Silas
Beloved
Your words echo with the same raw desperation that once poured from Job’s lips. When the bills pile up and every door seems slammed shut, it’s easy to feel trapped, as if the darkness has swallowed any hope of light. Job knew that feeling. He sat in ashes, his life shattered in a single day, and later he cried out that he wished God would just grant his request and cut him off. You’re not alone in that ache. I understand the fear that tightens your chest when you look at the numbers and see no human solution.
But here’s what Job couldn’t see from the ash heap, and what we need to remember now: there was a conversation in heaven that changed the meaning of his suffering. God was bragging on Job’s faithfulness, and Satan attacked, insisting that Job only loved God because of the blessings. Job’s ordeal wasn’t punishment for some secret sin, even though his friends kept insisting it must be. They were wrong. And your situation isn’t necessarily a sign that God is displeased with you or that you’re lacking faith. Sometimes, we just don’t know the reason. We cry out for answers and heaven stays silent, and it’s all right to tell God exactly how confused and desperate you feel. Job did that, and it wasn’t held against him.
When everything drags on, time seems to stretch into an unbearable slowness. An hour of pain can feel like an eternity, while a pleasant moment vanishes in an instant. You’re living in that slow, heavy time right now, scanning for any sign of change. Job’s days dragged too, and he admitted he was full of confusion. He couldn’t see the end. He didn’t know that God would eventually step in, speak into the storm, and restore him. What you’re enduring now is not the final chapter. The God who set boundaries for the sea is still in control of your employment and your finances, even when the way seems completely blocked.
So keep bringing your request before God. You’re asking for your contract to become full-time, and there’s nothing wrong with that prayer. It’s an honest plea from a child in need. While you wait, resist the accusing voices that say you must have done something to deserve this, or that God has abandoned you. Those are as misguided as the speeches of Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar. Job clung to God even when he couldn’t touch Him. Today, we know the One who was from the beginning, the One Job longed to see. Jesus has already proven God’s heart toward you. He didn’t stand aloof from suffering; He entered it.
Job’s story ended with his fortunes restored, but the deeper gift was this: he learned that God was with him all along. I can’t promise the exact timing or method of your relief, but I know that God sees you. He hasn’t forgotten. Like Job, you may one day look back and say, “I had heard of you by the hearing of the ear, but now my eye sees you.” Hold on, even when it feels like forever. Your honest cries are not a failure of faith; they’re the heartbeat of a soul reaching for the only true help.
But here’s what Job couldn’t see from the ash heap, and what we need to remember now: there was a conversation in heaven that changed the meaning of his suffering. God was bragging on Job’s faithfulness, and Satan attacked, insisting that Job only loved God because of the blessings. Job’s ordeal wasn’t punishment for some secret sin, even though his friends kept insisting it must be. They were wrong. And your situation isn’t necessarily a sign that God is displeased with you or that you’re lacking faith. Sometimes, we just don’t know the reason. We cry out for answers and heaven stays silent, and it’s all right to tell God exactly how confused and desperate you feel. Job did that, and it wasn’t held against him.
When everything drags on, time seems to stretch into an unbearable slowness. An hour of pain can feel like an eternity, while a pleasant moment vanishes in an instant. You’re living in that slow, heavy time right now, scanning for any sign of change. Job’s days dragged too, and he admitted he was full of confusion. He couldn’t see the end. He didn’t know that God would eventually step in, speak into the storm, and restore him. What you’re enduring now is not the final chapter. The God who set boundaries for the sea is still in control of your employment and your finances, even when the way seems completely blocked.
So keep bringing your request before God. You’re asking for your contract to become full-time, and there’s nothing wrong with that prayer. It’s an honest plea from a child in need. While you wait, resist the accusing voices that say you must have done something to deserve this, or that God has abandoned you. Those are as misguided as the speeches of Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar. Job clung to God even when he couldn’t touch Him. Today, we know the One who was from the beginning, the One Job longed to see. Jesus has already proven God’s heart toward you. He didn’t stand aloof from suffering; He entered it.
Job’s story ended with his fortunes restored, but the deeper gift was this: he learned that God was with him all along. I can’t promise the exact timing or method of your relief, but I know that God sees you. He hasn’t forgotten. Like Job, you may one day look back and say, “I had heard of you by the hearing of the ear, but now my eye sees you.” Hold on, even when it feels like forever. Your honest cries are not a failure of faith; they’re the heartbeat of a soul reaching for the only true help.
