Nymoerparn

Disciple of Prayer
I write with deep sorrow and pain in my heart. I have previously written about how I am going through a very difficult time facing false accusations that have disrupted not only my professional life but also my livelihood. To make matters worse, I am dealing with a terrible betrayal of my heart by a woman who I truly loved and who left me for another man and to make matters worse, started that affair while we were still together all the while telling me that she needed time and space to work on herself. I am sorry for coming back again with a prayer request, but my heartache feels terrible. The betrayal feels visceral. I re-run the messages, the scenes, the conversations in my head over and over again to identify what I could have done differently. I have not tried to contact her in any form, but nonetheless she has blocked my number and blocked me on all platforms. I find myself, despite the better of my senses, continually checking up on her via a mutual friend who still is in contact with her. She seems to be reveling in rejoice with her new relationship, her new found partner, and all this makes me even more sad and despondent. I believe in the Universal laws of our Lord and Savior Jesus and I know what goes around comes around. But I am stricken with grief, anxiety, stress, and recurrent thoughts teetering on obsession. I pray that God soothes me, shows me a sign that He is watching over me, and places a God-fearing, faithful, and loyal woman in my life with whom I can develop a deep, meaningful relationship predicated on trust, loyalty, faith, and devotion. Amen.
 
We stand with you in this deep valley of betrayal and heartache, lifting your pain before the throne of grace. The wounds you carry are not just emotional, they strike at the core of trust, love, and self-worth. Scripture tells us, "The Lord is near to those who have a broken heart, and saves those who have a crushed spirit" (Psalm 34:18). You are not alone in this suffering, and your grief is seen by the One who collects every tear in His bottle (Psalm 56:8).

First, we must address the sin that has been committed against you. What this woman did, deception, infidelity, and emotional manipulation, is a violation of God’s design for love and commitment. The Bible is clear: "Marriage is honorable among all, and the bed undefiled; but God will judge the sexually immoral and adulterers" (Hebrews 13:4). Her actions were not just a personal betrayal but a rebellion against God’s holy standard. We rebuke the spirit of deception that led her to lie to you and the spirit of hardness that now allows her to "revel" in her sin without remorse. May the Lord open her eyes to the gravity of what she has done, and may she one day seek true repentance, not just for your sake, but for her own soul.

Your struggle with obsessive thoughts and the temptation to check on her through mutual connections is understandable, but we must call it what it is: a snare of the enemy. The Bible warns, "Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it" (Proverbs 4:23). Every time you replay those memories or seek updates, you reopen the wound. We urge you to surrender this woman fully to God. "Vengeance is mine; I will repay, says the Lord" (Romans 12:19). You do not need to monitor her life to trust that God will bring justice in His perfect timing. Instead, we pray that the Holy Spirit would break the cycle of these thoughts and replace them with the peace of Christ.

You mentioned believing in the "Universal laws of our Lord and Savior Jesus," and we want to gently clarify that salvation and access to God come only through the name of Jesus Christ. There is no other name under heaven by which we must be saved (Acts 4:12). The "Universal laws" you referenced may sound comforting, but they cannot save, only faith in Jesus’ death and resurrection can reconcile us to God. We encourage you to examine your heart: Have you placed your trust fully in Christ alone for salvation? If not, we invite you to do so today. "If you declare with your mouth, 'Jesus is Lord,' and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved" (Romans 10:9).

Now, we lift you up in prayer:

Heavenly Father, we come before You on behalf of our brother, who is crushed under the weight of betrayal and grief. Lord, You see every tear, every sleepless night, and every moment of despair. We ask that You would wrap Your arms around him and remind him that You are his true Comforter. "The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want. He makes me lie down in green pastures. He leads me beside still waters. He restores my soul" (Psalm 23:1-3). Restore his soul, Lord. Break the chains of obsessive thoughts and replace them with Your peace that surpasses all understanding (Philippians 4:7).

We declare that this betrayal does not define him. You have a future and a hope for him (Jeremiah 29:11), and we pray that You would prepare a godly wife for him, a woman of faith, loyalty, and devotion, who will honor You and love him as Christ loves the Church. But Lord, we ask that You would first heal his heart completely. Do not let him enter a new relationship until he is whole, lest he carry these wounds into something new.

We rebuke the spirit of bitterness and unforgiveness that seeks to take root in his heart. Help him to release this woman to You, trusting that You will deal with her justly. "Let all bitterness, wrath, anger, outcry, and slander be put away from you, with all malice. And be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving each other, just as God also in Christ forgave you" (Ephesians 4:31-32). Give him the strength to forgive, not for her sake, but for his own freedom.

Father, we ask for tangible signs of Your presence in his life. Show him that You are watching over him, providing for him, and guiding his steps. May he experience Your love in ways that leave no doubt of Your faithfulness. Renew his mind with Your Word, and let him find his identity in You alone.

We pray all these things in the mighty name of Jesus Christ, the One who was betrayed yet chose forgiveness, the One who was abandoned yet remained faithful. May our brother walk in the fullness of His victory. Amen.

In the days ahead, we encourage you to immerse yourself in Scripture. Meditate on Psalm 34, which declares God’s nearness to the brokenhearted. Seek out a trusted pastor or Christian counselor who can walk with you through this season. And remember: Your worth is not found in how this woman treated you, but in how Christ loves you, so much that He died for you while you were still a sinner (Romans 5:8). That is the love that heals all wounds.
 
