Silas
Faithful Servant
The weight of such loss in so short a time is more than any heart should have to carry alone. When death keeps returning to your door, it can feel like walking through the valley of the shadow over and over, with no end in sight. The grief is real, and the questions that rise up in the quiet moments are real too. It is right that you have reached out. You were never meant to bear this by yourself.
Death always feels like an enemy because it is one. It entered the world through sin, and ever since, it has been taking those we love and leaving an ache that words cannot touch. The Scriptures are honest about this. They do not pretend death is natural or good. They call it the last enemy, and they show us generations of people crying out to the Lord under its crushing weight. You are not alone in that cry. The children of Israel cried unto the Lord under oppression and sorrow, and He heard them. He hears you now.
What we need most in these hours is not an explanation but a person. The Son of God took on flesh and blood precisely so that through His own death He might destroy the one who held the power of death and set free those who through fear of death were held in lifelong bondage. He did not stand at a distance from our grief. He entered it. He tasted death for every one of us. On the cross He bore the full penalty that sin demanded, and when He rose, He broke the grip of death forever. That means death does not get the final word over those who belong to Him.
That is the hope held out to you and to your boys. When the blood of Christ is applied to a life, death becomes a passage, not a prison. As the angel of death passed over the houses marked by the blood of the lamb in Egypt, so death has lost its sting for all who are covered by the blood of the true Lamb of God. He said it plainly: whoever lives and believes in Him will never die. The body may sleep for a season, but the person has passed from death into life. That is a promise you can cling to with both hands when everything else feels like sand.
You may find, as many grieving parents have, that the relationship you have with the Lord cannot automatically carry your children. The faith of one generation does not guarantee the faith of the next. Each heart must prepare itself to seek Him. But the same God who heard the cries of Israel and raised up a deliverer is able to reach any heart, even in its final moments. We entrust our loved ones to a Judge who is perfectly just and perfectly merciful, who alone knows the secrets of every heart and who gave His own Son to save sinners. You can rest your boys in that trust, painful as the rest may be.
For now, let yourself grieve. The Scriptures do not rush past grief; they record it. A daughter wept for two months over what she would not have. A judge’s life was shortened by sorrow over an only child. Tears are not a failure of faith. They are the honest language of love in a world still waiting for the final wiping away of every tear. So weep. Cry out. And as you do, remember that your cry is reaching the ears of the One who is with you in the valley. He knows the way through, because He walked it first. You do not walk it alone.
Death always feels like an enemy because it is one. It entered the world through sin, and ever since, it has been taking those we love and leaving an ache that words cannot touch. The Scriptures are honest about this. They do not pretend death is natural or good. They call it the last enemy, and they show us generations of people crying out to the Lord under its crushing weight. You are not alone in that cry. The children of Israel cried unto the Lord under oppression and sorrow, and He heard them. He hears you now.
What we need most in these hours is not an explanation but a person. The Son of God took on flesh and blood precisely so that through His own death He might destroy the one who held the power of death and set free those who through fear of death were held in lifelong bondage. He did not stand at a distance from our grief. He entered it. He tasted death for every one of us. On the cross He bore the full penalty that sin demanded, and when He rose, He broke the grip of death forever. That means death does not get the final word over those who belong to Him.
That is the hope held out to you and to your boys. When the blood of Christ is applied to a life, death becomes a passage, not a prison. As the angel of death passed over the houses marked by the blood of the lamb in Egypt, so death has lost its sting for all who are covered by the blood of the true Lamb of God. He said it plainly: whoever lives and believes in Him will never die. The body may sleep for a season, but the person has passed from death into life. That is a promise you can cling to with both hands when everything else feels like sand.
You may find, as many grieving parents have, that the relationship you have with the Lord cannot automatically carry your children. The faith of one generation does not guarantee the faith of the next. Each heart must prepare itself to seek Him. But the same God who heard the cries of Israel and raised up a deliverer is able to reach any heart, even in its final moments. We entrust our loved ones to a Judge who is perfectly just and perfectly merciful, who alone knows the secrets of every heart and who gave His own Son to save sinners. You can rest your boys in that trust, painful as the rest may be.
For now, let yourself grieve. The Scriptures do not rush past grief; they record it. A daughter wept for two months over what she would not have. A judge’s life was shortened by sorrow over an only child. Tears are not a failure of faith. They are the honest language of love in a world still waiting for the final wiping away of every tear. So weep. Cry out. And as you do, remember that your cry is reaching the ears of the One who is with you in the valley. He knows the way through, because He walked it first. You do not walk it alone.
