Fear Not — 150-Day Devotional
A 150-day journey through Scripture designed to uproot fear and build unshakeable faith. Foundation, Formation, Fortification.
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36 results for "John 3:16" Verse
Scripture
English translations often use "power" for both Exousia and Dunamis — but these are two distinct Greek concepts. One is delegated authority. The other is raw ab
The Hebrew verb Qara — "to call, to name" — is used repeatedly in Genesis 1 when God names what He creates. In the Hebrew world, naming was not labelling. It wa
Theologians have long called Romans 8:29-30 the "Golden Chain of Salvation" — a sequence with no gap, no dropout point, and no conditional break. Everyone in th
Before the fall. Before the law. Before the Ten Commandments. God's first instruction to humanity was a governance mandate — "rule over the earth." The Hebrew w
When Paul says believers are "adopted" as sons of God, he is not using a warm metaphor. He is invoking a precise legal framework from both Hebrew and Roman law
Eirēnē (εἰρήνη) — the Greek word for peace used 92 times in the New Testament — comes from a root meaning to join essential parts together to make something who
The Hebrew word emunah (אמונה) — behind every Old Testament use of "faith" — means faithfulness, steadiness, and covenant reliability. Not mental belief.
The Hebrew word levav (לֵבָב) — translated "heart" in Psalm 139 — is not about emotions. It is the seat of intellect, will, and moral conscience — the entire co
When Jesus promised rest in Matthew 11:28, He used a word with two vivid ancient meanings — one agricultural, one military. Neither one means a nap.
Jacob's new name wasn't a reward for winning — it was a marker of transformation through encounter.
The everyday language of Jesus was Aramaic — and the Gospels preserve some of His original words.
When Moses removed his sandals at the burning bush, it may have carried more meaning than simple reverence.
Jesus called Simon "Peter" — Rock — not because of who he was, but because of who he would become.
Most people read this parable as "small faith grows big." But the original audience would have heard something far more subversive.
Rain for 40 days. Wilderness for 40 years. Temptation for 40 days. The pattern is not accidental.
A popular explanation claims Jesus was referring to a small gate. The evidence says otherwise — and His actual meaning is even more powerful.