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Jane Little looks at the deeper meanings behind non-believing Brits' use of religious language on social media.

For the first time, surveys last year showed that a majority of British adults now have 鈥榥o religion鈥. Yet on social media, religious language is alive and well: hashtags like #PrayforLondon or #PrayforManchester invariably start trending on Twitter after terror attacks, and referring to people who have died as having 鈥済ained their angels wings鈥 or 鈥渇lying with the angels鈥 has become the norm online.

Jane Little examines what鈥檚 going on here: are people who have turned their backs on organized religion making up their own comforting set of beliefs (and copying them from each other), or has Britain become a nation of atheists who at difficult moments in life use religious language without meaning any of it?

In her quest, Jane meets non-religious people who retain strong and vividly expressed beliefs in the supernatural: people like Russell and Kerry, who lost their baby daughter Rubie Jane to meningitis, yet believe that she is still with them and sending them signs; Pat, who calls herself an atheist, but reports several hair-raising encounters with ghosts; and Rowan, who does not just believe in angels, but expresses a rock-solid conviction that they are around.

Helping Jane shed light on the strange paradox of non-believing believers will be experts including Tony Walter, who has made a particular study of 鈥渙nce-human angels鈥 鈥 the idea, not taught by the Christian churches, that people become angels after they die.

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27 minutes

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