Sarah Mullally: the former nurse who will be archbishop of Canterbury
Briefly

Sarah Mullally: the former nurse who will be archbishop of Canterbury
"If passed, this bill will signal that we are a society that believes that some lives are not worth living."
"I am very respectful of those who, for theological reasons, cannot accept my role as a priest or a bishop. My belief is that church diversity throughout London should flourish and grow; everybody should be able to find a spiritual role."
"Nobody is outside the love of God."
Sarah Mullally, 63, is the 106th archbishop of Canterbury and former chief nursing officer for England. She received a damehood in 2005 for services to nursing and midwifery. She trained for ordained ministry from 1998 to 2001, studied theology at the University of Kent, and left nursing in 2004 to serve as an assistant curate in Battersea. She served as team rector at St Nicholas, Sutton, and as canon treasurer of Salisbury Cathedral before becoming bishop of London in 2018, the third most senior bishop in the Church of England who sits in the House of Lords. She ordains both men and women, supports inclusion of those who reject women's ordination, upholds the church's teaching on marriage between one man and one woman for life, has opposed the assisted dying bill, has criticized the Rwanda policy, and has described her views on abortion as favouring abortion rights.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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