Silas
Faithful Servant
I join you in bringing your son before the Lord, asking in earnest for his complete healing from ADHD. It is good and right to come humbly, trusting that the One who created your child also has the power to restore him fully.
Think of the nobleman who traveled to find Jesus at Cana, desperate for his own son’s healing. Jesus simply spoke the word, and even across the miles life flowed back into that boy. The same Son of God, who declared that He could do nothing apart from the Father but always worked in perfect harmony with Him, hears our prayers today. He remains the same healer, whether the need is physical, as it was that day, or touches the mind and emotions, as with your son. So we can pray with confidence, asking Jesus to speak wholeness into his brain chemistry, his thought patterns, and his ability to focus and rest.
Yet I also remember that not all healings follow the same pattern. Some are immediate; some unfold gradually over time. Scripture shows us that even in our bodies God has established natural processes of restoration, and those are just as much His divine work. A healing that comes step by step, through wisdom, therapy, and small changes, is still from His hand. So we pray for total healing, while also asking for eyes to see and celebrate every forward step as evidence of God’s kindness.
What touches me deeply is that the Father knows what it means to love a son. When Abraham was called to offer Isaac, his only son whom he loved, it was a shadow of what God Himself would do in giving His own beloved Son for us. He does not stand distant from a parent’s longing. He saw Leah in her affliction and gave her sons; He heard the cry of the unloved and responded. In the same way, He has seen your tears and heard your prayers for this child. Your love for your son reflects, however faintly, that eternal love the Father has for Jesus, and the love He now extends to all whom He adopts as His own through faith.
So hold fast to the Son. Jesus said that whoever honors the Son honors the Father also. There is no access to the Father’s healing mercies apart from Him, but in Christ every promise finds its yes. Even when the process is long, do not let go of the truth that your son is precious in God’s sight. We can ask for the healing of his mind, for clarity, calm, and self-control, and for any hidden wounds or frustrations to be mended. The God who called a spurned wife’s baby “Look, a son” because He saw her misery, and another “Hearing” because He heard her cry, is the same God who looks on your struggle and bends His ear to your request.
So keep praying, keep trusting, and keep resting in the Son of God who has all authority to heal. I am praying alongside you, believing that in His time and in His perfect way, your son will be made whole.
Think of the nobleman who traveled to find Jesus at Cana, desperate for his own son’s healing. Jesus simply spoke the word, and even across the miles life flowed back into that boy. The same Son of God, who declared that He could do nothing apart from the Father but always worked in perfect harmony with Him, hears our prayers today. He remains the same healer, whether the need is physical, as it was that day, or touches the mind and emotions, as with your son. So we can pray with confidence, asking Jesus to speak wholeness into his brain chemistry, his thought patterns, and his ability to focus and rest.
Yet I also remember that not all healings follow the same pattern. Some are immediate; some unfold gradually over time. Scripture shows us that even in our bodies God has established natural processes of restoration, and those are just as much His divine work. A healing that comes step by step, through wisdom, therapy, and small changes, is still from His hand. So we pray for total healing, while also asking for eyes to see and celebrate every forward step as evidence of God’s kindness.
What touches me deeply is that the Father knows what it means to love a son. When Abraham was called to offer Isaac, his only son whom he loved, it was a shadow of what God Himself would do in giving His own beloved Son for us. He does not stand distant from a parent’s longing. He saw Leah in her affliction and gave her sons; He heard the cry of the unloved and responded. In the same way, He has seen your tears and heard your prayers for this child. Your love for your son reflects, however faintly, that eternal love the Father has for Jesus, and the love He now extends to all whom He adopts as His own through faith.
So hold fast to the Son. Jesus said that whoever honors the Son honors the Father also. There is no access to the Father’s healing mercies apart from Him, but in Christ every promise finds its yes. Even when the process is long, do not let go of the truth that your son is precious in God’s sight. We can ask for the healing of his mind, for clarity, calm, and self-control, and for any hidden wounds or frustrations to be mended. The God who called a spurned wife’s baby “Look, a son” because He saw her misery, and another “Hearing” because He heard her cry, is the same God who looks on your struggle and bends His ear to your request.
So keep praying, keep trusting, and keep resting in the Son of God who has all authority to heal. I am praying alongside you, believing that in His time and in His perfect way, your son will be made whole.
