Please pray

We hear your heart’s cry, dear sister in Christ, and we join you in fervent prayer for your husband’s deliverance from the bondage of alcohol. The pain and burden you carry are heavy, but you do not carry them alone, we stand with you before the throne of grace, lifting this matter to our Heavenly Father.

The Scriptures tell us, "No temptation has taken you except what is common to man. God is faithful, who will not allow you to be tempted above what you are able, but will with the temptation also make the way of escape, that you may be able to endure it" (1 Corinthians 10:13 WEB). Your husband is not beyond God’s reach, and the Lord is able to break every chain that holds him captive. We rebuke the spirit of addiction in Jesus’ name and declare that freedom is his portion by the power of the Holy Spirit.

We must also gently remind you, sister, that while your prayers are powerful and necessary, your husband must choose repentance and surrender to Christ. "Draw near to God, and he will draw near to you. Cleanse your hands, you sinners; and purify your hearts, you double-minded" (James 4:8 WEB). If he has not yet turned to the Lord with his whole heart, we pray that the Holy Spirit will convict him of his need for salvation and transformation. If he is a believer, we pray he will submit to God’s discipline and seek accountability within the body of Christ.

We also lift you up, dear one, for the weariness and sorrow you endure. Marriage is a sacred covenant, and the pain of watching a spouse struggle with sin is profound. But remember, "The Lord is near to those who have a broken heart, and saves those who have a crushed spirit" (Psalm 34:18 WEB). Lean on Him for strength, wisdom, and peace. Seek godly counsel from your pastor or a trusted Christian counselor who can walk with you through this trial. You are not called to carry this burden in isolation.

Let us pray together:

Heavenly Father, we come before You with heavy hearts, lifting up this dear sister and her husband. Lord, You see the struggle, the pain, and the longing for freedom. We ask that You would break the chains of addiction in his life. Pour out Your Holy Spirit upon him, convicting him of sin and drawing him into repentance. Give him the strength to resist temptation and the humility to seek help from godly men who can support him in his walk with You.

Father, we pray for this marriage. Restore what has been broken, heal what has been wounded, and fill their home with Your peace. Strengthen this sister as she waits on You, and help her to trust in Your perfect timing. Surround her with Your love and remind her that she is never alone.

Lord, if this brother has not yet surrendered his life to You, we pray that today would be the day of his salvation. Open his eyes to see his need for Jesus, and soften his heart to receive Your grace. We declare that no weapon formed against this marriage will prosper, and we stand on Your promise that "if the Son makes you free, you will be free indeed" (John 8:36 WEB).

We ask all these things in the mighty name of Jesus Christ, our Savior and Deliverer. Amen.

Sister, do not lose hope. Keep praying, keep trusting, and keep standing on God’s promises. The Lord is working even when you cannot see it, and His plans for you and your husband are for good and not for harm (Jeremiah 29:11). If your husband is willing, encourage him to seek biblical counseling or a Christ-centered recovery program. The battle is the Lord’s, and victory is assured in His name.
 
We hear the weariness in your words, the daily burden of watching someone you love struggle, the constant prayers that sometimes feel like they echo back unanswered. It is exhausting to carry this alone day after day, and we want you to know that we are standing with you in that quiet ache tonight.

When we love someone caught in addiction, it is easy to slip into feeling that we must find the key that will unlock their freedom, that if we just pray harder, say the right thing, or manage the situation perfectly, they will change. But that weight is not yours to carry. You cannot control your husband’s choices, and the pressure you put on yourself will only drain the strength you need right now. What you can do is make sure you are not walking this road alone. Are you connected with others who understand, a trusted pastor, a wise Christian friend, or a support group for families of those with addiction, like Al‑Anon? Having a space where you can be honest about your pain, without needing to fix anything, can make the loneliness a little more bearable.

Your prayers matter deeply, even when the change hasn’t come yet. But often God answers them through the support we accept for ourselves first. So let us gently encourage you: this week, take one small step toward your own refreshment. Call your pastor and tell him what you’re facing. Ask if there is a recovery ministry at your church where someone could reach out to your husband, or if someone could simply pray with you in person. You don’t have to orchestrate an intervention; just let another believer into your burden.

Let’s pray now.
Jesus, we lift up this wife who loves her husband so much and has poured out her heart to You daily. Give her rest tonight, a deep, quiet relief from the anxiety. Fill her with a sense of Your nearness that goes beyond words. Grant her wisdom to know what is hers to do and what she must release to You. And in Your perfect timing, break this chain of alcohol in her husband’s life, bringing him to the end of himself and into true healing. Surround them both with people who will love them well and speak truth with grace. In Your name we pray, amen.
 
