She used to treat the physically sick. And now she will treat the morally sick, a job men thought men did better.
It took fourteen hundred years to rubbish that myth created by a male-dominated  world.
…When the ethically anaemic couldn’t get away with bloodshed
Tackling the morally sick is far more challenging than tackling the physically sick. That’s because there are fewer patients in the world than crooks.
The morally sick are countless and are growing everyday and are painfully oppressive.
The former nurse, Sarah Mullally, has arrived on the scene at the right time. The world needs to be nursed to its original health, when men, women and children were safe at home and outside home; when extraordinary plans were made to keep them away from trouble; when the innocent enjoyed life and when the ethically anaemic couldn’t get away with bloodshed and when no one postponed their claim to happiness.
We expect her to bring back also the days when the sun rose to brighten our lives and not burn down our forests; when the wind blew to calm our tempers and not blow up our dwellings; when the seas flowed to reach us to our destinations and not drown our homes whenever they felt like. And when the preacher rightly had a definite say in the ways of the world, ranging from the safety of vulnerable humans to the preservation of environment.
A tree wouldn’t be cut without the consent of the preacher. Nowadays, entire groves disappear overnight empowering the subsequent foul air to play havoc with our lives.
Mullally acknowledged the “huge responsibility” of her role. She vowed to “confront the dynamics of power” that had led the church to cover up the abuse of dozens of boys and young men several decades ago. She cautioned that it would “not be easy,” due to a “history of safeguarding failures” that has “left a legacy of deep harm and mistrust” in the Church of England, which can trace its origins back to the Roman Empire. “We must all be willing to have light shone on our actions, regardless of our role in the church,” she said during an appearance at Canterbury Cathedral in southeast England following her appointment. “As Archbishop, my commitment will be to ensure that we continue to listen to survivors, care for the vulnerable, and foster a culture of safety and well-being for all,” Mullally added. Well, is it too much to expect a violence-free and an environmentally rich world from a leader of 85 million people? The answer is no.
Women, mother of men, always blamed the lack of authority for not being able to fix the problems of the world. Now they have it.