Silas
Good and Faithful Servant
What you are facing right now sounds incredibly heavy, and I want you to know that your cry to God has been heard. The pain of living in a toxic atmosphere, especially when it involves your children, cuts to the deepest places of the heart. God does not overlook your tears.
The picture Scripture gives us of marriage is not of a fleeting arrangement to escape when things become difficult. It is a profound, one-flesh union where a husband and wife belong to each other in a mutual giving of rights and benevolence. I understand the urge to pray for removal, but I want to gently point you toward another way God may work. The apostle Paul addressed a situation where a believing woman was married to an unbelieving husband. The instruction was clear: if he is willing to dwell with her, she should not leave him. The reason given is remarkable. The unbelieving husband is sanctified by the wife, and the unbelieving wife by the husband. Your presence in that home is not accidental. Because of your faith, there is a spiritual covering, a holy influence, that shelters your children. They are described as holy precisely because of a believing parent. Your steadfastness is a sanctuary for them right now.
I know this is not an easy word when the environment feels toxic. It can seem impossible to submit or to continue when you doubt whether your husband loves you as Christ loves the church. And yes, God’s design is that a husband loves his wife supremely, laying down his life for her, just as a wife submits to her husband’s God-given role. When those simple, profound rules for husbands and wives are broken, marriages begin to compound in misery. If your husband is requiring something that violates your conscience before God, you are not bound to follow him into sin. But often, the daily friction comes not from clear moral demands, but from a climate of provocation, neglect, or cruelty. Fathers are warned not to provoke their children to wrath through teasing, unreasonable demands, or callousness. That same spirit wounds a wife deeply.
So where does that leave you? I encourage you to shift the shape of your prayer. Cry out not for God to yank him out of the house like a weed, but for God to deliver you both from the trap this marriage has become. Remember the children of Israel with the Egyptian army behind them and the sea before them. God deliberately led them into that trap so He could show His power to make a way where there was no way. He can do that in your home. He can transform a hardened heart. He can provide a path of safety and wisdom for you and the children, whether that means eventual peace under the same roof or a provision that only He can orchestrate. You are not to leave him simply because he does not believe or because he is difficult. But you are not called to silently absorb what would crush your spirit. Seek godly counsel from older women in the faith who can teach you to love your husband and children from a place of discretion and purity, even in this storm.
Your children are watching. They see a mother who clings to the Lord when her own strength is gone. That testimony is being written on their hearts. Do not think you are losing them while you fight to win the world. Walk as a child of light in that home. Your hope is not in the immediate removal of hardship, but in the God who hears your cry, who parts the sea, and who can make even a husband of blood into a man at peace with God. Stand still in your spirit, and see the deliverance of the Lord.
The picture Scripture gives us of marriage is not of a fleeting arrangement to escape when things become difficult. It is a profound, one-flesh union where a husband and wife belong to each other in a mutual giving of rights and benevolence. I understand the urge to pray for removal, but I want to gently point you toward another way God may work. The apostle Paul addressed a situation where a believing woman was married to an unbelieving husband. The instruction was clear: if he is willing to dwell with her, she should not leave him. The reason given is remarkable. The unbelieving husband is sanctified by the wife, and the unbelieving wife by the husband. Your presence in that home is not accidental. Because of your faith, there is a spiritual covering, a holy influence, that shelters your children. They are described as holy precisely because of a believing parent. Your steadfastness is a sanctuary for them right now.
I know this is not an easy word when the environment feels toxic. It can seem impossible to submit or to continue when you doubt whether your husband loves you as Christ loves the church. And yes, God’s design is that a husband loves his wife supremely, laying down his life for her, just as a wife submits to her husband’s God-given role. When those simple, profound rules for husbands and wives are broken, marriages begin to compound in misery. If your husband is requiring something that violates your conscience before God, you are not bound to follow him into sin. But often, the daily friction comes not from clear moral demands, but from a climate of provocation, neglect, or cruelty. Fathers are warned not to provoke their children to wrath through teasing, unreasonable demands, or callousness. That same spirit wounds a wife deeply.
So where does that leave you? I encourage you to shift the shape of your prayer. Cry out not for God to yank him out of the house like a weed, but for God to deliver you both from the trap this marriage has become. Remember the children of Israel with the Egyptian army behind them and the sea before them. God deliberately led them into that trap so He could show His power to make a way where there was no way. He can do that in your home. He can transform a hardened heart. He can provide a path of safety and wisdom for you and the children, whether that means eventual peace under the same roof or a provision that only He can orchestrate. You are not to leave him simply because he does not believe or because he is difficult. But you are not called to silently absorb what would crush your spirit. Seek godly counsel from older women in the faith who can teach you to love your husband and children from a place of discretion and purity, even in this storm.
Your children are watching. They see a mother who clings to the Lord when her own strength is gone. That testimony is being written on their hearts. Do not think you are losing them while you fight to win the world. Walk as a child of light in that home. Your hope is not in the immediate removal of hardship, but in the God who hears your cry, who parts the sea, and who can make even a husband of blood into a man at peace with God. Stand still in your spirit, and see the deliverance of the Lord.
