Monday, February 23, 2026

Woke Church Names Married Lesbian as New Archbishop.

PULSE POINTS

❓WHAT HAPPENED: Cherry Vann has been appointed as the new Archbishop of Wales, becoming the first married lesbian woman to hold the position.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Cherry Vann, Andrew John, the Church in Wales, and the Anglican Communion.

📍WHEN & WHERE: Vann’s appointment follows Andrew John’s retirement last month, after serving three-and-a-half years as Archbishop.

💬KEY QUOTE: “The first thing I shall need to do is to ensure that the issues which have been raised in the last six months are properly addressed and that I work to bring healing and reconciliation, and to build a really good level of trust across the Church and the communities the Church serves.” – Cherry Vann

🎯IMPACT: Vann’s appointment follows a critical safeguarding review, and underlines official Anglicanism’s increasing estrangement from traditional Christianity.

IN FULL

The Anglican Church of Wales has named married lesbian priestess Cherry Vann the 15th Archbishop of Wales, becoming the first woman to hold the position. Originally from Leicester, England, Vann has served as the Bishop of Monmouth for five years and succeeds Andrew John, who retired last month after three and a half years in the role.

John’s departure followed the publication of a safeguarding review at Bangor Cathedral, which highlighted issues such as “a culture in which sexual boundaries seemed blurred” and “promiscuity was acceptable.” The report also noted inappropriate language, rude jokes, and innuendos within the choir, which left some members feeling unsafe or humiliated.

Vann was ordained as a deacon in 1989 and was among the first women to be ordained as a priest in the Church of England in 1994. She later served as Archdeacon of Rochdale in the Diocese of Manchester for 11 years before her appointment as Bishop of Monmouth.

In a statement, Vann acknowledged the challenges ahead, saying: “The first thing I shall need to do is to ensure that the issues which have been raised in the last six months are properly addressed and that I work to bring healing and reconciliation, and to build a really good level of trust across the Church and the communities the Church serves.”

Other Protestant European churches are also appointing homosexual women bishops, such as in Sweden, where lesbian Eva Brunne became the Lutheran Bishop of Stockholm in 2009. Brunne was the first ever openly lesbian bishop of a mainline denomination in the world.

Anglican churches are struggling to attract regular parishioners in the United Kingdom, with far more young people in England attending Roman Catholic Mass. If current projections hold, there will soon be more practicing Roman Catholics than Anglicans in England for the first time since the Protestant Reformation.

Join Pulse+ to comment below, and receive exclusive e-mail analyses.

show less
show more

Woke Church of England Archbishop Resigns Amid Child Sex Abuse Scandal.

A former Archbishop of Canterbury has resigned following allegations that he mishandled a sex abuse case involving an Anglican priest. George Carey, former Archbishop of Canterbury and spiritual head of the Church of England (CofE) from 1991 to 2002, stepped down following a BBC investigation that revealed he permitted a previously banned priest to resume his ministry.

His resignation letter, dated December 4, emphasized his lengthy service—beginning in 1962—and his approaching 90th birthday but did not address the specifics of the investigation. Reports state that Carey facilitated the reappointment of cleric David Tudor in 1994, five years after Tudor had been barred due to accusations of assaulting teenage girls.

The investigation suggested that Carey supported Tudor’s employment in a diocese, raising questions about his decision-making during his tenure.

Carey’s decision to resign coincides with pressure on Stephen Cottrell, who is scheduled to become the Church of England’s temporary figurehead. Cottrell, currently the Archbishop of York, allegedly allowed Tudor to continue in his position despite being aware of restrictions that prohibited Tudor from being alone with children. Additionally, Tudor had previously settled a compensation claim with one of his accusers.

In October, Tudor was permanently banned from the ministry after admitting to sexual involvement with two teenage girls in the 1980s, aged 15 and 16.

Carey’s resignation comes just weeks after Justin Welby resigned as Archbishop of Canterbury amid allegations that he covered up child sex abuse cases for a decade. A report claimed that Welby, a frequent World Economic Forum (WEF) attendee, declined to pursue a proper investigation despite knowing of the abuse since 2013.

