Dear Parish Family,
In the First Reading, the prophet reports a command given by God: ‘Comfort, give comfort to my people, says your God!” In the sorrows of life, who does not long for comfort? We are living in trying times with so many people known to us, family and friends have passed on in this year. Who would not melt with gratitude at the tender comfort of God? But what is comfort? Sometimes what we want is just what the good shepherd gives his lost sheep. We don’t want to walk along the road of our life to the Lord. We want God to carry us.
But a child that is carried all the time will never learn to walk, to leap and run. That child, weak enough already to have to be carried, will get only weaker as the carrying goes on. And comfort isn’t a matter of giving weakness. It’s a matter of giving strength—strength for walking, even over very rough roads. The ‘-fort’ in the word ‘comfort’ comes from the Latin ‘forte’ which means strength. To give comfort to someone is to lend him some of your strength. That person is more able to stand on his /her own feet and walk because you are there.
But what is the comfort of God? Where is it? How do we find it? The Gospel says that Christ baptizes his own with the Holy Spirit. Because of this baptism, the Holy Spirit comes to dwell within each person who comes to Christ. Our journey of life is full of peril and we human beings are limited in our resources and resilience. A lot of negative attacks against faith and religion have come up during this time. Any student of history will tell you that it was the strength from God that made people strong even when they ‘walked in the valley of darkness.’
That is why no one who comes to Christ and receives his baptism of the Holy Spirit walks the wild and rocky road of life alone. God is so much with him that, in the person of the Holy Spirit, God is within him. If God is for us, even within us, who can be against us? This is strength indeed. And so no wonder that the other name for the Holy Spirit is “the Comforter. Today’s Word of God encouraging to put trust where strength really resides, in our creator and redeemer.
Fr. Tom Kunnel C.O.