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Dear sisters and brothers in Christ,


I wish you all every blessing as we begin the season of Lent. In today’s Gospel Jesus is led by the Spirit into the wilderness to prepare for his public ministry and to defeat His temptations. In scripture the wilderness is the place where God is close to His people. Often this closeness comes at a time of trial, discernment and preparation for mission. We recall Moses leading the people through the wilderness to the promised land and Elijah fleeing into the wilderness in fear for his life.


Jesus is discerning. He is preparing for his public mission. He prepares in prayer and by fasting. Both practices heighten the closeness of the love of His Father and the guidance of the Holy Spirit. Jesus experiences the trials of temptation. He defeats those temptations by rejecting what is self-serving. Through His trials Jesus discerns we live by the Word of God not material things. We are not to put God to the test, rather we are called to follow His will. We worship and serve God alone.


We do not worship and serve the false riches, vanity and power the world may offer us. The Holy Spirit leads our Diocese into the wilderness of Lent. May we all through prayer, fasting and almsgiving allow God to be close to us in our discernments and trials. May we fight the temptations of self service and false gods in their many forms. May we, like Jesus, prepare ourselves for public mission.


In my last Pastoral Letter at the start of Advent, I wrote about our need to discern and act on our future mission as a diocesan family. I reflected with you the hopes and challenges our Diocese faces. One challenge I highlighted was the fewer priests we will have over the next ten years and what we can realistically expect from them. I continue to welcome non diocesan priests to minister here, and we are most grateful to them, but they will not replace all the diocesan priests who will soon retire. A second challenge was the number of churches we have maintained over the years even though Mass attendance has declined. Buildings must serve mission not the other way around. I wrote change is needed as present practice was not sustainable.


In Advent I explained there would be materials prepared to help that discernment leading to action. After consultation, those materials are now ready and are available on the diocesan website. Parish offices can print off materials if that assists you. The materials include a Parish Toolkit to guide every parish’s discernment of our mission and how we can work more closely together in a sustainable way. There are materials on prayer, discernment and often asked questions to assist us all. The materials include a statement of the Diocesan vision for mission. I have consulted widely about this for the last 18 months and the vision reflects what I have listened to. I trust it is a vision we can all share even if we may prioritise different parts of it. There are also materials that give a summary of parish and diocesan realities in terms of mass attendance, number of clergy, property and other resources.


From the initial parish discernments from now until April, we will move to a second phase of discernments in the summer across parishes in each locality/partnership and then across the wider deaneries. These will then inform the discernments across the whole Diocese. We intend to complete this discernment process by the Autumn of 2026, so that informed decisions about the future can be shared.


I invite us all to discern intentionally about our mission as Jesus did in the wilderness. The Lenten practices of prayer, fasting and almsgiving will guide us. We must discern in prayer, knowing the Spirit is alive in our communities. Like Jesus we must discern with an openness to fast from what is simply self-serving. We must all be aware of that temptation. We must discern by being generous in giving to one another in love. We must discern the common good for mission.


This is a spirit filled journey of listening and discerning. It must be mission led and hope filled. The Lord never leaves us. We must be honest about the reality we face now and will face in the next decade. The discernment must be an expression of shared responsibility. We are all co-responsible for the mission of the Diocese, people and clergy alike. I sincerely hope this discernment will lead to us all to reflect on how we can serve across our local parishes and so build up the Kingdom of God. We can all offer some practical service.


This discernment is not an inspection of parishes nor is it a predetermined plan of closures or reductions. There is no predetermined plan. It is not about assigning blame nor must it fall into nostalgia about the past. We learn from the past, both the good and the bad, but we do not live in the past. I understand that can cause grief and upset. We must seek to discern how the church may flourish now and in the future. If we do not act, then challenging realities will dictate actions which will leave people and communities hurt. Far better we discern together.


I wish to end where I began, with the Holy Spirit leading Jesus and our Diocese into the wilderness of Lent. The Holy Spirit is evidently at work in our parishes, schools and communities. There is so much holiness in our worship of the Lord and in the service of others. We have so much to learn from one another and share with one another. The joys and hope outweigh the challenges. Our mission is to walk with the Lord and enable others to encounter Him in our communities centered on the Eucharist. We are called to live justly, caring for our common home and especially for the poor in it. We are called to grow as one diocesan family which will necessarily mean working more closely together in new ways. Finally, we are called to be formed by Christ for mission. To be a baptised Christian is to have a mission. We are called to help every person flourish in the love of the love of the Lord and flourish in their service of others.


We are being led by the Holy Spirit, let us discern what that means for our future mission together. Please be involved in the parish discernments in the next few weeks.


With assurances of prayers,

Bishop Stephen




 

This weekend at all Masses a Pastoral letter from Bishop Stephen for the 1st Sunday of Advent was read out.

You can read it in full below


Dear Sisters and Brothers,

May I wish you all a joyful Church New Year. Advent invites us all to wake up, be people of the light not darkness, be ready to meet the Lord who is coming. Yes, we prepare to meet the Lord at Christmas. Though Advent also draws our attention to the Lord’s coming at the end of time and to His coming here and now, in His Word, in the Eucharist and in His Church.

Our readings challenge us. They speak of the last things, our mortality, the finite creation in which we live, the judgement that we all face. We are invited to be ready like a householder keeping out a burglar. Not the most comforting of images. St. Paul challenges us to live moral lives. Put on the armour of light and cast-off darkness. Avoid sin.