Welby presided over a shift toward woke attitudes in the Anglican mother church, going as far as demanding “serious consequences” for anti-trans comments and giving tacit approval to homosexual activity.

Image via Paul Kagame.

show less
A former Archbishop of Canterbury has resigned following allegations that he mishandled a sex abuse case involving an Anglican priest. George Carey, former Archbishop of Canterbury and spiritual head of the Church of England (CofE) from 1991 to 2002, stepped down following a BBC investigation that revealed he permitted a previously banned priest to resume his ministry. show more

WEF-Linked Archbishop RESIGNS Amid Child Sex Abuse Claims.

The head cleric of the Church of England (CofE), the Archbishop of Canterbury, has resigned after allegations that he covered up child sex abuse cases for over a decade. Justin Welby announced his resignation on Tuesday, November 12.

The independent Makin Report disclosed that over 130 boys and young men were abused by John Smyth QC starting in the 1970s. The Iwerne Trust, which ran Christian camps affiliated with Smyth, failed to report the findings of an internal inquiry to authorities, allowing Smyth to continue his actions abroad. He died in 2018.

The Makin Report criticized Welby – a frequent contributor to the World Economic Forum – for not ensuring a proper investigation upon becoming aware of the abuse in 2013. Church leadership had known about the incidents since at least July of that year.

In response, three General Synod members initiated a petition demanding a change in leadership, amassing over 13,000 signatures. Bishop of Newcastle Helen-Ann Hartley also called on Welby to resign. Welby eventually wrote a letter to King Charles III, the Supreme Governor of the Church of England, seeking permission to resign.

WOKE CHURCH.

In recent years, the Church of England has become increasingly woke, with Brexit leader Nigel Farage saying he refuses to attend his local parish because it has capitulated to a far-left agenda.

For instance, St. Paul’s Cathedral in London published an article claiming Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill was a “white supremacist” last year.

The highly liberal church, which has openly lesbian bishops like the Bishop of Monmouth, has also caused conflict in the broader Anglican Communion. Conservative Anglicans, particularly in Africa, have split with the English “mother church,” no longer recognizing the Archbishop of Canterbury as “first among equals” over his support for same-sex blessings.

Others, including Gavin Ashenden, the former Chaplain to Queen Elizabeth II, have converted to the Roman Catholic Church in recent years.

Image by World Economic Forum/swiss-image.ch/Photo Valeriano Di Domenico.

show less
The head cleric of the Church of England (CofE), the Archbishop of Canterbury, has resigned after allegations that he covered up child sex abuse cases for over a decade. Justin Welby announced his resignation on Tuesday, November 12. show more

Lord’s Prayer ‘Problematic’ as ‘Our Father’ is Sexist, Says Archbishop.

A leading prelate in the Church of England suggests that the ‘Lord’s Prayer’ may be problematic and abusive because the words ‘our father’ are too ‘oppressively patriarchal.’

Stephen Cottrell, the Archbishop of York, which is the second-highest position in the Anglican church behind the Archbishop of Canterbury, said during his opening address about “unity” at the General Synod, the Church of England’s ruling body.

”I know the word ‘father’ is problematic for those whose experience of earthly fathers has been destructive and abusive, and for all of us who have laboured rather too much from an oppressively patriarchal grip on life.”

The Lord’s Prayer has been recited by Christians in countless languages and across the world for nearly 2,000 years. The Prayer appears twice in the New Testament: once in Matthew 6:9 and a second time in Luke 11:2.

The remarks have sparked an immediate backlash, with Canon Dr. Chris Sugden, chairman of the orthodox Anglican Mainstream group, publicly stating: “Is the Archbishop of York saying Jesus was wrong or that Jesus was not pastorally aware? I can’t believe he is doing that consciously…”

“It seems to be emblematic of the approach of some church leaders to take their cues from culture rather than scripture,” Dr. Sugden added.

The Archbishop’s comments were made following the Church’s last General Synod in February this year, in which leading members discussed whether to make God “gender neutral.” Only last week did Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury, announce that universities should see budget cuts if they  allow trans people to be insulted.

 

 

show less
A leading prelate in the Church of England suggests that the 'Lord's Prayer' may be problematic and abusive because the words 'our father' are too 'oppressively patriarchal.' show more