evil, lack of remorse!!

Kensem

Beloved of All
Neither the landlord, the contact person, the owner nor the team has shown any remorse regarding the life-threatening electrical issues, but has instead asked the electricians to fake the report and write that everything works well.

I showed them pictures of the electric shocks I received while showering, which left my skin wounded. I also have medical reports stating that I have experienced this.

They have never apologised or empathised with me. They haven't offered me compensation or a new place to live.

All they do is block communication, make threats and refuse payment.

In the mighty name of Jesus, please continue to pray for an end to sadistic and antisocial tendencies and for an end to all unscrupulous behaviour, irresponsibility and avoidance.

May this situation be turned around and may they show remorse, apologise and pay compensation with due respect

Update:
The electrical system is life-threatening and needs urgent repairs. This has been documented by an electrician. Upon being informed about the electric shocks, medical treatment, hotel showers, etc., the lawyer representing the landlord wrote again to demand fees and to state that we do not deserve “comfort” or repairs, but rather forced eviction.
These words and attitude appear to be dangerous and psychologically damaging. The fact that she equates “comfort” with a “life-threatening issue” reveals a deeply disturbed heart and mind. Please pray for her and this situation in Jesus' name.

Update: Despite the apartment being uninhabitable and clean and ready for the keys to be handed in, the landlord is threatening legal action. Please pray that his heart is softened and that he is open to the guidance of the Holy Spirit.

Update: Please continue to pray for these people who have not apologised to me or compensated me after a month of moving out. Please pray. May God break their hardness. May they have a heart of flesh. May they hear His call. May they submit to Him.
 
We come before the Lord with heavy hearts, lifting up this situation that reeks of injustice, hardness of heart, and a callous disregard for human life. The actions of the landlord, their representatives, and legal counsel are not only unethical but sinful, lying, fraud, threats, and a refusal to take responsibility for life-threatening negligence. The Word of God is clear: "The LORD detests lying lips, but he delights in people who are trustworthy" (Proverbs 12:22 WEB). The demand to falsify reports and the mocking of your suffering, calling life-threatening danger a mere lack of "comfort", reveals a heart hardened by greed and deception. "Whoever walks in integrity walks securely, but he who makes his ways crooked will be found out" (Proverbs 10:9 WEB).

We rebuke the spirit of exploitation and callousness at work here. The Bible commands, "Do not withhold good from those to whom it is due, when it is in the power of your hand to do it" (Proverbs 3:27 WEB). These individuals have not only withheld justice but have actively sought to harm you further. We declare that their schemes will not stand. "No weapon that is formed against you will prevail; and you will condemn every tongue that accuses you in judgment. This is the heritage of the LORD’s servants, and their righteousness is of me," says the LORD (Isaiah 54:17 WEB).

We pray for conviction to fall upon them, landlord, lawyer, and all involved. May the Holy Spirit move in power to break their hardness of heart, as Ezekiel prophesied: "I will give you a new heart, and I will put a new spirit within you. I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you a heart of flesh" (Ezekiel 36:26 WEB). May they be gripped by remorse, not just for the harm they’ve caused you, but for their rebellion against God’s commands. "For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord" (Romans 6:23 WEB). We pray they would turn from their wickedness and seek the Lord while there is still time.

Lord, we ask for justice in this situation. You are a God who hears the cries of the oppressed: "The LORD works righteousness and justice for all who are oppressed" (Psalm 103:6 WEB). We pray that the landlord would be compelled to make restitution, not just for the sake of the law, but out of a transformed heart. "If the wicked restores the pledge, gives back what he had taken by robbery, and walks in the statutes of life, committing no iniquity, he shall surely live. He shall not die" (Ezekiel 33:15 WEB). May they offer compensation, a sincere apology, and whatever else is needed to make this right.

We also pray for your protection over you, dear one. The threats and psychological torment you’ve endured are not from God. "For God didn’t give us a spirit of fear, but of power, love, and self-control" (2 Timothy 1:7 WEB). We declare that no weapon formed against you will prosper, and every tongue that rises against you in judgment will be condemned. You are not alone in this battle. The Lord is your refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble (Psalm 46:1 WEB).

Father, we ask that you would intervene in the legal threats and maneuvers. Let their plans unravel, and let truth prevail. "The LORD is a God of knowledge. By him actions are weighed" (1 Samuel 2:3 WEB). May the evidence of their negligence and fraud be exposed, and may they face the consequences of their actions, not out of vengeance, but so that justice may roll down like waters, and righteousness like a mighty stream (Amos 5:24 WEB).

We also pray for their salvation. It is not too late for them to turn to Christ. "The Lord is not slow concerning his promise, as some count slowness; but is patient with us, not wishing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance" (2 Peter 3:9 WEB). Soften their hearts, Lord. Let them see the error of their ways and cry out for mercy. May they experience the transforming power of the gospel, that they might be born again and walk in newness of life (John 3:3, Romans 6:4 WEB).

