Paul Colton attended St Luke's National School, Douglas, Cork, Cork Grammar School and Ashton Comprehensive School, Cork, before being awarded a scholarship to the Lester B. Pearson United World College of the Pacific, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, where he completed the International Baccalaureate in 1978.[1] He studied law at University College Cork (part of the National University of Ireland) and was the first graduate of the university to be elected to a bishopric in the Church of Ireland.[2] He studied theology at Trinity College Dublin. In 1987, he obtained an MPhil degree in ecumenics from Trinity College Dublin, and in 2006, an LLM degree from Cardiff University. His law thesis was on the subject of legal definitions of church membership. In 2013 he creceived a PhD in law also from Cardiff University. His academic areas of interest are: church law, the law of the Church of Ireland, law within Anglicanism, the interface between the laws of religious communities and the laws of States (particularly in Ireland and Europe), human rights, education law, and charity law. In 2014 he was appointed as an honorary research fellow at Cardiff Law School of Cardiff University, and its Centre for Law and Religion.[3]
He is married to Susan Colton, who was deputy principal of a primary school until her retirement in 2022 and they have two adult sons.[6]
He was the first Church of Ireland bishop to openly support same-sex marriage.[7]
He is involved in education debates and in charity work.[1] He chairs the board of directors of Saint Luke's Charity, Cork, which focuses on the elderly and dementia sufferers.[8] He is also chairman of the board of governors of Midleton College.
At the episcopal ordination of Bishop Fintan Gavin as Catholic bishop of Cork and Ross in June 2019, Colton presented the crozier at Bishop Gavin's own request.[9]
As of June 2020, Colton is the longest-serving bishop of Cork Cloyne and Ross since bishop William Lyon in 1617 [10] and also the longest serving bishop still in office in the Anglican churches of Ireland, England, Scotland and Wales.[6]
On 27 February 2022, Colton was the invited preacher at the Patronal Eucharist in Lichfield Cathedral, to mark the 1,350th anniversary of the death of Saint Chad.
Publications
Colton is the author of almost a dozen book chapters, mostly in the area of the interface between religion and law.[1]