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OneWordStudy

One Greek word changed how I see doubt.

In English, doubt often sounds like failure. As if real faith should be clean, certain, and uninterrupted. In Mark 9:24, the father says, “I believe; help my unbelief.” The Greek word translated as unbelief is apistia. Apistia does not mean rebellion. It means belief that cannot fully stand on its own yet. Faith with a weak leg. Trust that still needs support. This kind of doubt is common among long-time believers. You believe—but you’ve buried people. You believe—but prayers didn’t change certain outcomes. You believe—but answers came slower than expected. Jesus doesn’t correct this man. He responds to him. Scripture shows us that faith and doubt are not always opposites. Sometimes, they are holding the same sentence together. #BibleStudy #GreekWord #DoubtAndFaith #SpiritualHonesty #ChristianLife

One Greek word changed how I see doubt.
OneWordStudy

One Hebrew word changed how I understand loneliness.

In English, alone sounds simple. It means no one is around. No company. No conversation. But in Psalm 25:16, David says, “Turn to me and be gracious to me, for I am lonely and afflicted.” The Hebrew word there is yachid. Yachid doesn’t just mean being by yourself. It means being the only one left. The one no longer chosen. The one whose place feels quietly removed. This kind of loneliness often shows up later in life. When friends pass away, when children are busy with lives that don’t include you as much, when your voice is still here, but fewer people ask for it. David doesn’t hide that feeling. He names it. And Scripture keeps it. Loneliness, in the Bible, is not treated as weakness. It’s treated as a condition God is willing to sit with. If you feel unseen, not just alone, Yachid says: God is not offended by that word. He wrote it down. #BibleStudy #HebrewWord #Loneliness #FaithAndAging #ChristianComfort

One Hebrew word changed how I understand loneliness.
OneWordStudy

One Hebrew word changed how I think about strength.

In English, the word strength usually means power. Energy. The ability to keep going. Isaiah 40:31 says those who “wait for the Lord shall renew their strength.” Most of us hear that as: try harder, then God will recharge you. But the Hebrew word here is koach. Koach doesn’t just mean raw power. It means capacity. The ability to carry a weight. The strength to endure what doesn’t end quickly. In other words, this verse is not promising that you’ll suddenly feel energized. It’s saying something quieter—and much more honest. God doesn’t always remove the burden. Sometimes He increases the capacity of the one carrying it. That matters if you’re older. Because many of you aren’t asking for excitement anymore. You’re asking for enough strength to get through another year that looks a lot like the last one. If your body feels slower. If your faith feels heavier. If life hasn’t gotten easier, just longer. Koach says this: Your tiredness is not a sign that God failed you. It may be evidence that you’ve been carrying something real for a very long time. Renewed strength doesn’t always feel like flying. Sometimes it feels like being able to stand again tomorrow. And that still counts. #BibleStudy #HebrewWord #SpiritualFatigue #Endurance #FaithAndAging #ChristianComfort

One Hebrew word changed how I think about strength.
LLama Loo

✨ Prophecy Fulfilled: The Life of Yeshua (Jesus) – Episode 53B “Do Not Let Your Hearts Be Troubled” The room still carried the weight of betrayal. Judas had slipped into the night, and the disciples sat shaken, confused, unsure of what was coming next. They didn’t yet grasp that the Passover table they had just shared was the doorway to a cosmic rescue. Yeshua could feel their fear— He always could. Their faces were tight with questions, their hearts trembling under the weight of uncertainty. So the Messiah who washes feet… the Messiah about to carry the sins of the world… leaned toward His friends and spoke words meant to steady every soul who would ever follow Him. ⸻ 🌿 “Let Not Your Hearts Be Troubled” His voice was gentle, but sure. “Do not let your hearts be troubled. You believe in God — believe also in Me.” Their world was about to shake. The One they thought would reign from Jerusalem was about to be handed over to executioners. Yet Yeshua was not trying to soothe them with empty comfort. He was re-anchoring them to truth. ⸻ 🏛️ The Father’s House He continued: “In My Father’s house are many rooms. If it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you.” Imagine hearing this from the One who spoke galaxies into existence. He wasn’t leaving them. He was going ahead of them. He wasn’t abandoning the world. He was reclaiming it. He wasn’t dying as a victim. He was stepping into victory. And then He gave a promise that still electrifies the Church today: “I will come again and take you to Myself— that where I am, you may be also.” The eternal heartbeat of the Gospel is right there: He wants us with Him. ⸻ ❓ Thomas Speaks for All of Us Thomas, always blunt, always earnest, said: “Lord, we don’t know where You are going. How can we know the way?” And Yeshua answered with a declaration that split history in half: ✝️ CONTINUED IN COMMENTS ⬇️⬇️⬇️ #Bible #God #Jesus #BibleStudy

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