Silas
Beloved
You are carrying so many burdens right now. The weight of a court date, a doctor who seems distant, and a child who tests your patience. Yet in the middle of it all, you paused to give thanks for the time away. That is the mark of a heart that is looking for the Lord's goodness even in hardship. Your prayer was brief but honest, and you are right to cry out to Jesus for help.
When troubles pile up, it is easy to think that if only one thing changed, life would be bearable. Leah knew that temptation. She kept having sons, each time hoping the birth would finally make her husband love her. She named her children after the distress of her heart, but the love she craved from a man could not be earned that way. God saw her affliction, and He sees yours. Your worth and your peace are not built on a doctor’s signature, your husband’s approval, or even your son’s behavior today. They rest in the fact that God has adopted you into His family as a true daughter. Not as a servant, but as a child of the free woman, an heir according to the promise.
You have an Abba, a Father, because the Spirit of His Son lives in your heart. That same Father who did not spare His own only begotten Son but gave Him for you will not abandon you on Monday. Abraham was willing to offer Isaac, the son he loved, trusting God to be faithful. That is a picture of how great the Father’s love is for you. It does not shift with your circumstances.
I understand the worry about the court date. You may feel like Jeremiah let down with cords into the dungeon, sinking in the mire with no one to help. But God saw him there and brought him out. He can bring order and mercy into legal proceedings. Pray and then trust the outcome to Him. If your husband does not share your faith, remember the instruction that a believing wife sanctifies the household. That does not mean every trouble vanishes, but it means God is present and working in your home. Your steady, faithful conduct speaks louder than you know. You are bound to the Lord first, and you can honor Him in how you respond, even when your husband falls short. If he makes demands that wound your conscience, you do not have to violate your integrity, but as much as it depends on you, walk in a spirit that seeks peace and reconciliation.
The doctor ignoring your requests is frustrating. Keep pressing the need, but release the demand to know why. Sometimes God uses someone’s delay to teach us deeper dependence. He is not ignoring you. The waiting may feel like a dungeon with no water but mire, yet that is often where we discover that our real thirst is for Him alone.
Today, with your son, take it one moment at a time. You are not alone in parenting. The Father sees the struggle, and He will give you patience if you keep asking. You are a child learning obedience too, shaped by the very trials you wish would go away.
Hold onto that gratitude you felt for the time away. Let it remind you that Jesus gives rest, and He will give you enough for each day. You can enter Monday not as a fearful servant but as a beloved daughter, with the Spirit of adoption in your heart, able to cry out with confidence: Abba, Father. He will help you.
When troubles pile up, it is easy to think that if only one thing changed, life would be bearable. Leah knew that temptation. She kept having sons, each time hoping the birth would finally make her husband love her. She named her children after the distress of her heart, but the love she craved from a man could not be earned that way. God saw her affliction, and He sees yours. Your worth and your peace are not built on a doctor’s signature, your husband’s approval, or even your son’s behavior today. They rest in the fact that God has adopted you into His family as a true daughter. Not as a servant, but as a child of the free woman, an heir according to the promise.
You have an Abba, a Father, because the Spirit of His Son lives in your heart. That same Father who did not spare His own only begotten Son but gave Him for you will not abandon you on Monday. Abraham was willing to offer Isaac, the son he loved, trusting God to be faithful. That is a picture of how great the Father’s love is for you. It does not shift with your circumstances.
I understand the worry about the court date. You may feel like Jeremiah let down with cords into the dungeon, sinking in the mire with no one to help. But God saw him there and brought him out. He can bring order and mercy into legal proceedings. Pray and then trust the outcome to Him. If your husband does not share your faith, remember the instruction that a believing wife sanctifies the household. That does not mean every trouble vanishes, but it means God is present and working in your home. Your steady, faithful conduct speaks louder than you know. You are bound to the Lord first, and you can honor Him in how you respond, even when your husband falls short. If he makes demands that wound your conscience, you do not have to violate your integrity, but as much as it depends on you, walk in a spirit that seeks peace and reconciliation.
The doctor ignoring your requests is frustrating. Keep pressing the need, but release the demand to know why. Sometimes God uses someone’s delay to teach us deeper dependence. He is not ignoring you. The waiting may feel like a dungeon with no water but mire, yet that is often where we discover that our real thirst is for Him alone.
Today, with your son, take it one moment at a time. You are not alone in parenting. The Father sees the struggle, and He will give you patience if you keep asking. You are a child learning obedience too, shaped by the very trials you wish would go away.
Hold onto that gratitude you felt for the time away. Let it remind you that Jesus gives rest, and He will give you enough for each day. You can enter Monday not as a fearful servant but as a beloved daughter, with the Spirit of adoption in your heart, able to cry out with confidence: Abba, Father. He will help you.
