We hear the deep pain and desperation in your heart, and we stand with you in prayer, lifting this marriage before the Lord with urgency. First, we must address the way you are approaching this situation. While we understand your desire to reclaim your husband’s heart and end any ungodly relationships, we must gently correct the use of "decreeing and declaring" as if we have the authority to command God’s will. That is not how prayer works. We come before the Lord in humility, surrendering our desires to His perfect will, not demanding our own way. The Bible tells us in James 4:13-15, "Come now, you who say, 'Today or tomorrow let’s go into this city, and spend a year there, trade, and make a profit,' whereas you don’t know what your life will be like tomorrow. For what is your life? For you are a vapor that appears for a little time, and then vanishes away. For you ought to say, 'If the Lord wills, we will both live, and do this or that.'" We must trust God’s timing and His ways, even when they are not our own.
We also want to address the sin of adultery that has taken place here. If your husband has been unfaithful to you, this is a grievous violation of the covenant you both made before God. Adultery is a serious sin, and it wounds deeply, but we serve a God who heals and restores. In Malachi 2:16, the Lord says, "For I hate divorce... and him who covers his garment with violence!" God hates divorce because He hates the breaking of the marriage covenant, but He also hates the sin that leads to it. We must pray for repentance—for your husband to turn away from this sin and return to you with a broken and contrite heart. Proverbs 28:13 tells us, "He who conceals his sins doesn’t prosper, but whoever confesses and renounces them finds mercy."
We also want to gently remind you that your worth and identity are not found in your husband’s faithfulness or lack thereof. You are deeply loved by God, and your value is not defined by another person’s actions. Psalm 139:13-14 says, "For you formed my inmost being. You knit me together in my mother’s womb. I will give thanks to you, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made. Your works are wonderful. My soul knows that very well." You are a daughter of the King, and He sees your pain and holds you in His hands.
Now, let us come before the Lord in prayer, surrendering this situation to Him and asking for His will to be done.
Heavenly Father, we come before You with heavy hearts, lifting up this marriage to You. Lord, we know that You hate the sin of adultery because it breaks the covenant that You designed for marriage. We ask that You would convict this husband of his sin and draw him back to You and to his wife. Soften his heart, Lord, and let him see the pain he has caused. Bring him to a place of true repentance, where he turns away from all ungodliness and seeks restoration with his wife. We pray that You would remove every ungodly influence from his life—every photograph, every memory, every temptation that does not honor You or his marriage. Cleanse his mind, his heart, and his eyes, Lord, so that he sees only his wife as the woman You have given him.
Father, we also lift up this wife to You. She is hurting deeply, and we ask that You would comfort her in her pain. Remind her of Your love for her and Your faithfulness. Heal her heart, Lord, and give her the strength to forgive if repentance comes. Help her to trust in You, even when the situation feels impossible. We pray that You would restore this marriage, Lord, but we also surrender it to Your will. If restoration is not possible, we ask that You would be her strength and her refuge.
Lord, we know that You are a God who restores what has been broken. We ask that You would rebuild the trust and love in this marriage, but we also ask that You would be glorified in the process. Let this situation be a testimony to Your power and Your grace. We pray all of this in the mighty name of Jesus Christ, the only name by which we can come before You. Amen.
We encourage you to seek godly counsel as well, whether through your pastor, a trusted Christian counselor, or a mentor who can walk with you through this difficult time. Restoration is possible, but it must be rooted in repentance, forgiveness, and a commitment to honoring God’s design for marriage. We will continue to stand with you in prayer, trusting that God is at work even when we cannot see it.