Silas
Servant of All
It is good that you bring these requests to the Lord, laying out both the burdens and the gratitude. Life often presses in from multiple sides at once: the weight of your daughter’s labor and the loneliness of her move, the uncertainty hanging over your son’s interview and his future studies. These are not small things. They cut to the heart of what it means to be a parent, standing in the gap and longing for God’s clear direction.
In seasons like this, we sense how little we actually control. When a person is stripped of ease, when the props of comfort or predictability are knocked away, the soul begins to voice its deepest questions. Why am I here? What is this life really about? Is God still good when the path is hard? Those questions are not a lack of faith; they are the raw cry of a heart that wants to trust but feels the strain. You are not wrong to pray for a godly partner for your daughter, or for favor on your son’s efforts. But underneath those requests lies an even deeper need: that they and you would know the One who holds every outcome, even when the answer seems slow or hidden.
Job lost everything. He had no explanation, no visible reason for his suffering. His friends insisted that his trouble must be proof of hidden sin, that godliness always leads to visible prosperity. Job pushed back on that. He saw that the wicked often prosper and the righteous often walk through fire, and he refused to pretend otherwise. Yet in his misery he cried out for an answer none of them could give. The book doesn’t hand us a neat solution to why each hardship comes. It does something greater: it pulls us down to the bare reality that life is not about managing circumstances but about meeting God in them.
Your daughter’s exhaustion and her solo move feel heavy. But the Lord sees her. He is not distant. Her need for a spouse is real, and you are right to bring it before Him. Just remember that the purpose of prayer is not to get our will done, but to surrender to His. Father, Your will be done in her life, in Your time, in Your way. A godly marriage is a good desire. Even that desire, placed in His hands, becomes an act of trust rather than anxiety.
Your son’s job and university acceptance are likewise in the Lord’s care. We ask, we wait, we knock. But if the outcome differs from what we picture, God is not absent. He is shaping character. Many times the dead end teaches us more than the open door. And always, behind every need, stands Jesus. Job asked whether a person lives on after death, whether there is any hope beyond the dust. He could only frame it as a question. We live on this side of the cross, where Jesus declared, “I am the resurrection and the life.” The deepest cry of the human heart, for meaning, for a future, for someone to bridge the distance, has been answered. That doesn’t erase the daily pressures, but it changes how we face them. Your family’s story is not defined by moves and jobs and admissions letters, but by a God who gave His own Son to secure an eternal hope.
So continue to praise Him for the blessings you’ve already seen. That thankfulness is not naivety; it is the clear-eyed recognition that every good gift comes from above. And keep asking, keep entrusting your daughter and son to Him. When you don’t understand why the road is rocky, remember that trouble is not a sign of God’s disfavor. The book of Job reminds us that the Lord never answered Job’s “Why?” He answered with Himself. That is where real peace is found. May you and your children rest in His unshakable goodness, even when the way forward is not yet visible.
In seasons like this, we sense how little we actually control. When a person is stripped of ease, when the props of comfort or predictability are knocked away, the soul begins to voice its deepest questions. Why am I here? What is this life really about? Is God still good when the path is hard? Those questions are not a lack of faith; they are the raw cry of a heart that wants to trust but feels the strain. You are not wrong to pray for a godly partner for your daughter, or for favor on your son’s efforts. But underneath those requests lies an even deeper need: that they and you would know the One who holds every outcome, even when the answer seems slow or hidden.
Job lost everything. He had no explanation, no visible reason for his suffering. His friends insisted that his trouble must be proof of hidden sin, that godliness always leads to visible prosperity. Job pushed back on that. He saw that the wicked often prosper and the righteous often walk through fire, and he refused to pretend otherwise. Yet in his misery he cried out for an answer none of them could give. The book doesn’t hand us a neat solution to why each hardship comes. It does something greater: it pulls us down to the bare reality that life is not about managing circumstances but about meeting God in them.
Your daughter’s exhaustion and her solo move feel heavy. But the Lord sees her. He is not distant. Her need for a spouse is real, and you are right to bring it before Him. Just remember that the purpose of prayer is not to get our will done, but to surrender to His. Father, Your will be done in her life, in Your time, in Your way. A godly marriage is a good desire. Even that desire, placed in His hands, becomes an act of trust rather than anxiety.
Your son’s job and university acceptance are likewise in the Lord’s care. We ask, we wait, we knock. But if the outcome differs from what we picture, God is not absent. He is shaping character. Many times the dead end teaches us more than the open door. And always, behind every need, stands Jesus. Job asked whether a person lives on after death, whether there is any hope beyond the dust. He could only frame it as a question. We live on this side of the cross, where Jesus declared, “I am the resurrection and the life.” The deepest cry of the human heart, for meaning, for a future, for someone to bridge the distance, has been answered. That doesn’t erase the daily pressures, but it changes how we face them. Your family’s story is not defined by moves and jobs and admissions letters, but by a God who gave His own Son to secure an eternal hope.
So continue to praise Him for the blessings you’ve already seen. That thankfulness is not naivety; it is the clear-eyed recognition that every good gift comes from above. And keep asking, keep entrusting your daughter and son to Him. When you don’t understand why the road is rocky, remember that trouble is not a sign of God’s disfavor. The book of Job reminds us that the Lord never answered Job’s “Why?” He answered with Himself. That is where real peace is found. May you and your children rest in His unshakable goodness, even when the way forward is not yet visible.
