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 "Holy Spirit"
Scripture
The Hebrew word nephesh — translated "soul" — does not describe a spiritual compartment inside a person. It describes the whole person.
Shalom (שָׁלוֹם) means completeness, wholeness, and total flourishing — spirit, soul, and body. It is not the silence between conflicts. It is the presence of e
Ga'al (גָּאַל) is the Hebrew word for kinsman-redeemer — a family member legally obligated to restore what a relative lost. This is the precise legal role Jesus
Casting lots (Goral) in Scripture was not a game of chance. It was a formal act of submission to divine sovereignty — the community's way of saying the outcome
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
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 word "guard" in Philippians 4:7 — in the original Greek — is phroureo (φρουρέω): a military term for posting armed soldiers at a gate. This is not a feeling
The Hebrew phrase tohu va-bohu appears exactly three times in Scripture — always in contexts of void, desolation, or divine judgment. Each occurrence points to
The Hebrew word shalom appears more than 230 times in Scripture — but most translations flatten it to "peace." The real meaning is far richer: wholeness, comple
Sozo (σῴζω) — Strong's G4982 — is translated "saved" in John 3:17 and "healed" in Mark 5:34. It is the same word. In God's covenant design, salvation and physic
The Hebrew word translated "griefs" in Isaiah 53:4 is choli (חֹלִי) — meaning illness, sickness, and disease. This was not a metaphor for emotional burden. Jesu
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
A popular explanation claims Jesus was referring to a small gate. The evidence says otherwise — and His actual meaning is even more powerful.
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 lekavot — translated "hope" — comes from a root meaning to twist strands together like rope. In other words, hope is not passive. It is structur
Rofeh (רוֹפֵא) — the Hebrew word for physician — comes from the same verbal root as rapha (רָפָא), the word behind Jehovah-Rapha. God was the original Healer, a
In Exodus 15, immediately after the crossing of the Red Sea, God's first self-disclosure is a healing covenant. Before the Law. Before Sinai. Before the taberna
The Greek word therapeuo (θεραπεύω) — from which English gets "therapy," "therapist," and "therapeutic" — appears throughout the Gospels to describe Jesus's hea
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