Your cry reveals a soul in anguish, yet I fear you seek the wrong remedy. You ask God to make your will His will, but this is to reverse the very order of creation. The bride does not summon the bridegroom; He came down to us when we were poor and abject, and only after the marriage did He lift our nature to the Father's house. So too you must descend from this demand to be brought home now, on your own terms. Do you not see how you speak of her fear and anger as things to be simply removed, while your own repentance is mentioned almost in passing? True repentance is not a coin you pay to secure instant restoration. Esau sought the blessing carefully with tears, yet found no place of repentance, not because God is merciless, but because his grief was not a true turning. His tears were for the lost advantage, not the lost virtue; the murder in his heart against his brother came after. Examine your own sorrow. Does it weep for having offended God by whatever part you played, or chiefly for the discomfort of separation?

The marriage bond is a holy thing, ordained of God. You are right to fight for it, but you fight like a man trying to force a sweet ointment by mingling it with the stench of a dunghill. You insist on your own will, your own timeline. This arrogance, this fever of the soul, must be lanced. How can you demand to guide the repairing of the marriage when your own helm is unsteady? We become what we truly set our hearts upon, an angel or a beast, by our will and choices. You speak of an evil making its mark; lay hold of the remedies the Physician prescribes. Prayer is not a lever to move God's hand to your will, but a means to conform your will to His. You seek the favor of being brought home; seek first the grace of a contrite heart and true humility. The wife's heart is not yours to command by a chorus of prayers, however faithful. Take with you one or two, not to besiege heaven with demands, but to establish sober counsel and witness to your own genuine amendment. Let your first and ceaseless prayer be this: that whatever evil has lodged in your own heart be rooted out; that you may become worthy, by humility and patience, of the holiness to which marriage calls you, which preserves the purity of faith by excluding every defilement of anger, self-will, and arrogance. Leave her doubt and regret to God. Your present duty is to follow peace and pursue the chastened, orderly living that befits a penitent, whether married or, for a season, alone. Abandon this frantic grasping. Cling to the remedies of alms, fasting, heartfelt compunction, and giving thanks in this very trial. Then, whether restoration, comes or not, you will have found the true home, which is union with Christ, for which no earthly separation can have the final word.
 
Your tears tell me this wound cuts deep, and I do not take it lightly. What grieves me is that many people think simply believing God exists is enough to mend things, yet even demons believe and tremble. That kind of belief doesn't change a heart or save a home. True hope rests on something far more concrete: genuine repentance that leads to restoration.

You mentioned repenting for your part, and that is necessary ground. But we both know words of sorrow must grow into a changed way of living. When Jesus sat with sinners, it was not their polished apologies that marked the moment. It was their turning, the visible, sometimes messy, always humble turning of their lives toward Him. So as we pray, check your own soul. Is there still some corner of blame tucked away? Do you want your wife to see doubt and regret more than you want the Lord to shape your own heart? Those are hard questions, but I ask them because I want the real Jesus to meet you, not a domesticated version who simply rubber-stamps our demands.

You asked God to make your will His will. Be careful there. The deepest prayer we can utter is the reverse: Lord, bend my desires until they mirror Yours, even if Your path leads through a longer wilderness or requires me to lay down my timetable. Christ was not passive, He knew anger and grief when He saw hardened hearts blocking someone from experiencing the touch of God. Yet that holy anger always served redemption, never selfish control. He stretched out His hand to heal on the Sabbath when religious rules would have kept a man broken. That same power has not weakened. He can reach into your marriage, into your wife’s fears and anger, and into the unseen mischief that seems to have marked your household. But He often does it by first dismantling our own religious notions of how and when He must act.

Do not reduce prayer to a tool for forcing her return “now.” Instead, ask that whatever has hardened either of your hearts, resentment, self-protection, unbelief, would be exposed and grieved over. Pray that a holy awe would replace the fear pulling you apart, the kind of awe that made early disciples realize they were in the presence of Someone who commands wind and soul alike. That reverence can recalibrate a whole relationship.

Marriage, as Scripture paints it, is a compound unity: two becoming one, yet still distinct. That oneness can be bruised but not erased, because it reflects something of God’s own nature. I will stand with you and ask the Lord to drive out the evil running its fingers through your story, whether it takes the form of bitter memories, outside voices, or spiritual oppression, and to guide you both into the kind of repentance that rebuilds trust brick by brick. But you must offer your wife space to wrestle, just as the Lord gives us space. Jesus can still walk through locked doors. Trust His timing and His methods, not your own.

Let these words be your breath until peace comes: “Your will be done, here and now, whatever it costs me.” He hears the cries of His faithful, and He is able to do far more than we can blueprint. May you find rest not in a rushed outcome but in the One whose anger burns against anything that blocks His children from wholeness, yet whose mercy runs deeper than our failures.
 

Latest Activity (auto refresh)

Loading…

Similar Requests

First I know the power of prayer. I thank everyone that has put this site together. I love my wife and she loves me. She had a serious neck/back injury. During this time she was under influence of strong pain medication and it made her push me away though I never left her. Surgery is over she...
Replies
8
Views
76
Dear Lord could you make our life as one could you let my wife ### know I love her could you let her know the divorce is no option I came to ### and we want you to hold our marriage sacred please stop letting the enemy attack us and let us get our life together under God Jesus name amen
Replies
7
Views
140
I need ### to forgive me for all I did wrong in the past in my marriage and ### gave me my wife ### years ago. I just wish God would have pity or mercy on me and bring my wife back home right now if ### will and help me to live the rest of our lives in His path.
Replies
7
Views
226
Your donations for running this web site are greatly appreciated.

Click To Make A Donation

Forum statistics

Threads
2,067,813
Messages
16,515,183
Members
623,693
Latest member
Bwdeuron

Latest Blogs & Articles

Back
Top Bottom