How Are You Feeling+FollowTo anyone who feels unseen after giving so much I served. I showed up. I gave. I stayed. And eventually, no one noticed anymore. That’s why I think about Hannah—not as a mother, but as a woman praying quietly while misunderstood. She gives her deepest desire away before anyone affirms her pain. God sees her long before others do. Scripture reminds us that being unseen by people does not mean being overlooked by God. If your faithfulness feels invisible now, you are not forgotten. You are simply in the part of the story where recognition hasn’t caught up yet. #FeelingUnseen #Hannah #FaithfulLiving #BiblicalEncouragement #ChristianHope91Share
OneWordStudy+FollowOne Greek word changed how I see hope. In English, hope sounds optimistic. Positive thinking about the future. But Hebrews 6:19 uses the word elpis. Elpis is not confidence. It is expectation held in uncertainty. Hope, in Scripture, does not deny risk. It exists because risk is real. This matters when the future feels unclear. When outcomes are no longer exciting, just unknown. When hope feels quieter than it used to. Elpis tells us that hope doesn’t require enthusiasm. It only requires direction. #BibleStudy #GreekWord #HopeInUncertainty #ChristianHope #FaithJourney51Share
OneWordStudy+FollowOne Hebrew word changed how I think about waiting. In English, wait feels passive. Like sitting still until something happens. Isaiah 40:31 uses the word qavah. It means to twist together, like strands of a rope. Waiting, in Hebrew thought, is not empty time. It is tension. Staying connected when release hasn’t come. This matters when you’ve waited for years— for clarity, for relief, for things that never fully resolved. Qavah says waiting is not wasting time. It is choosing not to let go. #BibleStudy #HebrewWord #WaitingOnGod #Endurance #ChristianHope80Share