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Comfort, Comfort Ye My People
Grace to you and peace from God our Father, and from
our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
Amen.
The Advent hymn before us this evening presents us with the spiritual discomfort involved in receiving the Advent message of comfort. The hymn “Comfort, Comfort Ye My People” is the work of Johann Olearius, a German court preacher and chaplain to a duke. He originally wrote this hymn for the Festival of St. John the Baptist. In the third stanza of the hymn, the writer describes the season of Advent as “calling sinners to repentance.” In the same stanza the writer lifts his finger in admonition: “Oh, that warning cry obey!”
These phrases of the hymn present us with an unpleasant task. Despairing of our own power and our cleverly conceived plans about saving ourselves, we humbly wait for the true word of comfort our Lord speaks to us: “I forgive you all your sins. I have paid the price for you.” We have to admit that we are weak, even powerless. We need a healing within that we ourselves can never provide. It’s tough to admit, “I can’t do it myself.” Few things make prideful human beings feel more uncomfortable than such an admission. Advent sweeps away all our pride.
We
need to hear a Word of comfort. And so God speaks to the prophet and sends him
out with a message:
"Comfort, comfort ye My people,
Speak ye peace," thus saith our God;
"Comfort those who sit in darkness,
Mourning 'neath their sorrows' load.
Speak ye to Jerusalem
Of the peace that waits for them;
Tell her that her sins I cover
And her warfare now is over."
John the Baptist is sent to preach this message. The fulfillment of this promise is later delivered by the angels to the shepherds upon the birth of the Child with another word of comfort: “I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people. For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord. …On earth peace, goodwill toward men.”
In
Holy Baptism, we die to sin with Christ, and then rise with Him to new life. Our
Lord has remade us: body, mind, and spirit. St. Paul the says that God in Christ has made
each of us “a new creation.” The
warfare waged by sinful man against his Creator is ended, the peace treaty
written in the blood of the Lamb, Jesus Christ Himself.
Yea, her sins our God will pardon,
Blotting out each dark misdeed;
All that well deserved His anger
He no more will see or heed.
She hath suffered many a day,
Now her griefs have passed away;
God will change her pining sadness
Into ever-springing gladness.
This message of salvation during the season of Advent—and of Christmas, Lent, Easter, and the rest of the year—delivers sweet comfort to hearts that were bound by sin. Living in this comfort, we are moved to speak this comfort to our neighbors. Love generates love; faith yields fruit. Advent prophets like Isaiah and John the Baptist call us to be engaged constantly in the activity of comforting through human care.
In other places, Isaiah sings about the eyes of the blind being opened and the ears of the deaf being unstopped. He talks about the poor and thirsty and needy being satisfied. Our Savior does such things. For sinners who do not have the power to heal, our Lord leads us to use the gifts He gives us. He urges us to bring comfort to our neighbor. Sharing such a message can be hard work. It’s hard to speak this message to people who don’t want to hear it. It’s hard to speak this message even to people who are willing to hear it. Even pastors and missionaries, people who earn their livelihood by sharing the Gospel, often find the work of sharing the Gospel to be difficult. Speaking the Gospel to people who are comfortable in their sins; speaking the Gospel to people who think the pastor himself is a waste of time or money; going into the homes of the sick, the lonely, the depressed, the dying, and the mourning; traveling thousands of miles to bring the Word to people who have a history of murdering Christian missionaries—it can be uncomfortable, exhausting—even a dangerous task.
Speaking
the comfort of the Gospel to hurting, broken people is rarely comfortable.
Seldom is it convenient. Certainly it is not something done quickly or easily.
But it is the work our Lord has called us to do: to deliver the comforting news
of salvation in the cross of Jesus Christ—the same good news our Lord has
delivered to you. The Holy Spirit strengthens you with the Word and with
Christ’s body and blood to do the uncomfortable work of comforting, for our Father
has made you a partner with Christ Himself as He carries out His ministry of
love in the world. So…
Make ye straight what long was crooked;
Make the rougher places plain.
Let your hearts be true and humble,
As befits His holy reign.
For the glory of the Lord
Now o'er earth is shed abroad,
And all flesh shall see the token
That His Word is never broken.
God grant you a “true and humble” heart that is
prepared to welcome your Lord as He comes to you, both now in His body and
blood, and at the Last Day. In the name of the Father and of the Son (†) and of
the Holy Spirit. Amen.
The peace of God which passes all understanding will keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus always. Amen.
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