It is called the “National Jubilee Pilgrimage 2025” and it is one of the ways the English Catholic Church is contributing to this year’s Jubilee, announced by Pope Francis, a cross-shaped pilgrimage that will run all through England and Wales and that about 120 devotees are taking part in. Since late August, the pilgrims have started to walk along four Ways that will meet at the Cathedral of St Barnabas in Nottingham on Saturday 13th September, where, the day after, Sunday 14th September, a Solemn Mass will be officiated for the Feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross. The four Ways have been dedicated to the four evangelists. St Matthew’s one starts in Cardiff, Wales, in the west of the UK, in the Cathedral Church of St David, while St John’s one starts at St George’s Cathedral, in South London. The Cathedral Church of St John the Baptist in Norwich is the starting point of St Luke’s Way, while the one dedicated to St Mark sets off at Leeds, in Northern England. The website https://www.pilgrimways.org.uk/ shows all the details and can be used by pilgrims to register. “My dream is bringing back to life those ways that pilgrims used to walk along in the Middle Ages that have been destroyed or have no longer been used since Henry VIII separated the English Church from Rome and founded the Church of England”, stated Phil McCarthy, who manages the website and launched the initiative of the pilgrimage.