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Mullally to Be Installed as First Female Archbishop of Canterbury
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By Reuters
Published 39 minutes ago on
March 25, 2026

Archbishop of Canterbury Sarah Mullally reacts during an 87-mile pilgrimage from St Paul's Cathedral to Canterbury Cathedral ahead of her installation ceremony as Archbishop of Canterbury on March 25, in Aylesford, Britain, March 20, 2026. (Reuters File)

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Sarah Mullally will be enthroned on Wednesday 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.

“I recognise the significance of being the first female Archbishop,” she told BBC News in an interview before the service, adding that the ceremony would feature women’s voices.

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.

Bishop Philip Mounstephen told Reuters that the arrival of a woman in an “ancient office … older than the Crown” was a historic occasion.

“It does signal a huge change that has taken place in the life of the Church,” said Mounstephen, who will bless her as she is installed.

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.

Ceremony to Reflect Anglicanism’s Global Reach

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

A bishop from the Anglican Church in Kenya, which is aligned with Gafcon, struck a more conciliatory tone as he arrived at Canterbury.

“Even though we hold that this (same-sex blessings) is not acceptable, we want to argue it from within to have people see also the reason why we reached that conclusion,” Bishop Francis Omondi told Reuters.

Mullally herself has emphasized 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 M; Editing by Gareth Jones)

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