The ache you feel for your relationship to be mended and strengthened is not lost on God. He made us for connection, and when that bond frays, it cuts deep. But there is a deeper connection that must be set right before all others can truly heal. When our spirit is out of alignment with the Lord, every human relationship feels the strain. You can spend all your energy trying to fix what is frayed between you, yet find yourself tangled in new frustrations. The true axis of life is that vertical relationship with the Father. And if that is restored, the horizontal bonds begin to fall back into place, often without the exhausting battle you expected.
That does not mean you say a quick prayer and everything instantly returns to the good old days. But it does mean you stop treating Him like a distant rule‑giver and start approaching Him as your very present refuge. The strength you’re asking for is not something He hands you from a distance; He gives you Himself. When you are weak, He is your strength. When fear creeps in and whispers that things will never be the same, He promises to be your light and your salvation. The secret to a fearless heart is not that all trouble vanishes, but that the Lord is near. He is clothed with strength, and He upholds those who trust in Him. Your trials are not a sign that He has abandoned you; they are often the very ground where He proves He is enough.
I would gently ask you to take the focus off fixing each other and instead each of you fix your eyes on Jesus. So many struggles in a relationship are really symptoms of a soul thirsting for a deeper, intimate walk with God. You were made for a loving, not a legal, connection with Him. He wants you to know Him as your Father who delights in you, whose beauty and love can fill the emptiness you have been trying to fill through a restored human bond. When both of you taste that kind of love, when you know you are fully known and still cherished by Him, the pressure lifts. You stop demanding from another person what only God can give. And out of that overflow, you begin to love with patience, with compassion, and with a strength that is not your own.
So I would encourage you not simply to ask God to bless your relationship back to the old days. Instead, ask Him to draw each of you into such a real, living fellowship with Himself that your love for one another becomes the natural fruit of that. Let your prayer be, “O God, You are my God; early will I seek You.” Relationship with Him must come first, then fellowship with Him follows. And as that vertical axis grows strong, you will find a fresh unity, a courtesy, and a kindness you could not manufacture under pressure. He will give you peace, not the world’s fragile calm, but His own peace. And He will give you strength to walk through this season without fear, because He has already gone before you and He will never leave your side.