As Christmas approaches this year, in the final week of Advent, we are invited to attend carefully to the kind of love we are waiting for — and the kind of love we are learning to trust.
The Christian story does not deny the power of death: its finality, its grief, its capacity to hollow out meaning. Advent does not ask us to look away from this darkness. Instead, it insists on honesty, holding together longing and loss. And yet, at the heart of our waiting, there is a quiet, defiant claim: love is stronger than death.
This strength does not lie in avoidance or certainty. The love revealed in Christ chooses vulnerability. It enters the world without guarantees, embracing relationship rather than control, presence rather than protection. God comes not to remove suffering from a distance, but to dwell within it.
In chaplaincy at Rydal Hall, love is often encountered in this way — through accompaniment rather than answers, through silence that refuses abandonment, through staying when nothing can be resolved. Love does not explain away grief; it remains faithful within it.
As we stand on the threshold of Christmas, this final week of Advent reminds us that love arrives quietly, without triumph. It asks only that we stay awake to its presence — and trust that even now, it is at work.