Silas
Servant of All
Your honesty about the ongoing struggle touches me deeply. More than three years of adjusting to disabilities, both physical and mental, is a heavy load, and yet your words ring with genuine praise. That testimony of being alive by the grace of God, and being drawn back after four decades of wandering, is nothing short of miraculous. It proves what Scripture shows us again and again: when we are pressed into a corner, when it becomes a life and death matter of the soul, we finally know our only hope is the living God. He used the very affliction you're still walking through to bring you to the end of yourself and back to His presence. That is a hard mercy, but a mercy indeed.
What you are experiencing now is not unusual for those who belong to Him. The physical limitations do not have the final word over your identity. Think of Jabez, whose very name spoke of sorrow because of his painful birth, yet his life became remarkable not because of his condition but because he cried out to God for blessing and enlargement. Your disability is real, and the difficulty is not something to minimize, but it is not the core of who you are. You are one whom God has sought, humbled, and restored. He has set you as a living altar, where the sacrifice of praise can ascend even when the body aches and the mind battles.
Take heart from the truth that God’s Spirit strives with extraordinary patience. Many would have written off a person after forty years, but He did not give up on you. He pursued you through the wilderness until you came back to fellowship. That same long-suffering carries you now. He knows your frame; He remembers that we are dust. Your weakness is an opportunity for His strength to be perfected, a stage for His grace to shine. While the outer man decays, the inner man is being renewed day by day as you fix your eyes not on what is seen but on what is eternal.
So do not despise the process. David gathered men around him who were in tremendous physical condition, fleet-footed and powerful, yet their true strength came from their allegiance to God’s anointed. Your greatest might is not in the body but in the bowing of the heart. Just as Manasseh, in the depths of Babylonian affliction, humbled himself greatly before the God of his fathers and found mercy, so your continued dependence on Jesus is the posture that moves heaven. Every prayer whispered in the name of Jesus, every “Hallelujah” lifted through tears, is a spiritual offering more precious than any physical ability.
Keep bringing your difficulty to the altar of grace. Do not suppress the struggle, but let it drive you closer to the One who holds you. He is not surprised or disappointed by your need. He invites you to cast every care on Him because He cares for you. And remember, the spiritual law of sowing and reaping means your persistent trust, even in the dark, will yield a harvest of deeper intimacy with Christ. Your life is a living proof that God restores the years the locusts have eaten. I am praying for you, standing with you, and rejoicing in the evidence of His faithful grip on your life. Thank you, Jesus, indeed.
What you are experiencing now is not unusual for those who belong to Him. The physical limitations do not have the final word over your identity. Think of Jabez, whose very name spoke of sorrow because of his painful birth, yet his life became remarkable not because of his condition but because he cried out to God for blessing and enlargement. Your disability is real, and the difficulty is not something to minimize, but it is not the core of who you are. You are one whom God has sought, humbled, and restored. He has set you as a living altar, where the sacrifice of praise can ascend even when the body aches and the mind battles.
Take heart from the truth that God’s Spirit strives with extraordinary patience. Many would have written off a person after forty years, but He did not give up on you. He pursued you through the wilderness until you came back to fellowship. That same long-suffering carries you now. He knows your frame; He remembers that we are dust. Your weakness is an opportunity for His strength to be perfected, a stage for His grace to shine. While the outer man decays, the inner man is being renewed day by day as you fix your eyes not on what is seen but on what is eternal.
So do not despise the process. David gathered men around him who were in tremendous physical condition, fleet-footed and powerful, yet their true strength came from their allegiance to God’s anointed. Your greatest might is not in the body but in the bowing of the heart. Just as Manasseh, in the depths of Babylonian affliction, humbled himself greatly before the God of his fathers and found mercy, so your continued dependence on Jesus is the posture that moves heaven. Every prayer whispered in the name of Jesus, every “Hallelujah” lifted through tears, is a spiritual offering more precious than any physical ability.
Keep bringing your difficulty to the altar of grace. Do not suppress the struggle, but let it drive you closer to the One who holds you. He is not surprised or disappointed by your need. He invites you to cast every care on Him because He cares for you. And remember, the spiritual law of sowing and reaping means your persistent trust, even in the dark, will yield a harvest of deeper intimacy with Christ. Your life is a living proof that God restores the years the locusts have eaten. I am praying for you, standing with you, and rejoicing in the evidence of His faithful grip on your life. Thank you, Jesus, indeed.
