Seeking prayer for a softened heart

The cry of your soul, which you now pour out, is itself no small sign that the hardness you lament is not total. A heart wholly dead to God does not grieve its own deadness, nor does it seek a sorrow it cannot feel. To desire godly sorrow is already the beginning of it, for this sorrow is not something we work up from our own nature, but a gift that comes down from the Physician of souls. God opens the hearts that are willing, and your very longing proves that His hand is already upon you, softening what was stone.

Do not mistake the character of this sorrow or think it must be a violent, crushing emotion. The sorrow of the world, which springs from pride or fear of disgrace, works death and plunges the soul into despair. That is not what you seek. Godly sorrow, the blessed mourning that the Lord calls blessed, is simply the turning of the will away from sin and toward the God you have offended. It possesses this advantage: it does not condemn the one who grieves, but works repentance unto salvation, a repentance that brings no regret. Look not, then, to the violence of your feelings as proof of its presence. Look to the direction of your will. Do you turn from sin? Do you desire Christ more than the passing pleasures you once loved? Then you have what you seek, even if it comes clothed in dryness and heaviness.

As for the oppression upon your body, I do not doubt the reality of your affliction. The enemy seizes upon the senses when he cannot hold the will, especially in those who have set out on the strait and narrow way. It is not possible that a man pursuing the course of virtue should be exempt from tribulation and the assaults of the wicked ones. If Job in his time said that the life of man upon earth is a state of trial, how much more is this so for those who have renounced the ruler of this world? Yet remember, the demon who cried out to the Apostles spoke truth, but Paul was grieved and cast him out nonetheless. Christ receives no testimony from demons, nor does He need their recognition. The tormentor seeks to persuade you that his grip is equal to your sin, or that your lack of feeling proves you are forsaken. Both are lies designed to swallow you up in overmuch sorrow. The true deliverance, the greater miracle, is not merely the cessation of this physical sensation, but the freeing of the soul from sin. That freedom Christ purchased with His own blood, and He grants it to all who cast themselves upon Him with the honest cry, “Lord, I believe; help my unbelief.”

Stand firm, therefore, and do not be distressed as though your afflictions were strange. In this mortal life, exemption from sorrow is impossible. If not today, then tomorrow; if not from one source, then another. But this pain, endured with faith and offered to God, becomes the very medicine that purges the soul. Do not seek to measure your repentance by the enemy’s torments, nor think that his noise indicates his victory. He roars most loudly when he is being driven out. Continue to flee to the Church for prayer, for the prayers of the faithful are a mighty weapon. Above all, do not despair. He who said, “I do not will the death of the sinner, but that he should turn and live,” is not deaf to the groan of a heart that longs to be healed. Your very desire is His gift. Receive it, give thanks in the midst of the trial, and wait upon His mercy. He will not despise a broken and contrite spirit.
 
Your honesty is a precious, painful gift. A heart that feels only its own hardness and cries out for it to be softened is not as far from God as the enemy wants you to believe. True, final hardness would not care. The very sorrow you wish you had is stirring now, because you wish it were there. That is not nothing. It is the faintest trace of godly sorrow already at work, and it can lead you all the way home.

The Scriptures show us a sobering pattern. Pharaoh hardened his own heart, again and again, refusing to bow before the living God. He chose stiffness. And then, after he had set that course, the Lord confirmed it, firming up the position Pharaoh had already taken. Two different Hebrew words make this clear. The Lord does not create hardness in a soft heart; He shores up the hardness we insist on. That is a fearful warning to anyone coasting in resistance, but it does not sound like you. You are not boasting in your sin. You are reaching. You are asking for what you lack. That is a heart that, however numb it feels, wants to turn. And God always meets that desire with mercy, not with more hardness.

What you long for is the kind of sorrow Paul described: not the regret of the world that simply mourns consequences and leads to death, but godly sorrow that works true repentance. It brings a clearing of yourself, a holy indignation, a deep desire to renounce sin and run from it. This sorrow is not mere emotion; it is a work of the Holy Spirit that brings real change. It leads to salvation and leaves no lasting regret, only freedom. So do not wait to feel enough before you bring your heart to Jesus. Bring the deadness itself. Confess plainly, “Lord, I am hard. I do not hate my sin as I ought. I have no conviction. Have mercy.” That prayer is the seed of repentance.

And remember what Christ has done. The blood of bulls and goats could only cover sin for a time, but the blood of Jesus puts sin away entirely. When the spear pierced His side, a broken heart poured out water and blood, the sign of a complete atonement. Every sin was dealt with there, every trace of the old bondage. He bore the curse so that you could receive a new heart. This is the promise: God says He will write His law not on stone tablets but on the fleshy tablets of living hearts. He will plant His desires within you so that you delight to do His will. That is your hope, not your own strength to feel the right things, but the transforming presence of His Spirit.

This is why John wrote that the one born of God does not practice sin. A new nature lives within you if you are in Christ. That does not mean you never stumble, but the pattern of your life is no longer a life of sin. Jesus came to destroy the works of the devil, including every chain and every dark oppression you have described. The demons that wrap themselves around you and press in upon you are real, but they are already defeated enemies. The work of Satan in your life is being undone by the Son of God who was manifested for this very purpose. Healing and deliverance come through the authority of Jesus, as you submit to God wholly, resist the enemy, and stand firm on the finished work of the cross.

Do not look inward for a feeling to prove your salvation. Trust Christ alone. His love is the one sin you must never reject, for that is the sin that damns. All manner of sin and blasphemy is forgiven when a person comes to the light. So come. Bring your hardness, your numbness, your long battle with these demonic assaults. Bring it all to the One whose heart was broken for you. He does not cast out a cry like yours.

Pray for a softened heart, and then let the answer begin with the words you have already spoken. You are turning from the stone. He is giving you a heart of flesh. As you continue to hold to His word, you will find that sorrow turns to a rejoicing that no enemy can steal, because you will know, deep within, that you belong to Him.
 

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