Good Morning All,
Isaiah
66:13; “As a mother comforts her
child, so will I comfort you.”
We have either seen it or been part of it
many times over. Even now, I remember
some of the times when my mother comforted me.
I vividly remember one winter day when we were going home from a
relative’s house. The sidewalk was icy
so I took off running and slid down the sidewalk. I found that I had no way to stop but I
thought a soft landing in a snowbank at the end of the walk would be
alright. The problem was that the
snowbank had been put there by the city plow and it was as hard as a rock. I hit it and all the wind was knocked out of
me. I couldn’t even cry until we were
already out of town. I rode home on her
lap the whole way.
I can remember times when either my wife or
I would have to comfort our sons after a fun play session ended with someone
crashing and then crying. A few times we
comforted them on the way to the emergency room for stitches. When they were very young, we would hold
them, rock a little, usually stroke their head and quietly talk to them trying
to calm the down. The first few sniffles
and cries were usually pretty loud and intense but eventually they would at
least only whimper and then usually go to sleep.
I have found that my role as pastor has
led me to be a “comforter.” There are
probably those who will tell you that there is a proper way to do this but I
tend to hold and to hug those who are hurting and crying. It is a lot like when my children would need
to be comforted. It seems that people
don’t need to hear a lot; they just want to be held and to be reassured that
the world isn’t completely crashing down on them- even as it seems so.
That is one of the truly great gifts that
God gives us with our faith. We still
feel the pain of events, dying loved ones, health issues, breaking
relationships, failures in life. They
are still there and very, very real. Yet
we have God’s comfort. We have his
presence through the Spirit in our lives to comfort us. One of the great benefits of being comforted
is that you feel some peace and you can rest.
We get that time when we rest, even if we were exhausted before, we get
to rest.
That is part of God’s great mercy for us-
rest. Too often, we are tormented by the
devil and his lies; God destroys those lies and in doing so we have comfort and
we have rest. God comforts us just as a
mother comforts her child. He holds us
close and whispers quietly in our ear.
We hear his words of forgiveness and of hope and we can rest assured of
his presence, of his peace. The world
will try to destroy it but God’s promise is sure; we have comfort, we have
peaceful rest. So, as life throws pain
and sadness at you, remember; God gives you comfort and he gives you peace to
rest.
Dearest Father, there are many times when we cry to you over the
pain we experience and you comfort us, you give us hope. We come to you in pain and you give us
rest. We give you thanks for this gift
and we ask you Father to use us to be those to whom others may find comfort and
rest. In Jesus’ precious name we pray,
amen.
God’s Peace,
Pastor Bret
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