On 23 October 2025, King Charles III and Queen Camilla visited the Vatican and joined Pope Leo in an ecumenical prayer service in the Sistine Chapel, in what was widely hailed as a historic moment of reconciliation between the Church of England and the Roman Catholic Church. The public rejoicing at this symbolic gesture is unsurprising; yet it also invites deeper scrutiny, especially from those who take seriously the constitutional, theological, and historical framework under which the British Crown operates.
One objection, which has already
been raised by some conservative Protestant voices, is that the King’s
participation in such a joint worship event may conflict with his coronation
oaths. Specifically, critics argue that by praying publicly with the Pope, the
spiritual head of the Roman Catholic Church, Charles may have breached his
solemn promise to “maintain … the Protestant Reformed Religion established by
law.”
The Coronation Oath and the King’s Religious
Duty
What the King swore
The British monarch, upon
coronation, takes an oath that includes a religious dimension: to uphold the
Protestant faith and the Church of England as established by law. The wording
is rooted in long tradition and statute. In the coronation liturgy of 2023, for
example, Charles pledged:
“Will you to the utmost of your
power maintain in the United Kingdom the Protestant Reformed Religion
established by law? Will you maintain and preserve inviolably the settlement of
the Church of England, and the doctrine, worship, discipline, and government
thereof, as by law established in England?”
Additionally, Charles had earlier
sworn the Accession Declaration Oath, in which he declared himself “a faithful
Protestant” and promised to uphold the statutes securing Protestant succession.
The constitutionally and
historically entrenched meaning of those promises is that the monarch must act
in a manner consistent with preserving the Protestant and Reformed character of
the Church of England, and resisting practices or alignments that might
undermine that identity.
Why the oath matters
The coronation oath is more than
mere symbolism. It is a binding moral and constitutional commitment. According
to constitutional precedent and theory, the monarch, in his role as Supreme
Governor of the Church of England, must avoid those acts which could compromise
the distinctiveness, doctrinal integrity, or legal settlement of the Church of
England. The oath further reflects the post-Reformation settlement in which the
Crown severed institutional allegiance to the Pope and asserted the Church of
England’s autonomy.
From that perspective, any act by
the monarch that creates or strengthens religious convergence, especially in a
liturgical or worship setting, with the Roman Catholic Church, risks
undermining the very separation from Rome that defines the Anglican
establishment.
Why the Meeting with Pope Leo May Have Violated
That Oath
Given the background, here is how
the meeting on 23 October might be seen as a violation of the King’s oath:
1. Public joint worship with the Pope blurs
lines of confessional identity
A state-sanctioned act of prayer
with the Pope, in the highly symbolic setting of the Sistine Chapel, is hardly
a neutral act. It publicly suggests a spiritual communion (or at least
affinity) between the monarch’s role in the Church of England and the head of
the Roman Catholic Church. That impression is particularly strong given the
historical antagonisms and doctrinal divisions that lie behind the Reformation.
By visibly sharing in worship,
the King arguably reduces the distance between Anglicanism and Catholicism,
undermining the “distinctive character” of the Protestant Reformed religion
that he swore to preserve. Critics might say that such a step is not an
innocuous gesture of goodwill but a departure from the strict confessional
boundary originally intended in the coronation oath.
2. It tacitly endorses Catholic ecclesiology and
papal authority (or reveals ambiguity)
The Pope is not merely a Religious
leader but the institutional head of the Roman Catholic Church, with claims to
doctrinal authority and jurisdiction (from the Catholic perspective) that
Protestants reject. When the monarch prays publicly with the Pope, even in an
ecumenical service, it can be construed as implicit acknowledgment or
validation of that Catholic claim or at least as a failure to repudiate it
clearly.
That is problematic under the
coronation oath, which presupposes that the monarch defends a Protestant
ecclesial order distinct from papal authority. In effect, the King’s conduct
may blur or fail to sufficiently resist the institutional claims of Roman
Catholicism, weakening the very distinction the oath was designed to protect.
