0:00:04 > 0:00:07Welcome to the cathedral city of St Albans
0:00:07 > 0:00:10where I'm taking part in a pilgrimage procession to celebrate
0:00:10 > 0:00:13the saint who gave this place its name - St Alban himself.
0:00:13 > 0:00:16Now, have you ever thought about how many places are named after
0:00:16 > 0:00:18saints and who those saints are?
0:00:18 > 0:00:22If the answer's "yes", then this week's Songs Of Praise is just for you.
0:00:24 > 0:00:27So this week: Stories from Britain's saintly places,
0:00:27 > 0:00:30including the legend of the stolen Cornish bones,
0:00:30 > 0:00:34Reverend Richard Coles tells me why we all have saintly potential,
0:00:34 > 0:00:37and we've hymns and songs from across the UK.
0:00:48 > 0:00:52The lives of Christian saints have always been part of Britain's history,
0:00:52 > 0:00:56but as well as the countless churches named after them,
0:00:56 > 0:01:00there are scores of hamlets, villages, towns and cities bearing their names.
0:01:01 > 0:01:03And this city is one of them. St Albans,
0:01:03 > 0:01:06where the locals hold a festival every summer
0:01:06 > 0:01:09to celebrate the life of St Alban.
0:01:12 > 0:01:16A pilgrimage procession leads from the city to the cathedral
0:01:16 > 0:01:20with giant puppets re-enacting the key moments of Alban's life.
0:01:20 > 0:01:21What do you know about St Alban?
0:01:21 > 0:01:26That he was a worshipper of God
0:01:26 > 0:01:30and that he believed in God
0:01:30 > 0:01:34and that he really trusted in him and that he would not betray God.
0:01:34 > 0:01:38He was martyred in the third century
0:01:38 > 0:01:41and was the first British martyr.
0:01:41 > 0:01:46I have come from Andover and we do a yearly pilgrimage
0:01:46 > 0:01:50and our vicar decided that this would be a good one to do.
0:01:50 > 0:01:53I'm learning as I go because I've never been here before.
0:01:55 > 0:02:00Alban was a guy who was able to recognise truth when he saw it,
0:02:00 > 0:02:02to make up his mind very quickly
0:02:02 > 0:02:05and to commit everything to a cause he believed in.
0:02:05 > 0:02:08Well, more about Alban later on,
0:02:08 > 0:02:11and our hymns also remember the saints, whether in their title,
0:02:11 > 0:02:13or in the churches where they've been sung,
0:02:13 > 0:02:16or even the name of the tunes and our first hymn
0:02:16 > 0:02:19is rather appropriately called For All The Saints.
0:04:37 > 0:04:39'Across the home counties from St Albans,
0:04:39 > 0:04:42'you'll find the Cambridgeshire town of St Neots.
0:04:42 > 0:04:46'And I've come to find out how skulduggery with a skeleton
0:04:46 > 0:04:48'may have led to the town's growth.'
0:04:48 > 0:04:49- Hello.- Hi, Diane.
0:04:49 > 0:04:53'Liz Davies is the curator of St Neots' museum.
0:04:54 > 0:04:56So, Liz, who was St Neot?
0:04:56 > 0:05:01Well, St Neot was a Cornish saint
0:05:01 > 0:05:04who lived in the 800s.
0:05:04 > 0:05:06He died in Cornwall and was buried there
0:05:06 > 0:05:10and the village where he was buried is still called St Neot.
0:05:10 > 0:05:13So, Liz, why are we here in Cambridgeshire?
0:05:13 > 0:05:17Well, we are here in Cambridgeshire because of bones like these.
0:05:17 > 0:05:23In the 900s Leofric, a Saxon lord, and his wife
0:05:23 > 0:05:27decided to found a priory in Eynesbury, which was here.
0:05:27 > 0:05:32The bones of St Neot were brought here from Cornwall.
0:05:32 > 0:05:35Some people said they were stolen,
0:05:35 > 0:05:37and they were installed in the priory.
0:05:37 > 0:05:40I don't quite get that. Why are bones so important?
0:05:40 > 0:05:43Well, because the bones of the saint
0:05:43 > 0:05:46were thought to have healing properties
0:05:46 > 0:05:49and to be able to perform miracles,
0:05:49 > 0:05:55and at that time, when people have no other means of curing themselves,
0:05:55 > 0:06:00and people were incredibly religious and they looked towards God for help.
