Silas
Beloved Servant
Your stress is heavy right now, and that weight can press down so hard that it’s difficult to see anything else. But the very fact that you want to be an example for Jesus in the middle of this tells me something important: your heart is set on Him, and that kind of desire doesn’t come from nowhere. It’s a sign that God is already at work in you, even when the bank account says otherwise.
Faith is often misunderstood when money runs short. Some act as though true faith would instantly make every creditor call disappear or fill every empty cupboard overnight. But the Scripture shows us people of tremendous faith who still faced severe trials. Abraham believed God’s promise that through Isaac his descendants would come, yet he stood on a mountain with a knife in his hand, trusting that God could raise the dead if necessary. That faith was counted as righteousness, not because his circumstances were easy, but because he held onto God’s word when nothing visible supported it. Faith isn’t the absence of struggle; it’s the evidence of things not seen. You may not see the provision yet, but faith clings to the God who sees and who has promised to care for His own.
The stress you feel is real, and it’s not a sign that your faith has failed. Even towering figures of faith had their lapses, hiding in caves, making fearful compromises, doubting in the dark. But God didn’t discard them. He met them in their weakness and reminded them of His grace. He does the same with you. Your faith isn’t measured by how calm you feel but by where you turn when the anxiety surges. You’re turning to Jesus. You’re asking for prayer. That’s faith in action.
Now, wanting to be an example for Jesus is a beautiful goal, but sometimes we picture that example as a life free from visible hardship, as if financial ease would make our testimony shine. Yet the world is full of comfortable people who never lean on God. The example that truly points to Christ is often a person who trusts Him when the outcome is uncertain, who keeps obeying and loving others even while under pressure. Your works won’t produce faith, but genuine faith will produce works, like patience, like refusing to cut corners, like continuing to serve and give out of your lack, like praying instead of panicking. That is a living faith, and it will display Jesus more clearly than a fat wallet ever could.
Remember how Abraham believed God, and it was credited to him as righteousness. That imputed righteousness came not through his perfect performance but through trusting the One who justifies the ungodly. Your standing before God is not up for grabs based on your bank balance. You are righteous through faith in Jesus Christ. That is your solid ground right now. And the same grace that saved you is the grace that sustains you in every bill and every anxious night. You can come to God freely, on the basis of that grace, and pour out your need.
So keep asking the Lord for help, He invites it. Keep expecting His provision, whether it arrives through a job, an unexpected gift, a lowered expense, or a wisdom you didn’t have before. Faith isn’t blind; it sees far beyond the visible. It sees a Father who fed His people in the wilderness and who did not spare His own Son but will with Him freely give us all things. That includes what you need financially.
We are praying with you, not just for the money to come, but that your faith would be strengthened and proven genuine through this testing. You are not alone. Stand on the promises, not on your feelings, because feelings will shift, but God’s word remains. And as you trust Him, that pure, unfeigned faith will be a demonstration, to yourself and to others, that Jesus is real and that He holds His people securely.
Faith is often misunderstood when money runs short. Some act as though true faith would instantly make every creditor call disappear or fill every empty cupboard overnight. But the Scripture shows us people of tremendous faith who still faced severe trials. Abraham believed God’s promise that through Isaac his descendants would come, yet he stood on a mountain with a knife in his hand, trusting that God could raise the dead if necessary. That faith was counted as righteousness, not because his circumstances were easy, but because he held onto God’s word when nothing visible supported it. Faith isn’t the absence of struggle; it’s the evidence of things not seen. You may not see the provision yet, but faith clings to the God who sees and who has promised to care for His own.
The stress you feel is real, and it’s not a sign that your faith has failed. Even towering figures of faith had their lapses, hiding in caves, making fearful compromises, doubting in the dark. But God didn’t discard them. He met them in their weakness and reminded them of His grace. He does the same with you. Your faith isn’t measured by how calm you feel but by where you turn when the anxiety surges. You’re turning to Jesus. You’re asking for prayer. That’s faith in action.
Now, wanting to be an example for Jesus is a beautiful goal, but sometimes we picture that example as a life free from visible hardship, as if financial ease would make our testimony shine. Yet the world is full of comfortable people who never lean on God. The example that truly points to Christ is often a person who trusts Him when the outcome is uncertain, who keeps obeying and loving others even while under pressure. Your works won’t produce faith, but genuine faith will produce works, like patience, like refusing to cut corners, like continuing to serve and give out of your lack, like praying instead of panicking. That is a living faith, and it will display Jesus more clearly than a fat wallet ever could.
Remember how Abraham believed God, and it was credited to him as righteousness. That imputed righteousness came not through his perfect performance but through trusting the One who justifies the ungodly. Your standing before God is not up for grabs based on your bank balance. You are righteous through faith in Jesus Christ. That is your solid ground right now. And the same grace that saved you is the grace that sustains you in every bill and every anxious night. You can come to God freely, on the basis of that grace, and pour out your need.
So keep asking the Lord for help, He invites it. Keep expecting His provision, whether it arrives through a job, an unexpected gift, a lowered expense, or a wisdom you didn’t have before. Faith isn’t blind; it sees far beyond the visible. It sees a Father who fed His people in the wilderness and who did not spare His own Son but will with Him freely give us all things. That includes what you need financially.
We are praying with you, not just for the money to come, but that your faith would be strengthened and proven genuine through this testing. You are not alone. Stand on the promises, not on your feelings, because feelings will shift, but God’s word remains. And as you trust Him, that pure, unfeigned faith will be a demonstration, to yourself and to others, that Jesus is real and that He holds His people securely.
