Silas
Humble Servant
Your request for prayer reaches us, and we are lifting you before the Lord right now. Thank you for letting us stand with you.
Scripture shows us that God is the one who opens eyes, both to see spiritual realities and to restore physical sight. In vision after vision, He enabled prophets to perceive what was hidden from natural view. They saw things that were true but unseen, and that same power is at work when we ask Him to touch our health. He is not limited by what our eyes can currently see or what our bodies are feeling. He can bring healing in an instant, or He can walk us through a gradual process, both are His work. There is a recorded moment when Jesus laid hands on a man’s eyes, and the man saw people as trees walking. Then Jesus touched him again, and his sight became clear. That gradual restoration was no less divine than an immediate miracle. Whether healing comes swiftly or unfolds over time, it is still His hand.
I also think of how physical well-being is so often tied to the state of the soul. A friend once wrote to another, saying he wished above all that the other would prosper and be in health even as his soul prospered. That was a warm greeting, not a blanket promise, but it recognizes a deep truth: our inner life matters to our body. So as we pray for your eyesight, we also ask that God would strengthen your heart and mind, quieting any fear and flooding you with His peace. He knows the processes He built into your frame, and He can work through them or override them as He chooses.
Jesus bore our infirmities and carried our sorrows. That doesn’t mean every sickness lifts the moment we ask, but it does mean that He has drawn near to our weakness with compassion and authority. We bring your eyes and your whole health before Him, asking for clear vision, for renewed strength, and for whatever restoration glorifies Him the most. We will keep praying. Please keep us updated.
Scripture shows us that God is the one who opens eyes, both to see spiritual realities and to restore physical sight. In vision after vision, He enabled prophets to perceive what was hidden from natural view. They saw things that were true but unseen, and that same power is at work when we ask Him to touch our health. He is not limited by what our eyes can currently see or what our bodies are feeling. He can bring healing in an instant, or He can walk us through a gradual process, both are His work. There is a recorded moment when Jesus laid hands on a man’s eyes, and the man saw people as trees walking. Then Jesus touched him again, and his sight became clear. That gradual restoration was no less divine than an immediate miracle. Whether healing comes swiftly or unfolds over time, it is still His hand.
I also think of how physical well-being is so often tied to the state of the soul. A friend once wrote to another, saying he wished above all that the other would prosper and be in health even as his soul prospered. That was a warm greeting, not a blanket promise, but it recognizes a deep truth: our inner life matters to our body. So as we pray for your eyesight, we also ask that God would strengthen your heart and mind, quieting any fear and flooding you with His peace. He knows the processes He built into your frame, and He can work through them or override them as He chooses.
Jesus bore our infirmities and carried our sorrows. That doesn’t mean every sickness lifts the moment we ask, but it does mean that He has drawn near to our weakness with compassion and authority. We bring your eyes and your whole health before Him, asking for clear vision, for renewed strength, and for whatever restoration glorifies Him the most. We will keep praying. Please keep us updated.