Our readings are full of hope too. They speak of our salvation won for us by the Lord, the Lord’s victory over all the challenges we face. He never abandons us. In our First Reading and again in the Psalm we have the hope filled image of the people on pilgrimage to the House of the Lord. All the nations flowing to God so that they may be taught by the Lord and be people of peace. We are in the final days of our Jubilee Year. Its call to be Pilgrims of Hope does not end. Like the pilgrims in our readings today we journey to the House of the Lord with joy so that He may teach us his ways and that we may walk in his paths.

The Advent readings are challenging and hopeful at the same time.

Hope and challenge are found in the life of the Church in every age. Having served as your Bishop for just over two years now, may I briefly reflect with you on the hope I see and some of the challenges we need to discern together.

Hope fills our communities, and it is a joy and privilege to experience it as I visit our parishes, schools and institutions. The love of the Lord you have and show is inspiring. The love is expressed in the welcome to others and in your generous and compassionate service. I see saints among us full of the love of the Lord. Thank you.

May I share one reality of hope among many. The number of adults seeking to be in full communion with the church is increasing in our Diocese and across our country. Noticeably the adults are younger than in former years. The holiness and beauty of the liturgy and the spaces we offer for prayer are ways many discover the Lord calling them. In a noisy world offering false satisfaction, many find a deeper meaning and fulfilment in our communities. They experience the mystery of God’s love for them. Academics speak of a “quiet revival” of people turning to the catholic faith. Across our country we are seeing it.

May I also speak about some of the practical challenges we now face. You will see the increasing age profile of our priests. Many will soon retire. The Lord will provide sufficient priests, but we must pray for them. I invite us all to be intentional in praying daily for vocations to the priesthood. Our vocations team have produced parish prayer resources which have been shared with our clergy. Please use them and pray for vocations.

The present offer of Sunday Masses is not sustainable. Priests are now stretched to the limit, if not overstretched. We must all accept pastoral changes are now necessary. Every priest may celebrate three Sunday Masses over the weekend. Masses must be arranged so that cover may be offered for vacations and sickness. The church’s wisdom states that Mass is the gathering of the one community around one Altar celebrating the one Eucharist. More than one Mass should only really be considered if there is insufficient space to fit the people into the Church. That liturgical and pastoral principle has been lost for some time due to the number of priests we have had. However, the principle will necessarily become a guide once again as priest numbers reduce. It is time for some parishes to amalgamate, and this has the blessing of sharing resources more efficiently for mission.

A linked challenge is the number of churches and buildings we have and the condition of some of them. Our mission is the key. Our mission is to evangelise, be communities of prayer and worship, to form missionary disciples, to be a truly synodal church listening to one another, clergy and people working co-responsibly in serving our communities with social justice and compassion. Buildings, even our precious and beloved churches, are to serve the mission. If they don’t then they become obstacles and very costly ones at that. Nobody takes any pleasure in raising this challenge, least of all me, but we must now face it. If we do not, then our human and financial resources will be lost to buildings, and we hand on the challenge to the next generation.

Many of our communities are already discerning these challenges with their clergy, and I thank you for this. Please continue. We need to ask, very honestly, what parish life will look like when fewer priests are available: how many Masses can realistically be celebrated, where priests will live, and how best to serve our communities to enable them to flourish. If we avoid these questions, we risk greater hurt later.

To guide this work, I have established a Pastoral Steering Group, which will meet for the first time in December. But this cannot be a top-down exercise. Synodality means that decisions must be shaped by local prayer, reflection, and dialogue. Final decisions rest with me, but they must be informed by discernment at parish, partnership, and deanery levels. To support that discernment, a Diocesan Discernment Pack will soon be available for every parish. It will help communities reflect on their mission, their resources, and the future. This work is essential, and it must begin or continue, now.

Christ is our hope, and the challenge is to be ready to meet Him in the years ahead. Please pray for our clergy, please pray for vocations and please be generous as we discern our readiness to meet the Lord in the years ahead.

With assurances of prayers





Bishop Stephen WrightBishop of Hexham and Newcastle

 





Day of Reflection for Readers

Date: Saturday 12th July 2025 Times: 10.30am-3.00pm - arrivals, registration and refreshments from 10.00am Location: St Hilda’s Diocesan Resource Centre, West Road, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE15 7PY Cost: £15.00 per person 

 

This Day of Reflection will be funded via the parish. Below is the link to the online booking form if you wish to make your own booking, or you can let Marjorie know that you wish to attend and she will do the booking for you.  See poster at the back of church.

 

 

 
About Us 

The parish of the Durham Martyrs incorporates the Catholic churches of Our Lady of Mercy and St Godric, St Bede and St Joseph (Gilesgate) in Durham City. We are part of the Finchale Partnership and based within the Diocese of Hexham and Newcastle.

Addressess

St. Bede,

St Godric's RC Primary School,

Carrhouse Drive,

Durham

DH1 5LZ 

Our Lady of Mercy

and St Godric

Castle Chare
Durham
DH1 4RA

St Joseph

Mill Lane
Durham
DH1 2JG

Contact 

Marjorie, the Parish Secretary's working hours are 8:30am -4:00pm Tues - Fri. If you email outside these hours you will receive a response when Marjorie is back in the office. 

Landline : 0191 3843810

Mobile: 07483 369 561

​durham.martyrs@diocesehn.org.uk

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