3. It creates an appearance of favoritism or
preference incompatible with legal establishment
The Church of England is the
established church in England; the monarch holds a legal and ceremonial
relationship with it, and by law must support it. The optics of a monarch
publicly associating himself with the Catholic Church risk signaling preferential
treatment or legitimacy for the Catholic side over purely Protestant
traditions.
To many believers and church
members, that may feel like a shift in the monarchy’s religious neutrality
(within the framework of Anglican Protestantism). The oath demands that the
monarch “maintain … the doctrine, worship, discipline, and government … as by
law established.” A public alignment or convergence with the Catholic Church
could be argued to encroach on that legal establishment.
4. It departs from historical precedent and
traditional caution
Historically, British monarchs
since the Reformation have been very cautious (or even hostile) with respect to
overt cooperation with the papacy, in part because of fears of Catholic
influence or subversion. The symbolic and historical weight of that caution
should not be dismissed lightly. By contrast, Charles’s act is unprecedented in
hundreds of years. For traditionalists, that breach of precedent is itself
cause for alarm.
5. The oath is more than a statement: it carries
moral obligation
One might argue that the King’s
intentions were ecumenical, non-doctrinal, and meant to foster Christian unity.
But the oath does not permit broad disapplication of its demands in the name of
“good intentions.” The oath binds him to maintain Protestant identity and the
established church; his personal interest in ecumenism cannot override that
solemn commitment. In short, an oath is an oath; if a public act contradicts
it, the King risks failing it.
Objections and Counterarguments
A reasoned treatment must
acknowledge counterarguments:
- Ecumenism as a positive duty: Defenders
might argue that Christian unity is a worthy goal, and that symbolic acts
of reconciliation do not necessarily weaken distinct confessional
identities but can strengthen mutual understanding.
- Pragmatic diplomacy and soft influence: The King
might argue that as a head of state, his role sometimes transcends
denominational particularism; meeting religious leaders is part of his
diplomatic and moral mission, rather than a confessionally binding act.
- The altered nature of modern monarchy and
pluralism: Some contend that the coronation oath itself
has been modified or reinterpreted in recent years to reflect religious
pluralism in the modern United Kingdom. Indeed, there is reporting that
Charles’s oath was adapted at his coronation to emphasize interfaith
inclusion.
- No explicit legal sanction or enforcement: Even if
the King’s action is inconsistent with the oath, there is no obvious legal
mechanism to penalize or void his act; the criticism remains moral, not
juridical.
These objections have merit. Yet
from the perspective of a traditional, confessional Protestant critique, they
do not fully dispel the charge of inconsistency: an ecumenical gesture, when
made by the very head of the established Protestant church, in worship
alongside the leader of Catholicism, carries implications that go beyond mere
diplomacy.
Closing Remarks
The 23 October 2025 meeting and
public prayer between King Charles III and Pope Leo is undeniably dramatic,
symbolically powerful, and likely to be lauded by many as a step toward
Christian unity. But from a standpoint grounded in constitutional, ecclesiastical,
and confessional commitments, it is defensible to assert that the King has
overstepped the boundary set by his coronation oaths.
By publicly sharing in worship
with the Pope, Charles risks blurring confessional lines, implying endorsement
(or at least recognition) of papal authority, and departing from the strict
Protestant identity he promised to maintain. While the monarchy is evolving in
a pluralistic age, and while ecumenical aspiration is admirable, those who
regard the oath as binding must ask whether any symbolic act is permissible if
it conflicts with the solemn promise to “maintain … the Protestant Reformed
Religion established by law.”
If the King’s aim was
reconciliation, a more cautious approach would have respected both the ancient
commitments of the Crown and the sensitivities of those who believe that
confessional distinction is not an optional luxury but an essential guarantee
of his constitutional role.

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