Archbishop of Canterbury tells Pope he will get warm welcome if he visits UK

WorldPolitics
27 Apr 2026 • 5:42 PM MYT
The Independent
The Independent

The world’s most free-thinking newspaper

Archbishop of Canterbury tells Pope he will get warm welcome if he visits UK

The Archbishop of Canterbury has praised Pope Leo for speaking out about injustice after their historic meeting at the Vatican.

Dame Sarah Mullally also assured the pontiff of a “warm welcome” should he visit the UK.

The archbishop, the first woman to hold the highest ministry of the Church of England, met with the Pope at a time when both religious leaders have urged peace amid ongoing war.

Pope Leo and the Archbishop of Canterbury will speak and pray together (Alessandra Tarantino/AP) (AP)

The meeting comes just weeks after Donald Trump’s broadside at the Pope, who the US president branded “weak on crime, and terrible for foreign policy” and demanded the pontiff “focus on being a great Pope, not a politician”.

Dame Sarah has previously said she stood in solidarity with the Pope’s calls for peace.

On Monday, in her address to him after their private meeting at the Apostolic Palace – a building which includes the Pope’s private apartment and top administrative offices of the Holy See – she paid tribute to him for speaking “powerfully about the many injustices in our world today”.

She said: “Your Holiness, you have spoken powerfully about the many injustices in our world today, but you have spoken even more powerfully about hope. Your pilgrimage to Africa was full of life and joy.

“The world needed this message at this time – thank you. It reminded us that despite our sufferings, people long for life in all its fullness and countless people are working each day for this vision of the common good.”

Dame Sarah also told the Pope the King had “valued his recent visit, especially the shared prayer and spirit of fraternity it embodied”.

In October, the King and Pope Leo made history when they prayed together in a symbolic moment of unity for Anglicans and Roman Catholics across the globe.

It was the first time a British monarch, the Supreme Governor of the Church of England, had prayed at a public service with the Pope, head of the Catholic Church, since the Reformation.

The archbishop told the Pope: “Please be assured of a warm welcome from the Church of England should you honour the United Kingdom with a visit.”

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