0:06:00 > 0:06:02Where is this Eynesbury Priory?
0:06:02 > 0:06:05Well, if you come with me, I'll show you.
0:06:09 > 0:06:13We're here on the site of St Neots' Priory.
0:06:13 > 0:06:16But today...
0:06:16 > 0:06:18it's turned into a car park.
0:06:20 > 0:06:23Because of the number of pilgrims coming,
0:06:23 > 0:06:26this part of Eynesbury, really developed,
0:06:26 > 0:06:28and that led to the town of St Neots.
0:06:30 > 0:06:34This is a copy of a jewel from the Anglo-Saxon period
0:06:34 > 0:06:36that was thought to show St Neot,
0:06:36 > 0:06:41but now it's realised that actually it's not St Neot.
0:06:41 > 0:06:44So basically what you're saying is there's not really that much
0:06:44 > 0:06:46of St Neot in St Neots these days.
0:06:46 > 0:06:51No, that's right, but people wanted to come on pilgrimage here
0:06:51 > 0:06:55to get close to St Neot so that he would speak to God on their behalf.
0:06:55 > 0:06:59And there are lots of reports of people being healed
0:06:59 > 0:07:03and maybe there was something in it because if cures
0:07:03 > 0:07:07hadn't been taking place, if miracles hadn't been happening,
0:07:07 > 0:07:11then people wouldn't have kept coming to St Neots.
0:07:11 > 0:07:14CHILDREN SING
0:07:14 > 0:07:18- # O, when the saints go marching in - When the saints go marching in
0:07:18 > 0:07:23- # O, When the saints go marching in - When the saints go marching in
0:07:23 > 0:07:28- # Lord, I want to be in that number - I want to be in that number
0:07:28 > 0:07:32- # When the saints go marching in - Saints go marching in
0:07:32 > 0:07:36- # O, when the sun begins to shine - When the sun begins to shine
0:07:36 > 0:07:41- # O, when the sun begins to shine - When the sun begins to shine
0:07:41 > 0:07:45- # Lord, I want to be in that number - Shine on your people
0:07:45 > 0:07:50# When the sun begins to shine
0:07:50 > 0:07:54# Oh, when the trumpet sounds its horn
0:07:54 > 0:07:59# Oh, when the trumpet sounds its horn
0:07:59 > 0:08:01# Lord, how I want to be in that number
0:08:01 > 0:08:03# I want to be in that number
0:08:03 > 0:08:08# When the trumpet sounds its horn
0:08:08 > 0:08:13# Oh, when the saints go marching in
0:08:13 > 0:08:16# Saints go marching Go marching in
0:08:16 > 0:08:20# Oh, I want to be in that number
0:08:20 > 0:08:27# When the saints go marching in
0:08:27 > 0:08:30# Go marching in. #
0:08:31 > 0:08:35Back in St Albans their annual pilgrim procession
0:08:35 > 0:08:39is telling the story of Alban's life, culminating in his beheading,
0:08:39 > 0:08:42thought to have taken place around 250 AD.
0:08:45 > 0:08:48But do all the people of St Albans know about their saint?
0:08:48 > 0:08:52I don't know anything about St Albans.
0:08:52 > 0:08:55Nothing at all, I'm sorry to say, nothing at all.
0:08:55 > 0:08:58So, any information you can give us would be very useful.
0:08:58 > 0:09:02I know he was a saint and I know that he was executed,
0:09:02 > 0:09:04but I found that out five minutes ago.
0:09:07 > 0:09:10- Hello, I'm Diane.- Welcome.
0:09:10 > 0:09:13'Cathedral guide Julia Low is certainly able
0:09:13 > 0:09:16'to tell me more about Britain's first martyr
0:09:16 > 0:09:20'and the sacrifice he made for the man who'd led him to faith.'
0:09:22 > 0:09:27There are many, many images around the cathedral of Alban.
0:09:27 > 0:09:33But this one shows Alban and the man who converted him to Christianity.
0:09:33 > 0:09:35He's known as Amphibalus
0:09:35 > 0:09:39and here he is on the banner looking very patriarchal,
0:09:39 > 0:09:43strengthening Alban for what's about to happen.
