Chrysostom
Beloved Warrior
Your anxiety over the doctor’s visit and the money needed to care for your nephew is natural, but remember what we truly possess in Christ. You ask for a financial blessing, yet think what blessings you already have: you call God Father. That single name contains remission of sins, adoption, sanctification, and a share in the inheritance of the saints. No amount of silver can compare to this spiritual wealth, which neither doctors nor debt can touch.
I will pray that the appointment is brief and free of trouble, but do not hang your heart on such relief. Often God permits delay and discomfort to detach us from carnal hopes. Look at Jacob: he obtained the blessing, yet spent his days in servitude, danger, and fear, while his brother lived in ease. Where did the promise find fulfillment? Only in the world to come. For carnal blessings, smooth days and full purses, are not the true blessing; they often turn the soul from higher things. Our Lord said, “In the world you have tribulation.” He leads us away from earthly props so we may grasp the “every spiritual blessing” spoken of by the Apostle.
The adoption of your nephew is a beautiful work of mercy, and alms-giving of this kind is rightly called a blessing. I urge you to pursue it with all virtue, but do not let family expectations crush you. You serve a Master who sees your labor, not a master called mammon, which enslaves the wretched with endless suits and strifes. To bow under the tyranny of financial fear is to fall away from the greatest blessings. Walk in the freshness of good deeds, trusting that the Gospel’s full reward awaits, not necessarily in this age, but in the rest that remains for the people of God.
So pray: “Our Father, who art in heaven.” That lifts your mind there, where true treasures lie. Seek first His kingdom, and the things needful for this life will be added according to His wisdom. I join you in asking for provision, but pray also that your hope remains fixed yonder, lest you fail through unbelief as the Israelites did in the desert. The Lord bless you with health of soul, peace in the appointment, and all that truly benefits you, not merely a carnal blessing, but the grace to abound in good works, to the praise of the Gospel.
I will pray that the appointment is brief and free of trouble, but do not hang your heart on such relief. Often God permits delay and discomfort to detach us from carnal hopes. Look at Jacob: he obtained the blessing, yet spent his days in servitude, danger, and fear, while his brother lived in ease. Where did the promise find fulfillment? Only in the world to come. For carnal blessings, smooth days and full purses, are not the true blessing; they often turn the soul from higher things. Our Lord said, “In the world you have tribulation.” He leads us away from earthly props so we may grasp the “every spiritual blessing” spoken of by the Apostle.
The adoption of your nephew is a beautiful work of mercy, and alms-giving of this kind is rightly called a blessing. I urge you to pursue it with all virtue, but do not let family expectations crush you. You serve a Master who sees your labor, not a master called mammon, which enslaves the wretched with endless suits and strifes. To bow under the tyranny of financial fear is to fall away from the greatest blessings. Walk in the freshness of good deeds, trusting that the Gospel’s full reward awaits, not necessarily in this age, but in the rest that remains for the people of God.
So pray: “Our Father, who art in heaven.” That lifts your mind there, where true treasures lie. Seek first His kingdom, and the things needful for this life will be added according to His wisdom. I join you in asking for provision, but pray also that your hope remains fixed yonder, lest you fail through unbelief as the Israelites did in the desert. The Lord bless you with health of soul, peace in the appointment, and all that truly benefits you, not merely a carnal blessing, but the grace to abound in good works, to the praise of the Gospel.
