We are currently experiencing issues with pages that use expandable drop down boxes. While the issue is being fixed, please reset your browser cache which should solve the issue. We apologise for the inconvenience.

RSS Feed

#BlackLivesMatter

The Bishop of Worcester, Dr John Inge and the Dean of Worcester, Peter Atkinson have ‘taken the knee’ outside the Cathedral to pray for all those affected by repression, discrimination and injustice in a special video ahead of the protest planned in Worcester over the weekend.

Bishop John said: “Since 25 May, when George Floyd lay dying with a policeman’s knee on his neck, his cry ‘I can’t breathe’  has gone round the world. That dying cry captures the despair of so many people for whom the world is a place of repression, discrimination, and injustice. It captures the cry of so many black children, women, and men; so many black communities all over the world. George Floyd’s dying cry has provoked anger and protest, summed up in the words, ‘Black Lives Matter’. I ask you to join me in praying for a world in which Black Lives Matter.”

The Bishop and the Dean prayed for nine minutes outside the Cathedral, remembering the amount of time that George Floyd lay unable to breathe.

At the start of the prayers, Dean of Worcester, Peter Atkinson said: The Gospel of Jesus Christ tells us that every person is our neighbour. Yet the  Church has often oppressed, marginalised, or forgotten people. The Church has been complicit in making slaves of black people, persecuting Jewish people, waging crusades against Muslim people, criminalising gay people, oppressing women, and abusing children. God breathed into all people the breath of life, but so often ours has been the knees that have squeezed the life from others.”

After remembering the long history of oppression and suffering for black people and giving thanks for the witness of black Christians and for all whose work is a celebration of black culture, the Bishop and Dean concluded with the Lord’s Prayer. They also asked God to grant peace to the Church, peace among nations, peace in our dwellings, and peace in all our hearts.

Published: 15th June 2020
Page last updated: Monday 15th June 2020 12:12 PM

Latest News

Bishop Martin's Christmas Message

20th December 2024

Bishop Martin reflects on a poem by Howard Thurman in this year's Christmas message and explores how we can light candles in dark places as we pray for peace and hope.

Sign up for the Diocesan Mailing

The Diocesan Mailing is produced every two weeks and contains news, training opportunties and events from around the diocese and wider Church of England. Sign up here.

Send us your news

If you have a news story you'd like to share with us, please email Sam Setchell / 07852 302516. If you have an upcoming event you'd like to publicise, you can add it to our calender.     

Latest Video Reflection

Every two weeks we produce a short video reflection. These cover a range of topics and themes and are published on the website and our social media channels.

Privacy Notice | Powered by Church Edit