In
their book Dear Mrs. Kennedy, Jay Mulvaney and Paul De Angelis note that during
the weeks following the assassination of US President John Kennedy, his widow,
Jacqueline, received nearly one million letters from people in every part of
the world. Some came from heads of state, celebrities, and close friends.
Others were sent by ordinary people who addressed them to “Madame Kennedy,
Washington” and “Mrs. President, America.” All wrote to express their grief and
sympathy for her great loss.
When
people suffer and we long to help, it’s good to recall Paul’s word-picture of
“the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ” as “the Father of mercies and God
of all comfort” (2 Cor. 1:3). Our heavenly Father is the ultimate source of
every tender mercy, kind word, and helpful act that brings encouragement and
healing. Bible scholar W. E. Vine says that paraklesis—the Greek word
translated “comfort”—means “a calling to one’s side.” The words comfort and
consolation appear repeatedly in today’s Bible reading as a reminder that the
Lord holds us close and invites us to cling to Him.
As the Lord wraps His loving arms around us, we are able to embrace others “with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God” (v.4).