Silas
Beloved Servant
What a powerful and honest outpouring of your heart before the Lord. You are holding so much, desperate pleas for protection, healing, deliverance, and salvation for your whole family, all mixed with real pain from the attacks and the long wait. This is very much like the psalms, where trust and trial are woven together. In Psalm 37, David began with that same raw mixture, but as he fixed his eyes on the Lord, his trust overcame the trial, and by the end there was a triumph of trusting. That is what the Spirit is doing in you even now: moving you from the agony of the moment toward a settled place of rest in Him.
You mentioned not losing sight of what God has already done while you wait for complete deliverance. That is the very battle. The exhortations in that psalm speak directly to this: fret not, envy not, cease from anger, forsake wrath. And on the positive side: trust in the Lord, delight yourself in Him, commit your way to the Lord, and rest in Him. Resting in the Lord in the midst of turmoil is one of the greatest marks of the Christian walk. You are being called to lean not on your own understanding, as you prayed, and to let His trust and His faith be formed in you supernaturally.
I am reminded that God often allows us to come to the very end of our own capacities so that we learn to draw from His all-sufficiency alone. The depth of character that He develops through prolonged suffering cannot be produced any other way. Those whose lives have been marked by affliction often carry a richness that others lack, and God can use that in you not only for your own soul but for the sake of those you love and pray for so fervently. Your waiting and your tears are not wasted. He is the one who restores souls, and He has promised to restore the years the locusts have eaten.
You asked for a wall of Holy Spirit fire and for warrior angels to surround you. Take heart from Psalm 62: from Him comes your salvation. He only is your rock and your salvation. He is your defense; you shall not be moved. In God is your salvation and your glory; the rock of your strength and your refuge is in God. That rock imagery means He is your immovable foundation, your hiding place when the pride of man and the assaults of the enemy press hard against you. The same Lord who shut Noah safely in the ark is the one who has shut you in with Himself. The enemy may hurl fiery darts of accusation and fear, but your faith in the finished work of Jesus Christ keeps you secure. You have been delivered from the power of sin, and though trials persist, you are kept by His grace.
Your prayer for salvation and healing for your whole family rests on this: truly in vain is salvation hoped for from any other source. Only in the Lord is there salvation. His arm is not too short. He is the captain of your salvation, made complete through sufferings, and He is not willing that any should perish. Keep bringing your loved ones before Him, knowing that the same God who hears your cry for deliverance from attacks and abusive patterns is able to break every chain and turn curses into blessings, just as you declared from Galatians.
I also see that you are struggling with relationships, with things you wish you had handled differently, and with a sense of being overlooked. It hurts deeply when trust is violated or when you feel unseen. Yet even there, the call is to commit your way to the Lord. He knows your frame; He remembers that you are dust. Confess what needs confessing, as you already have begun to do, and then receive the mercy that flows from His throne. He does not deal with you according to your failures but according to His steadfast love. He is your preserver from trouble; He will encircle you with songs of deliverance.
In the middle of all this, fix your eyes on the eternal. The sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that will be revealed in us. When you lose sight of eternity, the trials can seem senseless and overwhelming. But God is working even in the hardship to bring about a weight of glory beyond all description. Your waiting is not passive; it is an act of trust, a declaration that your expectation for deliverance is from Him alone. He is your rock, your fortress, your high tower, and your salvation. Wait on His name, for it is good before His saints. He will answer you.
You mentioned not losing sight of what God has already done while you wait for complete deliverance. That is the very battle. The exhortations in that psalm speak directly to this: fret not, envy not, cease from anger, forsake wrath. And on the positive side: trust in the Lord, delight yourself in Him, commit your way to the Lord, and rest in Him. Resting in the Lord in the midst of turmoil is one of the greatest marks of the Christian walk. You are being called to lean not on your own understanding, as you prayed, and to let His trust and His faith be formed in you supernaturally.
I am reminded that God often allows us to come to the very end of our own capacities so that we learn to draw from His all-sufficiency alone. The depth of character that He develops through prolonged suffering cannot be produced any other way. Those whose lives have been marked by affliction often carry a richness that others lack, and God can use that in you not only for your own soul but for the sake of those you love and pray for so fervently. Your waiting and your tears are not wasted. He is the one who restores souls, and He has promised to restore the years the locusts have eaten.
You asked for a wall of Holy Spirit fire and for warrior angels to surround you. Take heart from Psalm 62: from Him comes your salvation. He only is your rock and your salvation. He is your defense; you shall not be moved. In God is your salvation and your glory; the rock of your strength and your refuge is in God. That rock imagery means He is your immovable foundation, your hiding place when the pride of man and the assaults of the enemy press hard against you. The same Lord who shut Noah safely in the ark is the one who has shut you in with Himself. The enemy may hurl fiery darts of accusation and fear, but your faith in the finished work of Jesus Christ keeps you secure. You have been delivered from the power of sin, and though trials persist, you are kept by His grace.
Your prayer for salvation and healing for your whole family rests on this: truly in vain is salvation hoped for from any other source. Only in the Lord is there salvation. His arm is not too short. He is the captain of your salvation, made complete through sufferings, and He is not willing that any should perish. Keep bringing your loved ones before Him, knowing that the same God who hears your cry for deliverance from attacks and abusive patterns is able to break every chain and turn curses into blessings, just as you declared from Galatians.
I also see that you are struggling with relationships, with things you wish you had handled differently, and with a sense of being overlooked. It hurts deeply when trust is violated or when you feel unseen. Yet even there, the call is to commit your way to the Lord. He knows your frame; He remembers that you are dust. Confess what needs confessing, as you already have begun to do, and then receive the mercy that flows from His throne. He does not deal with you according to your failures but according to His steadfast love. He is your preserver from trouble; He will encircle you with songs of deliverance.
In the middle of all this, fix your eyes on the eternal. The sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that will be revealed in us. When you lose sight of eternity, the trials can seem senseless and overwhelming. But God is working even in the hardship to bring about a weight of glory beyond all description. Your waiting is not passive; it is an act of trust, a declaration that your expectation for deliverance is from Him alone. He is your rock, your fortress, your high tower, and your salvation. Wait on His name, for it is good before His saints. He will answer you.
