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Octavius Winslow

2 Cor. 7:6

2 Cor. 7:6
Octavius Winslow April, 17 2016 3 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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April, 17 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 3 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about God's comfort?

The Bible affirms that God is the source of comfort for those who are cast down (2 Cor. 7:6).

The Bible, particularly in 2 Corinthians 7:6, declares that God comforts those who are cast down. This promise illustrates God's infinite desire and ability to bring consolation and joy, providing an essential counterbalance to the sorrows of life. In the face of soul-despondency and heart-sorrow, the believer is reminded that God's heart is inclined toward their comfort, intertwining deep yearning with boundless power. While human sympathy may fail to reach the profound depths of sorrow, God is intimately aware of each individual's pain and stands ready to soothe it.

2 Corinthians 7:6

How do we know God comforts those in sorrow?

We know God comforts the sorrowful through His Word and the ministry of the Holy Spirit.

The assurance that God comforts the sorrowful is embedded deeply in Scripture and is reinforced through the ministry of His Spirit. God has commanded His ministers to speak comfort to His people and has provided His Word as a source of consolation. Additionally, He has given the Holy Spirit to guide believers to divine sources of comfort. This reveals a God who, at every moment, is devoted to lifting up those who find themselves in despair, emphasizing that His dealings, whether they seem adverse or not, are ultimately intended for their good and comfort.

2 Corinthians 7:6

Why is God's comfort important for Christians?

God's comfort is vital for Christians as it reassures them of His love and presence in times of trouble.

God's comfort is critically important for Christians as it serves as a profound assurance of His unwavering love and presence during trials and tribulations. In moments of deep sorrow, knowing that God is actively seeking to comfort His people provides immense relief and hope. The comfort that originates from God is unique and transformative; it promises to heal and uplift the spirit from states of despair. Such divine comfort is not just about alleviating pain but is intended to deepen the believer's joy and strengthen their faith as they recognize that even in difficulties, God's ultimate plan is for their good and His glory.

2 Corinthians 7:6

“God, that comforts those that are cast down.”

— 2 Cor. 7:6

IF there is much to cast down the child of God, there is more to lift him up. If in his path to glory there are many causes of soul-despondency, of heart-sorrow, and mental disquietude, yet in that single truth—God comforts the disconsolate—he has an infinite counterbalance of consolation, joy, and hope. That "God comforts those that are cast down," His own truth declares. It is in His heart to comfort them, and it is in His power to comfort them. He blends the desire, deep and yearning, with the ability, infinite and boundless. Not so with the fondest, tenderest creature. The sorrow is often too deep and too sacred for human sympathy to reach. But what is fathomless to man is a shallow to God.

I have said, that it is in the heart of God to comfort His people. Everything that He has done to promote their comfort proves it. He has commanded His ministers to "speak comfortably" to them. He has sent forth His word to comfort them. He has laid up all comfort and consolation for them, in the Son of His love. And in addition to all this, He has given them His own Spirit, to lead them to the Divine sources of "all consolation" which He has provided. Who could comfort the disconsolate but God? Who could effectually undertake their case but Himself? He only knows their sorrow, and He only could meet it. There is not a moment in which God is not bent upon the comfort of "those that are cast clown." All His dealings with them tend to this—even those that appear adverse and contrary. Does He wound?—it is to heal. Does He cause deep sorrow?—it is to turn that sorrow into a deeper joy. Does He empty?—it is to fill. Does He cast down?—it is to lift up again. Such is the love that moves Him, such is the wisdom that guides Him, and such too is the end that is secured in the Lord's disciplinary conduct with His people. Dear reader, it is in God's loving heart to speak comfortably to your sorrowful heart. Let but the Holy Spirit enable you to receive this truth in simple faith, and your grief, be its cause and its degree what they may, is more than half assuaged. Not a word may yet be spoken by the "God of all comfort," not a cloud may be dispersed, nor a difficulty be removed; yet to be assured by the Divine Comforter that the heart of God yearns over you, and that consolation is sparkling up from its infinite depths, waiting only the command to pour its tide of joyousness into your sorrow-stricken bosom, and it is enough. Yes, I repeat it—for every reiteration of so precious a truth must still be but a faint expression of its magnitude—it is in the loving heart of God to lift up your disconsolate soul from the dust. Listen to His words—there is melody in them such as David's harp spoke not when its soft and mellow strains soothed the perturbed spirit of Saul—"I, even I, am He that comforts you." Mark with what earnestness He makes this declaration. How solicitous does he appear to impress this truth upon the heart—that to comfort His own tried saints is His sole prerogative, and His infinite delight. "I, even I, am He that comforts you."

From Evening Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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