Clergy

Father Chrysostom

Born in Bristol in 1954, Fr. Chrysostom was brought to his Mother’s home, Ireland, to be baptized Charles Leonard at the age of two months. Raised in an Anglican family, his parents, Charles and Pat, ran a pub in Bristol and then, in Clevedon, Somerset. In 1973, he began studying Theology at Bristol University. Graduating in 1976, he trained for the Anglican ordained ministry at Ripon College, Cuddesdon (Oxford). In 1978 he married Mo (Maureen), a teacher, soon after his ordination. For sixteen years he served as an Anglican minister in Swindon, Bristol and Cornwall. Their daughter, Eleanor, who was born in Cornwall, is a police detective with Devon and Cornwall Police.
It was whilst in Cornwall Father’s long-standing interest in Orthodox Christianity had time to develop. Finding time for study, especially in the areas of Liturgy and Church History, he was increasingly convinced of the rightness of Orthodoxy and that, correspondingly, the whole western Christian tradition was, in varying degrees, evidently heterodox. As for Anglicanism itself, there was much in its history that might be admired but it was clearly losing its intellectual and moral power. From the Nineteen-Eighties, liberalism in particular was the driving force of the Church of England and with the advent of “women-priests” in 1994 the break was inevitable.
In the early Nineties Father Chrysostom formed the Pilgrimage to Orthodoxy movement that gathered together likeminded clergy. He was soon receiving post from all over Britain from fellow Anglican priests distressed at what had become of the Church of England. These were clergy for whom the allure of the Roman Church did not exist yet they felt at a loss as to what they might do. Many knew very little about the Orthodox Church.
In September 1994 Father Charles, as he still was, together with a party of other clergy from the movement, now led by Michael Harper, met His late Beatitude, Ignatius IV, Patriarch of Antioch in Paris. So began the history of the British Antiochian Deanery with the ordination of priests and the formation of Orthodox communities in various parts of the country.
Taking the name Chrysostom at his Chrismation in April 1995, he was ordained deacon in Paris in September of the same year and priest, a week later. Having left the Church of England, Father trained as a teacher, so was only able to minister in his free time. The small congregation in the Church of St. Petroc and St. Keyna never really developed with its rural location and several members moving out of the area. With the death of Fr. John Nield in Dorset, Fr. Chrysostom was asked to take over his parish at Athelhampton. This proved convenient for family and work reasons and with the help of his deacon, Fr. David, he ministered once again in a rural setting.
It was evident, however, that although it had a beautiful setting, such “hidden” Orthodoxy was not able to contact or attract many who might be searching for the truth of salvation. So, a mission was started in the Poole-Bournemouth conurbation, reflecting the missionary zeal of what had now become the Antiochian Orthodox Deanery of the United Kingdom and Ireland. With the ordination of Fr. Deacon David to the priesthood (to serve at Athelhampton), Fr. Chrysostom was appointed priest of the new community of St. Dunstan. Gathering in people of Orthodox background, as well as inquirers, the community has now become established as a parish with the Deanery. The Community, originally sited at the former St. Osmund’s church in Poole, worshipped for a time at the church hall belonging to the Roman Catholic parish of St. Edmund Campion at Castlepoint, Bournemouth through the kindness of Fr. Marcus Brisley. Eventually, the community was able to buy the former St. Osmund’s building and are actively working to restore it, both internally and externally. Fr. Chrysostom established the Bourenmouth-Poole Orthodox Christian Foundation as both a registered company and a registered charity to manage the care and maintenance of the building, now re named, St. Dunstan of Canterbury Orthodox Church. Ministering within the church at this time, though, was limited, as both father and his wife were employed in teaching.
Fr. Chrysostom retired from teaching in 2015 and has since been able to give his time to the full-time ministry at Poole and moreover, take a wider interest in the affairs of what has become the Antiochian Archdiocese.
Fr. Chrysostom envisages St. Dunstan’s parish as a centre for mission in the region of the ancient kingdom of Wessex, enabling as many as possible to find the ancient Christian faith of these islands, that Orthodoxy that had taken root here before the Great Schism of 1054. At the same time, the church is bringing in those in the area who are Orthodox by historical or ethnic background. Having acquired our own building the lengthy programme of restoration still continues on its way. To assist in this The Bournemouth Poole Orthodox Christian Foundation was established since 2011, a charitable company, which owns and runs the building. Alongside this, there is the Parish Committee, organising the parish community’s life.

