Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Mother Julian of Norwich. Who?

Who was Mother Julian of Norwich and why is she important?

Julian of NorwichAn icon of Julian of Norwich. Julian Centre

8 May is the traditional day to remember Mother Julian of Norwich. She is important because her book remains a classic of Christian spirituality and is the first book in English known to have been written by a woman. This is her story …

Anchorites

One class of hermit was the reclusive anchorites, who took a vow of poverty, a vow of chastity, and a vow to be anchored to one place. The term ‘anchorite’ comes from the Greek word άναχωρητής (anachoretes). These were men or women who lived in a cell or room, also called anchorholds, attached to a church to devote their lives to prayer. Being anchored to one spot, they were called anchorites, and female anchorites, who were more common, were known as anchoresses. Many churches had them, and they would have been connected to a priory, but instead of living in community, they lived in isolation except for visits.

An anchorite’s cell

A church might have had a cell occupied by successive anchorites or anchoresses. These varied in size but usually amounted to one or two rooms built against the church wall, with a window to the outside to allow food to be passed in and waste to be removed via a chamber pot. There would also be a window into the church, through which the anchorite received communion.

Once an anchorite was in the cell, the door connecting it to the church building would have been sealed or locked, but the windows allowed them to talk to visitors and receive food, clothing, and other items. People would bring them food, or someone from the local abbey might be assigned to look after them. 

Conditions did vary. Some anchorites were walled in, but others could wander around the church, and some had their own walled gardens. Sometimes they could leave temporarily to go on pilgrimage. Anchorites were seen as holy and were often consulted by others; some became famous and received visitors from afar.

Mother Julian

One such anchoress was known as Mother Julian and lived in Norwich. She was born about 1342 in Norwich. She was six years old when the Black Death came to the city and devastated the population, and she was one of its survivors. Some wonder if the experience of losing her family to the plague led her to a life as an anchoress. Others suggest she may already have been an anchoress before the plague and that her isolation saved her from infection.

Norwich

The English city of Norwich lies in Norfolk in East Anglia, in the south of England, where it juts into the North Sea. In medieval times, Norwich was the second-largest city in England after London, at a time when the population of the whole country was just a few million. It was a wealthy city through trade with the Low Countries. In medieval times, the city had a cathedral, five monasteries, a convent, and many parish churches. There were many priests, monks, nuns, and anchorites, creating a vibrant religious life.

The name Julian

To many, it may seem odd that Mother Julian bears what is now considered a male name. In medieval England, the name ‘Julian’ was used for both genders, although today we would use Julian as a male name and Juliana as the female variant. She is also called Dame Julian, Mother Julian, or Juliana of Norwich in different books. In fact, her real name is not known.

Julian might have been her real name or a new religious name taken on entering the convent. Many experts think that the name Julian may have been taken from St Julian’s Church in Norwich, where she was anchored, and that she became known as Julian by reference to her location. In turn, St Julian’s Church is not named after her but was dedicated to an earlier St Julian, though it is not certain which one: St Julian of Le Mans, St Julian the Hospitaller, or St Juliana of Nicomedia.

St Julian’s Church, Norwich

St Julian’s Church is in the south of Norwich and was built on the site of an earlier Anglo-Saxon church destroyed by the Vikings in 1004. The later Norman church had a round tower, and two-thirds of all round towers in England are found in Norfolk. The church was connected to the nuns at the Benedictine priory at Carrow Abbey in Bracondale, southeast Norwich. It is assumed that Mother Julian had been a nun attached to that priory, because it was their nuns who cared for the church and therefore also for the anchoresses, and Mother Julian was clearly literate and educated. Mother Julian’s cell was in a corner of the churchyard next to the church. She was likely one of many anchoresses who occupied the cell in succession. She was isolated, but not always alone, as she received visitors. She was sustained by her personal faith, which was very real to her, and many say she had a cat for company.

Revelations

When she was thirty years old, Mother Julian came close to death and lay ill for three days. In May 1373, a priest gave her the last rites, but as he held up his crucifix, she became transfixed by it. Over the next hours, she experienced a series of about fifteen visions, which she called ‘shewings’. These concerned Christ’s crucifixion and the depths of divine love. A final vision came later, after which she miraculously recovered. In these visions, she wrestles with core Christian questions about the meaning of suffering, the reality of evil, the foreknowledge of God, the nature of sin, the power of prayer, and the future of the soul.

