Touch the heart and mind of ### 🙏🙏🙏

Craurath

Servant of All
Dear Heavenly Father,

I come to You today with a heavy heart, carrying the hurt and frustration of feeling forgotten and unseen in my workplace. Lord, You see all things; You know the truth of how I have helped and supported my department head since the very beginning. You know the labor, loyalty, and heart I have poured into this work.

I lift my department head up to You today. Lord, I ask that You break the fog of manipulation and deceit that has surrounded her. Open her eyes to see through ### manipulation and any false narratives being fed to her. Expose ### ber being two faced and how she step over ### and how she bypass her at times. Grant ### her discernment and clarity of mind to see the workplace, and the people in it, exactly as they are.

Touch her heart, Lord. Break through any pride or insecurity that a position of authority can bring. I pray that You would give her a spirit of true humility. Remind her that a title or position is never the true measure of work done, but rather the dedication, integrity, and hearts of the people supporting her.

Help her to remember the history we share. Soften her heart to recall the genuine help and foundation I have provided.

While I wait for You to move, protect my own mind and heart from bitterness. Give me peace, dignity, and the strength to keep doing my best, knowing that my ultimate reward comes from You and not from man.

In Jesus' name, I pray.

Amen.
 
We hear the deep ache in your heart as you pour out your frustration over feeling unseen and undervalued in your workplace. It is painful when loyalty and hard work go unnoticed, especially when others manipulate the truth or twist narratives to serve their own agendas. The Lord sees every sacrifice you’ve made, every late hour, every act of support you’ve given with a sincere heart. He does not overlook your labor, and He will never forget it. "For God is not unrighteous to forget your work and labor of love which you have shown toward His name, in that you have ministered to the saints, and do minister" (Hebrews 6:10).

We must address the spirit of bitterness that can so easily take root in these situations. While it is natural to feel hurt, we are called to guard our hearts, for bitterness defiles many (Hebrews 12:15). Instead, we must choose forgiveness, even when it feels impossible, trusting that God will bring justice in His perfect timing. "Beloved, do not avenge yourselves, but rather give place to wrath; for it is written, ‘Vengeance is Mine, I will repay,’ says the Lord" (Romans 12:19). We rebuke the spirit of deception and manipulation that has clouded your workplace, and we pray that the Lord would expose every lie and bring truth to light. "For there is nothing covered that will not be revealed, nor hidden that will not be known" (Luke 12:2).

We lift up your department head before the Lord, asking Him to soften her heart and open her eyes. Pride and insecurity can blind even the most well-intentioned leaders, causing them to overlook the very people who have stood by them. We pray that the Lord would break any stronghold of pride in her life and replace it with humility. "God resists the proud, but gives grace to the humble" (James 4:6). May she remember the foundation you’ve helped build and recognize the integrity you’ve shown. We also pray for wisdom and discernment for her, that she would see the workplace, and the people in it, through God’s eyes, not through the lens of favoritism or deceit.

While you wait for the Lord to move, we encourage you to continue walking in dignity and excellence. Your ultimate reward comes from the Lord, not from man, and He will not forget your faithfulness. "Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as working for the Lord, not for human masters, since you know that you will receive an inheritance from the Lord as a reward. It is the Lord Christ you are serving" (Colossians 3:23-24). Do not let discouragement steal your joy or your peace. Instead, trust that God is working behind the scenes, even when you cannot see it.

We also want to gently remind you that our prayers are powerful when we come before God in the name of Jesus. There is no other name by which we can approach the Father, and it is only through Christ that we have access to His throne of grace. "Therefore God also has highly exalted Him and given Him the name which is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of those in heaven, and of those on earth, and of those under the earth" (Philippians 2:9-10). If you have not already, we encourage you to surrender your heart fully to Jesus, for He is the way, the truth, and the life (John 14:6).

Let us pray together:

Heavenly Father, we come before You with heavy hearts, lifting up our brother/sister who feels unseen and undervalued in their workplace. Lord, You see every act of loyalty, every sacrifice, and every moment of support they have given. We ask that You would open the eyes of their department head, breaking through any deception or pride that has blinded her. Give her discernment to see the truth and a heart of humility to recognize the contributions of those around her. We rebuke the spirit of manipulation and deceit in this workplace, and we pray that You would expose every lie and bring Your light into the darkness.

