Silas
Good and Faithful Servant
The ache you are carrying is real, and the distance you feel is not hidden from God. When reconciliation seems as far off as the moon, it is easy to believe that nothing is happening. But the very prayers you are praying, the surrender you keep offering, are evidence that God is near and working. The distance is painful precisely because you love. That love, poured out in prayer for her to find peace in Christ, is not wasted in heaven.
You are right to long for her salvation above all else. The Scriptures remind us that now is the accepted time, now is the day of salvation. God hears the cry of a husband who desires more than a restored phone call; you desire her eternal good. That is a holy longing. The grace of God that brings salvation has appeared, teaching us to deny ungodliness and worldly lusts. The deepest need of her heart is not simply to pick up the phone but to be reconciled to God. You are praying in line with the very ministry of reconciliation that God has entrusted to us: that God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself, not counting their trespasses against them.
Her silence, her distance, may be the outward sign of an inward struggle. When a breach exists because of faith in Christ and a lack of faith, the pain runs deeper than human misunderstanding. Yet the word remains clear: do not seek to be loosed from a wife, and a believing spouse may be the means by which God’s grace reaches the other. How do you know, O man, whether you will save your wife? Your steady, quiet life of surrender speaks more than you realize. Avoid giving any unnecessary offense, so that the only stumbling block is the cross itself. Your life is a poem of His grace, a workmanship that He is still writing.
Your prayer is a surrender, and that is the very place God brings every strong heart. Jacob wrestled all night, refusing to yield, until the Lord touched his hip. He crippled him in order to crown him. The Lord does not delight in our pain, but He uses it to loosen our grip on schemes and self-rescue. You have cried out, "I surrender to You, O Lord. I cannot do anything without You." That is not weakness; that is the posture of a man being freed from the exhausting burden of trying to orchestrate what only God can do. Leave it there. Do not pick it back up and look for another angle. Leave her heart, her mind, her future in the hands of the One who is mighty to save.
Your righteousness is complete in Jesus Christ. There is nothing you can add to it by frantic effort. Salvation is His gift, not your achievement. So rest. Let your sadness and worry melt away, not because the circumstances are good, but because the Savior is good and His ways are not your ways. The Lord wrestles to bring us to a full surrender so that He can do all He desires. Wait on Him. Delight in waiting, as you said. And trust that even now, perhaps through your faithful surrender, God is making an appeal to her heart that you cannot see. In Jesus’ name, that is enough.
You are right to long for her salvation above all else. The Scriptures remind us that now is the accepted time, now is the day of salvation. God hears the cry of a husband who desires more than a restored phone call; you desire her eternal good. That is a holy longing. The grace of God that brings salvation has appeared, teaching us to deny ungodliness and worldly lusts. The deepest need of her heart is not simply to pick up the phone but to be reconciled to God. You are praying in line with the very ministry of reconciliation that God has entrusted to us: that God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself, not counting their trespasses against them.
Her silence, her distance, may be the outward sign of an inward struggle. When a breach exists because of faith in Christ and a lack of faith, the pain runs deeper than human misunderstanding. Yet the word remains clear: do not seek to be loosed from a wife, and a believing spouse may be the means by which God’s grace reaches the other. How do you know, O man, whether you will save your wife? Your steady, quiet life of surrender speaks more than you realize. Avoid giving any unnecessary offense, so that the only stumbling block is the cross itself. Your life is a poem of His grace, a workmanship that He is still writing.
Your prayer is a surrender, and that is the very place God brings every strong heart. Jacob wrestled all night, refusing to yield, until the Lord touched his hip. He crippled him in order to crown him. The Lord does not delight in our pain, but He uses it to loosen our grip on schemes and self-rescue. You have cried out, "I surrender to You, O Lord. I cannot do anything without You." That is not weakness; that is the posture of a man being freed from the exhausting burden of trying to orchestrate what only God can do. Leave it there. Do not pick it back up and look for another angle. Leave her heart, her mind, her future in the hands of the One who is mighty to save.
Your righteousness is complete in Jesus Christ. There is nothing you can add to it by frantic effort. Salvation is His gift, not your achievement. So rest. Let your sadness and worry melt away, not because the circumstances are good, but because the Savior is good and His ways are not your ways. The Lord wrestles to bring us to a full surrender so that He can do all He desires. Wait on Him. Delight in waiting, as you said. And trust that even now, perhaps through your faithful surrender, God is making an appeal to her heart that you cannot see. In Jesus’ name, that is enough.
