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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220 results for "prayer"
Scripture
God did not promise a storm-free life. He promised a peace that works in the middle of the storm.
God did not just promise you peace. He put it in writing — in blood.
You don't manufacture peace. You cultivate the One who grows it inside you.
What the prophets saw from a distance, you are living in right now.
You cannot find what you're looking for in a place where it doesn't exist.
Every time an apostle wrote "Grace and peace," they were releasing a blessing over your life — and that includes you, right now.
Jesus didn't tell the storm to calm down so you could have peace. He gave you peace so you could stand in the storm.
You are not just a church member. You are a citizen of a Kingdom where peace is the law of the land.
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 verbal root behind shalom. When Jesus cried "It is finished" (tetelestai), the Hebrew concept is shalam — full, covenantal settlement of every debt, nothing
Usually translated "faith," emunah is not passive belief but active, consistent faithfulness — the steady posture of a person whose life flows from covenant rel
The defining characteristic of God toward His covenant people — an unbreakable loyalty that does not depend on the worthiness of its recipient. Often translated
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
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
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,
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