 Mae rai oes i symud oedd hynny yn ddau i disio'r teimlo freflech yn i ar yr ysgol sydd yng nghymru yn Gwunodeig Rwyll Passy Gŵr Roiol Navey, Caplan 2 ac aeth i AMS Prince of Wales. Rwympodd Siam yr archfodol Cymru ddau i gael eu rhyflau neu ddangos gyfan ni oon o'u ddweud y ffordd fynd. Mae yna yn cyflawni Cysunio Advent. A ti weithio cael ei ddylch chi'n arweinyddio ar hwylfaen hwylwyr yn fy mwyaf i'r gweithio am mewn diodd, ond yn gweithio rydym ni'n meddwl, rydym ni'n meddwl i'r llei, byddwn ni'n meddwl i'r llei. Mae'n siaradnau i'r gwneud sydd yn dda i'r newid, ac mae'r gwneud i'r gwneud i'r newid. Advent is saying that there is a better thing, a better one coming, and you'd better get ready. Make it easy for this wonderful event to happen. Prepare the way, which means it's going to take time. There are resonances of this in our everyday lives. I'm a Royal Naval Chaplin, that means I engage with Royal Naval Service personnel of whatever rate or rank. They are precious to me, and they all have equal right of access to whatever I can offer, whatever their faith system or none. I go where they go and participate where I can. That sometimes means waiting, waiting with the rest of a ship's company for the next evolution in an exercise, waiting for the return of a ship or a submarine, waiting. Of course, in the normal circumstances of life we wait for our significant others whilst they shop on a Saturday. We wait for friends to arrive for a long-anticipated meal. We wait for our favourite team to score or to be promoted perhaps a longer wait for some than for others. We wait for the start of a business session here or the other place or any firm you care to mention. Waiting is something we don't have a lot of control over. How we wait, the attitude we hold as we wait, we do have control over. There are many things in life. We cannot either control or change. Waiting is just one of them. But what makes the difference is how we react to those things, how we behave when we cannot have or do what we want when we want it. Because it is often in the waiting, in the margins, before the Presiding Officer arrives or the exercise starts or the meal is served or the kick-off happens that we engage with the people around us, where they get to know us and we them. Where it is less about them and us, about the shared experiences and the banter that arises, where barriers are breached, where we build relationships, where we prepare the way. At Arvent, we prepare our hearts to receive a fresh, God made flesh in Jesus. The one who dwelt amongst us, as John's gospel says, full of grace and truth. So as we wait with friends and acquaintances, our team and their team, may we use words of grace and truth, of respect and of loving kindness that his way may be prepared and that we may be fully human under God. God bless you all.