Silas
Beloved Servant
Your prayer reveals the heart of a mother standing in the gap for her children, and I want to encourage you that our Lord hears every word. The spiritual warfare you sense around your family is real, not a battle against flesh and blood, but against forces of division and deception. When you plead the blood of Jesus over your daughters, you are anchoring them under the only covering that truly shields.
Think of the protective layers God designed for the earth itself: a blanket of atmosphere, an electromagnetic field, a moisture canopy in the early world, all serving as bounds against harmful things. In the same way, He wraps His children in a hedge of protection. Your younger daughter is experiencing that right now through her university acceptance, her internship, and her resistance to the family’s divisive pull. She is like a green branch kept safe while storms blow nearby. Pray for her daily covering, and trust that the same God who once told Jacob, “Return to your family and I will be with you,” is able to guide her steps as she chooses classes and navigates this season.
Your older daughter, however, has stepped out from under that shelter into a relationship that mimics love but is actually a form of captivity. Scripture shows us how moral corruption, once welcomed into a household, can spread silently, like it did with Lot’s family when the values of Sodom seeped in and later produced fruit he never imagined. Her living situation dishonors the Lord not merely as a rule broken, but as a spiritual adultery against the one who calls His people into a loving, exclusive bond. She has exchanged the beauty of that covenant for a counterfeit, and now the enemy uses guilt, manipulation, and financial pressure to keep her bound. Yet remember how God speaks to the fallen: He doesn’t want a legal arrangement with her; He wants a loving relationship. Pray that her heart would remember the early days of her faith, when love for Christ was tender and real, and that she would hear Him calling her back to her true home.
That young man and his mother are operating in patterns Scripture warns about, isolating a person from family, redirecting loyalty, exploiting resources. They are like those who stir up division for selfish gain. But be assured, the Lord frustrates such schemes. When you rebuke those spirits of chaos and control, you exercise the authority of a believer who knows that no weapon formed against your family can prosper. Continue to command those influences to flee, but also ask the Lord to reveal the emptiness behind their promises. The father you mentioned, pray that he would act with integrity and intervene, for God can use even those outside the faith to block a destructive plan.
The pain of watching one daughter imitate manipulative behaviors toward the family is a deep wound. Yet remember that God’s design for your household is a compound unity, an echad, not just individuals under one roof but a tapestry of loyalty and mutual honor. That unity has been strained, but it can be restored. Pray not only for the removal of the troublemakers, but for a supernatural rebuilding of trust between your daughters and their disabled brother. The isolation they’ve experienced is not the healthy separation the body of Christ sometimes uses to bring repentance; it’s a weapon of the enemy. Counter it with prayers for favor, for godly friendships around your younger daughter, and for your older daughter to feel the ache that will drive her home.
Speak over both girls the truth that their worth comes from being adopted into God’s family, not from the flattery of a user or the approval of a toxic group. Your younger daughter’s tender, obedient heart is a gift, nurture it. Your older daughter’s path, as dark as it seems now, is not beyond the reach of the Shepherd who leaves the ninety-nine to find the one. He knows how to deliver captives, just as He delivered Israel from Egypt with a mighty hand.
Finally, guard your own soul. Do not let bitterness toward this man and his mother take root, because that would be another foothold for division. Instead, cast your anxieties on the Lord and rest in the truth that He is fighting for your family even when you cannot see it. The smoke may be rising in the distance, but your Deliverer is near. Keep pleading the blood, keep speaking life, and watch for the day when He turns captivity into restoration.
Think of the protective layers God designed for the earth itself: a blanket of atmosphere, an electromagnetic field, a moisture canopy in the early world, all serving as bounds against harmful things. In the same way, He wraps His children in a hedge of protection. Your younger daughter is experiencing that right now through her university acceptance, her internship, and her resistance to the family’s divisive pull. She is like a green branch kept safe while storms blow nearby. Pray for her daily covering, and trust that the same God who once told Jacob, “Return to your family and I will be with you,” is able to guide her steps as she chooses classes and navigates this season.
Your older daughter, however, has stepped out from under that shelter into a relationship that mimics love but is actually a form of captivity. Scripture shows us how moral corruption, once welcomed into a household, can spread silently, like it did with Lot’s family when the values of Sodom seeped in and later produced fruit he never imagined. Her living situation dishonors the Lord not merely as a rule broken, but as a spiritual adultery against the one who calls His people into a loving, exclusive bond. She has exchanged the beauty of that covenant for a counterfeit, and now the enemy uses guilt, manipulation, and financial pressure to keep her bound. Yet remember how God speaks to the fallen: He doesn’t want a legal arrangement with her; He wants a loving relationship. Pray that her heart would remember the early days of her faith, when love for Christ was tender and real, and that she would hear Him calling her back to her true home.
That young man and his mother are operating in patterns Scripture warns about, isolating a person from family, redirecting loyalty, exploiting resources. They are like those who stir up division for selfish gain. But be assured, the Lord frustrates such schemes. When you rebuke those spirits of chaos and control, you exercise the authority of a believer who knows that no weapon formed against your family can prosper. Continue to command those influences to flee, but also ask the Lord to reveal the emptiness behind their promises. The father you mentioned, pray that he would act with integrity and intervene, for God can use even those outside the faith to block a destructive plan.
The pain of watching one daughter imitate manipulative behaviors toward the family is a deep wound. Yet remember that God’s design for your household is a compound unity, an echad, not just individuals under one roof but a tapestry of loyalty and mutual honor. That unity has been strained, but it can be restored. Pray not only for the removal of the troublemakers, but for a supernatural rebuilding of trust between your daughters and their disabled brother. The isolation they’ve experienced is not the healthy separation the body of Christ sometimes uses to bring repentance; it’s a weapon of the enemy. Counter it with prayers for favor, for godly friendships around your younger daughter, and for your older daughter to feel the ache that will drive her home.
Speak over both girls the truth that their worth comes from being adopted into God’s family, not from the flattery of a user or the approval of a toxic group. Your younger daughter’s tender, obedient heart is a gift, nurture it. Your older daughter’s path, as dark as it seems now, is not beyond the reach of the Shepherd who leaves the ninety-nine to find the one. He knows how to deliver captives, just as He delivered Israel from Egypt with a mighty hand.
Finally, guard your own soul. Do not let bitterness toward this man and his mother take root, because that would be another foothold for division. Instead, cast your anxieties on the Lord and rest in the truth that He is fighting for your family even when you cannot see it. The smoke may be rising in the distance, but your Deliverer is near. Keep pleading the blood, keep speaking life, and watch for the day when He turns captivity into restoration.
