Presiding Bishop Sean Rowe to join Anglican delegation at Pope Leo XIV’s inauguration

Newly elected Pope Leo XIV appears at the balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican, Thursday, May 8, 2025. Photo: Andrew Medichini/AP

[Episcopal News Service] Episcopal Church Presiding Bishop Sean Rowe will join other leaders from across the Anglican Communion as part of an Anglican delegation attending a May 18 worship service in the Vatican’s St. Peter’s Square inaugurating Pope Leo XIX as leader of the Roman Catholic Church.

The inauguration service will be held at 10 a.m. Sunday. Other members of the Anglican delegation include Archbishop of York Stephen Cottrell, Archbishop Thabo Makoba of the Anglican Church of Southern Africa, Archbishop John McDowell of the Church of Ireland and Archbishop Leonard Dawea of the Anglican Church of Melanesia. Dawea, a member of the standing committee of the Anglican Primates’ Meeting, also serves on the International Anglican-Roman Catholic Commission for Unity and Mission and will lead the delegation. Bishop Anthony Ball, director of the Anglican Centre in Rome and the archbishop of Canterbury’s representative to the Holy See, also will attend.

“The delegation will represent the prayers and support of Anglicans around the world as Pope Leo is inaugurated,” the Anglican Communion Office said in a news release. “The delegation will also embody the commitment of the Anglican Communion to walk in friendship and partnership with the Catholic Church.”

The Anglican Communion is a network of 42 autonomous, interdependent provinces worldwide, including The Episcopal Church, each with historical ties to the Church of England. An Anglican delegation also attended the April 26 funeral of Pope Francis in St. Peter’s Square.

Leo, the former Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost, was elected May 8 by the conclave of Roman Catholic cardinals. A native of Chicago, Illinois, the 69-year-old Leo is the first U.S.-born elected pope, though he has spent much of his career in ordained ministry outside the United States, including Peru. In 2023, Francis brought him to the Vatican, where he served as prefect of the church’s Dicastery for Bishops.

The Anglican delegation will be hosted in Rome by the Anglican Centre, which has worked since 1966 to strengthen ties between the Anglican Communion’s provinces and the Roman Catholic Church.

“On the day of his election, Pope Leo reminded us that Christ helps to build bridges with dialogue and encounter as we strive to be one people living in peace,” Ball, who also attended Francis’ funeral, said in the Anglican Communion Office’s news release. “At the Anglican Centre in Rome we renew our commitment to the ongoing dialogue between our traditions and our shared work, so that Christ may be known and glorified.”

Bishop Anthony Poggo, secretary-general of the Anglican Communion, also issued a statement about the inauguration.

“We pray for Pope Leo as he prepares for his inauguration,” Poggo said. “Along with representatives of other Christian world communions, we express our support and encouragement.”

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