Silas
Good and Faithful Servant
It sounds like you are under a heavy sense of spiritual attack from people you hardly know, and that weight is real. Your prayer demonstrates a solid grasp of God’s promises, and the Scriptures you’ve claimed are powerful. I want to encourage you not to let go of that confidence, but I also want to gently remind you of something that can happen when we find ourselves in this kind of invisible fight.
When Nehemiah was building Jerusalem’s wall, his enemies tried everything to stop him. They mocked, they threatened, and they spread rumors. At one point, they tried to lure him into endless meetings, hoping to make him afraid and pull him off the work. Nehemiah had to learn that not every battle deserves his attention. He kept his hands on the task and finished the wall in fifty-two days. The enemy’s oldest trick is to distract you from your God-given purpose by making your entire life revolve around defending yourself against lies and unseen harassment. It can become a quiet trap: you spend so much energy trying to straighten out every false story and fend off every negative nudge that you lose sight of why God put you here. The wall gets neglected.
You mentioned generational chains and the attempts of these strangers to force something on you. That is a weighty thing. Scripture does show us that God can break any chain, no matter how long it has been in a family line. Think of Jeremiah. During the fall of Jerusalem, he was arrested, bound, and marched off in chains to Ramah. That must have felt like the end, as if the darkness of the moment had swallowed him. But God moved the heart of a pagan captain to release him, to speak kindly to him, even to offer him a place of care and provision. If God can turn the heart of an enemy to free Jeremiah from literal shackles, he can certainly sever anything attempting to bind your household spiritually. Your freedom does not depend on your ability to dismantle every scheme; it rests on the finished work of Christ.
That leads to another thought. You stand on powerful truths: the Lord rebuking the accuser, the cancellation of the charges against us, the standards lifted against the enemy. These are not just words; they are your spiritual armor. You have the shield of faith to extinguish those arrows, and you have the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word of God you are already wielding. When you know all that is yours in Christ, you can refuse to entertain the fear and refuse to let the attacks set the agenda for your days. You do not have to take from the enemy any of the guff he throws at you.
Yet there may also be a need to consider what your own posture should be toward family members you do not know. In the early accounts of Abraham, God told him to leave his country, his relatives, and his father’s household. Abraham’s first move was an incomplete obedience, he brought his father along and stopped short of the land God promised. That pause did not cancel the calling, but it delayed the fullness of blessing. Sometimes the hardest family entanglements are not the ones full of hatred, but the ones clouded by confusion and distance, where we feel an odd pull to engage or defend ourselves against ghosts of connection. God may be calling you to a holy release: to mentally and spiritually leave these people in his hands, not by denying they exist, but by refusing to let their actions consume your inner world. True deliverance often includes stepping away from the court of public opinion, and even from the invisible courtroom of spiritual blame, and simply entrusting judgment to the Lord who sees everything.
The prayer you prayed covers you in the blood of Jesus, and you have the armor of God. So do not let the fight against these attacks become your primary occupation. Your life is not meant to be a constant spiritual counterinsurgency against relatives you do not know. Your life is meant to be a light. The enemy’s aim is to turn your focus so inward and so defensive that you stop witnessing, stop serving, and stop living in the joy of your salvation. When you find yourself rehearsing the lies or tracking every faint feeling of negativity, remember that you have the mind of Christ. Bring every thought captive, not by wrestling with it indefinitely, but by dropping it at his feet and returning your attention to what is good and praiseworthy.
God has already disarmed the powers and authorities. He made a public spectacle of them. So the principality you perceive behind this uncle is a defeated foe. Its noise may be loud, but its teeth were pulled out at the cross. Rest in that. Lift your eyes from the dust of the attack and look to the one who plants your feet in a wide and secure place. Let him be the avenger. Let him be the one to expose lies in his own time. Your role is to remain in him, and as you do, the peace that surpasses understanding will garrison your heart and mind.
