Silas
Humble Servant
Your words carry the weight of years of pain, and I hear the cry for justice that has been so long delayed. It is a terrible thing when people do unspeakable wickedness and seem to walk away untouched, while you bear the scars daily. When the evil never stops and there is no visible sign that God has moved against them, the heart can grow weary and confused.
Scripture does not gloss over this. It tells us plainly that people can do evil a hundred times and their days still be prolonged. They may have breath and health and outward ease while the righteous suffer. That hard reality can make it look as though God is indifferent or that they have somehow outsmarted Him. But that is a fatal misreading of His patience. The Lord is long-suffering, not because He is weak or because He does not see, but because He is merciful even in His timing with the wicked. Yet that patience has an end. The prophet heard the Lord say, “Shall you be utterly unpunished? You shall not be unpunished.” The judgment of God is sure, even when it tarries.
The fear of the Lord is to hate evil. That is the beginning of true wisdom, to share, in a creaturely way, God’s own revulsion at what hurts and destroys. You are not wrong to hate what has been done to you. God hates it a thousand times more. And because He hates evil, He will finally judge it. The promise is clear: evil shall not depart from the house of those who reward evil for good. For the wicked, it shall not be well in the end. Their prosperity is a brief illusion, and unless they turn, they store up wrath against the day of judgment.
But while we wait for that day, we must guard our own hearts. It is easy, when surrounded by darkness, to become wise in the ways of darkness, to study it, to rehearse it, to let it dominate our inner life. Better to be simple concerning evil, as the apostle said. Do not let the poison of their actions breed a root of bitterness in you. You have been sinned against terribly, but the safest place for your soul is to stay close to the Lord, depart from evil yourself, and trust Him to settle the accounts. Honor the Lord with your life, and He will be your health and your vindication.
I will pray with you that Jesus, the righteous Judge, will bring these things to light and act in His perfect time. He sees the hidden things, the rituals done in secret, the gaslighting words. Nothing escapes His eyes. He is not a distant God, but one at hand. Ask Him to intervene, but also ask for the grace to release the case into His hands without letting it consume you. Your prayer is not for petty revenge but for His justice to be manifest. He will not let evil have the final word. In the long run, it will be well with those who fear Him, and the wicked will not stand. May He give you peace and protection even today, and may the day come soon when you see His right hand break the power of those who oppress you.
Scripture does not gloss over this. It tells us plainly that people can do evil a hundred times and their days still be prolonged. They may have breath and health and outward ease while the righteous suffer. That hard reality can make it look as though God is indifferent or that they have somehow outsmarted Him. But that is a fatal misreading of His patience. The Lord is long-suffering, not because He is weak or because He does not see, but because He is merciful even in His timing with the wicked. Yet that patience has an end. The prophet heard the Lord say, “Shall you be utterly unpunished? You shall not be unpunished.” The judgment of God is sure, even when it tarries.
The fear of the Lord is to hate evil. That is the beginning of true wisdom, to share, in a creaturely way, God’s own revulsion at what hurts and destroys. You are not wrong to hate what has been done to you. God hates it a thousand times more. And because He hates evil, He will finally judge it. The promise is clear: evil shall not depart from the house of those who reward evil for good. For the wicked, it shall not be well in the end. Their prosperity is a brief illusion, and unless they turn, they store up wrath against the day of judgment.
But while we wait for that day, we must guard our own hearts. It is easy, when surrounded by darkness, to become wise in the ways of darkness, to study it, to rehearse it, to let it dominate our inner life. Better to be simple concerning evil, as the apostle said. Do not let the poison of their actions breed a root of bitterness in you. You have been sinned against terribly, but the safest place for your soul is to stay close to the Lord, depart from evil yourself, and trust Him to settle the accounts. Honor the Lord with your life, and He will be your health and your vindication.
I will pray with you that Jesus, the righteous Judge, will bring these things to light and act in His perfect time. He sees the hidden things, the rituals done in secret, the gaslighting words. Nothing escapes His eyes. He is not a distant God, but one at hand. Ask Him to intervene, but also ask for the grace to release the case into His hands without letting it consume you. Your prayer is not for petty revenge but for His justice to be manifest. He will not let evil have the final word. In the long run, it will be well with those who fear Him, and the wicked will not stand. May He give you peace and protection even today, and may the day come soon when you see His right hand break the power of those who oppress you.
