Silas
Faithful Servant
I’m grateful you reached out, and I’ll certainly hold you in prayer for overall healing and wellness. Thank you for inviting us to stand with you.
As I turn your request over in my heart, I think of how the Scriptures do not give us a one-size-fits-all promise that every illness will be removed on our timetable. You may have heard the beautiful words, “I wish above all things that you may prosper and be in health, even as your soul prospers.” That’s a warm, personal greeting from a friend to a friend, a loving desire, not a guarantee from God that physical health always matches the soul’s state. Still, it hints at something true: there can be a deep connection between our inner peace and our bodily well-being. The attitudes we carry and the rest we find in Christ can shape how we walk through sickness and strength alike.
So while I pray for your body, I also pray that your soul prospers, that you know the steady comfort of Jesus, no matter what the coming days hold. He is certainly not indifferent to your health. He touched lepers, calmed fevers, and restored sight, often in stages, like that man who first saw people as trees walking before seeing clearly. Some healing comes suddenly; much of it comes through the slow, God-ordained processes of rest, wise habits, and the body’s God-given resilience. That too is divine goodness, even when we might not label it a miracle.
There is much I don’t understand about why one person is healed and another is not. Some of the most faithful, devoted people I know carry long-term health burdens, and it is not a sign of weak faith or a lack of love from the Father. Even Paul pleaded three times about a thorn in the flesh and heard instead, “My grace is sufficient for you.” Jesus himself bore our infirmities and carried our sicknesses, a truth Matthew applies to physical healing as well as to the forgiveness of sins. So we can ask boldly, knowing his compassion is real, while also trusting his wisdom when the answer comes differently than we imagined.
In a practical sense, it’s right to pay attention to the ways we steward our bodies, what we eat, how we rest, habits of cleanliness, not as a means of earning God’s favor but as an act of honoring the life he’s given. He wants you whole, in every dimension, and that wholeness sometimes begins in the quietened mind, in relationships restored, or in wounds of the heart being tended by his Spirit.
Let’s pray together: Father, I lift up this dear one asking for healing and wellness. You know every need, every ache, every anxious thought. We ask for your restoring touch, whether it comes in a moment or over time. Give wisdom to make healthy choices, peace to calm what stress has stirred, and deep trust in your care. Should the path include suffering, hold them close and let them know your grace is enough. May their body and soul prosper in the way that brings you glory. We ask this in Jesus’ name. Amen.
May the Lord bless you and draw you near as you look to him.
As I turn your request over in my heart, I think of how the Scriptures do not give us a one-size-fits-all promise that every illness will be removed on our timetable. You may have heard the beautiful words, “I wish above all things that you may prosper and be in health, even as your soul prospers.” That’s a warm, personal greeting from a friend to a friend, a loving desire, not a guarantee from God that physical health always matches the soul’s state. Still, it hints at something true: there can be a deep connection between our inner peace and our bodily well-being. The attitudes we carry and the rest we find in Christ can shape how we walk through sickness and strength alike.
So while I pray for your body, I also pray that your soul prospers, that you know the steady comfort of Jesus, no matter what the coming days hold. He is certainly not indifferent to your health. He touched lepers, calmed fevers, and restored sight, often in stages, like that man who first saw people as trees walking before seeing clearly. Some healing comes suddenly; much of it comes through the slow, God-ordained processes of rest, wise habits, and the body’s God-given resilience. That too is divine goodness, even when we might not label it a miracle.
There is much I don’t understand about why one person is healed and another is not. Some of the most faithful, devoted people I know carry long-term health burdens, and it is not a sign of weak faith or a lack of love from the Father. Even Paul pleaded three times about a thorn in the flesh and heard instead, “My grace is sufficient for you.” Jesus himself bore our infirmities and carried our sicknesses, a truth Matthew applies to physical healing as well as to the forgiveness of sins. So we can ask boldly, knowing his compassion is real, while also trusting his wisdom when the answer comes differently than we imagined.
In a practical sense, it’s right to pay attention to the ways we steward our bodies, what we eat, how we rest, habits of cleanliness, not as a means of earning God’s favor but as an act of honoring the life he’s given. He wants you whole, in every dimension, and that wholeness sometimes begins in the quietened mind, in relationships restored, or in wounds of the heart being tended by his Spirit.
Let’s pray together: Father, I lift up this dear one asking for healing and wellness. You know every need, every ache, every anxious thought. We ask for your restoring touch, whether it comes in a moment or over time. Give wisdom to make healthy choices, peace to calm what stress has stirred, and deep trust in your care. Should the path include suffering, hold them close and let them know your grace is enough. May their body and soul prosper in the way that brings you glory. We ask this in Jesus’ name. Amen.
May the Lord bless you and draw you near as you look to him.
