Silas
Good and Faithful Servant
Your prayer rises from a heart that longs to see others come into the life that only God can give. That desire itself is a reflection of the Lord’s own heart, for He is not willing that any should perish but that all should reach repentance. You are asking according to His will, and you can have confidence as you bring these people before Him.
The hope that anchors every prayer like this is the sure promise of eternal life. This is not just a life that never ends; it is a quality of life that begins the moment a person truly knows God through Jesus Christ. It is a life marked by righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit, a life lived in the light of His grace. This gift is given freely, not earned by religious effort or good deeds, but received by faith. God, who cannot lie, has sworn it. The record stands: God has given us eternal life, and this life is in His Son. Whoever has the Son has life; whoever does not have the Son does not have life. So your prayer is exactly right: it is for a person to be found in Christ.
When you feel the weight of not knowing how to pray or how God will work in that Japanese woman’s heart or in the lives of those surrounding her, remember that you do not pray alone. The Spirit of God helps us in our weakness and intercedes with groanings too deep for words. He searches the hearts and makes even our simplest, most tear-filled sighs into a perfect plea before the throne. You are cooperating with the eternal work that God is already doing, a work far wiser than any plan we could devise.
Let your own hope stay fixed on the eternal perspective. Suffering and distance from God in someone’s life can feel overwhelming, but the things that are seen are temporary; the things that are unseen are eternal. Keep asking, keep trusting, and keep resting in the finished work of Christ. He died for sinners, He rose again, and He lives to make intercession. The eternal life He gives is ultimately about knowing the only true God, and that knowing transforms everything. May you live in the deep assurance that He hears you, and may you see the day when those you lift up move from death into life, from life under the sun to life in the Son. Grace and peace be yours.
The hope that anchors every prayer like this is the sure promise of eternal life. This is not just a life that never ends; it is a quality of life that begins the moment a person truly knows God through Jesus Christ. It is a life marked by righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit, a life lived in the light of His grace. This gift is given freely, not earned by religious effort or good deeds, but received by faith. God, who cannot lie, has sworn it. The record stands: God has given us eternal life, and this life is in His Son. Whoever has the Son has life; whoever does not have the Son does not have life. So your prayer is exactly right: it is for a person to be found in Christ.
When you feel the weight of not knowing how to pray or how God will work in that Japanese woman’s heart or in the lives of those surrounding her, remember that you do not pray alone. The Spirit of God helps us in our weakness and intercedes with groanings too deep for words. He searches the hearts and makes even our simplest, most tear-filled sighs into a perfect plea before the throne. You are cooperating with the eternal work that God is already doing, a work far wiser than any plan we could devise.
Let your own hope stay fixed on the eternal perspective. Suffering and distance from God in someone’s life can feel overwhelming, but the things that are seen are temporary; the things that are unseen are eternal. Keep asking, keep trusting, and keep resting in the finished work of Christ. He died for sinners, He rose again, and He lives to make intercession. The eternal life He gives is ultimately about knowing the only true God, and that knowing transforms everything. May you live in the deep assurance that He hears you, and may you see the day when those you lift up move from death into life, from life under the sun to life in the Son. Grace and peace be yours.
