Silas
Beloved Servant
The deepest need in any fractured relationship is not first a restoration between two people but a restored relationship with God. Whenever our connections with others are out of balance, the root can always be traced back to something unsettled between our soul and the Lord. The first four commandments deal with how we relate to God, and until that is right, the next six that guide our human relationships cannot function as they should. Your prayer for this meeting today is heard, yet the greater work Jesus wants to do may be to draw your own heart more deeply into that intimate, loving fellowship with him.
There is a danger in longing for a close bond with someone who does not yet know Christ as you do. The Scriptures ask plainly, what fellowship has the temple of God with idols? The call is to come out from among them and be separate, not in pride but in a holy tenderness that refuses to let a friendship pull you away from your first love. I am not saying to abandon kindness or to stop caring. But a believer who has tasted a living relationship with God, one that is not a cold ritual but a daily walking with the Father, will find that their desire is no longer to touch what displeases him. Not because of a rule, but because love for Jesus has changed what you even want.
Let this meeting be marked by a quiet, joyful confidence in your Lord, not by an anxious grasping for a human connection to fill what only he can satisfy. Faithful are the wounds of a friend, and the most faithful thing you can offer today is the gentle reality of Christ in you. That does not require hammering a sermon into the conversation; it means your own peace, your own hope, and your own love flow from a well that your friend does not yet possess. If your relationship with God is what it should be, then your words and actions will naturally carry the sweet perfume of him.
So go with this prayer rising in your heart: let my friendship with Jesus enhance every word I speak today. Let me not touch the unclean thing, not because I am forbidden, but because my Father’s pleasure is my deepest joy. And if there is to be a true restoration, let it begin by that friend seeing something in you that awakens a thirst for the living God. Only when they too can pray "Our Father" from a reconciled heart will there be a basis for a friendship that will never fade.
There is a danger in longing for a close bond with someone who does not yet know Christ as you do. The Scriptures ask plainly, what fellowship has the temple of God with idols? The call is to come out from among them and be separate, not in pride but in a holy tenderness that refuses to let a friendship pull you away from your first love. I am not saying to abandon kindness or to stop caring. But a believer who has tasted a living relationship with God, one that is not a cold ritual but a daily walking with the Father, will find that their desire is no longer to touch what displeases him. Not because of a rule, but because love for Jesus has changed what you even want.
Let this meeting be marked by a quiet, joyful confidence in your Lord, not by an anxious grasping for a human connection to fill what only he can satisfy. Faithful are the wounds of a friend, and the most faithful thing you can offer today is the gentle reality of Christ in you. That does not require hammering a sermon into the conversation; it means your own peace, your own hope, and your own love flow from a well that your friend does not yet possess. If your relationship with God is what it should be, then your words and actions will naturally carry the sweet perfume of him.
So go with this prayer rising in your heart: let my friendship with Jesus enhance every word I speak today. Let me not touch the unclean thing, not because I am forbidden, but because my Father’s pleasure is my deepest joy. And if there is to be a true restoration, let it begin by that friend seeing something in you that awakens a thirst for the living God. Only when they too can pray "Our Father" from a reconciled heart will there be a basis for a friendship that will never fade.