Father, we ask that You would protect our brother/sister’s heart from bitterness. Fill them with Your peace and remind them that their labor is not in vain. Help them to continue working with excellence, knowing that their ultimate reward comes from You. Strengthen them in moments of discouragement, and let them feel Your presence surrounding them.

Lord, we also pray for their department head. Soften her heart, remind her of the history they share, and help her to see the genuine support that has been given. Break any strongholds of pride or insecurity, and replace them with humility and gratitude. May she lead with integrity and fairness, reflecting Your love and justice in all she does.

We trust in Your timing, Lord, and we know that You are working even when we cannot see it. Help our brother/sister to wait patiently, knowing that You are their defender and their rewarder. In Jesus’ mighty name, we pray. Amen.
 
It's one of the deepest aches, isn't it, to pour out your labor and loyalty only to feel erased by someone else's maneuvering. We hear in your prayer a heart that genuinely wants what is right, not just to be vindicated but for truth itself to cut through the fog. That kind of honesty before God doesn't go unnoticed, even when the people around you seem blind to it.

What you're describing, watching a colleague bypass and undermine while a supervisor seems caught in a web of distortion, is the exact setup where bitterness tries to move in and set up housekeeping. It doesn't announce itself; it just begins to color how you see her, how you replay every past slight, how you brace for the next one. And you've already named the danger out loud: protect my own mind and heart from bitterness. That's half the battle won. The other half is finding a small, daily way to release what isn't yours to carry. Sometimes that release looks like consciously handing the department head to God at the start of each workday, not with clenched fists but with open palms, and choosing, again, to do your work as an offering, not a performance for approval.

We're not saying that's easy, and we're not saying it erases the injustice. But it keeps your soul from becoming a locked room where resentment festers. You can't make her see what she's not ready to see, but you can refuse to let the situation rewrite your own integrity.

Let's pray:

Lord Jesus, you know what it is to give everything and be forgotten, to be undermined when you deserved honor. Meet our sister in that lonely place and steady her heart. Be her defender when human eyes fail. Grant her supervisor true clarity of sight and a softening of memory that recalls the faithfulness offered freely and not the flattery whispered in shadows. Guard this daughter of yours from the slow poisoning of bitterness, and give her daily peace and strength to keep walking uprightly. In your name we ask it. Amen.
 
Lord Jesus please richly bless, protect and guide them. Please help them in accordance with your perfect will Father. Thank you and praise you. In your holy name I pray. Amen.
 
The cross of Christ is the great remedy for every bitterness of spirit, and the hurt you feel, though sharp, can become a healing wound if you look away from the slights of men to the pierced hands of your Savior. I confess I have no love for a dry-eyed faith that shrugs at Calvary; let your soul mourn for Him as for a firstborn, and the gall of being overlooked will be swallowed up in a godly sorrow. That holy bitterness loosens the charms of this fleeting world, and better still, it sweetens every bitter cup the world thrusts into your hand. Cast your burden of frustration upon Him who was despised and rejected of men, and you will find that His love is broad enough to cover this hidden corner of your labor, long enough to stretch into the unbroken day when “they rest from their labors, and their works do follow them,” deep enough to reach the aching floor of your heart, and high enough to lift your gaze from office politics to the throne.

You pray for the eyes of your department head to be opened and for a spirit of humility to visit her. Pray on, but watch your own heart with holy jealousy, lest this trial become a snare of root-bearing bitterness. Your true reward is not the applause of superiors, but the smile of the Father who sees in secret. Set your love upon Him, as Boaz commended the humble Moabitess, and you will find that even this affliction is but a providence that transforms common dust into a honeycomb of grace. “I will deliver him,” says the Lord of those who love Him, and His deliverance often comes not by exposing the two-faced, but by lifting you above the fretful thirst for vindication. These troubles are often love-strokes, tearing down a nest built on a tree marked for the axe, that you may learn to build upon the Rock of Ages.

Leave the uncovering of deceit to Him who searcheth the reins and hearts. Your business is to keep your garments unspotted from resentment, to labor as unto Christ, and to fix your hope on the nearing day when the heavenly city shall descend. There the redeemed bear no denominational badges, no badge of earthly office; they have their Father’s name, and they are free from the weary wailing of wounded pride. Until then, rest in the glorious geometry of immeasurable love, and let your patient continuance in well-doing be a seed sown for that harvest where your works, done in faith, shall follow you into everlasting habitations.
 

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