• Sermon

    Holy Thursday

    I like my breakfast full. Not full-English or full-Scottish. It’s full when I have a newspaper to flick through and read while having breakfast. For that reason, I’ve had a subscription for years, so the paper could arrive regularly and be cheaper-ish. In practical terms, the publisher would send me a bunch of special vouchers I could use to buy…

  • Sermon

    Palm Sunday

    The human capability for benevolence as well as malevolence can produce astonishing results. The modern mass media, combined with modern communications technology, provide us with near-constant displays of human greatness as well as human meanness. It’s a perennial challenge faced by all societies across the globe. The opening reading of Jesus’ triumphant entry into the city of Jerusalem was soon…

  • Sermon - Year C

    4th Sunday of Lent

    Where does the money come from? It’s rather a tricky question, so let me narrow it down. What is the source of the money we can spend? The answer is: it depends on who you ask. Usually, it’s children that have the funniest ideas, like tooth fairies, Santa or ‘hole-in-the-wall’. The latter is the most convenient because – unlike the…

  • Sermon - Year C

    3rd Sunday of Lent

    I think we can all agree that comedy – in various forms – is among the most popular forms of entertainment. My favourite one is stand-up comedy and I have to admit that I consume quite a lot of it. Partially because – thanks to the internet – I’m able to watch or listen to relatively short comedic snippets rather…

  • Sermon - Year C

    8th Sunday in Ordinary Time

    Having noticed the degradation of my eyesight I prayed (that’s what you do…) and gave serious consideration to Jesus’s rhetorical question in today’s gospel: ‘Can one blind man guide another?’ As my prayer didn’t seem to be working, I went to Specsavers where I had my eyes tested and consequently got new glasses. My gaze is so sharp now that…