“Comfort,
comfort” is a doubly welcome word when it feels like you’ve paid double for
whatever it was that required you to pay a penalty in the first place. In the
same way being fed and gathered and carried and gently led is welcome relief to
those who like grass and flowers wither and fade. More often than not we are
fully responsible for the painful predicament produced by our sin but there is
also a good bit of life’s consequences that operate outside the boundaries of
cause and effect. I imagine there were a good number of those carted off to
captivity in Babylon that could not trace a clear line between what they had
done and what was being done to them. So in the middle of the captivity, when
the memory of Jerusalem was fading, or worse when the memory of its destruction
was like a recurring nightmare, the prophet speaks God’s words of hope and
healing. “Comfort, comfort” is what was needed to endure the everyday abuse of
captors who mockingly demanded, “sing us songs of Zion” as if joyful songs
could be conjured up like some cheap parlor trick. God visits us in the worst
of times to remind us that the best of times can be experienced when
anticipated through hope. The valley of despair will be lifted; the mountain of
desperation will be brought low, the uneven and rough places of sorrow and
suffering will be made smooth because the word of the Lord is consistent.
“Comfort, comfort.”
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