Bishop Sarah Mullally confirmed Archbishop of Canterbury

Bishop Sarah Mullally DBE was, this Wednesday (28 January), confirmed as the 106th Archbishop of Canterbury. The Confirmation of Election took place at St Paul’s Cathedral. She is the first woman to hold the office in its 1,400-year history.

The Confirmation of Election is a legal ceremony, set within a church service, at which Bishop Sarah, the Archbishop-Elect, legally became the Archbishop of Canterbury. Archbishop Sarah’s first act as Archbishop was to take up the Primatial Cross and give the blessing at the end of the service.

The Confirmation will be followed by an Installation service at Canterbury Cathedral in March, where Archbishop Sarah will preach her first sermon as Archbishop of Canterbury. Between her Confirmation of Election and Installation, Archbishop Sarah will pay homage to The King and meet with the leaders of other Christian denominations and other faiths in the UK. She will also co-preside at the Church of England’s General Synod in London in February, where she will deliver the Presidential Address. By tradition, Archbishop Sarah will begin her public ministry and full programme of public engagements following her Installation.

Bishop Sarah said: “It is an extraordinary and humbling privilege to have been called to be the 106th Archbishop of Canterbury. In this country and around the world, Anglican churches bring healing and hope to their communities. With God’s help, I will seek to guide Christ’s flock with calmness, consistency and compassion.

“These are times of division and uncertainty for our fractured world. I pray that we will offer space to break bread together and discover what we have in common – and I pledge myself to this ministry of hospitality.

“I want us to be a Church that always listens to the voices of those who have been ignored or overlooked, among them victims and survivors of church abuse who have often been let down. I am committed to equipping the Church to be a kind and safe place that cares for everyone, especially those who are vulnerable, as we rise to the challenge of God’s call to justice, equity, peace and the care of creation”.

Archbishop Stephen said: “As Archbishop Sarah takes up these new responsibilities and looks towards the beginning of her public ministry at her installation in Canterbury in March, it is a joy to be alongside her at the confirmation of her election as Archbishop of Canterbury. Sarah’s clarity of thinking, wisdom, grace and holiness is what the Church needs right now. I very much look forward to working with her and give thanks to God for his call in her life.”

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