletes at the Olympic Village July 27-Aug. 12 was an opportunity too good to pass up.

"It won't happen again in my lifetime, the Olympics coming to England, and I'm very much looking forward to it," Father Hilton told Catholic News Service in a June 20 interview at the Red Lion bowling green in Westhoughton, near Manchester.

"I might have to give up my bowling for two-and-a-half weeks, but I can manage that," he said.

"I am interested in most sports," he continued, "and as a young man I was involved in a number of these sports."

He said that he would be available throughout the Olympics for "anyone who needs spiritual support," to celebrate Mass, hear confessions and confer blessings.

But the church should separately also offer pastoral support to athletes who have ended their careers, he added.

"I understand how a lot of athletes suffer from depression," he said. "It is a worry. A lot of them seem to be discarded after they finish their professional careers. People need to know that they need support when they're no long performing at the top level."

Overall, there will be 190 chaplains to serve followers of the world's religions at the Olympics. The number of Catholic chaplains is expected to increase to 24 when the teams of such countries as Italy and Poland bring their own chaplains with them.

At the Olympic Village in London, five rooms will be set aside for Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Hindu and Buddhist chaplaincies, while Sikhs, Zoroastrians, Baha'i and Jains will share a space.

The Catholic chaplains have been selected from a range of backgrounds and include priests, deacons, sisters and laypeople, who will work eight-hour shifts beginning a week before the games open and up to a week after they close.

Besides athletes from all over the world, they will offer spiritual support to more than 50,000 unpaid volunteers and about 25,000 journalists.

The chaplains include Deacon Roger Stone, who will be chaplain to the sailing and water sports on the south coast, and Frankie Mulgrew, a former stand-up comedian who will be ordained deacon in Birmingham, England, June 30 ahead of his priestly ordination next year.

Mulgrew, 34, told CNS in a June 27 telephone interview that he volunteered to be a chaplain because, as the son of the popular British comedian Jimmy Cricket, he had spent his life with people in the public eye and had an "affinity" for them.

The chaplains also include Servite Sister Petronia Williams, a nun based near the Olympic Park who usually works with Gypsies and Irish Travellers.

Sister Petronia told CNS in a June 21 telephone interview that she volunteered because she thought work as an Olympic chaplain would offer a "golden opportunity" to fulfill St. Paul's injunction to "welcome the stranger."

"I'm very excited," she said. "I presume I will be welcoming people, and I expect that some will want to pray with me before they race.

"I am looking forward to the business of meeting people from other countries and being able to welcome them and being friendly," she said. "That's an important part of our Christian tradition, to show hospitality and welcome."

Father Christopher Jamison, a Benedictine monk of Worth Abbey, southern England, is the only Catholic priest to serve as a chaplain to the 25,000 journalists who will converge on the Olympic media center for the games. He will be assisted by a Catholic laywoman.

"I am very pleased that the church is involved," Father Jamison told Catholic News Service in a June 26 telephone interview. "It (the Olympics) is a vast migration into the heart of London, and it would be quite wrong if the church did not reach out to support those who are coming here."

James Parker, the Catholic Church's executive coordinator for the 2012 Olympics, said he would be serving as "the first ever lay Catholic chaplain to the Paralympic Games."

"The picture on our TV screens can move rapidly from one Olympic event to another," he told CNS in a June 27 email. "The camera rarely covers the days and hours leading up to an athlete's event and never fully covers how an athlete might respond to losing.

"This could mean coming last, fourth, or even winning a 'mere silver or bronze medal' in place of the gold," Parker said. "The accumulation of literally years of training and the pressure of national expectations can come crashing down on thousands of people within a very short space of time. As chaplains, we need to be ready to respond."

Please support The Catholic Register

Unlike many media companies, The Catholic Register has never charged readers for access to the news and information on our website. We want to keep our award-winning journalism as widely available as possible. But we need your help.

For more than 125 years, The Register has been a trusted source of faith-based journalism. By making even a small donation you help ensure our future as an important voice in the Catholic Church. If you support the mission of Catholic journalism, please donate today. Thank you.

DONATE