You have been praying every day, and your heart is heavy. You cry out with the same words, and sometimes it feels as though the ceiling is brass and the answer is a long time coming. But, dear soul, it is not so. Every one of those prayers has been gathered up, as carefully as a mother gathers the wildflowers her child brings in from the field, and laid upon the altar before the throne. Not one sigh of your heart has been wasted; not one tear has fallen to the ground unheeded. The Lord who counts the stars and calls them all by name has counted every petition you have whispered in the night watches, and He has kept them all.

You long for your husband to be set free from the thing that holds him, a chains that no human hand can break. And you are tempted to look at the chain instead of the Chain-Breaker. You have been looking at the empty place at the table, or the slurred words, or the days lost, and your heart has sunk within you. But turn your eyes, just now, from the storm to the Master of the sea. He is not asleep, though the winds are boisterous. He is not indifferent, though the hour is dark.

Do you know what God is like towards His people? He compares Himself to a husband. And what a husband He is! When His bride was in slavery, He gave a whole nation for her ransom. When she wandered and was faithless, He did not cast her off. When she was at her very worst, He remained faithful still. “For better or for worse,” we say in our marriage vows, and our poor love so often fails at the “worse.” But His love never fails. Is he not your Husband, the Lord of Hosts? And if He is such a Husband to you, faithful, tender, providing, communing with you in love, can you not trust Him with this sorrow? The same faithful love that holds you will hold your husband too. You cannot force his will, but the strong and gentle drawing of divine love can do what no argument, no tears, no human effort can accomplish. One hair from the head of Love will draw more than a cable of fear.

You have been, perhaps, sitting down and taking stock of the situation, and your barometer has gone down, down, down to “stormy.” You see your husband’s condition, and you mourn it, and the temptation comes to let that mourning turn into a settled despair. But all your lamentation over the evil will not, of itself, remove it. The remedy does not lie in your anxiety, but beyond and above you. There is a word I would press close to your heart: “Why speak ye not a word of bringing the king back?” You have been saying, “Pray for him.” That is right. But keep on speaking that word yourself. Keep on asking the King of Glory to come back into your home, to sit at your table, to stand by your side in the night. The royal hand alone brings health and cure. And He is not unwilling. He came to seek and to save the lost, and there is not a sinner so far gone that His love cannot overtake him. No, the very fact that you are praying is itself a sign that He is already at work. He first loved us, and from that first love every true prayer springs. Before you ever knocked, the door was already opening on the other side.

There is a lovingkindness that draws men. It is not the trumpet of warning alone that brings a wanderer home; it is the soft note of hope in God’s mercy. You cannot preach to your husband as you might wish, perhaps your words only stir up resistance. But your silent, steady prayer is a far mightier thing. It is like the light of dawn that steals over a dark landscape, imperceptibly yet irresistibly turning night to day. The love of Christ, shed abroad by the Holy Ghost, can melt a heart that has been frozen for years. So do not measure the Lord by your fears. He is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that you ask or even think.

Hold fast, dear heart. You are not alone in the deep water. The good Shepherd is near, and He knows how to lead even the most stubborn sheep back to the fold. I commend you to Him who is able to keep you from stumbling, and who can make even this bitter affliction work together for your good and for your husband’s everlasting gain., , Lord Jesus, Thou Shepherd and Bishop of our souls, look upon this dear woman in her trouble. Thou seest her tears, Thou hearest her daily cry. O Thou who didst give Egypt for a ransom and Ethiopia for a prize, undertake for her. Break the snare that holds the one she loves. Draw him with cords of lovingkindness, and let the sweetness of Thy grace overcome all that binds him. And give her, in the waiting time, such a sense of Thy faithful love that her heart may rest in Thee as a wearied child in a Father’s arms. Bring the King back to her home, and let the voice of rejoicing be heard there again. For Thy mercy’s sake, Amen.
 
Your anguish is plain, and your daily prayers rise as incense before the throne of God. But consider: the Lord often permits a soul to wander into dark valleys, not to destroy it, but to humble it and make the deliverance more precious when it comes. Do not suppose that He is deaf because the answer tarries. He grants something greater than mere removal of the trial: the strength to endure it, and a hope fixed on things eternal rather than fleeting comfort.

Yet I must also exhort you: beware how you treat your husband in this season. If you meet his fault with constant reproaches, you will only harden him. The woman who would truly please her husband and win him from sin does so not by sharp words, but by gentleness, meekness, and a chaste, quiet spirit. Even if he proves intemperate, your conduct may be a living sermon, a reproof without a word. And whatever you do, do not entertain the thought of separating from him under a show of piety. Many a wife, thinking to flee from affliction, has thereby thrust her husband into adultery or worse ruin. Remain as you are bound, and let your faithfulness be a constant prayer, a daily offering to God.

Remember that Christ revealed His knowledge to the Samaritan woman not by shunning her, but by gently exposing her sin and drawing her to truth. So you, by patience and unfeigned love, may become the means of his awakening. We shall join our prayers to yours, that God grant him a spirit of repentance and you the grace of holy endurance, that in the end both may be saved.
 

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