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Found 12 articles matching "strength"
Fear of the future grows most readily in the soil of forgetting. Scripture's most repeated anti-fear instruction is not "be brave" but "remember." This guide examines the biblical discipline of structured remembrance — the stones at the Jordan, the feasts of Israel, the practice of zakar — as the specific, practical antidote to fear of the unknown.
God's timing is rarely aligned with human preference, and the gap between the promise and its fulfillment is one of the most consistently demanding dimensions of the life of faith. These seven biblical principles describe what trust in God's timing looks like when the waiting is extended and the reasons are not explained.
Encouragement in Scripture is not optimistic sentiment — it is a theologically grounded strengthening that flows from specific truths about God's character and promises. This article examines what the Bible offers as genuine encouragement in the middle of genuine hardship.
A verse-centered biblical study showing that healing from illness in Scripture belongs to God’s restoring mercy, reaches deeper than the body alone, and points toward final wholeness in Christ.
The fear of the future is often the fear that tomorrow's provision will not arrive. Scripture's consistent answer is not the promise of stocked reserves but the pattern of daily bread — the trust that is rebuilt each morning rather than accumulated once and held. This article examines the manna principle and what it means for the person afraid of what is coming.
Humility in Scripture is not weakness or self-erasure — it is a rightly ordered understanding of who God is and who we are before Him. This article examines seven distinct biblical principles that define what genuine humility looks like in character, conduct, and relationship with God.
A theological explanation showing that Jesus’ command to love enemies is a call to imitate the Father’s generous mercy without approving evil or denying justice.
Hard times do not simply test faith — they reveal what faith is actually made of. This article explores the biblical theology of suffering, endurance, and the specific ways Scripture shows faith being forged rather than merely preserved through difficulty.
A verse-centered biblical study showing that spiritual strength in Scripture is received from God for endurance, obedience, and steadfastness.
A verse-centered biblical study showing that encouragement in Scripture is the strengthening of the heart through God’s word, God’s character, and the ministry of fellow believers.
The biblical words translated "wait" and "patience" carry the sense of active, strenuous exertion toward an expected destination — not passive endurance. These verses examine what Scripture means by waiting on God and what is formed in the person who sustains the practice.
Every command to "be strong and courageous" in Scripture is accompanied by a stated theological ground — a reason given for why the command is possible to obey. These verses examine the consistent biblical pattern of derivative courage and what it means for how strength is found and sustained.
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