I need to begin with care, because this weighs so heavily on you right now. If your mother is in immediate danger from those suicidal thoughts, please get her to local emergency services or help her reach a helpline in her country through
findahelpline.com. That is the first and most urgent thing. And for you, carrying all this, the shouting, the betrayal, the grief since your father passed, the miles and the money that keep you apart, I want you to know that the Lord sees every splinter of it, and He is not far off.
You describe a family that feels shattered beyond mending, where every conversation turns into screaming and ingratitude, where your offers of help are met with a closed door. It is like standing in the wreckage of a house after a storm, looking at broken beams and scattered belongings, and wondering if anything can ever be fit to live in again. The enemy would love for you to believe that this ruin is permanent, that the fractures are too many and the bitterness too deep. But God’s special delight is to take what is broken and make it whole. David knew something of this when he cried out about bones that were crushed; he discovered that the Lord does not simply patch us up, He makes the very bones that were broken to rejoice. That is not just healing, it is resurrection joy in the very place where the pain once sat.
Right now, you can hardly imagine a peaceful word spoken among your family, let alone rejoicing. You see the disobedience, the struggle for control, the ugly words flying back and forth. But remember this: the Lord’s thoughts are not your thoughts. You look at the chaos and see a hopeless tangle; He looks at the same scene and sees a canvas for His mercy. When you are exhausted by your own inability to fix things, when the expensive tickets and your spouse’s reluctance and the wall of anger all seem to block the way, the Lord is not blocked at all. He can come down into that house and into those hearts without a single plane ticket. He can work in your mother’s spirit even in that toxic environment. His thoughts toward each member of your family are more numerous than the sand; He is thinking about them even now, and His thoughts are all of peace.
Hanging over all of this is the deep hurt of feeling exterminated, as if you and your love for them have been wiped out, treated as nothing. That is a dreadful pain, and it is one that Jesus understands from the inside. He came to His own, and His own received Him not. He offered help, and they shouted for His death. Yet from the cross, He did not shout back. He prayed, “Father, forgive them.” That prayer was not a weak surrender; it was the triumphant beginning of something new. And you are following in that same track when you say, “I forgive them each day.” Do not despise that daily choice. It is not a small thing. You are, in truth, lifting off the dark lid that the enemy wants to keep clamped down over your family. Every time you forgive, you let a little more of the air of heaven into that stifled place.
What grieves your heart most of all may be your mother, carrying suicidal thoughts, her tongue sharpened by her own misery, yet still shouldering responsibility. This is a soul in deep, deep water. Do not think for a moment that the Lord has abandoned her to the waves. He who walked on the sea to reach His frightened disciples knows right where she is. And you, His child, are not powerless. You can pray her into the hands of the only One who can calm the storm within a human heart. You cannot silence the negative voices that swarm around her, but you can bring her name before the Throne, and the Prince of Peace can command a great calm.
And as for you, feeling caught between your spouse and your family, burdened with the cost of travel, carrying the weight of grief for your father, the Lord has not overlooked you. You said something beautiful: that after death, you will share together, and meet your father in heaven. That is no wishful dream; it is the solid hope of the gospel. Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and that is the promise for your household. The reunion you ache for now may be denied you, but in Christ it is guaranteed for eternity. And the same God who keeps that future safe is rich in mercy for the present. He can recover the years the locusts have eaten. He can turn the hearts that now seem so hard. He can provide for their needs and protect them in ways you cannot even imagine from this distance.
Let me leave you with this: you are not standing outside a locked door, banging in vain. You are kneeling inside the mercy seat itself, and the door of heaven is wide open over your family. The One who blots out transgressions for His own sake has heard you. He knows the way through this. Rest your heart in that.
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Lord Jesus, You see this family so tangled in pain and pride, so shattered by loss. You know the angry words, the suicidal shadows, the lonely grief of this dear one who prays. By Your mercy, step in. Protect that mother, quiet her heart, and break the lies of the enemy over that household. Provide for their needs when the way seems shut. And give Your child here the peace that passes all understanding, a deep, settled calm that comes from leaving it all in Your scarred hands. Heal what we cannot fix. In Your mighty name, Amen.