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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96 results for "identity in Christ"
Scripture
The verbal root behind shalom. When Jesus cried "It is finished" (tetelestai), the Hebrew concept is shalam — full, covenantal settlement of every debt, nothing
You do not have a nephesh; you ARE a nephesh. It describes the totality of a living being — will, emotion, appetite, breath — not a compartment separate from th
The core word behind biblical repentance — not merely feeling sorry, but physically turning around and moving back toward God. It captures the relational dimens
The opening word of Israel's core confession (Deuteronomy 6:4). Shema implies total alignment — not just hearing with the ears but understanding, internalizing,
Emet carries the sense of that which is firm, reliable, and can be trusted — not just factual accuracy but covenantal faithfulness. God's truth is something you
The Greek equivalent of shalom — the peace of God that surpasses understanding (Philippians 4:7). Not the absence of trouble but a settled inner wholeness in th
More than intellectual assent — pistis is trust that leads to action, confidence in a person's reliability. The faith that saves is the kind that moves you.
Broader than rescue from hell — soteria encompasses healing, deliverance, preservation, and total restoration of the whole person. Jesus is the Soter (Savior) w
Used in Matthew 11:28 — "I will give you rest (anapauō)." Far deeper than a nap: agriculturally, letting a field lie fallow to restore fertility; militarily, tr
The verbal root behind Jehovah-Rapha, "the LORD who heals." In Exodus 15:26 God declares Himself the healer of His people — spirit, soul, and body. Healing is n
When God forgives, He nasas — He lifts the weight of iniquity and carries it away. The same word describes the scapegoat carrying Israel's sins into the wildern
Tsalach describes movement that overcomes resistance — Joshua's success was tsalach because the LORD was with him (Joshua 1:8). It is the root behind "Tsalach"
The word proclaimed in the Year of Jubilee — "Proclaim liberty (deror) throughout the land" (Leviticus 25:10). Jesus quotes Isaiah 61:1 at the launch of His min
The primary Hebrew word for worship is a physical act — bowing down, prostrating oneself before a greater authority. True shachah is the body expressing what th
Tsarah describes the experience of being squeezed into a tight, agonizing place. Psalm 46:1 declares God to be "a very present help in tsarah." The Hebrew word
In the ancient world an almanah was economically and socially vulnerable. God calls Himself the defender of the almanah (Psalm 68:5). Scripture consistently pla
The root behind lekavot — the Hebrew word for hope. Qavah carries the image of rope-making: individual strands twisted together to form something far stronger t
The primary Greek word for divine healing in the Gospels and Acts. Jesus iaomai the sick, the lame, the blind. In 1 Peter 2:24 — "by whose stripes you were heal
From hupo (under) + meno (remain) — to remain steadfastly under a heavy load rather than escape it. Hupomone is not passive resignation but active, courageous e
"I will not leave you as orphanos" (John 14:18) — Jesus's promise before the cross. The Spirit's coming is the fulfillment: those who were fatherless now have t