Silas
Good and Faithful Servant
Your prayer reflects a deep longing for a relationship to be restored, for peace to settle on someone you care about, and for God to guard her steps. There is real pain in watching loneliness draw near to a person you love and in desiring to offer care when the door seems closed. But the most urgent matter before you right now is not her heart, it is your own heart with God.
Every lasting problem we face with others flows first from a problem in our relationship with the Lord. The commandments written in Scripture place our bond with Him ahead of every human bond, because unless that primary relationship is whole and undivided, the others cannot be what He intends. He does not merely want your words or your religious routine. He wants your heart, the seat of your will, your motives, your most honest loves, fully turned toward Him. Before you can rightly hold another, you must be held by Him.
Right now your heart is fastened on what you want for her and with her. That desire may feel pure, but Scripture urges us to examine ourselves. Is there covetousness there? Covetousness is not only scheming to take someone else’s possession; it is also the fierce, demanding clutch on a person or a future that God has not yet written for you. When the longing for a restored relationship begins to push aside the quiet trust that God’s will is good, the heart has slipped into a narrow place. My heart makes a noise in me, the prophet cried. I cannot hold my peace. That kind of inner turmoil signals that we are trying to force a peace that God has not yet given, and that makes a false peace. Saying peace, peace, where there is no peace never heals anyone, it only deepens the hurt.
The peace that lasts starts with peace with God. Through Jesus Christ, you have been freed from the futile effort to earn a righteous standing by your own performance. Through His death you are brought into a new relationship, married, as it were, to Him, so that the whole direction of your life is shaped by love for the One who first loved you. As that love takes the central place, His desires begin to displace your own. He works in you to will what He wills, not merely to sanitize what you already want. That changes how you pray. Instead of pressing a specific outcome, you can pour out your heart and then rest, asking Him to do whatever pleases Him in her life and in yours. He is the only one who can truly guard her steps from wrong refuges. He is the only one who can open a heart. Your job is to trust Him with that.
So bring your longing honestly before the Lord, but let Him search you first. Are your thoughts dwelling in vanity? Is there a divided loyalty, part of you clinging to a worldly image of what must happen for you to be happy, while another part says you want God’s will? He sees the heart completely. And when He finds a heart that is finally willing to let go and love Him above all else, He begins to enlarge it. The pressure eases. The war inside quiets. You are freed to love from a place of rest rather than desperation, and then you can sow in peace whatever small, faithful seeds of righteousness He entrusts to you.
Lay the whole weight of this relationship on the altar before Him, with no demand except that He receive you and rule in you. If your hands are open, He can fill them as He chooses. If they are clenched, even a gift from Him becomes an idol. Let your first plea be simply this: “Lord, make my heart wholly Yours. Then do what seems good to You.” That is the beginning of real restoration, whatever shape His answer takes.
Every lasting problem we face with others flows first from a problem in our relationship with the Lord. The commandments written in Scripture place our bond with Him ahead of every human bond, because unless that primary relationship is whole and undivided, the others cannot be what He intends. He does not merely want your words or your religious routine. He wants your heart, the seat of your will, your motives, your most honest loves, fully turned toward Him. Before you can rightly hold another, you must be held by Him.
Right now your heart is fastened on what you want for her and with her. That desire may feel pure, but Scripture urges us to examine ourselves. Is there covetousness there? Covetousness is not only scheming to take someone else’s possession; it is also the fierce, demanding clutch on a person or a future that God has not yet written for you. When the longing for a restored relationship begins to push aside the quiet trust that God’s will is good, the heart has slipped into a narrow place. My heart makes a noise in me, the prophet cried. I cannot hold my peace. That kind of inner turmoil signals that we are trying to force a peace that God has not yet given, and that makes a false peace. Saying peace, peace, where there is no peace never heals anyone, it only deepens the hurt.
The peace that lasts starts with peace with God. Through Jesus Christ, you have been freed from the futile effort to earn a righteous standing by your own performance. Through His death you are brought into a new relationship, married, as it were, to Him, so that the whole direction of your life is shaped by love for the One who first loved you. As that love takes the central place, His desires begin to displace your own. He works in you to will what He wills, not merely to sanitize what you already want. That changes how you pray. Instead of pressing a specific outcome, you can pour out your heart and then rest, asking Him to do whatever pleases Him in her life and in yours. He is the only one who can truly guard her steps from wrong refuges. He is the only one who can open a heart. Your job is to trust Him with that.
So bring your longing honestly before the Lord, but let Him search you first. Are your thoughts dwelling in vanity? Is there a divided loyalty, part of you clinging to a worldly image of what must happen for you to be happy, while another part says you want God’s will? He sees the heart completely. And when He finds a heart that is finally willing to let go and love Him above all else, He begins to enlarge it. The pressure eases. The war inside quiets. You are freed to love from a place of rest rather than desperation, and then you can sow in peace whatever small, faithful seeds of righteousness He entrusts to you.
Lay the whole weight of this relationship on the altar before Him, with no demand except that He receive you and rule in you. If your hands are open, He can fill them as He chooses. If they are clenched, even a gift from Him becomes an idol. Let your first plea be simply this: “Lord, make my heart wholly Yours. Then do what seems good to You.” That is the beginning of real restoration, whatever shape His answer takes.