Finally, we pray for your peace to guard your heart and mind in Christ Jesus (Philippians 4:7 WEB). This situation has been a heavy burden, but we declare that you are not defined by their cruelty. You are a child of the Most High God, fearfully and wonderfully made (Psalm 139:14 WEB). May you find rest in His presence and strength in His Word. And may this trial produce in you a testimony of God’s faithfulness, that others may see His glory and be drawn to Him.

In the mighty name of Jesus, we pray. Amen.
 
We have been bearing your situation in prayer, and our hearts ache with you over the way you’ve been treated. The physical danger, the dismissal, the cold legal threats, that kind of callousness over something so serious is deeply wrong, and we don’t brush past how lonely and infuriating it feels when no remorse comes.

While we keep praying for their hearts to soften (we truly are asking God for that “heart of flesh” you mentioned), we also want to gently care for you in the waiting. One thing that has helped others in similar pain is this: take a few minutes to write out everything you wish they would say, the apology, the acknowledgment of the damage, even the restitution, and then, in your own words, hand that paper over to God in prayer. You’re not excusing them or pretending it’s fine; you’re entrusting them to the One who judges justly and can actually change hearts. That act can slowly make space inside you for healing, even before they ever budge.

And please, if any physical symptoms linger from those electric shocks, keep following up with a doctor. Practical care for your body matters too, right alongside prayer.

Lord Jesus, we bring this painful weight to you. Please heal every physical and emotional wound these shocks and this mistreatment have caused. We ask you to break through the hardness in each person who has acted without conscience, give them a heart of flesh, and bring them to genuine repentance and restitution. Until that day, wrap our friend in your peace, provide wise counsel for any remaining legal steps, and let your justice and mercy be their anchor. In your mighty name, Amen.
 
We have been bearing your situation in prayer, and our hearts ache with you over the way you’ve been treated. The physical danger, the dismissal, the cold legal threats, that kind of callousness over something so serious is deeply wrong, and we don’t brush past how lonely and infuriating it feels when no remorse comes.

While we keep praying for their hearts to soften (we truly are asking God for that “heart of flesh” you mentioned), we also want to gently care for you in the waiting. One thing that has helped others in similar pain is this: take a few minutes to write out everything you wish they would say, the apology, the acknowledgment of the damage, even the restitution, and then, in your own words, hand that paper over to God in prayer. You’re not excusing them or pretending it’s fine; you’re entrusting them to the One who judges justly and can actually change hearts. That act can slowly make space inside you for healing, even before they ever budge.

And please, if any physical symptoms linger from those electric shocks, keep following up with a doctor. Practical care for your body matters too, right alongside prayer.

Lord Jesus, we bring this painful weight to you. Please heal every physical and emotional wound these shocks and this mistreatment have caused. We ask you to break through the hardness in each person who has acted without conscience, give them a heart of flesh, and bring them to genuine repentance and restitution. Until that day, wrap our friend in your peace, provide wise counsel for any remaining legal steps, and let your justice and mercy be their anchor. In your mighty name, Amen.
Amen in Jesus name.
 
You have shown me the wounds, the physical burns and the deeper hurt of being treated as though you were of no account. They looked at your injuries and asked an electrician to write a false report. They read your medical papers and then sent a lawyer to demand fees while mocking your need for safety, as if escaping electric shocks were a luxury called “comfort.” That word must have fallen upon your heart like a fistful of gravel. It tells you plainly that you are dealing with hearts that have grown stony indeed.

But come, sit down and let me tell you of another heart, the heart of the Lord Jesus Christ. He says, “I am meek and lowly in heart.” He does not sneer at your pain or call life‑threatening danger a trifle. He knows what it is to be wounded and have men twist the truth while demanding payment. And yet, when He was reviled, He reviled not again; when He suffered, He threatened not, but committed Himself to Him who judges righteously. That same heart of flesh beats for you now, full of a tenderness that can hold all your sorrow without breaking, and full of power to make all things right in His own time.

Now, do not suppose that He is indifferent to what you have endured. The Lord does see. Not one word of that contemptuous letter slipped past His notice; not one of your sleepless nights was overlooked. He who made the ear, does He not hear? He who formed the eye, does He not see? The God who can make the sun scorch the proud with its heat can also send a gentle rain to soften the hardest clod. The very prayer you have been praying, “May God break their hardness; may they have a heart of flesh”, is a prayer that is near to the heart of God. Think of it: you are asking Him to do the very thing He has promised in His covenant, to take away the stony heart and give a heart of flesh. He delights in such transformations. He turned a ravening wolf of a Pharisee into the lamb‑like apostle Paul. Could He not yet turn these people who have bruised you into people who will weep over their own cruelty?

Yet while you wait and pray, you must guard your own soul. Bitterness has a deceitfulness of its own, it can calcify the tenderest spirit, and before you know it, your own heart can begin to harden while you watch for theirs to soften. Do not let the injustice of these weeks become a root of poison within you. Instead, keep looking at your Master. Picture Him standing before Pilate, falsely accused, and answering nothing. Picture Him on the tree, nails through hands and feet, praying, “Father, forgive them.” He is not asking you to pretend the wrong is right; He is asking you to hand the whole heavy burden over to Him, so that your own heart does not become a second casualty.

