Silas
Beloved Servant
You are honest before the Lord about the struggle, and that is no small thing. You recognize the grip alcohol has, and you still reach out in prayer. That reaching is not your own doing. God is already at work, drawing you near even when you feel weak and tangled in the same habits. He does not require you to clean yourself up before you come. The very faith to pray, to thank Him for the small mercies of a peaceful day at work, that faith is His gift to you. This is the work of God: that you believe on the One He has sent. Not that you conquer every battle in your own strength, but that you trust Jesus has already finished the work of your redemption.
The forgiveness you asked for and that you extended to your wife and son is anchored there, at the cross. Your sins are not wiped away because you managed a good day or because you feel sorry enough. They are blotted out by the finished work of Christ. When you rest in that, you stop trying to earn what has already been given. You can lay your head on that pillow not in the false peace of a drink, but in the true rest of knowing you stand before God because of what Jesus did, not because of your track record today. That same grace flowing to you is what enables you to forgive your wife when she is mean and dredges up the past. Forgiveness is a matter of the heart, and God supplies the capacity when we are willing. So keep asking Him to deepen that spirit of forgiveness in you, even as you have already spoken it out.
Your wife’s behavior is its own symptom, just as yours is. Beneath the drinking and the harsh words, there is a deeper need only Christ can fill. Pray for her, yes, but do not miss that God often works through the very friction of daily life to shape us. When those clumsy edges are chipped off, it hurts. Yet the Lord knows exactly what He is doing. Submit to that inward work, even when you want to scream. It is necessary that He first work in you before He can work through you. The testing in your marriage and in your own battle with alcohol is not meaningless. Count it as an opportunity to see His grace at work, not as condemnation.
As for your projects and proposals, approach them with a willing heart. Do your work as unto the Lord, not with grumbling or anxiety. That quiet, faithful labor leaves a powerful witness before your bosses and coworkers. God stirs up willing hearts to accomplish what He calls us to do. But do not imagine you must perform perfectly to secure His blessing. You cannot obligate God by fasting, by promises, or by sheer effort. Whatever He does for you comes purely through grace. So pray about the deadlines, then work diligently, and leave the outcome with Him.
Remember, the greatest need you and your wife have is not a smoother day at work or even immediate sobriety, though those are good to ask for. The deepest need is the forgiveness of sins and a new life by the Spirit. That is already yours in Christ. Rest in His finished work. From that place of rest, you will find strength to face tomorrow, not because you are strong, but because He is, and He carries you.
The forgiveness you asked for and that you extended to your wife and son is anchored there, at the cross. Your sins are not wiped away because you managed a good day or because you feel sorry enough. They are blotted out by the finished work of Christ. When you rest in that, you stop trying to earn what has already been given. You can lay your head on that pillow not in the false peace of a drink, but in the true rest of knowing you stand before God because of what Jesus did, not because of your track record today. That same grace flowing to you is what enables you to forgive your wife when she is mean and dredges up the past. Forgiveness is a matter of the heart, and God supplies the capacity when we are willing. So keep asking Him to deepen that spirit of forgiveness in you, even as you have already spoken it out.
Your wife’s behavior is its own symptom, just as yours is. Beneath the drinking and the harsh words, there is a deeper need only Christ can fill. Pray for her, yes, but do not miss that God often works through the very friction of daily life to shape us. When those clumsy edges are chipped off, it hurts. Yet the Lord knows exactly what He is doing. Submit to that inward work, even when you want to scream. It is necessary that He first work in you before He can work through you. The testing in your marriage and in your own battle with alcohol is not meaningless. Count it as an opportunity to see His grace at work, not as condemnation.
As for your projects and proposals, approach them with a willing heart. Do your work as unto the Lord, not with grumbling or anxiety. That quiet, faithful labor leaves a powerful witness before your bosses and coworkers. God stirs up willing hearts to accomplish what He calls us to do. But do not imagine you must perform perfectly to secure His blessing. You cannot obligate God by fasting, by promises, or by sheer effort. Whatever He does for you comes purely through grace. So pray about the deadlines, then work diligently, and leave the outcome with Him.
Remember, the greatest need you and your wife have is not a smoother day at work or even immediate sobriety, though those are good to ask for. The deepest need is the forgiveness of sins and a new life by the Spirit. That is already yours in Christ. Rest in His finished work. From that place of rest, you will find strength to face tomorrow, not because you are strong, but because He is, and He carries you.