0:09:45 > 0:09:50Alban was a Romano Briton, and, along with abiding by the Roman laws,
0:09:50 > 0:09:54you've got your passport and that passport was in the form of a cloak.
0:09:54 > 0:09:58Now, while Alban and Amphibalus were together
0:09:58 > 0:10:01a decree came down from the Roman emperor
0:10:01 > 0:10:05that Christianity was really to be sorted out and suppressed.
0:10:05 > 0:10:08He helped his best friend get away.
0:10:08 > 0:10:11He gave him that passport, that cloak,
0:10:11 > 0:10:15and so Amphibalus could wrap himself in the cloak,
0:10:15 > 0:10:18walk straight past the Roman soldiers,
0:10:18 > 0:10:21and it was Alban who was taken before the governor.
0:10:21 > 0:10:26Alban turned round and said, "There is only one true God that I worship."
0:10:26 > 0:10:29That signed the death warrant.
0:10:29 > 0:10:33That's when he was brought up here onto this hillside.
0:10:33 > 0:10:35And that's where he was executed.
0:10:41 > 0:10:44Now you're coming to the heart of the cathedral.
0:10:44 > 0:10:46It's the shrine of Alban.
0:10:46 > 0:10:52One-day pilgrims come here, light a candle and say the prayer of Alban.
0:10:52 > 0:10:54There is a specific prayer to Alban.
0:10:57 > 0:11:01On pilgrimage day we all carry a red rose
0:11:01 > 0:11:05and all the roses are left here on the shrine,
0:11:05 > 0:11:08and it looks magnificent.
0:11:08 > 0:11:10That's our gift to Alban.
0:11:10 > 0:11:13Why do people come here to pay their respects to a saint?
0:11:13 > 0:11:16Look at the examples they set us.
0:11:16 > 0:11:20This is about Alban, a very, very ordinary man,
0:11:20 > 0:11:22but, gosh, did he do an extraordinary thing.
0:11:22 > 0:11:26He was so brave and it's still happening today.
0:11:26 > 0:11:30These people who give their lives for a cause are so brave.
0:11:30 > 0:11:32And that's Alban.
0:13:39 > 0:13:45I was caught up in drug addiction for about 15, 20 years.
0:13:45 > 0:13:48And I think if I hadn't have been found by God
0:13:48 > 0:13:51I certainly wouldn't be here now.
0:13:53 > 0:13:57Matt Wrathall arrived in St Albans three years ago.
0:13:57 > 0:13:59He'd recently become a Christian.
0:13:59 > 0:14:02Then homeless and waiting for a room in a local hostel,
0:14:02 > 0:14:05he felt drawn to the cathedral.
0:14:05 > 0:14:08I suppose I felt then, and I knew then,
0:14:08 > 0:14:11that this is the place that I kind of had to be.
0:14:11 > 0:14:14The church call it a calling, I suppose,
0:14:14 > 0:14:17and in more respects it's more of a bellowing.
0:14:17 > 0:14:22- When did you next come here? - Pretty much every day thereafter.
0:14:22 > 0:14:25And I felt a lot of comfort from coming here.
0:14:25 > 0:14:27On my own, talking to people,
0:14:27 > 0:14:31and it is kind of very reassuring for me to be here,
0:14:31 > 0:14:33in that environment,
0:14:33 > 0:14:36given the environment I had been in before that.
0:14:36 > 0:14:38When the priest had lived in his house some days...
0:14:38 > 0:14:42'Matt's now a regular worshipper at St Albans Cathedral
0:14:42 > 0:14:46'and this year he's taking part in the festival pilgrimage.'
0:14:46 > 0:14:49Matt, what was it like to be actually part of the procession?
0:14:49 > 0:14:53It feels good to be a part of somebody else's story
0:14:53 > 0:14:56and to be able to help other people to understand that story.
0:14:58 > 0:15:00It's been a massive eye-opener for me.
0:15:00 > 0:15:03The help and the support I've got from people.
0:15:03 > 0:15:05I certainly wouldn't have imagined I'd have ever been
0:15:05 > 0:15:08the sort of person to go to a cathedral.
0:15:08 > 0:15:11I suppose, for me, I thought it was very much...
0:15:11 > 0:15:14yeah, you know, yeah, a bit stuffy.
0:15:14 > 0:15:18And it's not really, it's a good place.
