Retreat in Daily Working Life
Beginning on Tuesday 23 September, ‘Chaplaincy Plus’ and ‘Manresa Link’ will run a six-week, Ignatian, individually- guided ‘Retreat in Daily…
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Senior West Midlands Church leaders were among the participants in the three-day pilgrimage that took place from Monday 28 to Wednesday 30 July 2025 inclusive. The 28-mile walk was organised to mark the 1700th anniversary of the First Ecumenical Council of Nicaea, which brought together around 300 bishops over a ten-week period in the summer of 325AD. The Ecumenical Council bequeathed to the Church 20 Canons and a statement of faith centred on the nature of Jesus Christ. This ‘original’ Nicene Creed was developed into the Nicene Creed still used today at the Ecumenical Council held in Constantinople (Istanbul) in 381AD.

A total of 30 pilgrims visited four West Midlands Cathedrals and 18 other places of Christian worship over the three days of the pilgrimage. The Cathedrals and churches visited included those belonging to Anglican, Baptist, Elim Pentecostal, Jabula New Life Ministries, Methodist, Quaker, Orthodox, Roman Catholic and Salvation Army traditions. Visits were also made to Urban Devotion Birmingham (Website HERE), Betel UK’s new national Anchor Point centre in Aston (Website HERE) and the Queen’s Foundation for Ecumenical Theological Education (Website HERE).

The pilgrimage began at the shrine of the 7th Century Midlands pioneer bishop St Chad in Lichfield Cathedral and ended at the Serbian Orthodox Church of the Holy Prince Lazar in Bournville. The south-southwesterly route followed the path of the Roman Ryknild Street and passed the ruins of Letocetum, to the southwest of Lichfield, a bustling Roman town in the years prior to the First Ecumenical Council of Nicaea. The terrain varied from urban pavements, country lanes, footpaths through fields, public parks, greenways and  canal towpaths.
Along the way, thanksgiving was offered, prayers made, hospitality received, the 325AD Nicene Creed read and friendships built. The event provided a brilliant insight into the rich diversity of Christian worship and outreach in the West Midlands in the 21st Century, encompassing people and places belonging to Orthodox, Catholic and Protestant communities. The ecumenical embrace has never been broader than it is today.

List of Christian sites visited
Lichfield (Anglican) Cathedral
St John the Baptist (Anglican) Church, Wall
(Wall Roman Site)
St Peter’s (Anglican) Church, Little Aston
Streetly Methodist Church
(Rowton’s Well, Sutton Park)
St Columba’s (Anglican) Church, Banners Gate
Urban Devotion Birmingham
St Margaret Mary (Roman Catholic) Church, Perry Common
Connected Life (Baptist) Church, Erdington
All Saints (Anglican) Church, Gravelly Hill
The (Greek Orthodox) Church of the Holy Trinity and St Luke, Erdington
New Jerusalem (Apostolic) Church, Aston
Betel/Anchor Point Church, Aston
The Birmingham (Salvation Army) Citadel
St Chad’s (Roman Catholic) Cathedral, Birmingham
Birmingham St Philip’s (Anglican) Cathedral
Birmingham City (Elim Pentecostal) Church
The (Greek Orthodox) Cathedral of the Dormition of the Theotokos and St Andrew, Birmingham
Ladywood Methodist Church
Oratory of St Philip Neri, Birmingham
Queen’s Ecumenical Foundation for Ecumenical Theological Education, Birmingham
Selly Oak (Quaker) Meeting House,
(Serbian Orthodox) Church of the Holy Prince Lazar, Bournville

List of participating senior West Midlands Church leaders
Major Adrian Allman (Commander, Salvation Army West Midlands Division)
Revd Adrian Argile (Regional Minister Team Leader, Heart of England Baptist Association)
Revd Steve Faber (Moderator, United Reformed Church West Midlands Synod)
Revd Novette Headley (Chair, Birmingham Methodist District)
The Right Revd Anne Hollinghurst (Principal, Queen’s Foundation)
The Right Revd Michael Ipgrave (Anglican Bishop of Lichfield)
Revd Helen Kirk (Chair, Chester and Stoke-on-Trent Methodist District)
The Very Revd Jan MacFarlane (Dean of Lichfield)
The Very Revd Brian McGinley (Dean of St Chad’s Cathedral, Birmingham)
The Right Revd Tim Menezes (Auxiliary Bishop, Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Birmingham)
The Right Revd Matthew Parker (Anglican Bishop of Stafford)
Fr Nenad Popovic (Priest, Church of the Serbian Orthodox Church of the Holy Prince Lazar)
Rachel Parkinson (Retiring Chair, Wolverhampton and Shrewsbury Methodist District)
The Venerable Megan Smith (Anglican Archdeacon of Stoke-upon-Trent)
The Very Revd Matt Thompson (Dean of Birmingham)
The Right Revd Michael Volland (Anglican Bishop of Birmingham)
Beginning on Tuesday 23 September, ‘Chaplaincy Plus’ and ‘Manresa Link’ will run a six-week, Ignatian, individually- guided ‘Retreat in Daily…
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