And take courage in this: you have already done what is wise, you moved out, you sought safety, you survived. A full month has passed and they have offered no apology, no compensation. Their silence is the echo of an inner poverty. A person who cannot say “I am sorry” is already beginning to feel the first stages of that terrible rigidity that sin brings. But even that is not beyond the reach of Divine grace. God’s right hand can find out the proud, and His mercy has ways of catching them when they least expect it. He can send some small affliction, some sudden memory, some pang of conscience that cracks the stone. Pray on; your cries are not wasted. He who “granted to the Gentiles repentance unto life” still gives the gift.

But remember this, too: your true compensation does not hang upon a landlord’s apology. The Lord Jesus was counted unworthy of comfort, driven outside the gate, stripped of every right. Yet He rose. And He lives now to be your Advocate and your High Priest. He knows what it is to be cheated by those in power, to have false reports drawn up, and to be hounded by lawyers who love fees more than truth. He entered into that darkness so that, when you pass through it, you would find Him already there, holding out His hand. Take that hand. It bears a scar, a scar that tells of the only true settlement for all the world’s wrongs.

As for the money, the apology, the acknowledgment, leave that in the hands of the One who says, “Vengeance is Mine; I will repay.” He may move them to restitution tomorrow, or He may wait until the judgment seat. Either way, you are not forgotten. The Judge of all the earth will do right. But the greater prize you seek for them, their own repentance and softening, is something far more precious still. Do not stop asking. The same God who promised, “I will give you a heart of flesh,” knows how to make good on His word.

Now let your heart rest a moment in the quiet waters of His love. Can you feel something of the meekness of Jesus flowing into your own spirit? It is not a weak thing, this meekness; it is the strength of the Lamb who was slain and yet stands. It is the power to endure, to wait, to bless, and not to curse, and that power is yours in Christ.

O tender Shepherd of the sheep, You who were led as a lamb to the slaughter and opened not Your mouth, look upon Your child who has been wounded by those who seem to have forgotten they have souls. You see the scars on their skin and the deeper bruise on their spirit from cruel words and lying reports. Draw near now, and bind up every broken place with Your own gentle hand. Let them feel the warmth of Your heart of flesh. Give them the grace to rest in Your perfect justice and the patience to wait while You work. And as for those who have done this wrong and show no remorse, O mighty God, take away their hearts of stone. Do not let them continue to be hardened through the deceitfulness of sin. Send whatever it takes, a still small voice in the night, a sudden fear, a memory that will not leave them, to crack the rock and bring them to true sorrow. May they yet be brought to apologise with sincere lips and to make amends. But if not, keep this dear one from bitterness, and let them find in You a joy that no human injustice can steal. In the name of Jesus, our righteousness and our peace, Amen.
 
You describe a grievous thing: those who ought to repair what is dangerous instead threaten and deceive, calling life a matter of comfort while your flesh bears the marks of their negligence. And you ask for prayer that they may show remorse and make amends. This is right: we should pray even for those who do us harm, for God desires not the death of a sinner but that he turn from his way and live. Yet we must understand what true remorse is, and not mistake a mere worldly sorrow for the repentance that avails.

I have seen many, like Judas, feel a bitter pain after the deed is done. He threw down the silver, he confessed his sin, and yet he ran to the noose and perished. Why? Because it was not repentance. It was despair mingled with pride, a hatred of the consequence rather than the evil itself. True repentance tears the heart, but it also bows the knee; it cries out, but it also turns and makes restitution as far as it can. The man who truly repents does not merely weep, he changes. He does not only say “I have sinned,” but he seeks to undo the wrong. If these people merely offer apologies to quiet their conscience while their hands still grasp at dishonest gain, their sorrow is empty.

Consider also the weight of their own condition. You suffer from their injustice, and your pain is real. But do not suppose they escape unharmed. Injustice is far more bitter to the one who practices it than to the one who endures it. Even now, if you could look within their souls, you would see a conscience that scourges them, a mind that invents excuses but cannot silence the judge God has placed within. They may surround themselves with lawyers and flatterers, they may silence your voice with threats, but within there is no flattery that can bribe that inner tribunal. Sleepless nights, sudden terrors, a heart that trembles at every knock, these are the wages of unrepented wrong. God’s long-suffering is not weakness; they are treasuring up wrath for themselves against a day of righteous revelation.

Nevertheless, continue in prayer. Ask the Holy Spirit to break the hardness of their hearts and grant them a heart of flesh. It is not impossible for Christ to be formed in a sinner again, even one who has sunk deep. The laver of repentance has great power; it can set free the most burdened soul. But do not tie your own peace to their response. The Scripture says of Esau that he sought repentance with tears and found no place for it, not because God refused a true penitent, but because his weeping was for the lost blessing, not for the sin. If these people persist in loving their gain more than God, no prayer of yours will force a repentance that is not born of the Spirit. Yet pray still, because while there is breath, the door is open. And if they will not turn, entrust yourself to the One who judges justly. He sees every hidden thing. The same Lord who said, “Vengeance is mine, I will repay,” also invites you to cast your care on Him. Do not let their evil infect your own soul with a root of bitterness. It is enough that God knows.
 

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