Chrysostom
Beloved Servant
Your heart’s stillness in this storm is no betrayal, but a gift. What you call guilt is the enemy’s whisper, trying to poison the peace Christ gives. You have cast your marriage upon the Lord, and the calm you feel is the beginning of His answer. Do not despise it. The frantic spirit would have you text and call in desperation, but then you would be trusting your own noise, not His silence. He who called you has called you in peace. Stand fast in that, and do not let the seeming inactivity trouble you. The stillness of your hands is the loudest prayer you could offer right now.
Remember what Christ became for us: a merciful and faithful High Priest, to make reconciliation for the sins of the people. He who began that work in you and your wife will complete it in His time, if you do not interrupt His healing with your own haste. Two weeks may feel like an eternity, but God’s patience spans ages. Use this season not to rehearse the injury or to plot your next move, but to search your own soul. Write down every fault, every harsh word, every neglect, and confess it in the sight of God. When you write, He blots out. Let there be a book in your heart of what you have done amiss, so that on the day of reckoning His mercy alone remains. Do not let pride or shame keep you from this; it is the surest preparation for any reunion.
You mention the mother-in-law, the finances, the stepson. These are cords you cannot untangle by force. But God is not bound by any of them. The One who parted the sea can quiet a whisper. Do not wage war against her family; wage war on your knees. Your wife’s path to the Lord is more precious than any reconciliation with you. If she finds her way to Him, you will have gained everything, even if the marriage is not restored in the way you imagine. And if she does not yet turn, your silent fidelity and prayer will speak louder than a thousand arguments. The incompleteness you feel is the ache of one flesh being torn, but that ache is meant to drive you into the arms of the only Bridegroom who never fails. He is making you the man He calls you to be in this furnace, not apart from it.
If her heart remains hard and the separation becomes final, remember: a brother is not under bondage in such cases. God has called you in peace. I do not say this to encourage divorce, which the Lord hates, but to set your soul free from the terror that if you do not fix everything, hope is lost. Your hope is in Christ, not in a text message. You have done nothing wrong by standing steady and silent. That is the discipline of a man who trusts that even now, Christ stands before the Father on your behalf, a faithful High Priest. So do not let guilt eat at you; it is not from the Spirit. The peace that passes understanding is yours while you wait. Whether the path forward leads to a renewed and holy marriage or to a season of single devotion, you already have the Bridegroom who will never leave nor forsake you. Let that be enough. Then all else will be added in His wisdom.
Continue to sit in His presence, twice a day if you are able, and let the silence of the church be the balm for the silence of your home. You are not alone; your family and friends are given for this hour. But above all, Christ is with you, the merciful and faithful One. He sees your tears, He carries your sorrow, and He will bring forth justice and healing in His time. Do not rush ahead. Wait on the Lord, and be of good courage.
Remember what Christ became for us: a merciful and faithful High Priest, to make reconciliation for the sins of the people. He who began that work in you and your wife will complete it in His time, if you do not interrupt His healing with your own haste. Two weeks may feel like an eternity, but God’s patience spans ages. Use this season not to rehearse the injury or to plot your next move, but to search your own soul. Write down every fault, every harsh word, every neglect, and confess it in the sight of God. When you write, He blots out. Let there be a book in your heart of what you have done amiss, so that on the day of reckoning His mercy alone remains. Do not let pride or shame keep you from this; it is the surest preparation for any reunion.
You mention the mother-in-law, the finances, the stepson. These are cords you cannot untangle by force. But God is not bound by any of them. The One who parted the sea can quiet a whisper. Do not wage war against her family; wage war on your knees. Your wife’s path to the Lord is more precious than any reconciliation with you. If she finds her way to Him, you will have gained everything, even if the marriage is not restored in the way you imagine. And if she does not yet turn, your silent fidelity and prayer will speak louder than a thousand arguments. The incompleteness you feel is the ache of one flesh being torn, but that ache is meant to drive you into the arms of the only Bridegroom who never fails. He is making you the man He calls you to be in this furnace, not apart from it.
If her heart remains hard and the separation becomes final, remember: a brother is not under bondage in such cases. God has called you in peace. I do not say this to encourage divorce, which the Lord hates, but to set your soul free from the terror that if you do not fix everything, hope is lost. Your hope is in Christ, not in a text message. You have done nothing wrong by standing steady and silent. That is the discipline of a man who trusts that even now, Christ stands before the Father on your behalf, a faithful High Priest. So do not let guilt eat at you; it is not from the Spirit. The peace that passes understanding is yours while you wait. Whether the path forward leads to a renewed and holy marriage or to a season of single devotion, you already have the Bridegroom who will never leave nor forsake you. Let that be enough. Then all else will be added in His wisdom.
Continue to sit in His presence, twice a day if you are able, and let the silence of the church be the balm for the silence of your home. You are not alone; your family and friends are given for this hour. But above all, Christ is with you, the merciful and faithful One. He sees your tears, He carries your sorrow, and He will bring forth justice and healing in His time. Do not rush ahead. Wait on the Lord, and be of good courage.
