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Construction Begins on UK’s Giant Wall of Answered Prayers

Construction Begins on UK’s Giant Wall of Answered Prayers

Work has begun on what many describe as the biggest Christian monument in the United Kingdom, the Eternal Wall of Answered Prayer.

A Monument of Faith and Hope

The structure takes the form of a white infinity loop called a Mobius strip. It will rise 51.5 meters high and stretch 80 meters wide. Builders plan to use one million bricks, and each brick will tell the story of an answered prayer.

Visitors can point their phones at any brick to listen or watch the story behind it through a dedicated mobile app. As a result, every visit will become a personal and interactive experience that connects faith and technology.

Years of Planning Turn Into Reality

After two decades of preparation, the £40 million project is finally moving forward. A recent post on the project’s LinkedIn page shared the excitement: “After 20 years, we break ground this week on Eternal Wall. The 51 meter high landmark will contain a million bricks, each telling a story of answered prayer.”

Richard Gamble, a former chaplain of Leicester City Football Club, received the vision for the project during prayer. Soon after, he gathered a small team, secured planning approval, and obtained land near Birmingham, between the M6 and M42 motorways.

“The waiting is over,” Gamble said. “Building starts November 5. Thank you Jesus.”

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Thousands of Stories of Faith

By July this year, organizers had already collected over 100,000 stories of answered prayer. Their goal is to reach 250,000 before the wall officially opens in 2028.

The testimonies come from across the world and reveal stories of healing, financial breakthroughs, restored marriages, and personal transformation. Each account will become a digital brick that proves how faith and prayer continue to change lives.

An Open Call to Share More Testimonies

Organizers continue to invite Christians everywhere to share their stories of answered prayer. For those unable to submit immediately, they encourage making an “Answered Prayer Pledge”  a promise to share the story at a later date.

Gamble and his team believe the project represents more than just a monument. Instead, it serves as a living record of faith built from real human experiences and divine encounters.

“Every story is a stone in this monument,” they said. “It is a lasting reminder that prayer works.”

 

 

 

 

 

Content Credit : Boluwatife Abiola

Image Credit : Google. Com

 

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