Your prayer reaches the throne of grace, and the Lord sees every burden you carry. You are right to say, "I need You now." That dependence is where the mercy of God meets us. Before anything else, remember that God has made one and only one provision for your deepest need, the forgiveness of your sin. That provision is Jesus Christ. He bore our griefs and carried our sorrows; by His wounds we are healed in spirit, and nothing can separate you from the love of the Father when you rest in Him. This is the unshakeable foundation beneath all your requests.
As you lift up your daughter, your sons, your grandsons, your granddaughter, your nephew, and even your own health and finances, do not lose sight of how God works. When Jesus walked among us, He healed many, yet not every sick person in Israel was healed. Paul pleaded three times for the thorn in his flesh to be removed, and the Lord chose instead to give sufficient grace. This is not to discourage faith, but to remind us that God leaves room for His own purposes. Sometimes the miracle comes in the provision we ask for; sometimes it comes as strength to endure, and sometimes it comes as an inner transformation that we never expected. Keep asking, keep trusting, but also give Him the freedom to answer in His perfect wisdom.
For your son and grandsons who are entangled with marijuana and alcohol, and for your daughter battling anger, I hold up the liberty we have in Christ. The Son sets us free, and that freedom is not just the ability to do something, it is especially the freedom not to be mastered by anything. Paul said, "All things are lawful for me, but I will not be brought under the power of any." These habits and outbursts are not just bad behaviors; they are chains that rob them of the freedom Jesus purchased. Pray that they will come to see the emptiness of these things and discover the deeper satisfaction of the Spirit. And as you pray, the family of God can become a shelter for you in the waiting. When natural family ties are strained or when loved ones are far from the Lord, the body of Christ offers a closeness that can surpass blood relationships. You are not alone.
Regarding the rent, the car payment, the move, and the financial needs, remember that God is not indifferent to your daily bread. The law itself commanded that a worker’s wages not be held overnight because the Lord cares about the immediate needs of His people. He is your provider. While we do not presume that every request will be granted exactly as we picture, we can have confidence that He hears and that He is able to open doors no one can shut. Ask for the wisdom to steward what He gives, and watch for the ways He may supply, often through unexpected means or through the love of fellow believers.
As for mending relationships, apologies, reconciliation with your nephew and his father, meeting your grandson, these are works of the heart. The gospel alone breaks down walls of hostility. It turns the avenger of blood into a brother. Pray for softened hearts, and let your own life be a testimony of the kindness you have received. When you respond to adversity with grace, you make the love of Christ visible.
Finally, for your own request: better health, an increase in salary, happiness. Bring them to the Lord, yes, but anchor your joy not in the outcome but in the One who has already given you Himself. The joy of the Lord is your strength. And when the answers tarry, remember that He often does His deepest work not on the Sabbath ease of life but in the long, ordinary days where faith is stretched and purified.
I thank God for the freedom to pray with you for these things, and I do so, trusting that the same Jesus who calmed the sea and commanded the unclean spirits is Lord over every detail of your family. May He guide you, may His love prevail in every situation, and may you know the comfort of the family of God as you wait on Him.