Posts Tagged With: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

The Voice of Comfort (How Then Shall We Hear, Part 3)

What possibly could be more needed this Christmas season than the voice of comfort?

Needed. Can all of us admit this year that we are needy? There is no exception. We are not strong. We are not wise. We are broken. We are weak.  We cannot fix ourselves, let alone our neighbors, family, friends, country, or world.

God speaks: “Comfort, O comfort My people. Speak kindly to Jerusalem” (Isaiah 40:1). How do we hear this? What does it mean to us and for us? “A voice is calling, “Clear the way for the LORD in the wilderness….”

If you remember the great oratorio by G. F. Handel, entitled Messiah, your memory may bring to you the majestic sound of these words ringing through your head: “Comfort Ye….”  “Ye” is the archaic plural pronoun for “you all,” you plural. You are not you singular, but you plural. We are not alone.

It has been hard for me to figure out what to write about that would be of any good to you this December. Personally, I’ve been very sick and haven’t been able to think and hear clearly. Then when I hear the news of violence, death, destruction, and demonic forces, I feel inwardly paralyzed. I cry out to God with the psalmist, “How Long, O Lord?”

And we wait. Isaiah 40 begins with God’s call for us to comfort others and the chapter ends with the encouragement that the Everlasting God, the LORD, the Creator of the ends of the earth does not become weary, as we do. Instead, He gives strength to the weary. Isaiah 41 expands God’s comfort. II Corinthians 1:3-5 tells us that God is a comforting God who wants us to comfort others in their sorrows with the comfort God gives to us in our troubles. Pass it on.

I want to pass on to you two comforts. The first one is one I wrote years ago. The second one is from a source I want to recommend to you for your long-term encouragement which you then can pass on to others.

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Categories: Devotional | Tags: , , , | 3 Comments

“Near Drowning of the Bells”: A Christmas Reading

My dear readers,

I wrote the following script as an Oral Interpretation (interpretive reading) ten years ago for a “Candlelight Carols” event in our home in Arizona. Recently, I found it in my Christmas music, edited it a bit, and then re-wrote the ending, giving it a different turn.

If you can use the script in any way, a home advent reading or with a group, feel free to use it. It is very fitting this year to give attention to Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s poem/carol, “I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day,” written on Christmas day in 1863. And to provide fascinating balance, I’ve brought in Phillips Brooks’ “O Little Town of Bethlehem,” written in 1867. What may we gain from their perspectives on heartache, war, providence, and the wondrous gift so quietly given to a noisy world?

Paul and I are going to be presenting this revised version this Sunday evening to our Home Group (five couples from our church that meet twice a month). We are calling our evening “Candlelight Carols and Cafe.” We will sing together, eat a fellowship meal together, and sing some more, scattering a few short readings in here and there, with this reading culminating toward the end.

So, how did Longfellow resist the encroaching despair when heartache upon tragedy invaded his world? Does the loudest noise need to be the most influential voice in your life? Listen to this reading:

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Categories: Devotional | Tags: , , | 5 Comments

The Near Drowning of the Bells

You’ve heard the song. You have probably sung it. But do you know the story? Continue reading

Categories: Joy & Suffering -- Good & Evil, Spiritual Growth | Tags: , | 1 Comment

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