Warm Tea - Words to Warm your Soul

Warm Tea - Words to Warm your Soul

por Thomas Davies
Temporada 2
Enough Love to Go Around
In this episode, I sit by the window watching the drizzle and reflect on how small drops of comparison and insecurity can build into inner landslides, just as they did for Saul when he heard the song about David. I explore the contrast between Saul’s jealous fear and Jonathan’s courageous affection, seeing Jonathan as a model of love that isn’t threatened by someone else’s grace. I link this to the Gospel’s image of crowds pressing around Jesus, whose healing compassion isn’t a limited resource. Along the way, I gently invite us to bring our jealousy and fear to God, to pray for those we struggle to celebrate, and to trust that in God’s heart there is enough love for every story, including our own.
God, Time, and the Pages of Our Lives
In this episode I sit with the big, unsettling question of how we’re meant to live inside our short, straight-line lives when God isn’t bound by the same ticking clock. I explore the image of God as the one who holds the whole book of our story—every page already present in his loving gaze—while we only see the chapter we’re in. From Hannah’s long grief to the fishermen’s sudden call, I reflect on how God’s eternal “now” can lift some of our panic about being “too late,” make our small acts of love more precious, and reshape how we imagine death, not as a dark end but as stepping further into God’s light.
Small Paths in a New Year
As I sit with the news of the FTSE breaking ten thousand on the first day of 2026, I find myself less interested in big numbers and more drawn to quieter kinds of newness. In this episode I linger with John the Baptist’s simple self‑description as “a voice” making space for Someone else, and I wonder if that’s a better model for our own beginnings. Instead of grand resolutions, I explore the idea of holy remembering—living as forgiven people and bringers of forgiveness—and choosing one small, concrete path for love to walk through. Together we reflect on tiny, repeatable acts of kindness, honesty and prayer that slowly, faithfully reshape a life.
Temporada 1
Christmas, Flesh and Light in a Technological World
On this Christmas Day, I sit with a too‑hot mug and the smell of pine and sprouts, reflecting on how our fast, clever world meets the fragile story of a baby in a manger. I ponder John’s words about the light that still shines in the darkness, even as wars rage and loneliness deepens. I explore how technology connects us but cannot rock a crying child or mend a broken relationship, and why it matters that God chose ordinary, vulnerable human flesh. I end by praying for Gaza, Ukraine, the lonely and the overworked, and by wondering how tiny, tender acts might let the Word become flesh again through us.
Refiner’s Fire and Restored Lakes
In this episode, I sit with the tension of a noisy world where headlines shout of violence while quieter stories of goodness slip by almost unnoticed. I reflect on Malachi’s image of God as a careful refiner, Luke’s tender scene of Elizabeth and Zechariah naming John, and the meaning of “God is gracious” in a bruised but still breathing world. I weave in stories of a blind pitmaster in Dallas, a Secret Santa in Idaho, and communities in India restoring hundreds of lakes, to explore how holy discomfort and restored tenderness can make our hearts able to hold water again. I end in prayer, asking to be gently shown the next small step on God’s path.
Turning Up in the Vineyard
In this episode, I sit with the jarring contrast of a news bulletin: the death of a nine‑year‑old girl alongside a story of derelict land in Chicago being turned into flower farms. I reflect on Zephaniah’s fierce warning and tender promise, and on Jesus’ parable of the two sons who say very different things and yet reveal themselves by what they actually do. I share a memory of Arthur, an old miner who came to chapel in dusty boots, and explore how real repentance looks like small, embodied yeses. I end by inviting you to notice just one place today where you might quietly, concretely turn up.
Partly Cloudy and God-With-Us
Today I sit at the kitchen table with the kettle on, watching a sky that can’t decide between bright or brooding, and thinking about how “partly cloudy” fits both our weather and our world. With flu wards under strain and budgets tightening again, I turn to Mary’s hurried visit to Elizabeth and the quiet miracle that happens in an ordinary doorway. I reflect on Immanuel, God-with-us, showing up in small acts of brother-and-sister kindness: in hospitals, supermarkets, and at the kitchen table. I remember my mother’s instinct to put the kettle on whenever there was a “knock in the wind”, and I wonder how each of us might gently warm one small corner of the world today.
Helping One Another Home
In this episode, I invite you in from a grey, overcast day at the cottage and reflect on how easily we can feel small, lost, or forgotten amid heavy headlines and personal regrets. A quiet news story about a truck driver who’s driven five million accident‑free miles becomes a doorway into today’s scriptures about God as a gentle shepherd who notices the one who’s wandered off. I share a memory of getting lost on the hills above the village and the farmer who walked me back to the gate, and explore how God’s steady, searching love calls us to notice those around us who seem “a bit turned around” and walk them home, a few steps at a time.
Wolves, Lambs, and the Small Fields of Our Hearts
In this Advent episode, I invite you into a quiet, in‑between Sunday where Isaiah’s peaceable kingdom meets John the Baptist’s sharp call to change. I explore the “inner menagerie” of wolves and lambs in our own hearts, and what it really means to repent—not by grovelling, but by turning around and letting our apologies grow visible fruit. We look at tiny, ordinary choices: a returned wallet in a shop queue, a retired officer running a mobile laundry, the decision not to send a sharp email. Together, we listen for the God of perseverance and encouragement, and ask where, today, we might let the lamb lead instead of the wolf.
Stay Awake: Small Lights in an Advent World
In this Advent episode, I sit with the quiet tug of the new Church year and the gentle witness of St Andrew, the apostle who simply said, “Come and see.” From Isaiah’s vision of swords turned into ploughshares to a child sharing a candle from her Advent wreath, I reflect on what it means to stay awake in a world that’s both aching and beautiful. I talk about ecological responsibility as a spiritual conversion of tenderness, the call to notice who is hurting nearby, and how God so often comes to us in small, ordinary acts of shared light, presence, and hope.
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