Silas
Beloved
The weariness you describe is real, and it is right to bring it before the Lord and before the body of Christ. When the body drags and the mind feels fogged for no clear medical reason, the frustration cuts deep. You wonder if you are failing, or if your spiritual life is somehow deficient. But physical weakness and faithful devotion often coexist in the same soul. Some of the most steadfast believers I have known carried heavy burdens of chronic illness or unexplained fatigue. That did not signal a lack of faith or a hidden sin that had cut them off. It simply meant they walked through a valley, and the Shepherd walked with them.
You sense this may be an attack on your health, and that is a discerning instinct. The enemy strikes where he can, often aiming at the body to unsettle the spirit. But the real danger is not the attack itself; it is if we let it become an attack on our spiritual life by embracing guilt, self-condemnation, or despair. Recognizing that something is a tactic of the adversary is the first step. When you name it, you can handle it with prayer rather than with the flesh’s panic. Do not let the accusation that you are lazy or unspiritual take root. That is a lying charge, and if you spend yourself defending your reputation against it, you’ll exhaust yourself further. God knows your heart. He is not measuring you by your output.
We are called to build even when there is opposition. I think of Nehemiah’s workers, who held a trowel in one hand and a sword in the other. The wall rose while enemies harassed them. They prayed and they kept working, even if the pace slowed. You can do the same. Offer what you can each day, however small, as an act of worship. It is not the size of the offering that matters but the faith behind it. And pray without ceasing, bringing every tired moment before the One who renews strength.
There is also a real connection between the state of the soul and the health of the body, not in a simple cause-and-effect way, but in how deep peace and trust in God settle our whole being. While we cannot demand physical healing as a guaranteed right, the Scriptures do show that a soul prospering in grace often brings a kind of steadiness that benefits the body. So guard your inner world. Do not let the weariness breed bitterness or hopelessness. Cast your cares on Him, and deliberately rest in His promises. That does not mean you ignore your body, rest when you need to, eat well, seek wise counsel if symptoms persist, but refuse to let the mind spiral into fear.
Your friends and family and the person you love are on your heart, and that in itself is a sign of a healthy soul. You are not consumed by your own struggle. I will pray for them, and for you, that God’s sustaining grace would be tangibly present. He does not always lift the trial quickly, but He always gives strength to endure and a purpose in the enduring. Trust Him with the mystery of timing. His ways are higher than ours, and His love is unchanged.
You sense this may be an attack on your health, and that is a discerning instinct. The enemy strikes where he can, often aiming at the body to unsettle the spirit. But the real danger is not the attack itself; it is if we let it become an attack on our spiritual life by embracing guilt, self-condemnation, or despair. Recognizing that something is a tactic of the adversary is the first step. When you name it, you can handle it with prayer rather than with the flesh’s panic. Do not let the accusation that you are lazy or unspiritual take root. That is a lying charge, and if you spend yourself defending your reputation against it, you’ll exhaust yourself further. God knows your heart. He is not measuring you by your output.
We are called to build even when there is opposition. I think of Nehemiah’s workers, who held a trowel in one hand and a sword in the other. The wall rose while enemies harassed them. They prayed and they kept working, even if the pace slowed. You can do the same. Offer what you can each day, however small, as an act of worship. It is not the size of the offering that matters but the faith behind it. And pray without ceasing, bringing every tired moment before the One who renews strength.
There is also a real connection between the state of the soul and the health of the body, not in a simple cause-and-effect way, but in how deep peace and trust in God settle our whole being. While we cannot demand physical healing as a guaranteed right, the Scriptures do show that a soul prospering in grace often brings a kind of steadiness that benefits the body. So guard your inner world. Do not let the weariness breed bitterness or hopelessness. Cast your cares on Him, and deliberately rest in His promises. That does not mean you ignore your body, rest when you need to, eat well, seek wise counsel if symptoms persist, but refuse to let the mind spiral into fear.
Your friends and family and the person you love are on your heart, and that in itself is a sign of a healthy soul. You are not consumed by your own struggle. I will pray for them, and for you, that God’s sustaining grace would be tangibly present. He does not always lift the trial quickly, but He always gives strength to endure and a purpose in the enduring. Trust Him with the mystery of timing. His ways are higher than ours, and His love is unchanged.
