Silas
Faithful Servant
Your heart is crying out for a husband, a Christian man to walk with you, and that desire is not wrong. God made you with longings that can only be satisfied within His design. But as you pour out that request, let these truths from Scripture settle deep into your spirit, guiding both what you seek and how you wait.
Right now you stand in a season where you can care for the things of the Lord without distraction. The unmarried woman has a unique ability to be holy in body and spirit, fully devoted to Jesus. Marriage is good, do not hear me belittle that longing, but once a wife, your focus shifts to pleasing your husband, and that too is part of God’s order. So use these days to strengthen your roots in Christ. Make prayer not just a list of what you want, but a surrender where you lay that desire before Him and then let Him decide: to satisfy it, to replace it with something better, or to delay it while He shapes you. Prayer opens the door for God to do what He desires in you, through you, and for you. The blood of Jesus gives you bold access, but it serves a will greater than your own.
When you pray, examine your heart. The law of God is spiritual; it searches out not just outward acts but the strong desires underneath. To crave a husband can become a coveting that chokes out peace. Delight in God’s law inwardly, and let His Spirit align your desires with His. Remember that Jesus Himself, the Son of God, saw the necessity of prayer, rising early to seek the Father. If He needed that communion, how much more do we? Bring your dreams to Him, but hold them loosely. He answered Paul’s plea for relief with a denial, giving grace instead. A denied request is still an answer, and a delay is not a rejection.
If God grants this prayer and brings you a godly husband, the foundation of that union is already laid out simply: two rules that keep a marriage thriving. The husband is to love his wife as Christ loved the church, sacrificially, supremely, nourishing her as his own body. The wife is to submit to that kind of love, respecting her husband as she respects the Lord. Neither rule works in isolation; it takes both. So while you wait, study that pattern. Let your imagination be shaped not by fantasy but by Scripture’s portrait of a covenant that lasts for life, where each surrenders the power over their own body to the other within that holy bond.
Be wary of any teaching that reduces faith to a formula where you speak things into existence. God honors prayer, but He is not a servant of our words. Instead, He invites you to trust His character. If you are called to suffer a season of singleness, do so with the grace that knows suffering for well-doing is better than suffering for rushing ahead of His will. Keep courtesy on your lips, not railing or bitterness. Forgive anyone who has wounded you in past relationships, because unforgiveness blocks your own experience of the Father’s forgiveness.
Finally, do not isolate yourself. The Scriptures show believers gathering to pray fervently for one another. Let mature believers stand with you, lay hands on you, and agree in prayer that God’s perfect will be done. Your desire for a Christian husband is a good thing, but the greater prize is Jesus Himself. Seek Him first, and trust that He knows how to give what you need.
Right now you stand in a season where you can care for the things of the Lord without distraction. The unmarried woman has a unique ability to be holy in body and spirit, fully devoted to Jesus. Marriage is good, do not hear me belittle that longing, but once a wife, your focus shifts to pleasing your husband, and that too is part of God’s order. So use these days to strengthen your roots in Christ. Make prayer not just a list of what you want, but a surrender where you lay that desire before Him and then let Him decide: to satisfy it, to replace it with something better, or to delay it while He shapes you. Prayer opens the door for God to do what He desires in you, through you, and for you. The blood of Jesus gives you bold access, but it serves a will greater than your own.
When you pray, examine your heart. The law of God is spiritual; it searches out not just outward acts but the strong desires underneath. To crave a husband can become a coveting that chokes out peace. Delight in God’s law inwardly, and let His Spirit align your desires with His. Remember that Jesus Himself, the Son of God, saw the necessity of prayer, rising early to seek the Father. If He needed that communion, how much more do we? Bring your dreams to Him, but hold them loosely. He answered Paul’s plea for relief with a denial, giving grace instead. A denied request is still an answer, and a delay is not a rejection.
If God grants this prayer and brings you a godly husband, the foundation of that union is already laid out simply: two rules that keep a marriage thriving. The husband is to love his wife as Christ loved the church, sacrificially, supremely, nourishing her as his own body. The wife is to submit to that kind of love, respecting her husband as she respects the Lord. Neither rule works in isolation; it takes both. So while you wait, study that pattern. Let your imagination be shaped not by fantasy but by Scripture’s portrait of a covenant that lasts for life, where each surrenders the power over their own body to the other within that holy bond.
Be wary of any teaching that reduces faith to a formula where you speak things into existence. God honors prayer, but He is not a servant of our words. Instead, He invites you to trust His character. If you are called to suffer a season of singleness, do so with the grace that knows suffering for well-doing is better than suffering for rushing ahead of His will. Keep courtesy on your lips, not railing or bitterness. Forgive anyone who has wounded you in past relationships, because unforgiveness blocks your own experience of the Father’s forgiveness.
Finally, do not isolate yourself. The Scriptures show believers gathering to pray fervently for one another. Let mature believers stand with you, lay hands on you, and agree in prayer that God’s perfect will be done. Your desire for a Christian husband is a good thing, but the greater prize is Jesus Himself. Seek Him first, and trust that He knows how to give what you need.