Mother Julian told these visions to visitors and wanted them written down for the benefit of others. Later, from about 1395, she expanded her writings with theological reflections. She did not write in Latin but in straightforward English. This makes her the first woman known to have written a book in English.

Summary of the visions

The first eight visions focus on the visual images of the crucified Christ, emphasising his suffering and his blood cleansing all sin. In her last eight visions, she had deeper revelations about sin, creation, and joy. In her ninth vision, God told her that sin is ‘behovely’, or necessary, for good to come from it, and she expressed her most famous phrase: “All shall be well.” Her tenth vision dwelt on the single Christian commandment to love God and our neighbours. In her eleventh vision, a hazelnut in God’s hand symbolised fragile creation sustained solely by love. In her twelfth vision, she outlined contrition, compassion, and longing as three wounds of the soul. In her thirteenth vision, she learned that humanity was in a bad way, yet God serves through Christ. In her fourteenth vision, she experienced joy beyond description and perceived Christ's motherly nurturing, learning the importance of prayer. Her fifteenth vision concerned the abundance of love and the idea that sin harms none eternally, as the Holy Spirit revives the soul. In her final vision, she received the assurance that “All shall be well, and all shall be well, and all manner of thing shall be well,” and gained an understanding of the Trinity.

The motherhood of God

Mother Julian is recognised as a mystic and theologian. Her theology is optimistic and sees God’s love expressed in joy and compassion. She also emphasises the maternal nature of God, describing God as both father and mother. She explained how the bond between mother and child is akin to the relationship a person can have with Jesus. Centuries before feminism, Mother Julian explored maternal imagery for God. Her emphasis on God’s mother-like compassion complements the traditional language of Father and King, giving a richer and more relational texture to Christian devotion. She wrote, “As truly as God is our Father, so truly God is our Mother.”

Death

It is not known exactly when Mother Julian died, but she was elderly, and estimates of the date of her death range from 1416 to 1430. Her cell continued to be used by successive anchoresses until the Reformation, when the practice was discontinued in England. With the Dissolution of the Monasteries, many anchorite cells were demolished or repurposed, though a few remain.

Revelations of Divine Love

Various manuscripts of Mother Julian’s writings have survived through the ages. However, they were little known until they were published in 1670 by Hugh Paulinus de Cressy. He was born in Yorkshire around 1605, became an Anglican priest, and fled to continental Europe during the English Civil War, disillusioned by Puritanism. He later became a Roman Catholic in Rome in 1646 and entered the Benedictine order at Douai in France, taking the name Serenus. He was deeply interested in Benedictine mysticism and was introduced to Mother Julian’s writings in the British Library. In 1670, he published them under the title XVI Revelations of Divine Love, shewed to a devout servant of Our Lord, called Mother Juliana, an Anchorete of Norwich: Who lived in the Dayes of King Edward the Third.

Reprints and new editions

Cressy’s edition was reprinted in 1843, sparking renewed interest in Victorian England. It was reprinted again in 1864, and a new version was produced by Henry Collins in 1877. However, from 1901, her writings became widely known when a more readable version in modernised English was published. This edition, based on a manuscript in the British Library, was edited by Grace Warrack and published by Methuen in London. This gave Mother Julian’s works a wide audience, and since then there have been many further editions and translations.

St Julian’s Church today

St Julian’s Church in Norwich fell into disrepair in the Victorian era and was restored in 1845. It was partly destroyed during the Blitz in June 1942, when the tower was hit and shortened. The church was restored again after the war. The site of the original anchorite cell has been identified and reconstructed to show how it might have looked in medieval times. A modern stained-glass window at the church depicts Mother Julian in traditional robes, holding her writings, with her famous words “All shall be well” among her visions. Nearby is the Julian Centre, with a bookshop, library, and All Hallows Guesthouse suitable for spiritual retreats.

