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Monday, December 22, 2014

Woman Bishop named by Church of England (Dec. 17, 2014) -- coverage in National Catholic Reporter online

Church of England names its first woman bishop

The Church of England announced on Wednesday (Dec. 17)  that Libby Lane, a parish priest from Hale, a small village outside Manchester, would become its first woman bishop, ending centuries of all-male leadership in this country's established church.
The announcement from Downing Street, the prime minister's official residence in London, came just a month after changes to canon law making it possible for women to assume the role of suffragan and diocesan bishops.
Lane, 48, a mother of two and the wife of an Anglican vicar, will be consecrated as the eighth bishop of Stockport, in the diocese of Chester, at a ceremony at York Cathedral on Jan. 26. Her appointment is as a suffragan bishop -- a bishop subordinate to a metropolitan or diocesan bishop.
Lane was one of the first women priests to be ordained, in 1992.
Only bishops in charge of dioceses -- there are 41 in England -- sit in the House of Lords, Parliament's Upper Chamber.
The first diocesan woman bishops are expected to be announced early next year to fill vacant posts in the dioceses of Oxford, Gloucester and Newcastle.
 

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