CANTERBURY, UK — For the first time in more than 1,400 years, a woman has been named Archbishop of Canterbury, the senior figure in the Church of England and spiritual leader of the worldwide Anglican Communion. Sarah Mullally, a former cancer nurse turned bishop, ceremonially knocked on the doors of Canterbury Cathedral on Wednesday, marking a historic moment as they swung open to welcome her.
Although Mullally formally assumed the role in January, Wednesday’s ceremony marked the beginning of her public ministry. She becomes the first woman to hold a post once established by St Augustine in 597, when the pope sent him to convert Britain to Christianity. Mullally now leads an Anglican Communion encompassing more than 100 million members worldwide, including the Episcopal Church in the United States.

“We walk with God – trusting that God walks with us,” Mullally said in her first sermon. “Trusting that — in all that we face, in the sorrow and the challenges as much as in the joy and the delight — we do not walk alone.”
The service, held on the Feast of the Annunciation, was attended by senior figures including Prince William, Princess Catherine, and Prime Minister Keir Starmer, alongside representatives from the 42 churches of the Anglican Communion, as well as the Roman Catholic and Orthodox churches. The Feast of the Annunciation, celebrating Mary’s acceptance of her divine calling, was seen as symbolic of Mullally’s historic appointment.
Mullally’s journey to the top of the Church of England is remarkable. Born in 1962 in Woking, southwest London, she trained and worked as a nurse before becoming chief nursing officer for England at 37, the youngest person ever to hold the post. She began training for the ministry while still in that role, and in 2015 she became one of the first female bishops in the Church of England. She later served as Bishop of London before her election as Archbishop of Canterbury.
Her appointment represents a milestone in a church that ordained its first female priests only in 1994 and consecrated its first female bishop in 2015. “The stained glass ceiling is smashed,” said George Gross, a theology and monarchy expert at King’s College London.

Yet Mullally begins her tenure amid significant challenges. The Church of England and the wider Anglican Communion are divided over the role of women and the treatment of LGBTQ+ individuals. Mullally also inherits the task of addressing ongoing sexual abuse scandals, including criticism over the handling of allegations by her predecessor, Justin Welby, who resigned in November 2024.
In an interview this week, Mullally said the church was “seeking to become more trauma-informed, listening to survivors and victims of abuse.” She added: “Light should be shone on all our actions, and the more senior we are, the more light should be shone.”
During her sermon, Mullally highlighted the church’s ability to enact goodness through ordinary acts of kindness. “The church, through the ordinary lives of its people, contains so many extraordinary acts of love,” she said. “God’s people, offering a listening ear, a word of encouragement, or prayer for healing; offering food and shelter, sanctuary and welcome; in a world that so often seeks to divide us, tables to sit at and conversations to be shared.”

The ceremony also reflected the global reach of the Anglican Communion. Archbishop Albert Chama of Zambia prayed in Bemba, and Bishop Alba Sally Sue Hernández García of Mexico delivered a Bible reading in Spanish. The Kyrie was sung in Urdu, and an African choir performed along the nave, celebrating the diversity of the worldwide church.
Mullally’s appointment, however, has not been without controversy. Archbishop Henry Ndukuba of the Church of Nigeria described the election as “devastating” and insensitive to members of the Communion who do not accept female leadership. Despite these tensions, Wednesday’s service emphasized unity and a new chapter for the church.
Mullally’s personal story added a human touch to the ceremony. She secured her ceremonial cloak with a clasp fashioned from the buckle of her nursing belt, nodding to her previous life as a healthcare professional. At key moments of the service, she appeared visibly moved, and the congregation responded with prolonged applause.
Observers say Mullally’s elevation is historic not just for gender equality but for the visibility of women in global religious leadership. She now ranks alongside the most recognised Christian figures in the world, a position that carries both enormous responsibility and influence.

As she begins her public ministry, Mullally faces the complex task of guiding the Church of England through internal divisions while strengthening the Anglican Communion’s international cohesion. She must balance tradition with reform, addressing difficult social issues while maintaining the spiritual leadership role inherited from centuries of predecessors.
For millions of Anglicans, however, Mullally’s ascension is a moment of celebration and hope — a testament to persistence, faith, and the gradual transformation of a historic institution. Her appointment demonstrates that barriers, no matter how entrenched, can be broken, and that the Church of England is embracing a new era of leadership.
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