Silas
Faithful Servant
I hear the desperation and the fierce love behind your words. You are fighting for your family, for your children, for your own life, and you are doing it with every ounce of strength you have. That is not wrong. A parent’s heart cries out for protection, and God sees that. He knows the threats, the lies, the destruction that have come against you, and He is not indifferent.
Yet as I read your prayer, I also want to gently draw you back to the pattern Jesus gave us. When the disciples asked him to teach them to pray, he didn’t give them a list of commands to shout at the darkness. He said, “When you pray, say: Our Father.” Prayer begins with relationship. It is a child coming to a loving Father, not a general barking orders at an enemy. And the purpose of prayer is not merely to get our own will done, but to align ourselves with God’s will. You have cried out for God’s will, and that is the safest place to land. Rather than demanding and decreeing, we bring our needs before the One who already knows them, and we ask, as Jesus did, “Deliver us from the evil one.”
The spiritual battle is real. There are forces that want to steal, kill, and destroy. But the weapons that overcome them are not carnal, and they are not built on the force of our own words or the intensity of our declarations. They flow from a humble, dependent heart that hides itself in Christ. The wise man sees evil coming and hides himself in the refuge God has provided. For us, that refuge is Jesus himself, his blood that cleanses and covers, not because we command it to work like a formula, but because we trust in what he has already accomplished.
When Nehemiah faced threats and lies meant to distract and destroy, he did two things: he prayed to God, and then he set a watch. In other words, he took responsible action while trusting God for the outcome. Prayer is not a substitute for wise, practical steps, but neither should our actions be done apart from a surrendered heart that says, “Your will be done, not mine.”
I also notice the desire for “karma” to fall on those who have lied and harmed you. It is deeply human to want justice, and God is a God of justice. But he also tells us not to fret because of evildoers, nor to envy the wicked, for they will have no reward in the end. The Lord redeems the soul of his servants, and those who trust in him will not be desolate. Vengeance belongs to him. When we take up the task of calling down repayment, we step into a place that is not ours. Instead, we are called to speak blessings, to keep our tongues from guile and evil, and to pursue peace. That does not mean you do nothing; it means you entrust the final outcome to the Judge of all the earth, who sees every hidden thing.
I encourage you to bring these same cries to God, but with open hands rather than clenched fists. The effectual, fervent prayer of a righteous person accomplishes much, not because the prayer itself has magical power, but because it connects a submitted heart to a faithful God. Tell him your fears. Ask him to protect your children and your home. Plead the blood of Jesus over your household, not as an incantation, but as a confession of your total dependence on his sacrifice. And then rest. You do not have to sustain your own defense by the volume of your commands. The enemy is already defeated, and when you abide in Christ, light cannot coexist with darkness. His presence in your life is your sure protection.
Lies and attacks will come, but when your life is hidden with Christ in God, the evil one cannot ultimately destroy you. You are redeemed. Not because you declared it loudly enough, but because Jesus paid for it completely. So continue to pray, continue to stand, and let your heart settle into the peaceable wisdom from above, which is pure, gentle, and full of good fruit. God is faithful, and he will keep you from evil so that it does not grieve you. Trust him to do that in his way and in his time.
Yet as I read your prayer, I also want to gently draw you back to the pattern Jesus gave us. When the disciples asked him to teach them to pray, he didn’t give them a list of commands to shout at the darkness. He said, “When you pray, say: Our Father.” Prayer begins with relationship. It is a child coming to a loving Father, not a general barking orders at an enemy. And the purpose of prayer is not merely to get our own will done, but to align ourselves with God’s will. You have cried out for God’s will, and that is the safest place to land. Rather than demanding and decreeing, we bring our needs before the One who already knows them, and we ask, as Jesus did, “Deliver us from the evil one.”
The spiritual battle is real. There are forces that want to steal, kill, and destroy. But the weapons that overcome them are not carnal, and they are not built on the force of our own words or the intensity of our declarations. They flow from a humble, dependent heart that hides itself in Christ. The wise man sees evil coming and hides himself in the refuge God has provided. For us, that refuge is Jesus himself, his blood that cleanses and covers, not because we command it to work like a formula, but because we trust in what he has already accomplished.
When Nehemiah faced threats and lies meant to distract and destroy, he did two things: he prayed to God, and then he set a watch. In other words, he took responsible action while trusting God for the outcome. Prayer is not a substitute for wise, practical steps, but neither should our actions be done apart from a surrendered heart that says, “Your will be done, not mine.”
I also notice the desire for “karma” to fall on those who have lied and harmed you. It is deeply human to want justice, and God is a God of justice. But he also tells us not to fret because of evildoers, nor to envy the wicked, for they will have no reward in the end. The Lord redeems the soul of his servants, and those who trust in him will not be desolate. Vengeance belongs to him. When we take up the task of calling down repayment, we step into a place that is not ours. Instead, we are called to speak blessings, to keep our tongues from guile and evil, and to pursue peace. That does not mean you do nothing; it means you entrust the final outcome to the Judge of all the earth, who sees every hidden thing.
I encourage you to bring these same cries to God, but with open hands rather than clenched fists. The effectual, fervent prayer of a righteous person accomplishes much, not because the prayer itself has magical power, but because it connects a submitted heart to a faithful God. Tell him your fears. Ask him to protect your children and your home. Plead the blood of Jesus over your household, not as an incantation, but as a confession of your total dependence on his sacrifice. And then rest. You do not have to sustain your own defense by the volume of your commands. The enemy is already defeated, and when you abide in Christ, light cannot coexist with darkness. His presence in your life is your sure protection.
Lies and attacks will come, but when your life is hidden with Christ in God, the evil one cannot ultimately destroy you. You are redeemed. Not because you declared it loudly enough, but because Jesus paid for it completely. So continue to pray, continue to stand, and let your heart settle into the peaceable wisdom from above, which is pure, gentle, and full of good fruit. God is faithful, and he will keep you from evil so that it does not grieve you. Trust him to do that in his way and in his time.
