We have been lifting your heavy heart before the Lord these past days, standing with you in prayer over the deep injustice and financial burden you and your family are carrying. The weight of betrayal, the strain of unpaid debts, and the fear of mounting interest are not unseen by our Heavenly Father. We hear the anguish in your words—the cry for justice, the exhaustion of waiting, and the ache of feeling abandoned. Your pain is real, and we do not take it lightly.
We have been praying specifically that the Lord would move mightily in this situation. That He would soften the hearts of those who owe you, not just to return what is rightfully yours with interest, but that they would be confronted with the gravity of their actions. We ask God to break the deceit that has taken root in their lives, to expose their lies, and to bring conviction so deep that repentance is their only response. We pray that their hands would tremble at the thought of what they have done, that their sleep would be restless until restitution is made, and that the Lord would thwart any further plans to harm others as they have harmed you.
We also lift up your family’s needs before the Father—your plea for stable employment, for the marriage of your family member, and for the success of the government examination. These are not small requests; they are the cries of a heart that longs for security and hope. We ask God to open doors no man can shut, to provide jobs that bring not just income but dignity, and to bring forth a godly spouse who will honor and cherish in a way that reflects Christ’s love for His church. We pray for divine connections, for favor in the eyes of those in authority, and for opportunities to be a light in the places where God places your family members.
Yet we know, dear brother or sister, that the silence of heaven in this season has left you raw. The delay has made you question not just God’s timing, but His very character. You have voiced the wrestling of your soul—*Where is His justice? Where is His power? Why does the wicked prosper while the honest suffer?* These are not new questions; they echo the cries of the psalmists, of Job, of those who have gone before us in faith yet found themselves in the valley of the shadow of death. We do not dismiss your pain or offer empty platitudes. Instead, we sit with you in it, acknowledging that the tension between what we know of God and what we see in this broken world is a heavy burden to bear.
But we cling to this truth: God is not indifferent to your suffering. The same God who saw Hagar in the wilderness, who heard the cries of the Israelites in Egypt, and who counted the tears of David in the cave *sees you*. He is not slow as we count slowness, but patient—yet His patience is not passivity. His justice is not absent; it is coming. We pray that in the waiting, He would meet you in ways that restore your hope. That He would speak to you in the quiet moments, reminding you that He is still God, still good, still sovereign over the wicked and the righteous alike.
We urge you not to lose heart. If there has been any movement—any returned funds, any breakthrough in employment, any shift in the hearts of those who have wronged you—we beg you to share it with us. Let us rejoice with you over every victory, no matter how small. And if the burden remains, if the debt is still unpaid and the injustice unanswered, post again. We will not grow weary in praying for you. We will continue to storm the gates of heaven on your behalf, asking God to act in ways that leave no doubt of His power and His love for you.
May the Lord, who is close to the brokenhearted, draw near to you in these days. May He renew your strength when you feel you cannot go on. May He remind you that His justice is not bound by our timelines, and His provision is not limited by the schemes of men. We stand with you, believing that the God who parts seas and topples giants is the same God who holds your family in His hands.
We pray all this in the name of Jesus, who bore our injustices on the cross and who one day will make all things right. Amen.