Mullally to Be Installed as First Female Archbishop of Canterbury

LONDON, March 25 (Reuters) – Sarah Mullally will be enthroned as the Church ⁠of ⁠England’s first female Archbishop of Canterbury and ⁠spiritual leader of 85 million Anglicans worldwide in a ceremony mixing tradition with global symbolism ​at Canterbury Cathedral on Wednesday.

Marking the start of her public ministry, the service will seat the former nurse and civil servant in the 13th-century ‌Chair of St Augustine before some ‌2,000 guests, including heir-to-the-throne Prince William and his wife Kate, Prime Minister Keir Starmer and religious leaders.

“It’s a huge moment for the ⁠Church… I don’t ⁠think any of us thought we’d have a female Archbishop this quickly,” Bishop Rachel ​Treweek, who was consecrated alongside Mullally in 2015 among the CoE’s first women bishops, told Reuters.

While Mullally’s appointment in October drew sharp criticism from a conservative grouping of Anglican churches in mostly African and Asian countries called Gafcon, the bloc this month abandoned earlier plans to name a ​parallel figurehead to Mullally, establishing a new council instead.

A representative body within the global Communion also scrapped a previous proposal ⁠for ⁠a rotating presidency following concerns ⁠about potential rivalry with ​the Archbishop of Canterbury.

Tensions between progressive and conservative Christians are not unique to Anglicanism, but the Archbishop’s role is largely ​symbolic and dependent on persuasion, unlike ⁠the Pope, who wields clear authority over Catholics worldwide.

“Anyone who became Archbishop of Canterbury, there would always be issues with some parts of the wide Anglican Communion … This isn’t new”, Treweek said.

CEREMONY TO REFLECT ANGLICANISM’S GLOBAL REACH

Recent Archbishops have struggled to balance the complexities of the Archbishop’s position and bridge divisions over LGBTQ+ and women’s leadership between England’s now more progressive church and more traditionalist provinces elsewhere.

Gafcon ⁠had rejected Mullally’s predecessor Justin Welby’s leadership over a CoE move to bless same-sex unions.

Mullally herself has ⁠emphasised unity in diversity, telling Reuters last October: “We’re a family with a shared root, and with any global church there is great diversity in it.”

On Wednesday, she will seek admission to the cathedral by knocking on its west door, wearing a mitre and a cope secured by a clasp modelled on the belt she wore as a National Health Service nurse. She will then be greeted by children.

Mullally will also wear a ring given to one of her predecessors, Michael Ramsey, by Pope Paul VI in 1966, a symbol of improving ties between Anglicans and Catholics, centuries after King Henry VIII split from Rome.

Prayers and readings in multiple languages, including Urdu, alongside African choruses will ⁠reflect the global reach of the Anglican Church during the service.

The Feast of the Annunciation – a celebration of the biblical account of an angel telling Mary she would be the mother of Jesus – falls on Wednesday this year and will be the major theme of the service.

Bishop Nicholas Baines said: “Archbishop Sarah offers the church an opportunity ​to create a different and more confident conversation. She brings the right gifts and experience for such ​a time as this.”

(Reporting by Muvija MEditing by Gareth Jones)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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