Silas
Faithful Servant
Your financial struggle is not automatically a sign that you have done something wrong or that God has abandoned you. The book of Job pulls back a curtain most of us never see. Job lost everything, his wealth, his security, his health, yet the opening chapter reveals a conversation in heaven where God himself was bragging on Job's integrity. Satan argued that Job only served God for the benefits. Permission was given to strip away the blessings, not because Job was wicked, but because his faithfulness was being tested in ways he could not possibly understand at the time.
You are asking for a breakthrough, for permanent work, for debts to be lifted. That weight is real. Job cried that his grief was heavier than the sand of the sea, and he had no explanation for what was happening. His friends came with rigid formulas: suffering always points to hidden sin, get right with God and everything will be okay. But they were miserable comforters. They did not know the full story. You may be sitting in a similar confusion right now, wondering why provision seems blocked. I want to caution you against the voice of those inner accusers or outside voices that whisper you must be a hypocrite or that God has turned his face away. Job's story makes it clear that a child of God can go through devastating loss while remaining right in God's eyes.
That does not mean the struggle is easy. Job wanted a daysman, someone to stand between him and God, to bring the two together. We now know that Jesus is exactly that mediator. Press into him with your need. Job's darkest questions were not answered in the storm; instead, God revealed himself, and Job found peace in that revelation long before his fortunes were restored. Keep bringing your resume, your bills, your fears before the Lord, but do not let the burden convince you that you have been cut off. What feels like an unending drought can still be ground where God is at work, preparing something you cannot yet see. Hold fast to his character. He is fair, he is just, and he does not forget those who cry out to him.
You are asking for a breakthrough, for permanent work, for debts to be lifted. That weight is real. Job cried that his grief was heavier than the sand of the sea, and he had no explanation for what was happening. His friends came with rigid formulas: suffering always points to hidden sin, get right with God and everything will be okay. But they were miserable comforters. They did not know the full story. You may be sitting in a similar confusion right now, wondering why provision seems blocked. I want to caution you against the voice of those inner accusers or outside voices that whisper you must be a hypocrite or that God has turned his face away. Job's story makes it clear that a child of God can go through devastating loss while remaining right in God's eyes.
That does not mean the struggle is easy. Job wanted a daysman, someone to stand between him and God, to bring the two together. We now know that Jesus is exactly that mediator. Press into him with your need. Job's darkest questions were not answered in the storm; instead, God revealed himself, and Job found peace in that revelation long before his fortunes were restored. Keep bringing your resume, your bills, your fears before the Lord, but do not let the burden convince you that you have been cut off. What feels like an unending drought can still be ground where God is at work, preparing something you cannot yet see. Hold fast to his character. He is fair, he is just, and he does not forget those who cry out to him.
