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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237 results for "identity in Christ"
Scripture
Unlike the English word "hope" which carries uncertainty, elpis in the Greek New Testament is a confident, assured expectation of something not yet seen. It is
Angelos means "sent one" — the same word used for heavenly beings and human messengers. Angels serve as God's agents throughout Scripture: protecting, announcin
Jesus offers living hudor that becomes a spring of water welling up to eternal life (John 4:14). Hudor is used for baptism, for the Spirit's work, and for the r
Thlipsis literally means pressure applied to squeeze something. Jesus promises thlipsis in the world — but adds "take courage; I have overcome the world" (John
Palin (again) + genesis (birth, beginning). Titus 3:5 speaks of the washing of palingenesia. John 3:3 — Jesus tells Nicodemus he must be born anothen (again, fr
The primary NT word for sin, from a root meaning to miss a target. John 1:29 — "Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the hamartia of the world." Jesus did not
Eidolon (image) + latreia (worship/service). Idolatry is not only bowing to statues; Paul identifies covetousness as eidololatria (Colossians 3:5). Anything tha
The root of the English words "therapy," "therapist," and "therapeutic." In the Gospels, therapeuo describes Jesus going about healing all kinds of sickness (Ma
The noun form derived from the verb rapha (H7495). Refuah describes healing not as a one-time event but as a destination — the state of restoration God intends.
God did not just promise you peace. He put it in writing — in blood.
You cannot find what you're looking for in a place where it doesn't exist.
When the weight of life presses in, the Word of God offers not just comfort — but a covenant reality of peace that surpasses understanding.
Both dimensions of the Holy Spirit's presence are real, biblical, and available — and understanding the difference changes everything.
The Bible is the most important book you will ever read. It was written so that ordinary people could understand extraordinary truth.
Emotional trading is not just financially dangerous — it is spiritually inconsistent. Discipline is a fruit of the Spirit applied to markets.
Not every market activity is equal in God's eyes. Understanding the difference protects your finances and your conscience.
The Hebrew behind Psalm 139:14 carries a weight of awe, intentionality, and sacred craftsmanship — and it is spoken about you.
Paul's deepest use of ploutos is not material: "the riches of His glory," "the unsearchable riches of Christ" (Ephesians 3:8). Jesus became poor so that through
Jesus called Simon "Peter" — Rock — not because of who he was, but because of who he would become.
Tohu va-bohu — the ancient Hebrew phrase for formlessness and void — appears three times in Scripture. Each time it describes life without God's presence: struc