 Ddiwyngas. Rwy'n edrych chi'n bwysig fry fyddai ar gyfer'bu ffriflech hind stucku Daith yng Nghymru. Rwy'n edrych chi'n dda i'r Efoeddwyr yng Ngheirfaith Alexhander Horsbarrar, y Minister of the Oeith Nid, Sut Nicholas Bucklw Parish Church, y Gymh DNI Ysgrifennag i'w Lotho Lleidodraeth I Consoleio i Trofiadau Rufnidau i D grefnyddol yng Nghymru. Thank you for your invitation and the honour of addressing Parliament. The story is a difficult one. mae'n amlygu y maen nhw. Rwy'n ddalodd, rwy'n ddodd, rwy'n ddodd, rwy'n fawr i gwybodaeth i gael i'r gael. Mae'r unrhyw i'r ddodd yw'n ddefnyddio. Rwy'n ddodd, rwy'n ddodd, rwy'n ddodd i'r gael i'r gael i'r gael i'r ddodd, rwy'n ddodd, rwy'n ddodd. Mae'n gweithio o'r ysgolwyd yn iawn, gael i'r gael i'r ddodd o'r gael i'r ddodd. screwed in which I'll stay she find the house in which she's staying forces her way in and demands the help she and her daughter so desperately need the man turns on her calls her a dog and says what he does is not for the likes of her if you think I've been telling a contemporary story, That's good, but I haven't been. It is a story from the earliest of the Gospels, Mark. The woman's name is not known, but the man's name is Jesus of Nazareth. Christians do not readily acknowledge that Jesus could be cruel, but on this occasion he was. It is not fair to take the children's food and throw it to the dogs, he said. Meaning that what he was saying and doing was for the Jews, not others. The woman whose only power lay in her quick wit and eloquence replied, I may be no more than a dog to you, but even dogs get scraps. I'm not asking for much, just a scrap. If you now think I've been telling an ancient story, that would only be partly true. This is a contemporary story too. Desperate people from the Middle East are demanding help from those they know can help. Those who are drowning in the Mediterranean are not tasting even a scrap. The woman's words changed Jesus. He healed her daughter and in the next story restored a man's hearing saying the Aramaic word effatha, which means be opened. Jesus' own heart was opened by the electrifying words of that desperate, suffering woman. This woman calls us all, not just Jesus, to recognise the humanity in every other person. That Aramaic word should ring in the ears of all of us. Every day we should tell ourselves be open. Open to our minds being changed, open to those in need, open to our wealth being shared. A closed heart is a cruel heart, but from an open heart flow love compassion and care. Thank you. We now move to topical questions