 Y cyflwyf hir ythau ar gyfer allan hwn yw'r amserau yw'r cyflwyffydd. Mae'r cyflwyffydd yw ymgylchedd cyflwyffydd. felly oedd y bibl cyflwyffydd yn ddweud o'r cyflwyffydd cymryd ar y gwir yw ymgylchedd cyflwyffydd, byd a'r ystod yn gweithio. o'r llwyddon i'r llyfr, o bwysigol. Rhefn i'r llyfr yn cael ei ddweud gweld, yr adnodd ar gyfer y bydd y lle mwyaf o'r lyfodol. Mae genesys ar y meddwl, o'r llyfr o ddiddorol, o bryi, o swerd o braw o'r llyfr, o'r llyfr o'r llyfr o'r llyfr o'r llyfr. As we'll see what I believe to be the prime passage for understanding theologically human relationship with nature, the book of Joe, is often known as the song of the suffering righteous man. It's subject matter ostensibly is that of pain. In the New Testament we have Saint Paul in Romans writing about the pain of all creation groaning as in the pains of childbirth until the future redemption of the world. So the painfulness of our grappling with our understanding of the natural world is biblically attested to throughout old and new testaments, actually apart from one place only, which is literally the exception that proves that all in Revelation 22, if you look at it, you'll find it's the only discussion of the deep structure of the physical world that doesn't talk about pain. In fact it talks explicitly of the absence of pain. That's one of the aspects of the eschatological new creation that we find there. Now those of you who are scientists or know people who are will know that sometimes we tend to put an overbrave face on the public communication we have around science. Science is a painful, long, sweaty process. Just as we're recording this very recently has been the wonderful first announcement of the discovery of detection of gravitational waves. It's a huge cultural achievement which opens our ears to the universe in a sense when we've only had eyes to see it until now. That has taken two or three generations of labour, of commitment, of belief of those who were convinced that we could do this, but who spent their whole scientific careers taking the engineering a bit closer but fruitlessly for them. It's an illustration of the painful story of science.