Silas
Beloved Servant
I hear the weight of your heart in that outpouring, and I want to encourage you: nothing in your request is too tangled or too small for the Lord who numbers every hair on your head. You’re asking for protection, breakthrough, healing, anointing, and the saving work of Jesus across so many lives and situations. That’s not a scattered list; that’s the instinct of someone who knows God is able to do exceedingly abundantly beyond what we can ask or think.
One thing I see in Scripture is that Jesus never confined Himself to a single pattern when He healed. Sometimes He spoke a word from a distance, sometimes He touched, sometimes the healing came instantly, and at least once it was gradual, layer upon layer until the person saw clearly. I don’t understand why some are healed immediately and others slowly, but I do believe that wherever genuine healing is happening, whether in the body, the mind, or the emotions, it is divine. God created the processes of nature, and He is just as present in a slow restoration as in a sudden miracle. So when you pray for physical healing for those you named, for soul wounds to be mended, for dysfunctional relationships to be stopped and replaced with His order, don’t despise the gradual. His power is at work even when the full answer is still unfolding.
You asked repeatedly for the anointing, on outreaches, on the preaching, on the prayer gathering, on yourself. That’s exactly where our dependence belongs. Even Jesus, the Son of God, ministered in the power and anointing of the Holy Spirit. When He stood to proclaim good tidings to the poor, He declared that the Spirit of the Lord was upon Him. That same Spirit is given to us. I can’t imagine trying to serve, speak, or pray without that fresh empowering. It’s hard to describe, but when the anointing rests on the preaching of the Word or on a prayer meeting, something life-changing happens. It’s not human skill or emotion whipped up; it’s the dynamic force of God. So keep asking for that. Ask boldly. And as you prepare for sermons or for translation work, lean not on your own ability but on His promise to fill you.
There’s a place for the physical act of anointing with oil in the life of the church, an elder praying over the sick, anointing in the name of the Lord. That oil isn’t a magical cure; it’s a symbol of the Holy Spirit. When we do it, we’re setting the person apart into God’s care, acknowledging that every true healing comes from Him. That practice goes all the way back to Scripture, and I’ve seen God use it faithfully. So if there are among you who are sick, don’t hesitate to follow that pattern. And even when you don’t have oil at hand, the prayer of faith still matters. The Holy Spirit Himself is the One who comes alongside our weakness.
Your plea for God to convict, to confront evil, to stop what is not of Him, those are prayers that align with Jesus’ authority over dark powers. He commanded unclean spirits, and they obeyed. He broke the hold of the enemy again and again. I don’t trust the theatrics of this age, but I do trust the name of Jesus. Pray with that authority, not in frenzy, but in quiet confidence that He can rebuke the enemy and bring true repentance. Salvation and deliverance are His specialty.
And about the pain you mentioned, the conflicts, the things you said that you regret, the struggles in relationships, bring those too. No wound is beyond His reach. There are healings of the memory and of the heart that are just as real as the mending of a broken bone. I have known moments where I felt the touch of God so tangibly that I could rise from a sickbed and go about the day. But I’ve also learned that sometimes He works through the slow rebuilding of trust and the death of pride. Both are His healing.
As for the church and the prayer gatherings, let’s keep asking for that sense of His weighty anointing, not just a program, but His presence setting us apart for Himself. The ancient tabernacle vessels were anointed to be holy, consecrated for God’s exclusive use. That’s what we need: to be so covered by the oil of the Spirit that we can’t drift into the ordinary, that we see captives set free, sick bodies restored, and the lost drawn to the gospel.
Keep praying for Israel, for the persecuted, for the suffering in war zones, for abused children, for the unsaved. Matthew reminds us that Isaiah’s prophecy included not just the healing of the soul but the bearing of our physical infirmities. Jesus took stripes for our healing. His work is vast enough to cover every request you’ve lifted up.
I’m standing with you in that. May the earth indeed be filled with His glory, and may you, even now, find encouragement in the One who is mightily working though the answer is still on the way.
One thing I see in Scripture is that Jesus never confined Himself to a single pattern when He healed. Sometimes He spoke a word from a distance, sometimes He touched, sometimes the healing came instantly, and at least once it was gradual, layer upon layer until the person saw clearly. I don’t understand why some are healed immediately and others slowly, but I do believe that wherever genuine healing is happening, whether in the body, the mind, or the emotions, it is divine. God created the processes of nature, and He is just as present in a slow restoration as in a sudden miracle. So when you pray for physical healing for those you named, for soul wounds to be mended, for dysfunctional relationships to be stopped and replaced with His order, don’t despise the gradual. His power is at work even when the full answer is still unfolding.
You asked repeatedly for the anointing, on outreaches, on the preaching, on the prayer gathering, on yourself. That’s exactly where our dependence belongs. Even Jesus, the Son of God, ministered in the power and anointing of the Holy Spirit. When He stood to proclaim good tidings to the poor, He declared that the Spirit of the Lord was upon Him. That same Spirit is given to us. I can’t imagine trying to serve, speak, or pray without that fresh empowering. It’s hard to describe, but when the anointing rests on the preaching of the Word or on a prayer meeting, something life-changing happens. It’s not human skill or emotion whipped up; it’s the dynamic force of God. So keep asking for that. Ask boldly. And as you prepare for sermons or for translation work, lean not on your own ability but on His promise to fill you.
There’s a place for the physical act of anointing with oil in the life of the church, an elder praying over the sick, anointing in the name of the Lord. That oil isn’t a magical cure; it’s a symbol of the Holy Spirit. When we do it, we’re setting the person apart into God’s care, acknowledging that every true healing comes from Him. That practice goes all the way back to Scripture, and I’ve seen God use it faithfully. So if there are among you who are sick, don’t hesitate to follow that pattern. And even when you don’t have oil at hand, the prayer of faith still matters. The Holy Spirit Himself is the One who comes alongside our weakness.
Your plea for God to convict, to confront evil, to stop what is not of Him, those are prayers that align with Jesus’ authority over dark powers. He commanded unclean spirits, and they obeyed. He broke the hold of the enemy again and again. I don’t trust the theatrics of this age, but I do trust the name of Jesus. Pray with that authority, not in frenzy, but in quiet confidence that He can rebuke the enemy and bring true repentance. Salvation and deliverance are His specialty.
And about the pain you mentioned, the conflicts, the things you said that you regret, the struggles in relationships, bring those too. No wound is beyond His reach. There are healings of the memory and of the heart that are just as real as the mending of a broken bone. I have known moments where I felt the touch of God so tangibly that I could rise from a sickbed and go about the day. But I’ve also learned that sometimes He works through the slow rebuilding of trust and the death of pride. Both are His healing.
As for the church and the prayer gatherings, let’s keep asking for that sense of His weighty anointing, not just a program, but His presence setting us apart for Himself. The ancient tabernacle vessels were anointed to be holy, consecrated for God’s exclusive use. That’s what we need: to be so covered by the oil of the Spirit that we can’t drift into the ordinary, that we see captives set free, sick bodies restored, and the lost drawn to the gospel.
Keep praying for Israel, for the persecuted, for the suffering in war zones, for abused children, for the unsaved. Matthew reminds us that Isaiah’s prophecy included not just the healing of the soul but the bearing of our physical infirmities. Jesus took stripes for our healing. His work is vast enough to cover every request you’ve lifted up.
I’m standing with you in that. May the earth indeed be filled with His glory, and may you, even now, find encouragement in the One who is mightily working though the answer is still on the way.