Memorials

Mother Julian is remembered by Anglicans on 8 May, the day of her first vision. She was never formally canonised but is remembered in the Catholic calendar on 13 May, the day of her recovery. Today, she is recognised across Christian denominations as an important mystic, England’s most famous female visionary, and a significant figure in the development of feminist theology. In recent decades, many books have been written about her, and she is celebrated as a key figure in Norwich’s history and heritage.

Norwich memorials

In 2000, a statue of Mother Julian was erected by the west door of Norwich Cathedral. In 2009, a new bridge over the River Wensum was named Lady Julian Bridge. In 2021, the University of East Anglia opened a new building called the Julian Study Centre.

Upsurge in interest

During the COVID lockdown, there was an upsurge in interest in Mother Julian, as she seemed especially relevant to people experiencing isolation. In 2023, a series of events in Norwich marked the 650th anniversary of her revelations. On Sunday 5 November 2023, she featured on BBC Radio 4’s Something Understood, presented by Mark Tully.

Collect

The Anglican collect prayer for 8 May is:

“Most holy God, the ground of our beseeching,
who through your servant Julian
revealed the wonders of your love:
grant that, as we are created in your nature and restored by your grace,
our wills may be made one with yours,
that we may come to see you face to face
and gaze on you for ever;
through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,

one God, now and for ever.”
CT.

Ireland.

Irish church leaders denounce 'epidemic' of violence against women.

woman, women (Photo: Getty/iStock)

Church leaders in Ireland have expressed their “sympathy and prayerful support” to the families of women who have been killed in “an epidemic of violence against women sweeping across Ireland”.

Representatives of the Catholic Church, Anglicanism, the Methodist and Presbyterian churches and the Irish Council of Churches appealed for the protection of women as they convened in Armagh to mark the death of Amy Doherty at a community vigil.

Doherty, a mother of two, was killed in Londonderry in March after being found badly injured at a Londonderry property. Hundreds of people joined a vigil in the city centre following her death. A man has been charged with her murder.

According to the church leaders, Doherty was the 65th woman to be murdered on the island of Ireland since 2020.

In a statement, the leaders said that “as people of faith, we wish to express our sympathy and prayerful support for all those families who have been bereaved in such terrible circumstances and also our deep concern at what has become an epidemic of violence against women sweeping across Ireland”.

They added that they were ashamed to hear that Northern Ireland is now one of the most dangerous places for a woman to live in Europe, with 30 of the 65 being killed in the province. Most of the victims were killed at home.
 
“As Christian leaders, we condemn femicide absolutely and all forms of violence perpetrated against women," they said. 

"While we welcome the introduction of policy and strategies to address the horror of violence against women and girls in both jurisdictions in recent years, it is regrettable that this has not resulted in a decrease in this abhorrent murder rate. 

“At this particular time, we urge politicians, men and women together, to continue to work with the emergency services and the courts, to ensure that they have the resources necessary to combat this epidemic."

The leaders also called for “cultural change”, an end to the toleration of “misogyny”, and work to foster models of “positive manhood”.

CT.

Birdie.


 

God's Perspective Is Not Like That of Mankind.

The Prayer That Moved Heaven.

 The prayer that moved Heaven: Finding God in your most desperate hour.


In a broken world tainted by sin and pain, it is easy to feel unseen, unheard or overwhelmed by circumstances beyond our control. Yet even in the midst of life’s heaviest trials, Scripture reminds us that God sees the depths of our hearts and notices every tear we shed.

The story of King Hezekiah offers a powerful example of prayer in our hours of desperation. It’s a gentle reminder that our faithfulness to God matters and that He responds to hearts that cry out to Him.

In Isaiah 38:23, we read, “Then Hezekiah turned his face toward the wall, and prayed to the Lord, and said, “'0Remember now, O Lord, I pray, how I have walked before You in truth and with a loyal heart, and have done what is good in Your sight.’ And Hezekiah wept bitterly.”

These words, spoken through tears by a king who was dying, stand as one of the most honest and vulnerable prayers recorded in Scripture. King Hezekiah of Judah wasn’t asking God to remember some big theological accomplishment or impressive religious achievement. He wasn’t pointing to any personal success. No. In his darkest hour, facing a death sentence from both disease and divine decree, he simply asked God to remember his faithfulness — and then he wept bitterly.

But here’s what makes this prayer so remarkable: God not only heard those words, He saw every tear. And those tears moved the heart of the Almighty. Hezekiah surely knew the words of David in Psalm 56:8: “You number my wanderings; put my tears in Your bottle; are they not in Your book?” God records every tear, collects them, is moved by them, and responds.

Hezekiah’s situation was dire. The prophet Isaiah came to him with the message: “Set your house in order, for you shall die and not live” (Isaiah 38:1). No hope, no possibility of healing, just a direct word from God Himself: your time is up.

But notice Hezekiah’s response. He didn’t argue, demand a second opinion, or rage against God. He turned his face toward the wall, away from the people, and poured out his heart to God. Sometimes the most powerful prayers happen when we turn away from human comfort and face God alone with our pain.

In that moment, he reminded God of three specific things: first, he reopened the doors of God’s house (2 Chronicles 29:3), restoring the temple and making worship central in Judah. Second, he restored true worship, commanding the Levites to sing praise to the Lord with gladness (2 Chronicles 29:30). Third, he restored sacrificial giving, reinstituting offerings that demonstrated heartfelt repentance and love toward God.

And then, he wept bitterly. The Hebrew word translated “wept” is intense, gut-wrenching sobs. Not just a few tears, but deep grief and vulnerability. God saw every tear. As Psalm 56:8 declares, God collects our tears in a bottle. When words fail, tears become a language Heaven understands perfectly.

God’s response was swift: “Go and tell Hezekiah, thus says the Lord, the God of David your father: ‘I have heard your prayer, I have seen your tears; surely I will add to your days 15 years’” (Isaiah 38:5). Beyond healing, God confirmed His intervention in a tangible way, He made the shadow on the palace sundial go backward 10 degrees. One man’s prayer and tears caused the God who spoke the stars into existence to alter the rotation of the earth itself.

This story reminds us that under the new covenant, our access to God is grace-based, not works-based. We don’t need perfect credentials to receive supernatural intervention. Grace qualifies us for miracles. Even in impossible circumstances, the same God who heard Hezekiah’s prayer and saw his tears is for us (Romans 8:31).

Perhaps you’re reading this through your own tears. Maybe you’ve received devastating news, face impossible circumstances, or feel the crushing weight of life.

Your tears aren’t a sign of weakness; they’re a language that Heaven understands. They’re proof that you’re still fighting, still believing, still hoping that God, who created the universe, cares about your pain.

Here’s a short prayer to consider praying right now, no matter the situation you’re in:

“Lord, You know my heart. You see my tears. You understand my pain. I have tried to walk before You in truth, to worship You with gladness, to give sacrificially of what You’ve blessed me with. In this moment of crisis, I ask You to remember my faithfulness and respond to my broken heart. You are for me, not against me, and I trust You to work all things together for my good.”

This is an adapted excerpt from Jentezen Franklin’s newest book, “The Power of Short Prayers.”CP.

Pastor Jentezen Franklin is the senior pastor of Free Chapel, a multi-campus church. Each week, his television program, Kingdom Connection, is broadcast on major networks all over the world. A New York Times best-selling author, Franklin has written eight books.

Why Jesus Set Us Free.

Freedom in Christ. Galatians.

5) It is for freedom that Christ has set us free. Stand firm, then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke of slavery.

Most Revealing.

 Sam Allberry’s fall: What the Church must learn about LGBT identity.


The news of Sam Allberry’s fall sparked a question among our team at CHANGED: How might things be different today had the Stonewall activist movement of the '70s failed to pressure the American Psychiatric Association (APA) to reform its position on same-sex sexuality? 

That might seem like an odd tangent when discussing the moral failures of a favored Christian leader, but it is an important one for our cultural moment because the rhetoric and dogma of the 1970 and '80s LGBT activist movement continue to dictate what we believe today and how people respond to those of us with these feelings. Activists have given us our understanding of a “unique people group” that only finds satisfaction and peace in same-sex sexuality and the subculture around it.

​It wasn’t primarily scientific research that changed medical perspectives around same-sex sexuality; it was activist pressure. Charles W. Socarides, M.D., a psychiatrist during the 1970s, said: “Those of us who did not go along with the political redefinition were soon silenced at our own professional meetings. Our lectures were canceled, and our research papers turned down in the learned journals … mainstream publishers turned down books that objected to the gay revolution.” 

The ultimate determination that homosexuality could offer satisfaction and healthy functioning was a conflict-ridden conclusion. Today, the medical establishment continues to embrace the ideals of the LGBT subculture while also steadfastly refusing to accept scientific evidence out of step with its dogma, e.g., the harms of surgical interventions to treat adolescent transgenderism.

​But it’s the LGBT “community” that is paying the price for their freedom from the APAs. In the decades following Stonewall (1969), and despite significant advances in legal and social recognition over the last 50 years, LGBT-identifying populations continue to experience disproportionately high rates of depression, anxiety, substance abuse, and suicidality relative to national population averages.

We are told that bigotry and discrimination are the cause; however, similar disparities exist in European nations that provide even greater acceptance than the U.S. in civil protections for LGBT-identifying individuals, including the Netherlands (which legalized gay marriage in 2001). Current public health data consistently indicate that LGBT-identifying youth remain at significantly elevated risk for suicidal ideation and self-harm compared to their heterosexual peers. The APA is failing this population despite its wholehearted embrace of LGBT.

​In 2019, Science Magazine published the largest genome-wide association study (GWAS) on same-sex sexual behavior, which analyzed data from nearly 500,000 individuals. Researchers found no evidence for a “gay gene.” Instead, the researchers found genetic correlations between same-sex sexual behavior and several psychiatric or mental-health-related traits, including major depressive disorder, schizophrenia, anxiety, bipolar disorder, ADHD, autism, and addiction. 


Genes do not dictate behavior, and the science of epigenetics is still exploratory, yet the study shows that social stress alone is not causing suicidality. And for me, the study reshapes my perspective on same-sex sexual attraction (SSA). 

Returning to our opening question, “What if activism had not reframed the experience of SSA for medical professionals?”

​The LGBT population is at risk for mental illness, and the medical establishment currently fails to link SSA to emotional distress, something many of us at CHANGED experience.

Consider this thought experiment comparing SSA to clinical depression. When a person seeks a psychologist for severe depression, the psychologist is not going to promise a joy-filled life free of depression. No, she will likely suggest that biological factors and temperament may be involved.

The professional will explore life pressures and may revisit family systems and attachment issues before turning to a modality of talk therapy for relief, such as cognitive behavioral therapy. This gives the individual comfort and life strategies, as well as a deeper self-understanding of the formative and developmental factors involved.

Perhaps there is overall emotional relief, even a diminishment of the life-dominating attraction. The individual may move on and live several years without issue, using life strategies and growing healthy. CHANGED co-founder Ken Williams is an example of a man who worked through issues in his life with Jesus and a counselor, ultimately marrying his wife, Tiffany, and forming a family. They are very healthy and happy together.

​Neeza Powers became an Instagram sensation when he published his day-by-day journey reading the Bible to discover Christ, documenting his path of detransition. But recently, Powers made an abrupt retreat into his alt-identity as a trans woman. Some are saying his priest had denied him the opportunity to be baptized. 

Perhaps Allberry experienced some similar kind of life pressure, leading him into an illicit relationship. I’ve seen this reaction time and again. Does this mean once gay, always gay? Well, perhaps only in the same way as once depressed, always depressed. We easily silo ourselves into groups that share our life-dominating issues for comfort.

It happens among those suffering from autism, ADHD, depression, alcoholism and same-sex attraction. People live meaningful lives married to their same-sex spouses, raising families, etc.

However, they have also given themselves over to their primary mode of comfort and coping rather than pressing against the underlying issues. That is a personal choice all of us at CHANGED have had to grapple with. But we have chosen to move on from LGBT to embrace the biblical anthropology. It is far easier to give in. 

​Our shared societal failure to think more deeply and creatively about the lived experiences of those who identify as LGBT pushes people unnecessarily into these identity categories based on progressive, activist premises.

Today, we need new answers, new approaches, a better understanding, and a different narrative for all of us with this condition. Please, as you pray for Sam Allberry and others like him, remember that God’s Kingdom will bring full restoration to men and women of body, soul and spirit. 

Maranatha.

Elizabeth Woning is co-founder of the CHANGED Movement, an international network of men and women who have left the LGBT subculture and identity to follow Jesus. She earned her master’s degree from a PCUSA seminary while openly lesbian and ministered within the LGBT-affirming church movement. A radical revelation of Jesus led her to a different path. Today, she is a licensed pastor at Bethel Church in Redding, California, where she lives with her husband, Doug. CVP.

Monday, May 11, 2026

Pastor in Mexico.

Pastor in Mexico jailed, expelled for refusing to participate in Catholic ritual.

  • 26 Jan, 2026 13:06 EST

    Officials in a village in southern Mexico’s Oaxaca state detained for five days and then expelled a Protestant pastor for refusing to participate in Catholic church rituals, according to a U.K-based advocacy group. CD.

Philemon 1:4.

Birdies.


 

A Scripture From Luke 7 Which I Adore.

20) When the men came to Jesus, they said, “John the Baptist sent us to you to ask, ‘Are you the one who is to come, or should we expect someone else?’”

21) At that very time Jesus cured many who had diseases, sicknesses and evil spirits, and gave sight to many who were blind. 22) So he replied to the messengers, “Go back and report to John what you have seen and heard: The blind receive sight, the lame walk, those who have leprosy.

are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the good news is proclaimed to the poor. 23) Blessed is anyone who does not stumble on account of me.”

PERSECUTION TRENDS 2026.

 

PERSECUTION TRENDS 2026.

Posted: 30th December 2025

Persecuted Trends Report Image 2

As the gospel spreads and impacts more lives, Christians around the world are bracing themselves for a year of increased persecution at the hands of oppressive governments and religious extremists.

Release International’s annual Persecution Trends Report spotlights a number of places in the world where severe persecution is likely to increase in the year ahead.

The report provides a platform for Release International’s partners to analyse the current situation in their country and to say what they think 2026 could hold in store for followers of Christ.

In Nigeria one of Release International’s partners says the martyrdom of Christians could double without swift action. In China Release International’s partner believes persecution it at its worst level since the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s and early 1970s.

The report appears in the January edition of Release International’s free quarterly magazine, Voice. It can also be read by clicking the button below. Release Int.

UK NHS Employs More People Than Any and All Non-Military Organisations Worldwide. Why Are We Barely In The Top 20?

 Based on 2026 health care index data analyzing public funding, access, and efficiency, the following is a list of top-performing nations with high-quality publicly funded or heavily subsidized healthcare systems. [1, 2, 3]

Top 15 Best Publicly Funded Healthcare Systems (2026)
These nations are recognized for providing universal, high-quality, and accessible care with strong government funding. [123]
  1. Taiwan (1st): Leads global rankings with a single-payer system providing nearly 100% coverage.
  2. South Korea: Renowned for efficient, public National Health Insurance with exceptional technology.
  3. Netherlands: A top-tier system based on managed competition, with strong state regulation.
  4. Japan: Offers universal coverage with low patient costs and high life expectancy.
  5. Austria: Features a high-quality public healthcare network and strong patient satisfaction.
  6. Ecuador: Ranked highly for its public health initiatives and accessible care.
  7. Finland: Often cited for having one of the world's best tax-financed systems.
  8. Thailand: Known for its highly efficient, publicly financed universal coverage.
  9. Denmark: Features comprehensive, publicly funded healthcare with high public financing.
  10. Spain: Offers a premier Mediterranean public system, fully funded by taxes.
  11. France: Consistently high-ranked, public-led system that provides universal coverage.
  12. Belgium: Combines mandatory insurance with public funding, high patient satisfaction.
  13. Czech Republic: Strong public system with very low patient wait times.
  14. Norway: Exemplary universal healthcare system subsidized heavily by the government.
  15. Lithuania: Recognized for improving its national health insurance system. [12345]
  • 16. Estonia: Known for digital integration and public insurance
  • 17. Luxembourg: High-quality public care through taxes and mandatory insurance
  • 18. Qatar: Offers robust public sector services
  • 19. Israel: Features a high-quality, universal, non-profit system
  • 20. United Kingdom: The National Health Service (NHS).

Mother Julian of Norwich. Who?

Who was Mother Julian of Norwich and why is she important? An icon of Julian of Norwich.  Julian Centre 8 May is the traditional day to reme...