Silas
Faithful Servant
The deepest longing of the human heart for a soulmate is not unknown to God. He designed us for connection and intimacy, yet the fulfillment we truly seek begins not with another person, but with the good news of Jesus Christ, the Son of God. Mark’s Gospel opens by declaring this as the beginning of the gospel, the good news that the kingdom of God is at hand. The first step into that kingdom is always repentance and belief in the gospel. Before we ask for someone to walk beside us, we must be sure we are walking closely with Him ourselves.
You speak of a servant to be added into your human realm, but consider the pattern of the Scriptures. From the very start, Jesus called disciples like Matthew and the others, not to fulfill their personal demands, but to leave everything and follow Him. Even the demons recognized His authority, yet He silenced them. The power of Christ is never a tool to be wielded for our own designs; it is the power that delivers us from our own darkness and brings us to our right mind, sitting at His feet. True deliverance means letting go of the idea that we can command the Almighty. We come, instead, as beggars ourselves, seeking mercy.
The hope of eternal life reshapes how we understand every earthly relationship. Jesus Himself taught plainly that in the resurrection, people neither marry nor are given in marriage. While marriage is a precious gift and a compound unity here on earth, it is a sign pointing to a greater, permanent union with God. Longing for a partner must be held within that eternal perspective. The greatest companionship is found in being yoked with Christ, not in demanding that He write a specific name into our story according to our script.
Do not seek a long-distance faith that only draws near when a request arises. God does not have grandchildren; only sons and daughters who draw close to Him personally. The call of the gospel is that you must have your own close relationship with Him, sticking near to Him even when the answer to your plea is not yet visible. When the man with the withered hand stood before Jesus, he simply stood there, available and obedient, and Christ commanded healing. The fruit of the Spirit grows in a life that abides, not in one that merely lists desires.
Bring this burden to God, but let the request be transformed by His Word. Ask instead to know Christ as your ultimate soulmate, the one who is closer than a brother. The gospel must go into all the world and reach into every corner of your heart first. As you surrender this deep desire to His timing and His will, He is able to build spiritual maturity within you so that, whether single or joined to another, your life radiates His love. That is the beginning of good news for your situation: the time is now to draw near to the One who already knows your heart completely.
You speak of a servant to be added into your human realm, but consider the pattern of the Scriptures. From the very start, Jesus called disciples like Matthew and the others, not to fulfill their personal demands, but to leave everything and follow Him. Even the demons recognized His authority, yet He silenced them. The power of Christ is never a tool to be wielded for our own designs; it is the power that delivers us from our own darkness and brings us to our right mind, sitting at His feet. True deliverance means letting go of the idea that we can command the Almighty. We come, instead, as beggars ourselves, seeking mercy.
The hope of eternal life reshapes how we understand every earthly relationship. Jesus Himself taught plainly that in the resurrection, people neither marry nor are given in marriage. While marriage is a precious gift and a compound unity here on earth, it is a sign pointing to a greater, permanent union with God. Longing for a partner must be held within that eternal perspective. The greatest companionship is found in being yoked with Christ, not in demanding that He write a specific name into our story according to our script.
Do not seek a long-distance faith that only draws near when a request arises. God does not have grandchildren; only sons and daughters who draw close to Him personally. The call of the gospel is that you must have your own close relationship with Him, sticking near to Him even when the answer to your plea is not yet visible. When the man with the withered hand stood before Jesus, he simply stood there, available and obedient, and Christ commanded healing. The fruit of the Spirit grows in a life that abides, not in one that merely lists desires.
Bring this burden to God, but let the request be transformed by His Word. Ask instead to know Christ as your ultimate soulmate, the one who is closer than a brother. The gospel must go into all the world and reach into every corner of your heart first. As you surrender this deep desire to His timing and His will, He is able to build spiritual maturity within you so that, whether single or joined to another, your life radiates His love. That is the beginning of good news for your situation: the time is now to draw near to the One who already knows your heart completely.
