A Prayer for Single Parents Carrying More Than One Person Was Designed to Carry
Single parenting is a sustained reality — the daily accumulation of decisions, provision, presence, and emotional support that was designed to be shared between two people, now carried by one. If you are tired, this is not a character flaw. This is for you.
What single parenting actually costs
Single parenting costs in multiple dimensions that compound each other:
- Time: Every hour must be stretched between work, children, household management, emotional labor, and attempts to maintain your own personhood
- Presence: You are the one your children come to with every fear, question, need, and conflict. There is no one to tag when you are depleted. There is no one to handle bedtime while you rest.
- Financial pressure: One income, one set of hands, one set of decisions bearing the weight of what was structured for two
- Underlying grief: Whether the single parenting arrived through divorce, death, or a relationship that never became what it was supposed to be — that grief rarely gets the sustained attention it needs
The demand does not adjust itself to your capacity. And the grief underneath all of it is real, even when there is always a child who needs something before that grief has been fully processed.
What the Bible says about God’s care for single parents and their children
God is specifically attentive to single-parent families. His care is not generic. It is particular.
- Psalm 68:5: God is “a father to the fatherless, a defender of widows” — naming both the children without a father’s consistent presence and the parent carrying the family alone.
- Genesis 21: Hagar, a single parent, ran out of water in the desert and wept. God heard the boy crying. He opened her eyes to a well. He was present in the moment when she had nothing left.
- Isaiah 40:11: God “gathers the lambs in his arms and carries them close to his heart; he gently leads those that have young.” There is a specific gentleness in how God leads people responsible for children.
A prayer for single parents when the weight feels unmanageable
What to do with the guilt
Single parenting produces a particular kind of guilt — the persistent sense that you are not enough, that your children are missing something essential, that the configuration of your family is a damage to be managed. That guilt is rarely productive and is often factually incorrect, but it is remarkably consistent and remarkably loud.
A few honest things worth saying about it:
- Children raised by one loving, faithful, present parent are not automatically disadvantaged. What children need most is love, safety, consistency, and someone who stays. Single parents provide all of those things — often at enormous personal cost and with remarkable dedication.
- The gap between what your children have and what you wish they had is real. But the presence of a gap is not evidence of your failure. It is evidence of a difficult situation that you are navigating faithfully.
- God is not holding the imperfections of your family configuration against your children. He is not absent from their lives because their family looks different from the ideal. He specifically positioned himself as present and providing for exactly this kind of family.
When you need a community that will carry some of this
Single parenting was never meant to be done in total isolation. The community of faith, at its best, is part of how God provides the support that the structure of single parenting leaves missing — other adults in your children’s lives, practical help, prayer, and the sense that you are not carrying this entirely alone.
If you need people who will pray over the specific demands of what you carry daily, you can bring the weight of this to people who will hold it before God with you. And if you need to be reminded that God provides for single parents in specific and practical ways, the stories of what He has done for people carrying more than one person was designed to carry are real and worth reading.
Take one real step today
Give yourself credit for what you are doing — not as self-congratulation, but as honest acknowledgment:
- Acknowledge that you are doing something hard, faithfully, every day — and that matters
- Bring the full weight to God honestly — the tiredness, the guilt, the gaps, the gratitude for the children you love
- Let one person know you need support or prayer
- Rest without guilt, knowing God is gentle with those who have young
You do not have to do this alone
If the weight of single parenting feels unmanageable, do not isolate with it. Post your request, keep it simple, and let a praying community bring your burden before God with you.