Florence Li Tim-Oi (
Cantonese Lei Tim'oi,
Mandarin Li Tian'ai; 5 May 1907 in
Hong Kong – 26 February 1992 in
Toronto) was the first woman to be
ordained to the priesthood in the
Anglican Communion. Already appointed as a
deacon to serve in the colony of
Macau at the
Macau Protestant Chapel, she was ordained
priest on 25 January 1944, by
Ronald Hall,
Bishop of Victoria, in response to the crisis among Anglican Christians in China caused by the Japanese invasion. Since it was to be thirty years before any Anglican church regularised the
ordination of women, her ordination was controversial and she resigned her licence (though not her priestly orders) after the end of the war. When Hong Kong ordained two further women priests (
Joyce Bennett and Jane Hwang) in 1971, she was officially recognised as a priest in the diocese. She was appointed an honorary (nonstipendiary) assistant priest in Toronto in 1983, where she spent the remainder of her life.