 Felly dywed i gynnwys, cyflniadau am ymdilynes rywbeth i'n ddiddordebeth i ff inequalities i ddiddordebeth, donc y tuerddion ddiddordebeth wedi ei ddiddordebethau, mae Llywodraeth lwn i gyfligion ei ddiddordebeth sydd wedi gweld dros ym Ilm Llywodraeth, yn y Cyfnodol? Felly ddiddordebeth i ddiddordebeth, yn ddiddordebeth, yn y cyfligion ei ddiddordebeth i ddiddordebeth, dyma'r ddiddordebeth yn ei ddiddordebeth. Felly mae'n rhaid i ddiddordebeth i ddiddordebeth. Mae'r ffordd i gael gwybod gyntaf o'r cyrcas ymlaes Gwch, mae nhw'n rhaid i'r ddolygu yn gweithio i chi i gael gweithio i chi i chael gwch, ac mae'n ddesigio'n gweithio i chi gael gweithio i chi gael gwasanaeth i chi gweithio i chi gael gweithio i chi gael gwaith, ond nifer o'r amgueddfa i chi ddiwyddyn nhad, dau iddo i'n cael ei ffamilau a youriau. Mae'n gweithio i chi'n gweithio i chi'n gweithio i chi'n gweithio i chi gael gwaith. I'm sure you're wary of letting your guard down with the media and being too personal. A bit like being film stars really, but I'm not sure if you think that's the case. The leadership can be a lonely place. And as a society I think we're all faced with the challenges of isolation and loneliness. Our youth may be particularly in their electronic world of one-dimensional friendships. Old age, with its loss of friends and family, poverty, unemployment, having the wrong opinions, business, not being like everyone else. A thousand challenges today in our sophisticated first world society. I'm a minister of the Free Church of Scotland. An old Christian denomination. Our roots, at least since around 1900, have had strong Highland connections. But we do aspire now to be a church for the whole of Scotland, and I value greatly the privilege of having been the minister of St Columbus in my home city of Edinburgh for the last 16 and a half years, and your neighbour at the top of the mile. But our Highland flavour, I think often derided in the past and maybe even still by some, offers a perspective on family, community and belonging that fits in well with a Christian message of reconciliation with God. Through Christ. He uniquely understands loneliness as the book of Isaiah prophesied of his short life he was despised and rejected. His death and resurrection celebrated by the Christian community recently at Easter offers an end to spiritual desolation and loneliness and inspires us to live and love others sacrificially. But we love community and we hope that through our commitment to it, as we open our hearts and homes to all, whatever their convictions, religion, ethnicity, orientation or politics, we can inspire something new. With an unqualified attitude of Christ motivated love and service we want to reach out into the communities throughout Scotland to dispel loneliness. Provoking an opportunity to share our faith in such a way that breaks down barriers, helping us to understand each other better and the gospel that has transformed our lives.