Church of England names first female Archbishop of Canterbury

People photograph Archbishop of Canterbury-designate Sarah Mullally at Canterbury Cathedral, in Canterbury, Britain, October 3, 2025. REUTERS/Toby Melville

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The Church of England named Sarah Mullally on Friday as the
next Archbishop of Canterbury, the first woman to hold the 1,400-year-old
office, prompting immediate criticism from conservative Anglican churches in
Africa who oppose women bishops.
The 63-year-old former nurse will become the ceremonial head
of 85 million Anglicans worldwide and, like her predecessors, will
face a Communion divided between conservatives and more liberal Christians in
the West over the role of women in the Church and the acceptance of same-sex
couples.
While the appointment was welcomed by many religious leaders
in Britain, Laurent Mbanda, archbishop of Rwanda and chairman of a global
grouping of conservative Anglican churches, told Reuters that Mullally would
not be able to unite the Communion.
A bishop in Nigeria said the choice was "very
dangerous" because men should lead and women should follow. The Church of
England's evangelical wing also called for a halt to what it called a drift
away from scripture.
MULLALLY HAS
CHAMPIONED LIBERAL CAUSES
Bishop of London since 2018, Mullally has previously
championed blessings for same-sex couples, a major source of contention in the
global Anglican Communion. Homosexuality is outlawed in some African countries.
In an address in Canterbury Cathedral on Friday, Mullally
said she would seek to help every ministry to flourish, "whatever our
tradition".
On same-sex relationships, she told Reuters in an interview
that the Church of England and the broader Anglican Communion had long wrestled
with difficult issues.
Mullally said she wanted the Church to tackle the misuse of
power after sexual abuse scandals and safeguarding issues, and she condemned
rising antisemitism following an attack on a synagogue in Manchester
on Thursday which killed two men.
Reforms introduced more than a decade ago made it possible
for a woman to become the 106th Archbishop of Canterbury. It is one of the last
British institutions to have been run until now only by men.
But those reforms have been rejected by many churches in
Africa and Asia.
"Christ is the head of the Church, man is the head of
the family, and from creation God has never handed over the position of
leadership to woman," Nigeria's Funkuro Godrules Victor Amgbare told
Reuters in Abuja.
SAFEGUARDING
IMPROVEMENTS NEEDED
Mullally will replace Justin Welby, who resigned over a
child abuse cover-up scandal and who was criticised by some Anglicans for
taking an activist role on social issues.
She spoke in her cathedral address of the difficulties of an
age which "craves certainty and tribalism" and a country which is
wrestling with complex moral and political questions around migration and
communities feeling overlooked.
"Mindful of the horrific violence of yesterday’s attack
on a synagogue in Manchester, we are witnessing hatred that rises up through
fractures across our communities," she said, adding that it was her
Christian faith that gave her hope in a world which often feels "on the
brink".
Mullally is also an outspoken opponent of legislation
currently in parliament that would allow assisted dying, describing it as
"unworkable and unsafe" and saying it poses a risk to the most
vulnerable in society.
'IT'S ALL ABOUT
PEOPLE'
Mullally is a former cancer nurse who worked as England's
Chief Nursing Officer in the early 2000s. She was ordained as a priest in 2002
and became one of the first women to be consecrated as a bishop in the Church
of England in 2015.
The married mother of two adult children said there were
similarities between nursing and Christian ministry.
"It's all about people, and sitting with people during
the most difficult times in their lives," she once told a magazine.
Linda Woodhead, professor of theology and religious studies
at King’s College London, said the Church needed Mullally's strong management
skills.
"Her emphasis on unity, gentleness and strength is
exactly what the Church, and nation, needs right now," she said.
Reflecting the Church of England's status as the country's
established church, the appointment was announced by Prime Minister Keir
Starmer's office.
It was given formal consent by King Charles, the Supreme
Governor of the Church of England, a role established in the 16th century when
King Henry VIII broke from the Catholic Church.
David Pestell, 74, who heads a tourist guide group in
Canterbury, reflected on Mullally's predecessors.
"Some of them have been very good, some of them have
been pretty bad," he said. "Some of them have been very contentious,
and some of them ended up murdered. I hope it doesn't happen to this one. It's
delightful."
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