Silas
Beloved Servant
Pain has a way of making itself known, doesn't it? When it settles into your teeth and gums, your feet and ankles, your back and knees, it can feel as though your whole body is groaning under a weight you never asked to carry. That groaning is not foreign to Scripture. Paul speaks of how we who are in this body often groan earnestly, longing for the day when what is mortal is swallowed up by life. The aches in your muscles, the inflammation in your nerves, the sharpness when you try to walk, these are all echoes of a world that has been broken by sin. They were never part of God's original design, and they will not remain forever.
When Jesus stood before the tomb of Lazarus, He wept. Not because He lacked power to change the situation, but because He saw and felt the sorrow that sin brings into a person's life. He saw the pain, the grief, the suffering. And what He saw in that moment, He sees now in you. Every time you wince as your feet touch the ground, every throb in your jaw, He is not distant or indifferent. He who bore our griefs and carried our sorrows understands the prison of a hurting body. There is no promise that all healing in this life will be instant or complete, but there is a promise that He walks with us through it all.
The Scriptures show us that healing can come in many ways. Sometimes it is a sudden release, a word spoken and the body made whole at once. Other times it unfolds gradually, like the blind man at Bethsaida who saw men as trees walking before his sight cleared fully. Even the slow mending that nature itself accomplishes is no less divine, for He created the processes of restoration within us. What matters is not the speed or the manner, but the One who stands behind it. If the relief comes over days or months, through rest or treatment or the quiet rebuilding of what is inflamed, it is still His hand at work. And if the pain lingers for reasons we cannot understand, that does not mean His love has failed. His love is not measured by the absence of suffering, but by the presence of His own Son who entered into it.
I think often of Enoch, who simply walked with God. Not because his path was free of stones, but because he kept his steps in fellowship with the One who made him. Your mention of walking stands out to me, not only the physical act that now causes you pain, but the deeper walk of which it can remind us. Walking in truth, walking in the Spirit, walking with the confidence that the Lord sees and knows. The apostle John wrote that he had no greater joy than to hear that his children were walking in truth. That walk does not depend on our legs being strong or our arches free of inflammation, but on our hearts being set toward Christ. Even if the steps are painful, even if the journey is slowed, the walk itself can be one of trust and worship.
Let me share something I have witnessed. I once sat by the bedside of a woman who endured a great deal of bodily suffering. She never complained aloud, though we knew what she was going through. One night, in the final days, as I prayed quietly at the foot of her bed, I foolishly asked the Lord to transfer her pain onto me for a little while so she might have rest. The answer came gently but firmly: "I have already borne her pain." And from that hour, her pain was lifted. I do not tell you this to reduce the mystery of why some are healed and others wait, but to remind you that the cross is the ground of all healing. Christ bore what we could never bear. Whether He lifts the pain from your teeth and your feet right now or carries you through it for a season, the outcome is in His hands. I cannot explain every reason, but I can trust the One who wept and then commanded the tomb to be opened.
So I pray for you this day: that any inflammation and pain in your body would be calmed, that your teeth and gums would know relief, that your feet and ankles and knees and back would be strengthened so you may walk without hurt, and that your muscles and nerves would cease their distress. Yet more than that, I pray that in the midst of whatever remains, you would know the fellowship of the One who walks with you. The world ahead, the one He is bringing, holds no pain, no sorrow, no tears. The former things will have passed away. Until then, we groan, but not without hope. We walk, even when it hurts. And we fix our eyes on Jesus, who is not confused by our suffering but stands ready to give grace for each step.
When Jesus stood before the tomb of Lazarus, He wept. Not because He lacked power to change the situation, but because He saw and felt the sorrow that sin brings into a person's life. He saw the pain, the grief, the suffering. And what He saw in that moment, He sees now in you. Every time you wince as your feet touch the ground, every throb in your jaw, He is not distant or indifferent. He who bore our griefs and carried our sorrows understands the prison of a hurting body. There is no promise that all healing in this life will be instant or complete, but there is a promise that He walks with us through it all.
The Scriptures show us that healing can come in many ways. Sometimes it is a sudden release, a word spoken and the body made whole at once. Other times it unfolds gradually, like the blind man at Bethsaida who saw men as trees walking before his sight cleared fully. Even the slow mending that nature itself accomplishes is no less divine, for He created the processes of restoration within us. What matters is not the speed or the manner, but the One who stands behind it. If the relief comes over days or months, through rest or treatment or the quiet rebuilding of what is inflamed, it is still His hand at work. And if the pain lingers for reasons we cannot understand, that does not mean His love has failed. His love is not measured by the absence of suffering, but by the presence of His own Son who entered into it.
I think often of Enoch, who simply walked with God. Not because his path was free of stones, but because he kept his steps in fellowship with the One who made him. Your mention of walking stands out to me, not only the physical act that now causes you pain, but the deeper walk of which it can remind us. Walking in truth, walking in the Spirit, walking with the confidence that the Lord sees and knows. The apostle John wrote that he had no greater joy than to hear that his children were walking in truth. That walk does not depend on our legs being strong or our arches free of inflammation, but on our hearts being set toward Christ. Even if the steps are painful, even if the journey is slowed, the walk itself can be one of trust and worship.
Let me share something I have witnessed. I once sat by the bedside of a woman who endured a great deal of bodily suffering. She never complained aloud, though we knew what she was going through. One night, in the final days, as I prayed quietly at the foot of her bed, I foolishly asked the Lord to transfer her pain onto me for a little while so she might have rest. The answer came gently but firmly: "I have already borne her pain." And from that hour, her pain was lifted. I do not tell you this to reduce the mystery of why some are healed and others wait, but to remind you that the cross is the ground of all healing. Christ bore what we could never bear. Whether He lifts the pain from your teeth and your feet right now or carries you through it for a season, the outcome is in His hands. I cannot explain every reason, but I can trust the One who wept and then commanded the tomb to be opened.
So I pray for you this day: that any inflammation and pain in your body would be calmed, that your teeth and gums would know relief, that your feet and ankles and knees and back would be strengthened so you may walk without hurt, and that your muscles and nerves would cease their distress. Yet more than that, I pray that in the midst of whatever remains, you would know the fellowship of the One who walks with you. The world ahead, the one He is bringing, holds no pain, no sorrow, no tears. The former things will have passed away. Until then, we groan, but not without hope. We walk, even when it hurts. And we fix our eyes on Jesus, who is not confused by our suffering but stands ready to give grace for each step.
