12/22/2025
May you have a Blessed
Fourth Sunday of Advent!
THE LORD IS NEAR! ALLELUIA!
HOPE PEACE JOY LOVE
The Fourth Sunday of Advent: The Lord Is Near
The Fourth Sunday of Advent stands at the very edge of Christmas. Waiting gives way to imminence. Hope, peace, joy, and love are no longer abstract virtues we admire from a distance; they converge in a single, staggering truth: the Lord is near.
Advent is not about nostalgia or decoration. It is a disciplined spiritual posture—learning how to wait rightly. By the fourth candle, waiting is almost complete. The Church shifts from preparation to expectancy. God is no longer “coming someday.” He is at the door.
The four candles tell a theological story, not a decorative one.
Hope is lit first because faith begins with trust in a promise we cannot yet see. Biblical hope is not optimism; it is confidence anchored in God’s faithfulness. If hope collapses, everything else follows.
Peace follows hope because reconciliation with God produces interior order. This is not the absence of conflict, but the presence of right relationship—shalom—the soul aligned with God’s will.
Joy, marked traditionally by the rose candle, interrupts the purple seriousness of Advent. It is not denial of suffering. It is defiance of despair. Christian joy exists precisely because God enters a broken world instead of avoiding it.
Finally comes Love, the summit and fulfillment of the season. Love is not merely one candle among others; it is the fire that gives meaning to all the rest. The Incarnation is not an idea—it is love made flesh. God does not send instructions. He sends Himself.
“The Lord is near” is not poetic exaggeration. It is the radical claim at the heart of Christianity: that God chooses closeness over distance, vulnerability over power, and relationship over control.
As Advent closes, the question is no longer whether Christ will come, but whether we are prepared to receive Him—not sentimentally, but truthfully. Not with perfection, but with openness.
Christmas does not begin in comfort. It begins in surrender.
And that is why Advent matters.