• Sermon - Year C

    1st Sunday of Advent

    Once, after a three-hour long drive, I finally reached my destination in the middle of nowhere. It turned out to be a ‘Pay and Display’ car park with a ticket machine. To my horror, it was taking coins only. My problem was that I had practically stopped using cash, preferring cashless payments as they’re more convenient to use and lighter…

  • Sermon - Year C

    Christ the King

    When a month ago the date of King Charles’ coronation was announced, most of the population of the United Kingdom reacted with a great shrug of their shoulders. While there are staunch monarchists on one side and vigorous republicans on the opposite side, most of our fellow citizens are really indifferent to all things royal most of the time. I…

  • Sermon - Year C

    33rd Sunday in Ordinary Time

    The Scottish leg of my priestly career started in Elgin. The parish priest and I covered a huge area between Lossiemouth in the north, on the Moray Coast and Tomintoul in the south, deep in the Cairngorms. To those unfamiliar with the area, it took an hour to drive between Elgin and Tomintoul along mostly winding roads. I was particularly…

  • Year C

    32nd Sunday in Ordinary Time

    “Utterly or obviously senseless, illogical, or untrue; contrary to all reason or common sense; laughably foolish or false.” This is a brief definition of the word absurd. It seems to increasingly define our lives’ social, intellectual and political aspects; the dividing lines get sharper and opposite views are dismissed as invalid, worthless or utterly absurd. Consequently, people get entrenched in…

  • Sermon - Year C

    31st Sunday in Ordinary Time

    “Zacchaeus made his appearance: he was one of the senior tax collectors and a wealthy man […] but he was [..] short.” This was a concise introduction of today’s gospel’s main character. A bit further down the line, St Luke indicated how Zacchaeus had been seen by his local community, when “they all complained [about Jesus] that He had gone…