A million testimonies written in stone
More than a monument, this is “one of the biggest evangelistic opportunities in Britain for a generation”, Richard Gamble tells Naomi Osinnowo
With work on the one-mile access road due to begin this autumn, the Eternal Wall of Answered Prayer will soon start to take shape.
I caught up with founder Richard Gamble for the latest on the Christian monument, which, at 169ft tall, is set to be loud and proud about the goodness of God.
The Eternal Wall of Answered Prayer has been grabbing headlines for months. For those who are not in the know, what is it?
RG: It’s a colossal piece of public art, a giant infinity loop made up of a million bricks. Every single one of those bricks will represent a story of answered to make hope visible to all who...
A million bricks – that’s a lot!
RG: It is! A million answered prayers even more so. The concept is that people will see this massive structure from six miles away. It’ll be 169ft tall, two-and-a-half-times the size of the...
Each brick will represent an answered prayer—quite a testimony that.
RG: This is one of the biggest evangelistic opportunities in Britain for a generation. People will be able log onto an app, type into it whatever circumstance they’re going through, and the app...