0:15:18 > 0:15:20A good place, good people.
0:15:22 > 0:15:28I know that, like St Alban, I was lost until I found Christianity.
0:15:28 > 0:15:33I know most people that know me are still scratching their heads,
0:15:33 > 0:15:37thinking, when is this bit of the story going to end?
0:15:37 > 0:15:40And I sort of have to sort of pinch myself, to be honest with you,
0:15:40 > 0:15:43to think where I was and where I am now.
0:15:43 > 0:15:46The fact that I am thinking about going to university this year,
0:15:46 > 0:15:50you know, and I'm helping other people in recovery as well now,
0:15:50 > 0:15:52which is a big thing.
0:15:52 > 0:15:56So, yeah, it is good. Well, it's great, isn't it? Yeah.
0:16:04 > 0:16:07# King of Kings
0:16:08 > 0:16:11# Majesty
0:16:12 > 0:16:15# God of heaven
0:16:15 > 0:16:19# Living in me
0:16:21 > 0:16:24# Gentle saviour
0:16:26 > 0:16:28# Closest friend
0:16:30 > 0:16:33# Strong deliverer
0:16:33 > 0:16:37# Beginning and end
0:16:39 > 0:16:42# All within me
0:16:42 > 0:16:45# Falls at your throne
0:16:47 > 0:16:50# Your Majesty
0:16:52 > 0:16:54# I can but bow
0:16:56 > 0:16:58# I lay my all
0:17:00 > 0:17:03# Before you now
0:17:04 > 0:17:07# In royal robes
0:17:09 > 0:17:12# I don't deserve
0:17:13 > 0:17:21# I live to serve you, Majesty
0:17:26 > 0:17:30# Earth and Heaven
0:17:31 > 0:17:34# Worship you
0:17:36 > 0:17:38# Love eternal
0:17:39 > 0:17:42# Faithful and true
0:17:44 > 0:17:47# Who bought the nations
0:17:49 > 0:17:51# Ransomed souls
0:17:53 > 0:17:57# Brought this sinner
0:17:57 > 0:17:59# Near to your throne
0:18:02 > 0:18:04# All within me
0:18:05 > 0:18:09# Cries out in praise
0:18:10 > 0:18:13# Your Majesty
0:18:15 > 0:18:17# I can but bow
0:18:19 > 0:18:21# I lay my all
0:18:23 > 0:18:26# Before you now
0:18:28 > 0:18:30# In royal robes
0:18:32 > 0:18:35# I don't deserve
0:18:36 > 0:18:44# I live to serve you, Majesty
0:18:45 > 0:18:48# Oo-oo-oo-oo. #
0:19:07 > 0:19:10Well, so far we've heard about the Cornish St Neot,
0:19:10 > 0:19:12the Roman St Alban,
0:19:12 > 0:19:15and now here's a take on a fascinating legend about
0:19:15 > 0:19:19an Irish female saint that's given a small community in Cumbria
0:19:19 > 0:19:20its saintly name.
0:19:21 > 0:19:24On the most westerly tip of Cumbria
0:19:24 > 0:19:28the village of St Bees is home to a 900-year-old priory
0:19:28 > 0:19:32and a school whose pupils are well acquainted with their local saint.
0:19:32 > 0:19:34ALL: Welcome to St Bees.
0:19:34 > 0:19:37St Bees is named after St Bega.
0:19:37 > 0:19:40And this is her legendary story.
0:19:51 > 0:19:53Out there is the Irish Sea.
0:19:53 > 0:19:59Bega was a young Irish princess betrothed to a Viking prince.
0:20:01 > 0:20:04Her father wanted the marriage to take place,
0:20:04 > 0:20:07but Bega definitely didn't.
0:20:07 > 0:20:10She was a Christian and she didn't want to marry a heathen.
0:20:12 > 0:20:15So she decided to run away from home.
0:20:15 > 0:20:18Even though she was locked in her room, an angel visited her
0:20:18 > 0:20:23and the angel gave her a bracelet which was able to open locked doors.
0:20:23 > 0:20:27This allowed her to escape in a small boat to England.
0:20:29 > 0:20:32When she had arrived here in Cumbria she lived as a hermit, but
0:20:32 > 0:20:36she wanted to live out her Christian faith by starting a church.
0:20:38 > 0:20:41But she needed somewhere to build a church.