Continue to stand on the Scriptures, but stand relaxed in the victory already won. You are not caught in a trap. If God could lead a captive prophet out of chains under the nose of an empire, he can certainly keep your household safe from the shadows. You are safe. Now go build your wall and let the clamor fade behind you.
When Nehemiah was building Jerusalem’s wall, his enemies tried everything to stop him. They mocked, they threatened, and they spread rumors. At one point, they tried to lure him into endless meetings, hoping to make him afraid and pull him off the work. Nehemiah had to learn that not every battle deserves his attention. He kept his hands on the task and finished the wall in fifty-two days. The enemy’s oldest trick is to distract you from your God-given purpose by making your entire life revolve around defending yourself against lies and unseen harassment. It can become a quiet trap: you spend so much energy trying to straighten out every false story and fend off every negative nudge that you lose sight of why God put you here. The wall gets neglected.
You mentioned generational chains and the attempts of these strangers to force something on you. That is a weighty thing. Scripture does show us that God can break any chain, no matter how long it has been in a family line. Think of Jeremiah. During the fall of Jerusalem, he was arrested, bound, and marched off in chains to Ramah. That must have felt like the end, as if the darkness of the moment had swallowed him. But God moved the heart of a pagan captain to release him, to speak kindly to him, even to offer him a place of care and provision. If God can turn the heart of an enemy to free Jeremiah from literal shackles, he can certainly sever anything attempting to bind your household spiritually. Your freedom does not depend on your ability to dismantle every scheme; it rests on the finished work of Christ.
That leads to another thought. You stand on powerful truths: the Lord rebuking the accuser, the cancellation of the charges against us, the standards lifted against the enemy. These are not just words; they are your spiritual armor. You have the shield of faith to extinguish those arrows, and you have the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word of God you are already wielding. When you know all that is yours in Christ, you can refuse to entertain the fear and refuse to let the attacks set the agenda for your days. You do not have to take from the enemy any of the guff he throws at you.
Yet there may also be a need to consider what your own posture should be toward family members you do not know. In the early accounts of Abraham, God told him to leave his country, his relatives, and his father’s household. Abraham’s first move was an incomplete obedience, he brought his father along and stopped short of the land God promised. That pause did not cancel the calling, but it delayed the fullness of blessing. Sometimes the hardest family entanglements are not the ones full of hatred, but the ones clouded by confusion and distance, where we feel an odd pull to engage or defend ourselves against ghosts of connection. God may be calling you to a holy release: to mentally and spiritually leave these people in his hands, not by denying they exist, but by refusing to let their actions consume your inner world. True deliverance often includes stepping away from the court of public opinion, and even from the invisible courtroom of spiritual blame, and simply entrusting judgment to the Lord who sees everything.
The prayer you prayed covers you in the blood of Jesus, and you have the armor of God. So do not let the fight against these attacks become your primary occupation. Your life is not meant to be a constant spiritual counterinsurgency against relatives you do not know. Your life is meant to be a light. The enemy’s aim is to turn your focus so inward and so defensive that you stop witnessing, stop serving, and stop living in the joy of your salvation. When you find yourself rehearsing the lies or tracking every faint feeling of negativity, remember that you have the mind of Christ. Bring every thought captive, not by wrestling with it indefinitely, but by dropping it at his feet and returning your attention to what is good and praiseworthy.
God has already disarmed the powers and authorities. He made a public spectacle of them. So the principality you perceive behind this uncle is a defeated foe. Its noise may be loud, but its teeth were pulled out at the cross. Rest in that. Lift your eyes from the dust of the attack and look to the one who plants your feet in a wide and secure place. Let him be the avenger. Let him be the one to expose lies in his own time. Your role is to remain in him, and as you do, the peace that surpasses understanding will garrison your heart and mind.
Continue to stand on the Scriptures, but stand relaxed in the victory already won. You are not caught in a trap. If God could lead a captive prophet out of chains under the nose of an empire, he can certainly keep your household safe from the shadows. You are safe. Now go build your wall and let the clamor fade behind you.
