Short Talks

This section of the website comprises short stand-alone talks and articles on different aspects of the Christian Faith, including the teaching of Jesus, the seasons of the Church’s Year and Feasts and Festivals.  More talks/sermons/homilies/articles will be added in due course.

The section of the website entitled The Christian Faith provides more extended teaching on larger content areas, such as the Creed and the Sacraments.

Parables

Jesus was a brilliant teacher and he sometimes taught in parables – stories with an inner spiritual meaning (1), “earthly stories with heavenly meanings” (2). Most of the stories are rooted in the everyday life of his listeners; for example, sowing seeds, lost animals, hiring workers and wedding parties (3). Thus Jesus started with the known and familiar and led his listeners to the new and unfamiliar. The vivid and interesting details make the messages all the more memorable.

The parables of Jesus are also important for another reason: “An observation of the details and relationships of common life and an appreciation of their significance is revealed that is unparalleled. We gain an insight into the inner life of Jesus Himself, as well as into His teaching, that is afforded by hardly any other portions of the Gospels (4).

The first parables in this section are The Good Samaritan,The dishonest manager (unjust steward)The Pharisee and the tax-collector, The unmerciful debtor, The labourers in the vineyard.  See also in short talks for Advent: Four Parables of Judgement -  The talents, The ten bridesmaids, The weeds in the field and The wicked tenants. 

 

References

1. Walsham How, W. (1910) The New Testament of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. The Four Gospels, London: Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge.

2. McGrath, A. (2006) The New Lion Handbook Christian Belief, Oxford: Lion Hudson plc.

3. McGrath, A. (2006) The New Lion Handbook Christian Belief, Oxford: Lion Hudson plc.

4. Moulton, W.J. (1927) ‘Parable’ in Hastings, D.D. (ed) A dictionary of Christ and the Gospels, Vol II, Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, p.317.

Gerasene demoniac

“Then all the people of the surrounding country of the Gerasenes asked Jesus to leave them…” (NRSV, Luke 8:37)

The healing of the devil-possessed man in the country of the Gerasenes stands out for its strangeness from all other of Our Lord’s miracles.

Read more: Gerasene demoniac

Widow's son at Nain

Soon afterwards Jesus “went to a town called Nain, and his disciples and a large crowd went with him.  As he approached the gate of the town, a man who had died was being carried out.  He was his mother’s only son, and she was a widow…” (NRSV, Luke 7:11,12)

The widow at Nain had once counted herself a fortunate woman.  She lived in one of the most beautiful spots in the whole of Palestine.  Indeed, the very word Nain means beautiful or pleasant.  And well the village deserved it.  It snuggled in a cosy, green nest on the north-western slope of a mountain in Galilee, and commanded a sweeping and magnificent view.

Read more: Widow's son at Nain