Silas
Humble Servant
You are right to bring your sins and mistakes openly before the Lord. Forgiveness is found not in explaining away what you have done, but in confessing it plainly. When you quit trying to cover it or excuse it, God can deal with it fully. The same Scripture that calls us to reason together with Him promises that though your sins are like scarlet, they will be white as snow. Let that sink in; His forgiveness is total, not partial.
As for the trouble at work and the trust that has been shaken, I would point you to two things at once. The first is the spirit of forgiveness. Jesus taught that forgiveness is not a matter of keeping a ledger. It is a matter of the heart. If bitterness or an unforgiving spirit has crept in toward those who now doubt you or toward yourself for failing, you must ask the Lord for a willing heart that can forgive. He will give the capacity if you are willing. The second is the lesson about where real trust belongs. It is a repeated mistake to think that God’s silence means approval, or to trust in the strength of our own position. When people trust in their own resources, their own reputations, or their own plans, they are building on a landslide. But the one who puts their trust in the Lord will stand like Mount Zion that cannot be moved.
You are praying about financial struggles, and that is exactly the place where trust stops being a theory and becomes real. Trust is not just for the days when God is doing things the way you think He ought. Trust begins when you do not understand His ways. You look at the depleted account or the unsettled situation and think the provision is not there. But time and again, those who walk with Him learn that He is preparing us to rely on Him for the very meal at the end of the day. He does not want you leaning on your own strength, your own purse, or on the chariots of this world. Woe to those who go down to Egypt for help because their army looks powerful. The flesh will fail you, and if you trust in it, you will fail with it. But if you trust in Him, He will continue to supply. There will never be a lack of what is truly needed.
Do not stop praying for your family’s healing and strength, and for your own growth in stability and purpose. That prayer for God’s presence to watch over them is exactly right. As you move forward, remember that real trust says, “Lord, I know You are working. I do not understand what You are doing right now, but keep doing it. Revive Your work in the midst of these years, and remember mercy.” The Lord who was David’s hope from his youth, who delivered him from the giant and the spear, wants to be your hope now. Yet the moment we grow strong or prosperous, we are tempted to trust in the blessings instead of the Blesser. Do not let that be your story.
Take every care, every tangled relationship, and every unmet desire, including the desire for a godly spouse, and hand them to Him. Seek His cleansing from every distraction, so your prayers come from a heart that acknowledges the transgression and expects His help. The One who has shown you great and sore troubles will make you alive again and bring you up from the depths. He will not leave you in confusion. Put your trust not in the watchmen on the wall or in any human safeguard, but in the Lord who keeps the city. He is faithful, and His forgiveness beats in the heart of the King who has already canceled the unpayable debt. Rest in that finished work, and let a spirit of forgiveness and trust shape every part of your life.
As for the trouble at work and the trust that has been shaken, I would point you to two things at once. The first is the spirit of forgiveness. Jesus taught that forgiveness is not a matter of keeping a ledger. It is a matter of the heart. If bitterness or an unforgiving spirit has crept in toward those who now doubt you or toward yourself for failing, you must ask the Lord for a willing heart that can forgive. He will give the capacity if you are willing. The second is the lesson about where real trust belongs. It is a repeated mistake to think that God’s silence means approval, or to trust in the strength of our own position. When people trust in their own resources, their own reputations, or their own plans, they are building on a landslide. But the one who puts their trust in the Lord will stand like Mount Zion that cannot be moved.
You are praying about financial struggles, and that is exactly the place where trust stops being a theory and becomes real. Trust is not just for the days when God is doing things the way you think He ought. Trust begins when you do not understand His ways. You look at the depleted account or the unsettled situation and think the provision is not there. But time and again, those who walk with Him learn that He is preparing us to rely on Him for the very meal at the end of the day. He does not want you leaning on your own strength, your own purse, or on the chariots of this world. Woe to those who go down to Egypt for help because their army looks powerful. The flesh will fail you, and if you trust in it, you will fail with it. But if you trust in Him, He will continue to supply. There will never be a lack of what is truly needed.
Do not stop praying for your family’s healing and strength, and for your own growth in stability and purpose. That prayer for God’s presence to watch over them is exactly right. As you move forward, remember that real trust says, “Lord, I know You are working. I do not understand what You are doing right now, but keep doing it. Revive Your work in the midst of these years, and remember mercy.” The Lord who was David’s hope from his youth, who delivered him from the giant and the spear, wants to be your hope now. Yet the moment we grow strong or prosperous, we are tempted to trust in the blessings instead of the Blesser. Do not let that be your story.
Take every care, every tangled relationship, and every unmet desire, including the desire for a godly spouse, and hand them to Him. Seek His cleansing from every distraction, so your prayers come from a heart that acknowledges the transgression and expects His help. The One who has shown you great and sore troubles will make you alive again and bring you up from the depths. He will not leave you in confusion. Put your trust not in the watchmen on the wall or in any human safeguard, but in the Lord who keeps the city. He is faithful, and His forgiveness beats in the heart of the King who has already canceled the unpayable debt. Rest in that finished work, and let a spirit of forgiveness and trust shape every part of your life.
