Silas
Faithful Servant
Your distress over your son’s situation is completely understandable. Those moments when a child is treated unfairly and doors seem to close for no good reason can stir up deep pain and confusion. A father’s or mother’s love for their child is one of the fiercest loves we know, and it’s no small thing that Scripture so often pictures God’s own love for His people through the image of a parent whose heart is wrapped up in their son.
When Abraham was told to take Isaac, his only beloved son, and offer him on the mountain, every natural instinct must have screamed against it. And yet Abraham trusted that the God who promised him a son was faithful, even when the path made no sense. There was no manipulation that could finally thwart God’s plan, no human error that could steal what God had spoken over Isaac’s life. God sees the whole picture, and He is not blind to injustice. He is a God who makes things right in His own time and His own way.
It may help to remember that the story of Scripture often turns on the Father’s choice, not on human scheming. Ishmael was a son of the flesh, born through trying to force a promise, but Isaac was the son of promise. When it seemed like the wrong son might inherit, God stepped in and said, “No, the promise is with Isaac.” Even in David’s house, it was not the eldest son who took the throne, but Solomon, the one God designated. The Lord is never boxed in by a placement decision or by what seems unfair. He can open doors no one can shut and redirect paths according to His good purpose.
The deepest anchor we have, however, is not that our children get into the right school, but that God has given us His Son, Jesus Christ. In Him, we have a Father who did not withhold His only beloved Son for our sakes. Because of Jesus, you and your son are not defined by an earthly institution but by an eternal inheritance that nothing can tamper with. That doesn’t erase the present struggle, but it places it within a larger hope.
I will join you in interceding that wherever injustice or manipulation has occurred, the Lord will expose it and bring about a just resolution. Pray with me that God would either change the hearts of those in authority to review the placement, or sovereignly override it so that your son may attend the school he worked so hard for. But also pray, as Jesus taught, for the grace to trust the Father’s will when we don’t understand His ways. He knows what He is doing, and His love for your son is perfect, even when human systems fail.
May the Spirit of adoption cry out in your heart, “Abba, Father,” giving you confidence that the God who raised Jesus from the dead will certainly attend to the details of your son’s life. He who has the Son has life, and with that life comes a Father who never stops caring for every burden we carry.
When Abraham was told to take Isaac, his only beloved son, and offer him on the mountain, every natural instinct must have screamed against it. And yet Abraham trusted that the God who promised him a son was faithful, even when the path made no sense. There was no manipulation that could finally thwart God’s plan, no human error that could steal what God had spoken over Isaac’s life. God sees the whole picture, and He is not blind to injustice. He is a God who makes things right in His own time and His own way.
It may help to remember that the story of Scripture often turns on the Father’s choice, not on human scheming. Ishmael was a son of the flesh, born through trying to force a promise, but Isaac was the son of promise. When it seemed like the wrong son might inherit, God stepped in and said, “No, the promise is with Isaac.” Even in David’s house, it was not the eldest son who took the throne, but Solomon, the one God designated. The Lord is never boxed in by a placement decision or by what seems unfair. He can open doors no one can shut and redirect paths according to His good purpose.
The deepest anchor we have, however, is not that our children get into the right school, but that God has given us His Son, Jesus Christ. In Him, we have a Father who did not withhold His only beloved Son for our sakes. Because of Jesus, you and your son are not defined by an earthly institution but by an eternal inheritance that nothing can tamper with. That doesn’t erase the present struggle, but it places it within a larger hope.
I will join you in interceding that wherever injustice or manipulation has occurred, the Lord will expose it and bring about a just resolution. Pray with me that God would either change the hearts of those in authority to review the placement, or sovereignly override it so that your son may attend the school he worked so hard for. But also pray, as Jesus taught, for the grace to trust the Father’s will when we don’t understand His ways. He knows what He is doing, and His love for your son is perfect, even when human systems fail.
May the Spirit of adoption cry out in your heart, “Abba, Father,” giving you confidence that the God who raised Jesus from the dead will certainly attend to the details of your son’s life. He who has the Son has life, and with that life comes a Father who never stops caring for every burden we carry.
