Silas
Beloved Servant
I hear the anguish in your words, and I will not dismiss it with easy answers. You are carrying the weight of long waiting, broken promises, family strain, and a deep sense of injustice. The questions you are asking are not trivial. They are the very cries that fill the book of Job, a man who lost everything, sat in ashes, and demanded to know why the righteous suffer while the wicked seem to go unpunished. You are walking a path he knew well.
Your family needs work, and a gracious spouse, and the return of what was taken. Those needs are real. Bring them plainly before the Lord, who tells us to cast our cares on him. Yet when the answer delays and the cheater prospers, the heart can curdle into bitterness. You have begun charging God with silence, slowness, and even powerlessness. I recognize those accusations; Job’s lips tasted them too. He longed for a mediator, for a day in court where his innocence would be proven and the wicked judged. He never received that full answer in his lifetime.
The mistake his friends made was to assume that every stroke of hardship is a direct punishment for secret sin. They were wrong. But there is another error that can slip in: the belief that if God is truly just, he must unleash the torments we design for our adversaries, and do it now. That is the demand of a wounded heart, not the posture of faith. You have spelled out physical and material curses on the man and his wife, down to the loss of his hands and the ruin of his children’s education. I must tell you plainly, this is not how God calls his people to pray. The Scriptures teach us, “Vengeance is mine; I will repay, says the Lord.” He does not need us to script the punishment. When we clutch that right, we poison our own souls.
Job too reached the point where he wished his day of birth could be blotted out. Yet in the very pit, he cried out, “I know that my Redeemer lives.” He had no completed Bible, no knowledge of the cross. All he had was a raw trust that somehow, beyond his death, God would stand upon the earth and make things right. That seed of faith, planted in a dark field, was counted to him as righteousness.
You have been given what Job only glimpsed. Jesus Christ took the ultimate injustice when he, the righteous One, was nailed to a tree between thieves. He absorbed the curse, and in his resurrection he broke the power of death. Because he lives, your waiting is not pointless. Your cries are heard. The liar who seems to prosper will face a judge, and no amount of his lies will stand in that day. But Christ died for him too, and the deep work of repentance can happen only through God’s kindness, not through our desire for harm. Hand this man over to God; release the demand to see him suffer as you have suffered. Forgive as you have been forgiven. That is impossible without the Spirit’s help, I know. Cry out for the grace to do it, even while your bank interest climbs.
As for the job and marriage requests, keep asking. But do not reduce God’s provision to a single profession or income level. A godly spouse is one who fears the Lord and walks in integrity, not one whose salary or habits simply please you. His goodness may come wrapped differently than you expect, but it will be exactly what is needed. Trust him with the details, and let your own heart be shaped by patience.
I do not write this to brush away your suffering. Months of waiting feel like years. The pressure is intense. But God has not abandoned you. He is not stone or silence. He is the Father who gave his Son, and nothing can separate you from that love. Do not let the bitterness of injustice convince you that it is better to join the wicked. Their laughter is a thin veil over an eternal loss.
Pour out the remaining venom to the Lord privately. Tell him exactly how you feel, as Job did. Then, at the end, let your heart whisper, “Though he slay me, yet will I trust him.” He will carry you until the day when every wrong is made right.
Your family needs work, and a gracious spouse, and the return of what was taken. Those needs are real. Bring them plainly before the Lord, who tells us to cast our cares on him. Yet when the answer delays and the cheater prospers, the heart can curdle into bitterness. You have begun charging God with silence, slowness, and even powerlessness. I recognize those accusations; Job’s lips tasted them too. He longed for a mediator, for a day in court where his innocence would be proven and the wicked judged. He never received that full answer in his lifetime.
The mistake his friends made was to assume that every stroke of hardship is a direct punishment for secret sin. They were wrong. But there is another error that can slip in: the belief that if God is truly just, he must unleash the torments we design for our adversaries, and do it now. That is the demand of a wounded heart, not the posture of faith. You have spelled out physical and material curses on the man and his wife, down to the loss of his hands and the ruin of his children’s education. I must tell you plainly, this is not how God calls his people to pray. The Scriptures teach us, “Vengeance is mine; I will repay, says the Lord.” He does not need us to script the punishment. When we clutch that right, we poison our own souls.
Job too reached the point where he wished his day of birth could be blotted out. Yet in the very pit, he cried out, “I know that my Redeemer lives.” He had no completed Bible, no knowledge of the cross. All he had was a raw trust that somehow, beyond his death, God would stand upon the earth and make things right. That seed of faith, planted in a dark field, was counted to him as righteousness.
You have been given what Job only glimpsed. Jesus Christ took the ultimate injustice when he, the righteous One, was nailed to a tree between thieves. He absorbed the curse, and in his resurrection he broke the power of death. Because he lives, your waiting is not pointless. Your cries are heard. The liar who seems to prosper will face a judge, and no amount of his lies will stand in that day. But Christ died for him too, and the deep work of repentance can happen only through God’s kindness, not through our desire for harm. Hand this man over to God; release the demand to see him suffer as you have suffered. Forgive as you have been forgiven. That is impossible without the Spirit’s help, I know. Cry out for the grace to do it, even while your bank interest climbs.
As for the job and marriage requests, keep asking. But do not reduce God’s provision to a single profession or income level. A godly spouse is one who fears the Lord and walks in integrity, not one whose salary or habits simply please you. His goodness may come wrapped differently than you expect, but it will be exactly what is needed. Trust him with the details, and let your own heart be shaped by patience.
I do not write this to brush away your suffering. Months of waiting feel like years. The pressure is intense. But God has not abandoned you. He is not stone or silence. He is the Father who gave his Son, and nothing can separate you from that love. Do not let the bitterness of injustice convince you that it is better to join the wicked. Their laughter is a thin veil over an eternal loss.
Pour out the remaining venom to the Lord privately. Tell him exactly how you feel, as Job did. Then, at the end, let your heart whisper, “Though he slay me, yet will I trust him.” He will carry you until the day when every wrong is made right.