We hear the deep sorrow and confusion in your words, and we hurt with you. When trust is broken so thoroughly, especially while you were still hoping for reconciliation, the pain feels almost physical. Replaying the conversations and checking for signs of her life are completely understandable reactions; the mind instinctively searches for a way to undo the damage or make sense of it. Yet we also know those same loops tend to keep the wound open rather than letting it begin to heal.

For your own well-being, consider asking your mutual friend not to share any updates about her for now. That isn’t weakness or giving up, it’s giving yourself the quiet you need to regain your footing. You might also try, when the mental replay starts, to write down a few of those swirling thoughts in a simple notebook, not to analyze them again, but to name them and then set them aside for the moment. Little shifts like these can slowly loosen obsession’s grip and create room for something other than the hurt.

None of this minimizes the injustice or the loss. We simply want you to have space to grieve honestly and to let your heart catch its breath. Your longing for a faithful, God-honoring partner is a good and natural desire; it can sit in God’s hands without being rushed.

Let us pray with you:

Father, you see this man’s grief, his churning thoughts, and his deep disappointment. Quiet the noise inside him with your steady presence. Give him the courage to step away from the habits that feed his pain, and grant him moments of peace even while the ache remains. Guard his heart and guide his steps. In your time, bring healing and companionship that reflect your kindness. In Jesus’ name, amen.
 
Thank you Heavenly Father for blessing us with another day, and for all you do for all of us. All glory and honor belongs to you Father. Please Heavenly Father grant strength and wisdom to this requestor. Soften hearts and bring about peace of mind. I lift this prayer up on your glory Father God and ask that you grant your perfect will. In Jesus name I pray. Amen



““But blessed is the one who trusts in the Lord, whose confidence is in him.”

‭‭Jeremiah‬ ‭17‬:‭7‬ ‭NIV‬‬
 
The wounds of the human heart are deep, and your thoughts have become a multitude. "In the multitude of my thoughts within me, Your comforts delight my soul." You replay scenes, you rehearse conversations, you search for a reason within yourself, yet such thoughts as these will only haunt you until you turn your eyes to the deep things of God. The more you dwell on her, the more you sink; the more a believer thinks of his God, the more comfort he will have.

Consider the nature of your suffering. You speak of betrayal, and the word itself should lift your eyes to Gethsemane. Our Lord was betrayed with a kiss, sold by one who walked with Him, ate with Him, heard His sermons. He knows this pain perfectly. That woman spoke of needing space to work on herself, yet her words were a cover for treachery, a kiss that wounded. And you perceive the sorrow of it, but have you perceived also this: that in your obsession, your checking upon her through a mutual friend, you have been faithful to your own master? Judas was faithful to his master, the devil, and carried out his agreement honestly. Some are always very honest with the devil. Your flesh has driven you to a twisted fidelity, faithful to jealous prying, faithful to self-inflicted torment. Would God that you were as true to Christ as you have been to this misery.

You speak of universal laws and sowing and reaping, but God’s thoughts are not your thoughts. If your thoughts run this way, and God’s thoughts are in an opposite direction, you cannot have fellowship with Him. Your thoughts can no more attain unto Him than an infant can touch the stars. Still, it is a comfort that if your thoughts cannot bear you up to Him, His thoughts can bring Him down to you. He is thinking upon you with constant, kind, wise, tender, gracious, perfect thoughts. Your demand for a sign, your timeline for a new, loyal woman, these are your thoughts. His ways are higher. He may not remove the grief by a distinct act, but He quickens you in your affliction, and so He comforts. This is your comfort: not a new face to replace the old, but the Word that quickens your dead heart.

This comfort comes from a peculiar source. It is not the letter of the Bible alone, but the Spirit who takes that Word and makes it life to a sinking soul. You need a comfort you can press to your bosom now, not a distant hope. The external comfort is the Word of God; the internal comfort is its quickening power. And have you forgotten the Friend who sticks closer than a brother? Fidelity is the very marrow of true friendship, and where will you find it among the sons of men? The pomps and vanities of the world cannot furnish it. Christ is holy, He cannot lie, He is the faithful and true witness. If you want a loyal companion, begin by finding all your loyalty satisfied in Him. Set your thoughts there, for even the thoughts of a little child have comfort in them, how much more the precious thoughts of God, which are so great a sum they cannot be counted.

Yet comfort alone is not sufficient. You have prayed for soothing, but the apostle prays that God would comfort your heart and establish you in every good word and work. Constancy without comfort will not suffice us, and comfort by itself breeds a soft and useless piety. You have been staring at the shut door, re-running messages that are dead and gone, but holy service is a swift cure for a sickly heart. Throw yourself into good works. Rebuke idleness of spirit. The Lord is faithful, and He shall establish you and keep you from evil, but you must rise from the ashes of this false love and walk in steadfastness.

You are not the first to bemoan a desponding heart. This is a faithful saying, worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, not just the outwardly vile, but the inwardly crushed, the self-absorbed, the ones who have made an idol of a creature and now find the idol shattered. Throw yourself upon that faithful Friend. His mercy shall endure, ever faithful, ever sure. And when you awake from this dark dream of sorrow, you will find that you are still with Him.
 

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