Wrap Your Arms Around Me

Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and God of all comfort,  2 Corinthians 1:3 ESV

Comfort – Do you remember? Do you remember sitting in your father’s lap, safe, his arms around you, holding you as the most precious person in all the world? Do you remember what it felt like to know deep down inside that you were loved, right to the core? I hope you do. If you can’t remember that feeling, if it was tragically never part of your childhood, then it will be particularly difficult for you to understand Paul’s use of the Greek parakaleo. Most of the time we don’t think parakaleo is about having strong arms hold us tight. Most of the time we think parakaleo is the Greek word for the Holy Spirit, the Comforter. And most of the time, we think comfort means something like serenity or contentment, not solace or reassurance. Our prosperity-addicted society thinks of comfort as comfortable, not as consolation, but Paul was not a prosperity preaching television personality. He knew sorrow. So do you and I. That’s why the Jewish Greek of parakaleo is not about life at ease. It is about acts of love when life hurts.

The TDNT article on parakaleo notes: “In the LXX the words are used for 15 Hebrew terms and also occur in free renderings. Mostly, however, they are used for nāḥam, and this makes ‘comfort’ the main sense, especially in bereavement (Gen. 24:67).”[1] In other words, parakaleo is the Greek equivalent of sitting on God’s lap and knowing He loves you when life hurts. This is not theory. It is not a paper declaration, treaty, theological doctrine or gospel tract. This is emotional connection. For many of us, it is the desperate cry of our souls.

And that’s why it seems so unfathomable, even scary. We don’t know what this kind of deep emotional connection feels like because it has not been part of our experience. We know that it must exist. We pray that it will be manifested. We hope it is real. But it remains a theological ideal rather than a lived reality. We haven’t felt the arms of God despite our grand theology of care. Perhaps we need to remember something else that Paul wrote: “Therefore I am well content with weaknesses, with insults, with distresses, with persecutions, with difficulties, for Christ’s sake; for when I am weak, then I am strong” (2 Corinthians 12:10 NASB). Perhaps we don’t feel the arms of God wrapped around us because we are afraid to be weak. In our efforts to secure ourselves, we have constructed a sanctuary that prevents the experience of parakaleo, the very thing we hoped would make us feel safe. Perhaps the key to emotional theology is vulnerability, not protection. When we let God care for us, we take the risk of abandonment, and the specter of that risk is often what prevents us from letting go of all those security behaviors. To be vulnerable to God is to accept our weaknesses, confess our need and trust Him. Then comfort arrives.

Topical Index: parakaleo, comfort, nāḥam, 2 Corinthians 1:3, 2 Corinthians 12:10

[1] Kittel, G., Friedrich, G., & Bromiley, G. W. (1985). Theological Dictionary of the New Testament (778–779). Grand Rapids, MI: W.B. Eerdmans.

Subscribe
Notify of
5 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
laurita hayes

“We take the risk of abandonment”. So true! There is no possibility of comfort this side of that risk! All love is to be found only there, outside ourselves. The baby eagle, I daresay, is not allowed on its parent’s back in the nest. It only gets to ride after it jumps out of the nest and gets to the edge of its ability to fly. Free fall is the precondition of those Arms. I have never met them in any other place. But I have ALWAYS met them there. This experience and faith in His assurance have been the reasons I have been learning that free is where I need to be all the time.

Faith is where you continually sail off the edge of the flat planet of your paradigm. True comfort awaits just over the horizon off the edge of our own comfort zone. Thanks for steering, Skip!

Donna R.

This is hitting me deep in my heart, Skip. Our Father is teaching me, showing me how He loves me and who I am to Him. I don’t remember the actual feeling of my earthly father hugging me, though I know he did. Our family was torn apart when I was a teenager as he left. I really can’t remember much before then. It took awhile for me to forgive and begin to build a relationship with him again and then he died at the young age of 51. I guess I am still in the healing stages as I am weeping even as I write this.

My heart has always been for the children, especially the underdog. The orphan and the forgotten ones. I know they are missing this. May we be the arms that comfort them.

Thank you, again ?

Seeker

Skip is it in Guardian Angel that you explained one of God’s attributes is like the comforting care of a mother for a baby in her womb…

Someone once told me that we can understand how God comforts us when we look back on the times we were down and reflect on what carried us through these hard times. Not the supporting comfort but that empowering feeling that comes from…

Our God works in mysterious ways…

Ways and thoughts above our comprehension…

M kaise

For me the analogy of sitting on my fathers lap is not a good one. I’m glad for all those who have those wonderful memories but I do not, it’s not your fault but neither is it mine. And reading the first few lines brought such a cry of distress from my soul to God, pain I thought I had dealt with, anger, I thought I had laid to rest, but the anger reared it’s ugly head with such ferocity, I struggled to hold my tongue, before God, and could only sob and weep, BUT HE IS THE GOD OF ALL COMFORT, HE SIMPLY IS WHO HE SAYS HE IS and I’m so glad He meets us where we are at, and you are right it is about vulnerability, in His love for us He made himself vulnerable, He is the God of ALL comfort, and because He has been through more pain and suffering then we ever have or will He understands, yet still admonishes us to forgive, therin lies the vulnerability for me at least to let go of the wall of protection I have placed around myself and let Him in.
Thank you for your biblical insights