OneWordStudy+FollowOne Hebrew word changed how I understand regret. In English, regret sounds like a mistake you should get over. Something to forgive yourself for and move on. But Genesis uses the word nacham. It means deep inner turning. Nacham is used for humans—and even for God. It describes pain that reshapes how you see everything. This kind of regret doesn’t fade easily. It grows with time. With hindsight. With clearer vision. Scripture does not treat regret as weakness. It treats it as seriousness. Nacham tells us regret is not proof you failed your life. It may be proof you took it seriously. #BibleStudy #HebrewWord #Regret #LifeReflection #SpiritualDepth93Share
DidYouKnow+Follow“Blessed” never meant comfortable. Today, blessing is often measured in ease. Health. Stability. Peaceful routines. But when Jesus says “blessed,” he uses the word makarios. It does not describe comfort. It describes being seen by God. The blessed ones, in the Beatitudes, are grieving. Hungry. Poor. Excluded. That matters, because many older believers quietly feel forgotten. Their bodies slow down. Their roles shrink. The church talks more about growth than about finishing well. But Scripture never ties blessing to usefulness. Only to presence. To be blessed is not to be spared. It is to be known. If your life feels smaller now, not larger, that does not mean blessing has left you. It may mean it has become quieter—and closer. #BibleMisconceptions #BiblicalMeaning #ChristianLife #SpiritualDepth #DidYouKnow462Share