This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/dec/18/sarah-mullally-appointed-bishop-of-london-church-of-england
The article has changed 7 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 1 | Version 2 |
---|---|
Sarah Mullally appointed bishop of London | Sarah Mullally appointed bishop of London |
(35 minutes later) | |
A woman has been appointed as the bishop of London, the number three position in the Church of England, in a move that will delight campaigners for gender equality but dismay conservatives in the church. | A woman has been appointed as the bishop of London, the number three position in the Church of England, in a move that will delight campaigners for gender equality but dismay conservatives in the church. |
Sarah Mullally, the bishop of Crediton, has been appointed the 133rd bishop of London, Downing Street announced. She will automatically take a seat in the House of Lords and the post-holder is traditionally dean of the royal chapels. | Sarah Mullally, the bishop of Crediton, has been appointed the 133rd bishop of London, Downing Street announced. She will automatically take a seat in the House of Lords and the post-holder is traditionally dean of the royal chapels. |
At a press conference at St Paul’s Cathedral, Mullally said she was “delighted and slightly terrified” at her appointment. | At a press conference at St Paul’s Cathedral, Mullally said she was “delighted and slightly terrified” at her appointment. |
Before becoming a priest, she worked as a nurse in NHS hospitals in the capital, including St Thomas’s and the Royal Marsden, and became chief nursing officer in 1999. She was ordained as a priest in 2001and made a dame in recognition of her services to nursing in 2005. | |
“It is a great honour to be nominated to the See of London. Having lived and worked in London for over 32 years, the thought of returning here is about returning home,” she said. | |
“I am often asked what it has been like to have had two careers, first in the NHS and now in the church. I prefer to think that I have always had one vocation: to follow Jesus Christ, to know him and to make him known, always seeking to live with compassion in the service of others, whether as a nurse, a priest, or a bishop. | “I am often asked what it has been like to have had two careers, first in the NHS and now in the church. I prefer to think that I have always had one vocation: to follow Jesus Christ, to know him and to make him known, always seeking to live with compassion in the service of others, whether as a nurse, a priest, or a bishop. |
“To be given the opportunity to do that now in this vibrant world city is a wonderful privilege.” | “To be given the opportunity to do that now in this vibrant world city is a wonderful privilege.” |
London is one of the few areas in which C of E congregations are growing, but it is a complex diocese with a formidable presence of conservatives, both from the Anglo-Catholic and evangelical traditions, who disapprove of women priests. | |
Mullally told reporters: “I respect those that cannot accept my ministry as a bishop because I am a woman.” | Mullally told reporters: “I respect those that cannot accept my ministry as a bishop because I am a woman.” |
She said the diocese was theologically diverse and that she would work with the bishops of Fulham and Maidstone, who minister to clergy and congregations who do not accept women priests. | |
The previous bishop of London, Richard Chartres, declined to ordain priests of either gender in order to avoid stirring controversy. Mullally became the first female bishop to lead an ordination service two years ago, when she ordained four clergy, three of whom were women. | |
Mullally is viewed as supportive of LGBT equality. The new bishop said London was a very diverse city and that she hoped everyone could find a spiritual home. She did, however, endorse current C of E teaching that marriage was a union between a man and woman, saying: “I absolutely support that.” | |
William Taylor, the rector of St Helen’s Bishopsgate, one of London’s largest churches, threatened to break from the C of E earlier this month if the next bishop of London had liberal views on sexuality. | |
Jayne Ozanne, a leading LGBT campaigner in the church, said she was “absolutely delighted with this extraordinarily brave, courageous and well-deserved appointment. | |
“Her appointment will ensure that the church takes seriously its commitment to learning from medicine and science, particularly in the areas of human sexuality and gender, where we have often been so ignorant. This is not just good news for the people of London, but very good news for us all.” | |
Mullally said the church needed more black and minority ethnic clergy and better representation of disabled people, as well as women, in order to better represent the communities it served. | Mullally said the church needed more black and minority ethnic clergy and better representation of disabled people, as well as women, in order to better represent the communities it served. |
She spoke of deprivation and inequality in London, where some people feel “marginalised, voiceless and angry”. | She spoke of deprivation and inequality in London, where some people feel “marginalised, voiceless and angry”. |
On safeguarding within the church, she said she would “seek to have a culture … where there is no place for abuse” and planned to work with survivors and help them flourish. | |
Gilo, a survivor whose surname is withheld at his request, and who has campaigned for independent oversight of safeguarding within the church, said: “I think survivors will hope this represents a long overdue turning point. | |
“As third most senior bishop, Dame Sarah Mullally can now take a far more decisive role in championing a compassionate and just response with real structural reformation at last. I hope she invites survivors, men and women, to her enthronement – not as protesters but as presences of the need for authentic justice and healing for all survivors.” | |
Mullally will be introduced to representatives from across the diocese at St Paul’s Cathedral on Monday morning before meeting staff and students at the Urswick secondary school in Hackney, where 70% of pupils are eligible for pupil premium funding. | |
As part of a tour of some of the parishes and projects in the diocese, Mullally will visit a food bank preparing Christmas packages at St John’s in Hoxton and will be introduced to leaders from the Tower Hamlets interfaith forum to discuss the challenges faced by London’s faith communities. | As part of a tour of some of the parishes and projects in the diocese, Mullally will visit a food bank preparing Christmas packages at St John’s in Hoxton and will be introduced to leaders from the Tower Hamlets interfaith forum to discuss the challenges faced by London’s faith communities. |