0:20:41 > 0:20:43It was the middle of summer time
0:20:43 > 0:20:47and she went to the local landowner called Lord Egremont.
0:20:47 > 0:20:52He said whatever land was covered in snow the next day, she could have.
0:20:54 > 0:20:56The next morning was Midsummer's Day
0:20:56 > 0:20:59but the whole land was covered in snow.
0:20:59 > 0:21:02And so it meant that all this land became hers
0:21:02 > 0:21:05and she built the church which has now become St Bees Priory.
0:21:08 > 0:21:12This is all legend, but some say it's true.
0:21:14 > 0:21:19What we do know is that this village was originally called Kirkby Beacock
0:21:19 > 0:21:22which means a church by the settlement of Bega
0:21:24 > 0:21:26The Priory has been here since 1120 AD.
0:21:28 > 0:21:31Even today it remains a key part of our village community,
0:21:31 > 0:21:33and of the school.
0:21:35 > 0:21:38Every week we join here all together for a whole school service.
0:21:38 > 0:21:42It is an amazing building with a lot of signs of Bega.
0:24:04 > 0:24:08In almost every part of the UK there's a place named after a saint
0:24:08 > 0:24:12and joining me in St Albans is Reverend Richard Coles
0:24:12 > 0:24:15who's a bit of an expert on these saintly places.
0:24:15 > 0:24:17Well, in the Middle Ages and before that,
0:24:17 > 0:24:20it was very important for a place to have a sort of local hero,
0:24:20 > 0:24:21if you see what I mean.
0:24:21 > 0:24:23Partly because it put them on the map,
0:24:23 > 0:24:25but partly also because there seems to be
0:24:25 > 0:24:27a sort of impulse in people, in religious people,
0:24:27 > 0:24:29to identify with other people.
0:24:29 > 0:24:31Religion can sometimes get a bit abstract
0:24:31 > 0:24:34and I think lots of times people like to see a religion
0:24:34 > 0:24:36as it plays out in the life of an individual
0:24:36 > 0:24:38so they can sort of focus on that and relate to that
0:24:38 > 0:24:41and then around that sort of stories build-up,
0:24:41 > 0:24:43communities build-up, and before you know it,
0:24:43 > 0:24:45you've got an identity for a whole community.
0:24:45 > 0:24:47So, who are all these little-known saints?
0:24:47 > 0:24:49Well, there's loads of them.
0:24:49 > 0:24:52There's a lovely saint called St Rumwald of Buckingham,
0:24:52 > 0:24:55not very far from here, and he was actually,
0:24:55 > 0:24:59he was born and came out of his mother's womb saying,
0:24:59 > 0:25:01"I am a Christian, I am a Christian, I am a Christian."
0:25:01 > 0:25:04He then preached a sermon on the brevity of life
0:25:04 > 0:25:05and died aged three days.
0:25:05 > 0:25:07Now, to you or I,
0:25:07 > 0:25:10that would be a rather surprising activity for a newborn to do.
0:25:10 > 0:25:13But it's a legend that was important to people then
0:25:13 > 0:25:16because it gave them some sort of identity.
0:25:16 > 0:25:19And, also, there is a kernel of truth in them that preserves
0:25:19 > 0:25:23an essential truth, which is what's it like to dedicate your life to God?
0:25:23 > 0:25:25To live your life in accord with the will of God,
0:25:25 > 0:25:28and the grace of God and the light of God,
0:25:28 > 0:25:32and that's what saints are about - people who anticipate heaven
0:25:32 > 0:25:34through living a godly life in the here and now.
0:25:41 > 0:25:43It's just really interesting
0:25:43 > 0:25:45the way that saints were perceived then
0:25:45 > 0:25:47- to how we perceive them now.- Yes.
0:25:47 > 0:25:50Now I think saintly behaviour would be harder to identify.
0:25:50 > 0:25:52A lot of the saints of the past would be diagnosed
0:25:52 > 0:25:54with mental health problems now.
0:25:54 > 0:25:59Voice hearing, the sort of austerities they would practise,
0:25:59 > 0:26:02going without food, going without rest.
0:26:02 > 0:26:06And I think our eyes are not as open as they were to the strangeness
0:26:06 > 0:26:07and the miraculousness
0:26:07 > 0:26:11and the mysteriousness of how God works out in people's lives.
