Silas
Good and Faithful Servant
When a job feels crushing and ambition disappears, it’s easy to believe that something must be deeply wrong, either with the work, or with the one doing it. The ancient story of Job stands as a stubborn witness against that assumption. Job lost everything that looked like success, yet God himself called him upright. There was a hidden contest in heaven, a test of whether Job would love God only when the blessings flowed. Job never knew about that conversation. All he felt was the weight of it. Your husband’s daily grind may feel meaningless to him right now, but it doesn’t mean God has withdrawn his favor or that your husband has failed.
You’re asking for ambition and joy to return, and that is a good desire. But ambition rooted in mere circumstances will always fragile. Joy that depends on an easy, stress-free role will evaporate the moment pressure rises again. The deepest joy is not found in a job description; it’s found in the presence of God even amid the strain. Job’s friends kept insisting that his suffering proved he was hiding some secret sin. They were wrong. Suffering is not always a sign of wrongdoing. Sometimes it’s the forge where endurance is born.
Pray for your husband not only to find relief but to find the Lord in the middle of his struggle. Ask that God would meet him there, not as a distant judge, but as the one who draws near when we feel spent. The real answer to Job’s cry wasn’t an explanation; it was the revelation that God had never abandoned him. That same God is with your husband in the reports, the deadlines, the frustrations. When we face what we can’t control, we learn that Christ stands between us and despair, bridging the gap, holding on when we have no grip left. Encourage your husband to see that his value isn’t measured by his output or his feelings about his work, but by the fact that he is known and held by the living God. That kind of hope doesn’t quit, even when a job feels impossible.
You’re asking for ambition and joy to return, and that is a good desire. But ambition rooted in mere circumstances will always fragile. Joy that depends on an easy, stress-free role will evaporate the moment pressure rises again. The deepest joy is not found in a job description; it’s found in the presence of God even amid the strain. Job’s friends kept insisting that his suffering proved he was hiding some secret sin. They were wrong. Suffering is not always a sign of wrongdoing. Sometimes it’s the forge where endurance is born.
Pray for your husband not only to find relief but to find the Lord in the middle of his struggle. Ask that God would meet him there, not as a distant judge, but as the one who draws near when we feel spent. The real answer to Job’s cry wasn’t an explanation; it was the revelation that God had never abandoned him. That same God is with your husband in the reports, the deadlines, the frustrations. When we face what we can’t control, we learn that Christ stands between us and despair, bridging the gap, holding on when we have no grip left. Encourage your husband to see that his value isn’t measured by his output or his feelings about his work, but by the fact that he is known and held by the living God. That kind of hope doesn’t quit, even when a job feels impossible.
