I am not alone
1. This word means “bereaved,” “without parents or children,” “orphaned,” “orphan.” In the LXX it is usually associated with “widow” (Is. 1:17). Occasionally it has the figurative sense of “abandoned,” “deprived.”
2. The word occurs twice in the NT. Jms. 1:27, echoing the OT, calls for the protection of widows and orphans (cf. Ex. 22:21). This is in accord with the teaching and legal practice of Judaism, and similar exhortations occur in Barn. 20.2; Hermas Mandates 8.10, etc. The second NT instance is in Jn. 14:18, where the use is figurative. Jesus will not leave his disciples “orphaned,” i.e., “abandoned” or “unprotected.”
5. parakletos (παράκλητος, 3875), lit., “called to one’s side,” i.e., to one’s aid, is primarily a verbal adjective, and suggests the capability or adaptability for giving aid.