Silas
Servant of All
Your prayer reveals a heart crying out for change, and that is not a small thing. God looks at the heart. He sees the desire behind your words, the weariness of being stuck, and the hope that He will make a way where you see none. That desire to thrive spiritually, physically, and financially brims from a place that only He can truly fill. But the greatest work He wants to do right now may not be external. He zeros in on the heart first, because out of the heart flow the very issues of life.
You are standing on promises, and that is good. Yet consider that God also examines the motivations beneath those prayers. Are you seeking His kingdom and His righteousness before all else, or have the financial pressures and the rut become the master passion? When riches delay or doors seem bolted shut, the temptation is to let the heart grow heavy with the very things we are asking God to provide. The Scripture warns: do not let that be your goal; if increase comes, set not your heart upon it. Cease from your own wisdom. God may indeed release funds and open job opportunities, but He wants your heart undivided, fully committed to Him, not merely to the relief He can bring.
That longing for your son’s heart to soften is precious. God alone can turn a heart, but He often works through a parent’s persistent, faith-filled prayers. Guard your own heart with all diligence as you wait. No hardness, no bitterness, no frantic grasping. A heart that stays soft before Him will not be disappointed. Even when you feel helpless, remember that He credits the desires of a right heart. David had it in his heart to build the temple, and though he never lifted a stone, God honored that willing intention. So too, your willingness to trust Him in the waiting matters more than you know.
Be honest before Him: Is there any place where your heart has grown distant? True worship is not just crying out with your lips while the heart wanders. Ask Him to create in you a clean heart, a pure heart. From a pure heart, prayers rise with power. When you give Him your whole heart, cheerfully, willingly, not out of pressure, He will cause all grace to abound toward you. He is able to do what man cannot do. He opened the Red Sea, He removed the swarms from Pharaoh, He can release what has been stalled for months. But He will do it in a way that keeps your heart tethered to Him, not to the provision.
Continue seeking Him daily. He is indeed the Author and Finisher of your faith. As you let Him finish this chapter, hold fast to this: the One who sees your heart is also the One who can change any heart, including your son’s. He can soften the hardest resistance, just as He can open doors no man can close. Rest in that. Lay your requests before Him, then let your heart say, “Not my will, but Yours be done.” That is the heart He will never ignore.
You are standing on promises, and that is good. Yet consider that God also examines the motivations beneath those prayers. Are you seeking His kingdom and His righteousness before all else, or have the financial pressures and the rut become the master passion? When riches delay or doors seem bolted shut, the temptation is to let the heart grow heavy with the very things we are asking God to provide. The Scripture warns: do not let that be your goal; if increase comes, set not your heart upon it. Cease from your own wisdom. God may indeed release funds and open job opportunities, but He wants your heart undivided, fully committed to Him, not merely to the relief He can bring.
That longing for your son’s heart to soften is precious. God alone can turn a heart, but He often works through a parent’s persistent, faith-filled prayers. Guard your own heart with all diligence as you wait. No hardness, no bitterness, no frantic grasping. A heart that stays soft before Him will not be disappointed. Even when you feel helpless, remember that He credits the desires of a right heart. David had it in his heart to build the temple, and though he never lifted a stone, God honored that willing intention. So too, your willingness to trust Him in the waiting matters more than you know.
Be honest before Him: Is there any place where your heart has grown distant? True worship is not just crying out with your lips while the heart wanders. Ask Him to create in you a clean heart, a pure heart. From a pure heart, prayers rise with power. When you give Him your whole heart, cheerfully, willingly, not out of pressure, He will cause all grace to abound toward you. He is able to do what man cannot do. He opened the Red Sea, He removed the swarms from Pharaoh, He can release what has been stalled for months. But He will do it in a way that keeps your heart tethered to Him, not to the provision.
Continue seeking Him daily. He is indeed the Author and Finisher of your faith. As you let Him finish this chapter, hold fast to this: the One who sees your heart is also the One who can change any heart, including your son’s. He can soften the hardest resistance, just as He can open doors no man can close. Rest in that. Lay your requests before Him, then let your heart say, “Not my will, but Yours be done.” That is the heart He will never ignore.
