Sarah Mullally, who becomes head of the Church of England next month, warned during a Christmas sermon on Thursday that national conversations over immigration were dividing British society.
Currently the Bishop of London, Mullally, 63, will on January 28 become the first woman to lead the centuries-old mother church of the world’s 85-million strong Anglican community.
In her Christmas sermon at St Paul’s Cathedral in London, the incoming Archbishop of Canterbury raised concerns about the hot-button issue of immigration.
“Our national conversations about immigration continue to divide us, when our common humanity should unite us,” she said.
She continued: “We who are Christians then hold fast to joy as an act of resistance.”
This, she said, was “the kind of joy that does not minimise suffering but meets it with courage”.
Immigration has become a central political issue in the United Kingdom.
In response to undocumented asylum seekers making the perilous journey across the Channel to Britain in small boats, Labour Prime Minister Keir Starmer has vowed to “smash the gangs” of people smugglers behind them.
So far he has struggled to reduce the number of migrants arriving in the country -- the vast majority of them legally -- but the issue is being exploited by the anti-immigration Reform party.
The rise in support for hard-right Reform mirrors advances by far-right parties across Europe.
Mullally is to succeed Justin Welby, who stepped down from the top post earlier this year over findings that the Church of England had covered up a 1970s case of serial sexual abuse against young boys and men.
The Church of England has been struggling to shake accusation of years of sex abuse cover-ups and safeguarding failures.
It is currently looking into a complaint from 2020 against Mullally’s handling of the allegations made by an individual known as ‘N’.
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