0:26:11 > 0:26:14You're encountering this all the time in the most unlikely places.
0:26:14 > 0:26:17Street homeless people, young people, the very old,
0:26:17 > 0:26:20people on the margins of things who are pretty much overlooked
0:26:20 > 0:26:23or ignored, and yet lived lives of extraordinary holiness,
0:26:23 > 0:26:25if you've got the time and the patience
0:26:25 > 0:26:28to actually sit and listen and see.
0:26:28 > 0:26:29Are we all saints?
0:26:29 > 0:26:32I think we all CAN be saints.
0:26:32 > 0:26:36God wants us to bear the authentic likeness of his son, to restore
0:26:36 > 0:26:40the goodness and grace and light and truth of Jesus Christ in us.
0:26:40 > 0:26:43We are his hands, his feet, his mind, his words, his deeds.
0:26:43 > 0:26:47If we give ourselves to God, God will use us,
0:26:47 > 0:26:49frail, broken vessels that we are, for God's purposes.
0:26:49 > 0:26:54And some people are really good at that and those are the people who we would acknowledge as saints
0:26:54 > 0:26:57and see in them what it might be like to live entirely to God.
0:26:57 > 0:26:59A life of blessedness and holiness -
0:26:59 > 0:27:02it's a wonderful thing when you encounter it.
0:27:13 > 0:27:19# Make me a channel of your peace
0:27:19 > 0:27:25# Where there is hatred, let me bring Your love
0:27:25 > 0:27:27# Where there is injury
0:27:27 > 0:27:31# Your pardon, Lord
0:27:31 > 0:27:37# And where there's doubt, true faith in You
0:27:37 > 0:27:44# Oh, Master, grant that I may never seek
0:27:44 > 0:27:50# So much to be consoled as to console
0:27:50 > 0:27:56# To be understood as to understand
0:27:56 > 0:28:02# To be loved as to love with all my soul
0:28:05 > 0:28:11# Make me a channel of your peace
0:28:11 > 0:28:16# Where there's despair in life, let me bring hope
0:28:17 > 0:28:23# Where there is darkness, only light
0:28:23 > 0:28:30# And where there's sadness, ever joy
0:28:30 > 0:28:37# Oh, Master, grant that I may never seek
0:28:37 > 0:28:43# So much to be consoled as to console
0:28:43 > 0:28:49# To be understood as to understand
0:28:49 > 0:28:57# To be loved as to love with all my soul
0:28:59 > 0:29:04# Make me a channel
0:29:04 > 0:29:10# A channel of your peace
0:29:10 > 0:29:17# Oh, make me a channel
0:29:17 > 0:29:18# Of peace
0:29:18 > 0:29:23# Make me a channel of your peace
0:29:23 > 0:29:34# A-a-a-a-a-h. #
0:29:39 > 0:29:41Heavenly Father,
0:29:41 > 0:29:44thank you for the stories our saints left behind,
0:29:44 > 0:29:46to inspire and to teach us.
0:29:47 > 0:29:51Thank you that the saints were ordinary people like us
0:29:51 > 0:29:53and you can speak to us as you did to them.
0:29:55 > 0:29:59And may God give us grace to follow his saints in faith and hope
0:29:59 > 0:30:02and love, and the blessing of God Almighty,
0:30:02 > 0:30:05the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit
0:30:05 > 0:30:10be with us and remain with us this day and evermore.
0:30:10 > 0:30:11Amen.
0:30:14 > 0:30:16When we look at the lives of the saints,
0:30:16 > 0:30:19as we have been doing today, we realise that they were
0:30:19 > 0:30:22just ordinary people, simply putting their trust in God.
0:30:22 > 0:30:26And that's the story of our final hymn, Thy Hand, O God, Has Guided.
0:33:02 > 0:33:05Next week, Bill takes the ancient pilgrim's path
0:33:05 > 0:33:07to the holy island of Lindisfarne,
0:33:07 > 0:33:10birthplace of the beautiful Lindisfarne Gospels.
0:33:10 > 0:33:14He meets a graffiti artist inspired by medieval manuscript
0:33:14 > 0:33:16and learns how to draw Celtic knots.
0:33:16 > 0:33:20And the hymns come from Lindisfarne island's Anglican Church.
0:33:39 > 0:33:41Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd