St Mary's Centre for Peace and Reconciliation

St Mary's Centre for Peace and Reconciliation A church based project seeking peace and justice in luton and beyond.

15/05/2026

Kingdom over Nation - Churches Together in England's (CTE) resource on Christian Nationalism has not emerged suddenly or in reaction to a single event. Rather, it has grown out of a sustained period of reflection and response across the ecumenical landscape. Our Member Churches are committed to t

We share Churches Together in Luton’s concern at this event, both its message and impact.
10/05/2026

We share Churches Together in Luton’s concern at this event, both its message and impact.

But Christ never left Christmas!A response from Luton to ‘Tommy Robinson’s Christmas event’Over the past few weeks forme...
04/12/2025

But Christ never left Christmas!

A response from Luton to ‘Tommy Robinson’s Christmas event’

Over the past few weeks former Lutonian Stephen Yaxley Lennon, aka Tommy Robinson, has returned to a theme we were hearing about here 15 years ago, that Christmas isn’t celebrated in Luton. Only this time it is a nationwide campaign, and on Sunday evening he announced a London event on Saturday13th December to “Put Christ back into Christmas.”

First, let’s be clear. “We never took Christ out of Christmas here in Luton!” …….

(The whole article is here with live links

https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/x078sf8hypzau39htnpo7/But-Christ-never-left-Christmas.pdf?rlkey=yakinqj6b8eifrqj9f2wt552k&st=ci6blm73&dl=0

Or in the images below.

16/10/2025

We are so privileged to host "No Place for Hate" today.

06/10/2025
02/10/2025

Terror attack on a synogue in Manchester.

As Churches in Luton we wish to express our profound sympathy with the Jewish community following the horrific attack on a synagogue in Manchester. Today is Yom Kippur, the Jewish Day of Atonement, and the holiest day in their religious calendar, a day of prayer, fasting, and putting things right with God. An attack like this is awful and to be condemned at any time, but the horror of this attack on this holy day can only be multiplied by its timing.

The past decades have seen increased intolerance in our nation, and this attack is now one in a long line of terror attacks that seek to express opposition to those who are different. As churches in Luton we want to oppose that message and commit ourselves once again to working for the unity and yet diversity of all in our great town. As we stand in solidarity with our Jewish community as they process this horrible news, we commit to working with all of goodwill for the safety, peace and justice of all in Luton.

Churches Together in Luton.
2nd October 2025

Never more needed.
25/09/2025

Never more needed.

In today's full teaching from "Daily Meditations,” Father Richard Rohr shares Martin Luther King Jr.’s principles of nonviolence:

1. Nonviolence is a way of strength and not a way for cowards. It is not a lack of power which allows us to be nonviolent, but in fact the discovery of a different kind of power. It is a choice, not a resignation; a spirituality, not just a tactic.

2. The goal of nonviolence is always winning the friendship and the understanding of the supposed opponent, not their humiliation or personal defeat. It must be done to eventually facilitate the process of reconciliation, and we ourselves must be willing to pay the price for that reconciliation. King based this on Jesus’ lifestyle and death and on Ephesians 2:13–22 and Romans 12:1–2.

3. The opponent must be seen not so much as an evil person, but as a symbol of a much greater systemic evil — of which they also are a victim! We must aim our efforts at that greater evil, which is harming all of us, rather than at the opponent.

4. There is a moral power in voluntarily suffering for the sake of others. Christians call it the “myth of redemptive suffering,” whereas almost all of history is based on the opposite, the “myth of redemptive violence.” The lie that almost everybody believes is that suffering can be stopped by increasing the opponent’s suffering. It works only in the short run. In the long run, that suffering is still out there and will somehow have to work its way out in the next generation or through the lives of the victims. A willingness to bear the pain has the power to transform and absorb the evil in the opponent, the nonviolent resister, and even the spectator. This is precisely what Jesus was doing on the cross. It changes all involved and at least forces the powers that be to “show their true colors” publicly. And yes, the nonviolent resister is also changed through the action. It is called resurrection or enlightenment.

5. This love ethic must be at the center of our whole life, or it cannot be effective or real in the crucial moments of conflict. We have to practice drawing our lives from this new source, in thought, word, emotion, and deed, every day, or we will never be prepared for the major confrontations or the surprise humiliations that will come our way.

6. Nonviolence relies on a kind of cosmic optimism which trusts that the universe/ reality/God is finally and fully on the side of justice and truth. History does have a direction, meaning, and purpose. God/good is more fundamental than evil. Resurrection will have the final word, which is the very promise of the Jesus event. The eternal wind of the Spirit is with us. However, we should not be naïve; and we must understand that most people’s loyalties are with security, public image, and the comforts of the status quo.

References:
King’s language for these principles may be found online at “The King Philosophy – Nonviolence365,” The King Center: https://thekingcenter.org/about-tkc/the-king-philosophy/

Adapted from Richard Rohr, “Martin Luther King Jr.’s Principles of Nonviolence,” ONEING 10, no. 2, Nonviolence (2022): 48–50. Available in print or PDF download.

23/09/2025

by David Jonathan, Grassroots & Luton Council of Faiths

19/09/2025

Our statement on the ‘Unite the Kingdom’ protest in London last Saturday. we took some time put it together as we are aware that across Luton churches there are a wide variety of views and we needed to engage with all. We will be working on developing our work on this over the next few weeks.

Address

Luton
LU13JF

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