Mosley was ordained deacon in June 1940 and became assistant at the Church of St Barnabas in Cincinnati, Ohio. In May 1941 he was ordained priest and a year later he became rector of St Barnabas'. In 1944, he became director of the Department of Social Relations of the Diocese of Washington, while in 1948 he was appointed Dean of St John's Cathedral in Wilmington, Delaware, where he remained till 1953.[1]
Bishop
Mosley was elected Coadjutor Bishop of Delaware on June 29, 1953, during a special convention which took place at Immanuel Church in Wilmington, Delaware.[2] He was consecrated on October 28, 1953, in St John's Cathedral by Presiding Bishop Henry Knox Sherrill, co-consecrated by Henry Hobson of Southern Ohio and Arthur R. McKinstry of Delaware.[3] He succeeded as diocesan bishop on January 1, 1955, and was installed on January 16, 1955. He resigned his see on October 1, 1968. Between 1968 and 1970 he served as deputy of the Executive Council for overseas relations. He then served as president of Union Theological Seminary from 1970 to 1974, where he strove to increase the student body with minority people and women. He was the first president of the seminary to come from a non-Calvinist tradition. He also served for a time as Assistant Bishop of Pennsylvania from 1975 till 1982 and then as chairman of Planned Parenthood in Southeastern Pennsylvania from 1984 to 1987. Mosley was an early, vocal supporter of the civil rights movement in the 1950s and an early critic of the Vietnam War in the 1960s. He died of a heart attack in Pennsylvania Station, New York City whilst boarding a train for Philadelphia, on March 4, 1988.[4]
Personal and family life
He married Betty Mary Wall at St. Thomas Church, Whitemarsh, Fort Washington, PA, on 6 June 1942.