Silas
Beloved
Thank you for bringing this burden before the Lord with such a heartfelt plea. The grief you feel over the twisting of truth and the callous disregard for life is itself a sign that the Spirit is stirring your own heart, and your prayer for those lawyers and their team echoes a deep biblical reality: none of us can manufacture righteousness through education, status, or even a careful keeping of rules. The law, as Scripture teaches, was never given to make anyone righteous. Rather, by the law comes the knowledge of sin. It exposes what sin is, leaving every mouth stopped from boasting. So when you see people trained in the law yet caught in what you rightly call horrible sins, it simply confirms that knowing what is right and doing it are two different things. The problem goes deeper than behavior; it is rooted in the nature we all inherited from Adam.
Sin entered the world through one man, and death through sin. That death spread to every person because all sinned in him. Whether a lawyer or a laborer, we come into this world with a sinful nature that produces its own fruit. That is why Psalm 51 you cited is so crucial. A broken spirit and a contrite heart are not additions to human effort; they are the only acceptable sacrifice before God, because they admit what we truly are. You are praying for them to hate their sin enough to stop living in it. That is exactly what the Holy Spirit does when He comes: He convicts the world of sin, of righteousness, and of judgment. The sin He convicts of is not primarily one bad deed or another, but the refusal to believe in Jesus. The righteousness He testifies of is not a longer list of good works, but the perfect righteousness of Christ, who ascended to the Father. All other ground is sinking sand.
We must be careful not to think that educated people simply need a little more moral reformation. The danger is turning prayer into a wish for self-righteous fixes. Many perfectly religious people can polish the outside while remaining dead inside. The law only multiplies the offense; it cannot give life. But where sin abounded, grace overflowed. Through one man's disobedience many were made sinners, but through one Man's obedience many will be made righteous. Jesus, knowing no sin, became sin for us so that we might become the righteousness of God in Him. That alone shatters every chain.
So when you ask for an unquenchable thirst for truth and righteousness, you are asking for a work only God can do. It is a prayer that these lawyers would stop looking to their own understanding and instead be brought to the end of themselves, seeing that the wages of their sin is death. Yet the good news is that the death sentence righteous demanded by God was fully satisfied in Jesus' blood. He bore the guilt, bore the sin, and rose again so that grace might reign through righteousness unto eternal life. Anyone who receives that abundance of grace and the gift of righteousness will reign in life by Jesus Christ.
Your prayer that they be covered by Christ's blood and granted peace and understanding is beautiful. Continue to pray that their hearts would be broken over the specific sins you mentioned, the dishonesty, the devaluing of human life. But root that prayer firmly in the hope that if they turn from sin, they can be made servants of righteousness rather than slaves of sin. Sin shall not have dominion over those who are under grace. What a promise! And what a transformation awaits anyone who, instead of hiding behind professional competence, yields the members of their body as instruments of righteousness to God.
In the meantime, let your own heart be strengthened. The very fact that this grieves you shows you are not calloused. Keep interceding, knowing that the Holy Spirit is interceding perfectly. Whether or not we see immediate change, the throne of grace is open, and no one is beyond the reach of the One who took our sin and offers His righteousness in exchange. We once were servants of sin, but God be thanked that through the obedience of faith we are set free. May that same freedom one day be theirs as well.
Sin entered the world through one man, and death through sin. That death spread to every person because all sinned in him. Whether a lawyer or a laborer, we come into this world with a sinful nature that produces its own fruit. That is why Psalm 51 you cited is so crucial. A broken spirit and a contrite heart are not additions to human effort; they are the only acceptable sacrifice before God, because they admit what we truly are. You are praying for them to hate their sin enough to stop living in it. That is exactly what the Holy Spirit does when He comes: He convicts the world of sin, of righteousness, and of judgment. The sin He convicts of is not primarily one bad deed or another, but the refusal to believe in Jesus. The righteousness He testifies of is not a longer list of good works, but the perfect righteousness of Christ, who ascended to the Father. All other ground is sinking sand.
We must be careful not to think that educated people simply need a little more moral reformation. The danger is turning prayer into a wish for self-righteous fixes. Many perfectly religious people can polish the outside while remaining dead inside. The law only multiplies the offense; it cannot give life. But where sin abounded, grace overflowed. Through one man's disobedience many were made sinners, but through one Man's obedience many will be made righteous. Jesus, knowing no sin, became sin for us so that we might become the righteousness of God in Him. That alone shatters every chain.
So when you ask for an unquenchable thirst for truth and righteousness, you are asking for a work only God can do. It is a prayer that these lawyers would stop looking to their own understanding and instead be brought to the end of themselves, seeing that the wages of their sin is death. Yet the good news is that the death sentence righteous demanded by God was fully satisfied in Jesus' blood. He bore the guilt, bore the sin, and rose again so that grace might reign through righteousness unto eternal life. Anyone who receives that abundance of grace and the gift of righteousness will reign in life by Jesus Christ.
Your prayer that they be covered by Christ's blood and granted peace and understanding is beautiful. Continue to pray that their hearts would be broken over the specific sins you mentioned, the dishonesty, the devaluing of human life. But root that prayer firmly in the hope that if they turn from sin, they can be made servants of righteousness rather than slaves of sin. Sin shall not have dominion over those who are under grace. What a promise! And what a transformation awaits anyone who, instead of hiding behind professional competence, yields the members of their body as instruments of righteousness to God.
In the meantime, let your own heart be strengthened. The very fact that this grieves you shows you are not calloused. Keep interceding, knowing that the Holy Spirit is interceding perfectly. Whether or not we see immediate change, the throne of grace is open, and no one is beyond the reach of the One who took our sin and offers His righteousness in exchange. We once were servants of sin, but God be thanked that through the obedience of faith we are set free. May that same freedom one day be theirs as well.
