Silas
Humble Servant
A toothache is a cruel kind of pain, the way it throbs and demands your attention, making it hard to think of anything else. Your cry to the Father in Jesus’ name is not a small thing. He hears you.
We live in a world where sin has left its mark on everything, including our bodies. Pain, decay, and sickness were never part of the original design. They came as a consequence of a broken world, not necessarily as a direct act of God toward you. Good people suffer. Faithful people ache. It does not mean He has turned away. Sometimes pain is a slow grind, and relief comes gradually as the body’s own God-given processes do their work. That too is a kind of divine healing, because He is the One who created those processes and set them in motion.
Remember that Jesus dealt with sickness in all kinds of ways. Sometimes He spoke a word and it was done. Other times He touched the eyes or the hand. Once, a woman simply grabbed the hem of His garment and felt healing flow into her instantly. On another occasion, a man’s sight returned not all at once but in stages. The Lord is not confined to a single pattern. Your relief may come swiftly, or it may ease over the next hours or days. Either way, His power is not limited, and His compassion is not distant.
Scripture shows us that Jesus bore more than our sins. He took our infirmities and carried our sicknesses. That means your toothache matters to Him. He does not stand aloof from something as physical and nagging as this. You can ask Him to touch that inflamed nerve, to calm the throbbing, and to let the healing virtue that is in Christ flow into your body right now. And while you wait, you can rest in this: He already knows the weight of what sin has done to the world. He wept at the grave of a friend, not because He lacked power, but because He felt the deep sorrow that suffering brings. He feels it with you now.
Lift your hand in praise if you can, even in the middle of this, and ask Him for relief. Not in a frenzy or with fakery, but with the honest faith that says, “Lord, You are able. If it pleases You, touch me now.” Perhaps in this very moment, you will sense that pain begin to lift. Perhaps it will draw back quietly as the hours pass. Either way, He is near, and your request is not foolish. Jesus has already borne this for you. May His peace guard your heart while your body is made whole.
We live in a world where sin has left its mark on everything, including our bodies. Pain, decay, and sickness were never part of the original design. They came as a consequence of a broken world, not necessarily as a direct act of God toward you. Good people suffer. Faithful people ache. It does not mean He has turned away. Sometimes pain is a slow grind, and relief comes gradually as the body’s own God-given processes do their work. That too is a kind of divine healing, because He is the One who created those processes and set them in motion.
Remember that Jesus dealt with sickness in all kinds of ways. Sometimes He spoke a word and it was done. Other times He touched the eyes or the hand. Once, a woman simply grabbed the hem of His garment and felt healing flow into her instantly. On another occasion, a man’s sight returned not all at once but in stages. The Lord is not confined to a single pattern. Your relief may come swiftly, or it may ease over the next hours or days. Either way, His power is not limited, and His compassion is not distant.
Scripture shows us that Jesus bore more than our sins. He took our infirmities and carried our sicknesses. That means your toothache matters to Him. He does not stand aloof from something as physical and nagging as this. You can ask Him to touch that inflamed nerve, to calm the throbbing, and to let the healing virtue that is in Christ flow into your body right now. And while you wait, you can rest in this: He already knows the weight of what sin has done to the world. He wept at the grave of a friend, not because He lacked power, but because He felt the deep sorrow that suffering brings. He feels it with you now.
Lift your hand in praise if you can, even in the middle of this, and ask Him for relief. Not in a frenzy or with fakery, but with the honest faith that says, “Lord, You are able. If it pleases You, touch me now.” Perhaps in this very moment, you will sense that pain begin to lift. Perhaps it will draw back quietly as the hours pass. Either way, He is near, and your request is not foolish. Jesus has already borne this for you. May His peace guard your heart while your body is made whole.
