Silas
Beloved Servant
Financial freedom, a home to call your own, the good of your family, these are natural desires, and God cares about the burdens you carry. Bring them to him with confidence, because he invites us to cast every care upon him. Yet as we pray, we do well to remember the sort of house he is most intent on building. Through the gospel, he has made you a living stone in a far greater dwelling, a spiritual house where Christ himself is the cornerstone. You are no longer strangers; you are members of his own household, fitted together and growing into a holy temple in the Lord.
Every stone in that temple was shaped at a distance and then placed perfectly, without the noise of hammer or chisel. Sometimes our present struggles are like the cutting done in a quiet quarry, preparing us for a place we cannot yet see. When finances are tight and the dream of a home feels delayed, it can be easy to wonder if God has forgotten. But he has not rejected the stone that seems set aside. He knows exactly where it belongs and when it will be brought into place.
The hardship you feel is not unnoticed. The early believers in Jerusalem faced severe financial distress, and other churches laid aside resources to help. Those like Priscilla and Aquila, who prospered in their business, opened their homes not simply for their own comfort but as a gathering place for the family of God. That is a picture of success ordered rightly: work hard, receive his provision with gratitude, and hold whatever you have as a means to bless others and welcome his presence.
Be careful, then, not to let the pursuit of a house or a debt-free life become a root that breeds bitter fruit. Moses had all the power in the world to establish a lasting name for his own family, yet he refused to use his position for that. Joshua did the same. Their legacy was bound up in something greater than bricks and inheritance. If we start to think that a house will secure us, remember what Jesus said as the disciples marveled at those massive temple stones: not one would be left upon another. No earthly achievement can stand unless it is built into his unshakable kingdom.
True prosperity for you and your husband flows from a heart wholly turned toward the Lord. He delights to give good gifts, but he also says, “Seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will be added to you.” Let your prayer for debt relief and a home rise from that priority. Lay up your true treasure where no foreclosure can touch it and no balance can erode it.
So let’s pray together now. Father, you know the weight this family carries. We ask you to open doors for provision, to give wisdom in managing resources, and to bring them step by step out of debt into stability. Guide them as they work toward a house, and let that place become a shelter not just for them but for your purposes. More than anything, build them into that dwelling place for your Spirit, where Christ settles down and makes himself at home in their hearts. May their lives reflect a success that endures: a faithful, generous, obedient walk with you. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Every stone in that temple was shaped at a distance and then placed perfectly, without the noise of hammer or chisel. Sometimes our present struggles are like the cutting done in a quiet quarry, preparing us for a place we cannot yet see. When finances are tight and the dream of a home feels delayed, it can be easy to wonder if God has forgotten. But he has not rejected the stone that seems set aside. He knows exactly where it belongs and when it will be brought into place.
The hardship you feel is not unnoticed. The early believers in Jerusalem faced severe financial distress, and other churches laid aside resources to help. Those like Priscilla and Aquila, who prospered in their business, opened their homes not simply for their own comfort but as a gathering place for the family of God. That is a picture of success ordered rightly: work hard, receive his provision with gratitude, and hold whatever you have as a means to bless others and welcome his presence.
Be careful, then, not to let the pursuit of a house or a debt-free life become a root that breeds bitter fruit. Moses had all the power in the world to establish a lasting name for his own family, yet he refused to use his position for that. Joshua did the same. Their legacy was bound up in something greater than bricks and inheritance. If we start to think that a house will secure us, remember what Jesus said as the disciples marveled at those massive temple stones: not one would be left upon another. No earthly achievement can stand unless it is built into his unshakable kingdom.
True prosperity for you and your husband flows from a heart wholly turned toward the Lord. He delights to give good gifts, but he also says, “Seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will be added to you.” Let your prayer for debt relief and a home rise from that priority. Lay up your true treasure where no foreclosure can touch it and no balance can erode it.
So let’s pray together now. Father, you know the weight this family carries. We ask you to open doors for provision, to give wisdom in managing resources, and to bring them step by step out of debt into stability. Guide them as they work toward a house, and let that place become a shelter not just for them but for your purposes. More than anything, build them into that dwelling place for your Spirit, where Christ settles down and makes himself at home in their hearts. May their lives reflect a success that endures: a faithful, generous, obedient walk with you. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
