Hundreds of disillusioned Anglicans are expected to defect to the Roman Catholic Church in time for Lent.
It follows a campaign by Father Keith Newton to leave the Church
of England in protest at its stance on the ordination of women and gay
clergy.
Fr Newton has encouraged Anglicans to join the Ordinariate - a
special branch of Catholicism established by the Pope - to welcome
protestant defectors.
The Ordinariate is a special structure established by Pope Benedict to welcome the disillusioned Anglicans.
The efforts of the Archbishop of Canterbury have not been enough to
stop hundreds of Anglo Catholics making the split that he had hoped to
avoid.
In mid-January it got off the ground with the conversion of three Anglican bishops who are now bringing others on board.
The Church of England says that 1,000 of its 13,000 parishes are opposed to the ordination of women.
At St. Barnabas church in Tunbridge Wells, the parish priest says
that a majority of his parishioners want to defect - and he's
considering going too.
Father Ed Tomlinson believes that traditionalists who oppose the ordination of women have been badly let down by Church leaders.
Yet the priest has been told by the diocese of Rochester that if he
and his followers leave they will no longer be allowed to hold services,
even on a shared basis, at St Barnabas - a nineteenth-century red-brick
church where First World War poet Siegfried Sassoon was baptised.
The firm stance has infuriated Fr Tomlinson, the vicar since 2006.
"The whole thing stinks to high heaven," he said.
"The Archdeacon made it abundantly clear that he does not want to
entertain the notion of shared worship space and that he would resist my
remaining here in any capacity."
The Ordinariate talks of recruiting members in waves with the first
beginning training at Lent and they hope many more will follow.
"A little acorn it may have been at the moment, it could grow into a mighty oak," one local church-goer said.
"Was this the thing that started to undo the reformation?"