Silas
Beloved Servant
The ache you carry is not hidden from the One who bore our sorrows. When a heart turns cold and vows are shattered, the pain runs deep because it mirrors the very covenant God intended to display. And yet Scripture never lets us remain in that sorrow without purpose. The promise that the Father takes no pleasure in the death of the wicked but wills all to turn and live is not a distant hope but the very fuel of intercession. So though every call has gone unanswered and every effort seems fruitless, you are not casting words into the wind. You are standing where Jesus stood as He wept over a city unwilling to be gathered, longing to shelter those who refused. That grief is not a sign of failure but a sharing in His heart.
Salvation is far more than acknowledging a God in the sky. The demons do that and tremble. What you are asking for is that life-changing union with Christ where a person truly believes into Him, being brought from death to life. The prayer for a new heart, for eyes opened by God’s own light, is the only door out of the darkness. No argument can shatter the kind of hardness that explains away evidence while clinging to sin. Only the Spirit can remove the heart of stone. That is why you fast and why you plead the promises: not because God is reluctant, but because His power alone can accomplish what no persuasion can. And the very thing that seems so impossible now, the stubborn silence, the refusal to reconcile, is precisely the terrain where He works. He often brings a soul to the end of its own resources before it will turn. Jairus would never have fallen at Jesus’ feet unless his dearest treasure was slipping away. The desperation that makes a person risk reputation and position is sometimes the strange mercy of God. So do not despise the long wait or the apparent hopelessness. The Lord knows how to touch what is most guarded.
In the meantime, guard your own heart from letting the disappointment curdle into bitterness. The one who sinned against you has ultimately sinned against God, just as David confessed. And while you cannot see the inner change of another, you can trust that the same voice that commanded unclean spirits with authority can speak peace to the storm. Keep your own life centered on Him, not on the outcome. The Word of God is a seed with all the information coded into it to make you like Jesus. As you long for your spouse to be transformed by that seed, let it also do its work in you, producing the fruit of mercy, because the merciful will receive mercy. The fast you offer and the tears you shed are not wasted. They are wings to prayer.
If the day comes when the Spirit breaks through, the evidence will be unmistakable: a true repentance that doesn’t merely regret being caught but longs to make things right, just as Zacchaeus joyfully restored what he had taken. That is the gift you are asking for. Not a surface truce, but a salvation so real that sin loses its grip and the heart becomes soft and supple again, able to receive the new wine of His life. Until then, rest in this: whatever happens, you are held in the love of the One who intercedes with groans too deep for words. The gospel is the power of God unto salvation for everyone who believes. That includes the one you love. So keep your lamp trimmed and your eyes on the Bridegroom, not on the clock. He is able.
Salvation is far more than acknowledging a God in the sky. The demons do that and tremble. What you are asking for is that life-changing union with Christ where a person truly believes into Him, being brought from death to life. The prayer for a new heart, for eyes opened by God’s own light, is the only door out of the darkness. No argument can shatter the kind of hardness that explains away evidence while clinging to sin. Only the Spirit can remove the heart of stone. That is why you fast and why you plead the promises: not because God is reluctant, but because His power alone can accomplish what no persuasion can. And the very thing that seems so impossible now, the stubborn silence, the refusal to reconcile, is precisely the terrain where He works. He often brings a soul to the end of its own resources before it will turn. Jairus would never have fallen at Jesus’ feet unless his dearest treasure was slipping away. The desperation that makes a person risk reputation and position is sometimes the strange mercy of God. So do not despise the long wait or the apparent hopelessness. The Lord knows how to touch what is most guarded.
In the meantime, guard your own heart from letting the disappointment curdle into bitterness. The one who sinned against you has ultimately sinned against God, just as David confessed. And while you cannot see the inner change of another, you can trust that the same voice that commanded unclean spirits with authority can speak peace to the storm. Keep your own life centered on Him, not on the outcome. The Word of God is a seed with all the information coded into it to make you like Jesus. As you long for your spouse to be transformed by that seed, let it also do its work in you, producing the fruit of mercy, because the merciful will receive mercy. The fast you offer and the tears you shed are not wasted. They are wings to prayer.
If the day comes when the Spirit breaks through, the evidence will be unmistakable: a true repentance that doesn’t merely regret being caught but longs to make things right, just as Zacchaeus joyfully restored what he had taken. That is the gift you are asking for. Not a surface truce, but a salvation so real that sin loses its grip and the heart becomes soft and supple again, able to receive the new wine of His life. Until then, rest in this: whatever happens, you are held in the love of the One who intercedes with groans too deep for words. The gospel is the power of God unto salvation for everyone who believes. That includes the one you love. So keep your lamp trimmed and your eyes on the Bridegroom, not on the clock. He is able.
