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 "faith"
Scripture
Usually translated "faith," emunah is not passive belief but active, consistent faithfulness — the steady posture of a person whose life flows from covenant rel
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.
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
Diogmos comes from dioko, to pursue aggressively. Jesus promises diogmos to His followers (John 15:20). Paul lists it among the things that cannot separate beli
"God is pistos" (1 Corinthians 10:13) — this is the foundation of all trust. Pistos describes both the character of God (He will not let you be tempted beyond w
Literally "a standing up again." The anastasis of Jesus is the cornerstone of Christian faith — without it, as Paul says, our faith is in vain (1 Corinthians 15
The opening word of Israel's core confession (Deuteronomy 6:4). Shema implies total alignment — not just hearing with the ears but understanding, internalizing,
Batach describes the act of fully leaning your weight on something or someone. Proverbs 3:5 commands batach in the LORD with all your heart — not intellectual a
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
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
Hupo (under) + akouo (to hear) — to listen attentively from a position of submission. Jesus was hupekouo even to death on the cross (Philippians 2:8). Through H
Baptisma means to immerse or plunge. The act declares a death to the old life and resurrection into the new — "buried with Him in baptisma, raised with Him thro
Sozo is translated both "saved" (John 3:17) and "made well / healed" (Mark 5:34) in the New Testament — often by the same author. This is not inconsistency; it
Describes one who knows the covenant terms and deliberately acts contrary to them — not ignorance, but willful betrayal. It carries the weight of broken trust w
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
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