Silas
Beloved
The cry of your heart comes through so clearly, and I am praying with you right now. You have laid hold of the very truth that opens the door to all God can do: with Him nothing is impossible. Where human resources end, His power begins.
You asked for a permanent resurrection of your heart, soul, life, faith, hope, and joy. That is exactly the kind of deep work God loves to do. He is not interested in surface repairs. Outward changes can be made for a time, but they fade unless the heart itself is renewed. The Lord said, “Rend your heart and not your garments.” He wants to change you from the inside out. A heart made whole by His Spirit no longer swings wildly between devotion and defeat, or between fleshly desires and a longing for God. Instead, it becomes fixed, not because you muster enough willpower, but because His life takes root in you. That is the resurrection you are asking for: a new heart that beats with His purposes.
This new life is not just a repaired version of the old one. When you are born again by faith in Jesus Christ, your very center is reordered. The old life was dominated by the body’s demands, pulled down toward the animal plane. The new life is spiritual, your spirit alive to God, in union with His Spirit. That is the quality of life Scripture calls eternal life, and it is found only in the Son. Jesus said, “He who has the Son has life.” It is a life of righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit. So your request for restored joy and hope is not a separate thing; it flows from receiving His life afresh.
That hope is no fragile wish. It is a living hope, anchored in the fact that Jesus rose from the dead. If He did not rise, our hope would be empty. But He did rise, and because He lives, every promise of restoration is secure. The same God who cannot lie has promised eternal life before the world began. Your faith and hope can rest there, not on shifting feelings or circumstances.
Faith like that will show itself. True faith is active; it produces a changed life. You will not be saved by your changed actions, salvation is by faith in Christ alone, but a genuine faith will be demonstrated in works of righteousness. As you trust Him, He will empower you to walk in newness. Your heart’s orientation toward Him, even when you stumble, is what He honors. Like David, you can pray, “Unite my heart to fear Your name,” and He will answer.
So I join you in asking the heavenly Father to resurrect and permanently restore everything you named. He is able. Cast your burden on Him, for He cares for you. Keep looking to Jesus, who is your peace with God, your living hope, and the source of a joy that cannot be taken.
You asked for a permanent resurrection of your heart, soul, life, faith, hope, and joy. That is exactly the kind of deep work God loves to do. He is not interested in surface repairs. Outward changes can be made for a time, but they fade unless the heart itself is renewed. The Lord said, “Rend your heart and not your garments.” He wants to change you from the inside out. A heart made whole by His Spirit no longer swings wildly between devotion and defeat, or between fleshly desires and a longing for God. Instead, it becomes fixed, not because you muster enough willpower, but because His life takes root in you. That is the resurrection you are asking for: a new heart that beats with His purposes.
This new life is not just a repaired version of the old one. When you are born again by faith in Jesus Christ, your very center is reordered. The old life was dominated by the body’s demands, pulled down toward the animal plane. The new life is spiritual, your spirit alive to God, in union with His Spirit. That is the quality of life Scripture calls eternal life, and it is found only in the Son. Jesus said, “He who has the Son has life.” It is a life of righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit. So your request for restored joy and hope is not a separate thing; it flows from receiving His life afresh.
That hope is no fragile wish. It is a living hope, anchored in the fact that Jesus rose from the dead. If He did not rise, our hope would be empty. But He did rise, and because He lives, every promise of restoration is secure. The same God who cannot lie has promised eternal life before the world began. Your faith and hope can rest there, not on shifting feelings or circumstances.
Faith like that will show itself. True faith is active; it produces a changed life. You will not be saved by your changed actions, salvation is by faith in Christ alone, but a genuine faith will be demonstrated in works of righteousness. As you trust Him, He will empower you to walk in newness. Your heart’s orientation toward Him, even when you stumble, is what He honors. Like David, you can pray, “Unite my heart to fear Your name,” and He will answer.
So I join you in asking the heavenly Father to resurrect and permanently restore everything you named. He is able. Cast your burden on Him, for He cares for you. Keep looking to Jesus, who is your peace with God, your living hope, and the source of a joy that cannot be taken.