With God’s blessing the number of people drawn to the parish has steadily increased, both those who attend the Divine Liturgy and those who seek the spiritual care of the clergy. With the ordination of two assistant priests now Fr. Chrysostom is aware that, If St. Dunstan’s is to become a centre for the propagation of Orthodox Christianity, the work of restoration must be completed, the parish set on a firm financial footing, and the continuation of the priestly ministry in the future, assured. It is therefore important for the parish to encourage suitable candidates to come forward to study Theology and offer themselves for the sacred ministry. These local circumstances, are to be seen alongside the broader picture and as the Nicene Creed states, there is only ONE, holy, Catholic and apostolic Church; anything else must be part of a fragmentation. In common with the whole Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of The British Isles and Ireland, this parish must hold to a single vision: the Re-hallowing of these islands, calling all into the unity of the One Faith in One Lord.

Father Filip Lommaert

Born 10/10/1961 in Menin, Belgium. As were most Belgians at the time, he was nominally brought up in the Roman Catholic faith, although in his teens he lapsed.
After his baccalaureate at the Royal Atheneum in Menin he joined the Belgian Armed Forces, training as a Medic, specialised in Hyperbaric Medicine. He achieved the rank of Staff Sergeant in the Cavalry, and Chief Petty Officer in the Navy, the two arms to which he was detached during the nearly 8 years he spent in the Armed Forces. Having met and married his wife, Annemieke, in Great Britain in 1986, he left the Armed Forces and moved to the UK, working as a Hyperbaric Technician, diver and H&S consultant on compressed air tunnelling projects, as well as accompanying his wife to Cyprus from 1991 to 1993, where she was on a temporary assignment.
In Cyprus he became interested in the Orthodox Church, and on their return to the UK he became a catechumen at the Greek Orthodox Church of Christ the Saviour in Welling, London, and was baptised in the Orthodox Church on 12 October 1997.
As compressed air tunnelling became unpopular in the mid-nineties, he worked for various insurance companies and public opinion polling companies, making use of his administrative skills. In 2002 he and his wife moved to Dorset, which they had visited many times, and in 2003 Filip started working for Dorset Police as police staff in the Custody Suite in Weymouth.
Upon finding the Orthodox Christian Parish of St Edward in Athelhampton, he became a parishioner there, and in 2008 was ordained Reader there.
In May 2012 he was ordained Sub-Deacon by Metropolitan (now His Beatitude) John X during the Antiochian Conference in Swanwick, Derbyshire.
At the end of 2014 he resigned from Dorset Police to work as a freelance translator, in order to be able to devote more time to the Church.
He was ordained a Deacon in May 2015 by Metropolitan Ignatius of Western Europe in the Orthodox Christian Parish of St Botolph, London, to continue serving at St Edward’s in Athelhampton. In October 2015, the newly enthroned Metropolitan Silouan of the British Isles and Ireland asked him to serve at the Orthodox Christian Church of St Dunstan of Canterbury in Poole, as the parish there was rapidly growing. On Sunday July 29, 2018, His Eminence Metropolitan Silouan visited the parish of Saint Dunstan, where he ordained Deacon Filip to the priesthood during the Hierarchical Liturgy. Father Filip serves as assistant priest to Father Chrysostom. During a subsequent visit in May 2019, His Eminence also awarded Fr Filip his epigonation so he can take confessions.