Fear Not — 150-Day Devotional
A 150-day journey through Scripture designed to uproot fear and build unshakeable faith. Foundation, Formation, Fortification.
✦ KINGDOM SEARCH
237 results for "identity in Christ"
Scripture
Kingdom finance is the management of material resources according to biblical principles — understanding that everything belongs to God, that wealth is a tool f
The Kingdom of God is the sovereign rule and reign of God — present, active, and advancing wherever King Jesus is acknowledged and obeyed. It is not a future lo
"Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is eleutheria" (2 Corinthians 3:17). Christ has set believers free — not to live for the flesh, but for a life of love a
Katallage describes the exchange from enmity to peace. God does not need to be reconciled — we do. Paul declares that God was in Christ katalassonting the world
Eros, mania, and ludus are the only love-types most people are taught. Scripture presents at least eight — and missing the other five is one of the primary reas
The Hebrew word Navi (נָבִיא) — translated "prophet" — does not primarily mean predictor. It means one through whom God speaks. The prophet does not originate t
Most people think Mazal Tov means "congratulations" or "good luck." The Hebrew underneath those two words carries a theological declaration that has nothing to
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 word boged doesn't just mean "unfaithful" — it describes a traitor who knows the terms of a covenant and acts against them anyway.
A popular explanation claims Jesus was referring to a small gate. The evidence says otherwise — and His actual meaning is even more powerful.
Far richer than the absence of conflict — shalom describes a state of total completeness where every part of life is whole, full, and flourishing.
The defining characteristic of God toward His covenant people — an unbreakable loyalty that does not depend on the worthiness of its recipient. Often translated
In Hebrew thought the levav is not primarily the seat of emotions but of decision-making and moral character — the command center of the whole person.
A legal term describing the obligation of a family member to restore what a relative has lost — property, freedom, or life. Jesus is the ultimate Go'el who rede
Yada is the deepest form of knowing — not intellectual information but intimate, experiential knowledge. The same word used for the covenant union between husba
"Be still and know that I am God" (Psalm 46:10) — the word "still" is raphah: let go, stop fighting, release control. It is the posture God calls us into before
Used for both the breath of God and the Spirit of God. The same word describes the wind, the human spirit, and the Holy Spirit — the animating, life-giving brea
Literally "heaviness" or "weightiness" — kabod describes the substantial, weighty presence of God. When His glory fills the temple, it is a tangible, overwhelmi
The root of "Hallelujah" (Praise Yah). Halal implies exuberant, demonstrative praise — shining a light on someone, boasting about their excellences, celebrating
In Hebrew thought, the dabar is not merely information — it carries the power of the one who speaks it. God's dabar does not return void; it accomplishes what H