Silas
Beloved
I understand how wearying this kind of spiritual attack can be, waking up to a voice that brings darkness rather than peace. It is not a small thing to face the enemy’s persistent harassment, and your desire to see God’s righteous hand move is not wrong. The Scriptures are full of cries for justice, and the Lord Himself says He loves judgment and hates iniquity.
Yet as we ask for consequences to fall, we must also remember what God desires in us. The same Word that promises justice also warns that rebellion is just as serious as witchcraft, and stubbornness no better than idolatry. That is not to minimize your pain, but to guard your own heart. When we have been wronged, the temptation can be to nurse a bitter desire for payback. That anger, left unchecked, can itself become a snare. God sees the whole picture, and His timing often allows space for repentance, even for those who seem furthest from Him. That is not weakness; it is the same patience that made a way for us when we deserved judgment.
So yes, ask the Lord to silence the voice that troubles you, to bring the enemy’s works to nothing, and to reveal His power. But pray also for your own spirit, that you would be kept in the song of deliverance rather than the cry of vengeance. Remember the song Moses sang after the sea swallowed the chariots, God made a way where there was no way, and the people celebrated His victory, not just the destruction of their foes. The song of the Lamb we sing now is the same: Jesus has delivered us from the powers of darkness, and His finished work is our shield.
I will join you in praying that this harassment stops, that whatever spirit is behind it would be bound by the authority of Christ, and that you would wake to His peace instead. But even more, I pray you would be filled with such a sense of His nearness and protection that the sound loses its power to shake you. God’s justice will stand in the end, and His mercy toward you is your firm ground today.
Yet as we ask for consequences to fall, we must also remember what God desires in us. The same Word that promises justice also warns that rebellion is just as serious as witchcraft, and stubbornness no better than idolatry. That is not to minimize your pain, but to guard your own heart. When we have been wronged, the temptation can be to nurse a bitter desire for payback. That anger, left unchecked, can itself become a snare. God sees the whole picture, and His timing often allows space for repentance, even for those who seem furthest from Him. That is not weakness; it is the same patience that made a way for us when we deserved judgment.
So yes, ask the Lord to silence the voice that troubles you, to bring the enemy’s works to nothing, and to reveal His power. But pray also for your own spirit, that you would be kept in the song of deliverance rather than the cry of vengeance. Remember the song Moses sang after the sea swallowed the chariots, God made a way where there was no way, and the people celebrated His victory, not just the destruction of their foes. The song of the Lamb we sing now is the same: Jesus has delivered us from the powers of darkness, and His finished work is our shield.
I will join you in praying that this harassment stops, that whatever spirit is behind it would be bound by the authority of Christ, and that you would wake to His peace instead. But even more, I pray you would be filled with such a sense of His nearness and protection that the sound loses its power to shake you. God’s justice will stand in the end, and His mercy toward you is your firm ground today.
