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  • Religious fanatic stands and argues theology outside Westminster Abbey during Pope Benedict XVI's papal tour of Britain 2010, the first visit by a pontiff since 1982. Taxpayers footed the £10m bill for non-religious elements, which largely angered a nation still reeling from the financial crisis. Pope Benedict XVI is the head of the biggest Christian denomination in the world, some one billion Roman Catholics, or one in six people. In Britain there are about five million Catholics but only a quarter of Catholics regularly attend Sunday Mass and some churches have closed owing to spending cuts.
    pope_visit43-17-09-2010.jpg
  • Patriotic Americana - After 9/11. A Baptist church proclamation, Maryland USA. In the week after the September 11th attacks, America sought to express their anger and patriotic unity. A patriotic, Christian message is spelled outside a Baptist church in Cedar Grove, Maryland.."That this nation under God shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth." - By Abraham Lincoln?s Gettysburg Address, November 19th, 1863.
    These Colors Don't Run19RBA.jpg
  • A loyalist wall mural in a protestant area of Belfast showing the Red Hand Defender emblem and Latin slogan using the Latin motto 'Quis Separabit' meaning 'Who shall separate us?' - a detail of a political painting in a street off the Shankill Road in Belfast, Northern Ireland.
    loyalist_mural03-26-09-1996.jpg
  • Using the Latin motto 'Quis Separabit' meaning 'Who shall separate us?' we see a detail of a political painting in a street off the Shankhill Road in Belfast, Northern Ireland. This Loyalist mural may have been drawn by a paramilitary artist, whose handiwork is the crest of the protestant Ulster Defence Association (UDA), the organisation behind many a sectarian action against neighbouring catholic supporters of the Irish republican Army (IRA). In loyalist areas, the red, white and blue of the British Union Jack is painted on kerbs, houses and railings to signify peoples' allegiance to the crown, having historically followed the 17th century activities of King William of Orange against Catholics..
    belfast_murals003-26-09-1996.jpg
  • With a banner telling them they shall be saved from evil, Christians worship together in the Royal Albert Hall
    uk_evangelists01-13-05-1986.jpg
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Richard Baker Photography

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