Silas
Beloved Servant
What you are carrying right now is heavy, and the hatred you feel is a real response to real wounds. When people who should have protected you used their position to tear you down, it cuts deep because it is a perversion of what God intended authority to be. Psalm 82 strips away their false security, showing that they are not gods at all. They will die like every mortal, and they will stand before the Judge who sees every cruel word, every act of dismissive pride. That truth is not just a comfort; it is a solid anchor for your soul when the emotional waves hit hardest. Your exhaustion and anxiety are not signs of weakness, they are the very real effects of a sustained assault on your spirit, and God is not indifferent to that.
Hatred like you are describing makes sense on a human level, but it also works like a poison that harms the one who holds it. You see that in the way it stirs up strife and keeps the wound open long after the blow lands. Emotional abuse from lying lips and a deceitful tongue can take far longer to heal than a physical cut, because the mind replays the words and the heart keeps tally. Your abusers may believe their wealth and status make them untouchable, but God exposes the hatred they cover with smooth words. He sees the injustice done to the poor and the afflicted, and He will not let it stand forever. Justice belongs to Him, and that means you are free to release the burden of trying to make them pay.
The spiritual thirst inside you cannot be satisfied by obsessing over their downfall or by waiting for an emotional rush of vindication. People chase emotional highs all the time, thinking the next experience will finally fix what is broken, only to find the emptiness returns. What you really thirst for is God Himself, for His justice, His nearness, and His healing. That thirst is met not by constructing a perfect argument in your head against them, but by bringing your raw and honest hatred to the Lord and asking Him to carry it. Jesus understands hatred without a cause because He endured it Himself. He knows what it is to be despised by those who should have honored Him.
Do not let their deceitful mouths make you into someone who hides hatred with lying lips of your own. You do not have to pretend you like them or force a smile, but you can entrust your cause to the One who judges righteously. When you do, the bitterness that is eating at you will lose its power. Love covers a multitude of sins, not by pretending the sin did not happen, but by refusing to let the sin define your whole future. Your abusers have already done enough damage; do not let them continue to control your emotions through endless replay. The moments when you feel that hatred surge, turn it into prayer, even if it is a cry of “Lord, You see this. Deal with them, and heal me.”
I know that inside a fractured family, the wounds can feel impossible to escape. But God is a Restorer. He can bring order out of chaos and make a way for you to breathe again, even if some relationships remain broken. Your worth is not determined by their opinion, and your future is not chained to their past cruelty. Let your faith rest on the facts of God’s Word rather than the storm of your feelings. Emotions will flip quickly; one moment hatred, the next despair. But the Word remains steady: God loves justice, He defends the fatherless and the oppressed, and He will vindicate you in His time. Let that truth dig deep roots, and it will produce lasting healing, not just a temporary emotional release. You are not alone in this, and your cries are not lost in the noise. The God who heard the afflicted in Psalm 82 hears you now.
Hatred like you are describing makes sense on a human level, but it also works like a poison that harms the one who holds it. You see that in the way it stirs up strife and keeps the wound open long after the blow lands. Emotional abuse from lying lips and a deceitful tongue can take far longer to heal than a physical cut, because the mind replays the words and the heart keeps tally. Your abusers may believe their wealth and status make them untouchable, but God exposes the hatred they cover with smooth words. He sees the injustice done to the poor and the afflicted, and He will not let it stand forever. Justice belongs to Him, and that means you are free to release the burden of trying to make them pay.
The spiritual thirst inside you cannot be satisfied by obsessing over their downfall or by waiting for an emotional rush of vindication. People chase emotional highs all the time, thinking the next experience will finally fix what is broken, only to find the emptiness returns. What you really thirst for is God Himself, for His justice, His nearness, and His healing. That thirst is met not by constructing a perfect argument in your head against them, but by bringing your raw and honest hatred to the Lord and asking Him to carry it. Jesus understands hatred without a cause because He endured it Himself. He knows what it is to be despised by those who should have honored Him.
Do not let their deceitful mouths make you into someone who hides hatred with lying lips of your own. You do not have to pretend you like them or force a smile, but you can entrust your cause to the One who judges righteously. When you do, the bitterness that is eating at you will lose its power. Love covers a multitude of sins, not by pretending the sin did not happen, but by refusing to let the sin define your whole future. Your abusers have already done enough damage; do not let them continue to control your emotions through endless replay. The moments when you feel that hatred surge, turn it into prayer, even if it is a cry of “Lord, You see this. Deal with them, and heal me.”
I know that inside a fractured family, the wounds can feel impossible to escape. But God is a Restorer. He can bring order out of chaos and make a way for you to breathe again, even if some relationships remain broken. Your worth is not determined by their opinion, and your future is not chained to their past cruelty. Let your faith rest on the facts of God’s Word rather than the storm of your feelings. Emotions will flip quickly; one moment hatred, the next despair. But the Word remains steady: God loves justice, He defends the fatherless and the oppressed, and He will vindicate you in His time. Let that truth dig deep roots, and it will produce lasting healing, not just a temporary emotional release. You are not alone in this, and your cries are not lost in the noise. The God who heard the afflicted in Psalm 82 hears you now.
