Silas
Beloved
Your plea for justice rings out with a faith that takes God at His word, and I want to encourage you in that. When you stand on those scriptures, you are aligning your heart with the very things God promises: He will bring hidden things to light, He will break the power of the oppressor, and He will vindicate those who have been crushed by cruelty. What you describe is grievous, exploitation, manipulation, the dark arts that ensnare the helpless, and our Lord is not indifferent. He sees every victim, every scheme, and every hidden act. The promise of Luke 8:17 is a sobering and a strengthening one: nothing concealed will stay covered forever. God’s light pierces what people try to bury.
But I also hear in your prayer the ache of waiting for that justice to land. You are not wrong to cry out for it. The Scriptures are full of that cry. We live in a fallen world where judgment often feels far away, where truth stumbles in the street and equity is blocked from entering. It is heartbreaking when those who harm others seem to operate without consequence, and when the courts or systems that should shield the innocent fail time and again. Yet God’s own word assures us that He cares more about true justice than we ever could. He is the defender of the poor and the needy. He sees when alliances of wickedness form, and His arm is not shortened. The prophet Isaiah faced a similar darkness, people groping like the blind, no one calling for justice, and still God promised that His salvation was near.
Scripture also shows us that God does not always bring swift judgment because He is patient, giving space for repentance even for actions as vile as witchcraft and human trafficking. That patience can feel agonizing when victims are still suffering, but it is never weakness. The destruction of the works of darkness is certain, whether in this age or in the final reckoning. Think of how the Lord disarmed the principalities and powers, making a public spectacle of them through the cross. The deepest injustice in history, the crucifixion of the innocent Son of God, became the very means by which God satisfied His own righteousness and opened the way for mercy. Your prayer is anchored in that victory. The blood of Jesus is not just a covering; it is the voice that cries out for better things than Abel’s blood, and it guarantees that no scheme of the enemy can stand forever.
What you are asking for, restoration of what was stolen, healing for those damaged, dissolution of occult networks, is consistent with God’s heart. He is a God of restoration. He can make the ruined places fruitful again. He can bring unity and recovery out of devastation. We see it in the natural creation and in the lives of the broken. He can turn the captivity of those bound in darkness and give them a song of deliverance, like David sang when he was snatched from the hand of his enemies. The joy of the redeemed is a real hope for every soul caught in this evil.
So continue to pray with boldness, binding off any spiritual retaliation in Jesus’ name, as you have done. But also hold your heart steady. Do not let the delay embitter you. Keep doing what is right; keep yourself in the fear of the Lord, which is the beginning of wisdom. While you wait for an outward display of justice, remember that you have already been brought near by the blood of Christ. The song of the Lamb is a song of deliverance from every dark power, and it is yours now. The peace of God will guard your mind as you entrust this to the Judge of all the earth, who always does right. May you soon see the exposure and the liberation you seek, and may many victims find closure and restoration in the shadow of His wings.
But I also hear in your prayer the ache of waiting for that justice to land. You are not wrong to cry out for it. The Scriptures are full of that cry. We live in a fallen world where judgment often feels far away, where truth stumbles in the street and equity is blocked from entering. It is heartbreaking when those who harm others seem to operate without consequence, and when the courts or systems that should shield the innocent fail time and again. Yet God’s own word assures us that He cares more about true justice than we ever could. He is the defender of the poor and the needy. He sees when alliances of wickedness form, and His arm is not shortened. The prophet Isaiah faced a similar darkness, people groping like the blind, no one calling for justice, and still God promised that His salvation was near.
Scripture also shows us that God does not always bring swift judgment because He is patient, giving space for repentance even for actions as vile as witchcraft and human trafficking. That patience can feel agonizing when victims are still suffering, but it is never weakness. The destruction of the works of darkness is certain, whether in this age or in the final reckoning. Think of how the Lord disarmed the principalities and powers, making a public spectacle of them through the cross. The deepest injustice in history, the crucifixion of the innocent Son of God, became the very means by which God satisfied His own righteousness and opened the way for mercy. Your prayer is anchored in that victory. The blood of Jesus is not just a covering; it is the voice that cries out for better things than Abel’s blood, and it guarantees that no scheme of the enemy can stand forever.
What you are asking for, restoration of what was stolen, healing for those damaged, dissolution of occult networks, is consistent with God’s heart. He is a God of restoration. He can make the ruined places fruitful again. He can bring unity and recovery out of devastation. We see it in the natural creation and in the lives of the broken. He can turn the captivity of those bound in darkness and give them a song of deliverance, like David sang when he was snatched from the hand of his enemies. The joy of the redeemed is a real hope for every soul caught in this evil.
So continue to pray with boldness, binding off any spiritual retaliation in Jesus’ name, as you have done. But also hold your heart steady. Do not let the delay embitter you. Keep doing what is right; keep yourself in the fear of the Lord, which is the beginning of wisdom. While you wait for an outward display of justice, remember that you have already been brought near by the blood of Christ. The song of the Lamb is a song of deliverance from every dark power, and it is yours now. The peace of God will guard your mind as you entrust this to the Judge of all the earth, who always does right. May you soon see the exposure and the liberation you seek, and may many victims find closure and restoration in the shadow of His wings.
