6/5/26

Friendship with God as taught in the Psalms

Whom have I in heaven but you? And earth has nothing I desire besides you. My flesh and my heart may fail, but God is the strength of my heart and my portion (choice) forever. Psalm 73:25–26

I like to listen to sermons and walk during lunch hour and thought this was an incredible sermon that explains Christianity in terms everyone can understand. He argues that while modern secular culture often seeks a vague sense of 'spirituality' without the demands of religion, the Bible offers a profound intimacy with God that actually embraces truth, discipleship, and sacrifice. The full sermon is worth a listen here:  Let the Psalms Teach You to Pray

As I was listening I came to walk with my friend Nitin and we had a wonderful visit. Later in the day I had a Psalm 1 experience walking back to my after a work event (listening to the Gospel shaped life) preparing for Alpha Prayer with other friends and family. 

Modern life is full of spirituality. Bookstores overflow with it. Social media is saturated with it. People light candles, practice mindfulness, curate aesthetics of transcendence, all while keeping God at arm's length. We want the feeling of connection without the demands of relationship.

The Bible refuses that bargain. What Scripture offers isn't a vague spiritual atmosphere. It's a friendship — specific, costly, and more intimate than anything we could engineer on our own.

Tim Keller argues this is exactly what the Psalms are about. And to understand why that friendship is even possible, we have to start where most people don't: with God's own nature.


Why friendship with God is possible at all

The ancient philosopher Aristotle said friendship requires similarity. You can't be friends with someone too far above you. The gap is too wide. By that logic, friendship between a human being and the God of the universe is simply impossible.

But Keller points out that the Bible changes the equation three ways.

  • First, the Trinity. God doesn't exist in isolation. He exists eternally as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit — a triune relationship of love (1 John 4:8; John 17:24). Friendship isn't foreign to God's nature. It's fundamental to it. Before creation, before time, God was already a community of love.
  • Second, the image of God. Because we're made in the image of a relational God (Gen 1:26–27), our hunger for deep connection isn't a flaw or a weakness. It's a clue. The longing itself — that relentless ache described in Psalm 42 ("As the deer pants for streams of water, so my soul pants for you, my God") — points us toward the One we were made for.
  • Third, redemption. Through the Incarnation and the Atonement, God didn't just invite us to friendship from a safe distance. He entered our suffering. He became vulnerable. He laid down his life (John 15:13; Phil 2:6–8; Heb 4:15). The history of salvation isn't just a legal transaction — it's a cosmic act of friendship.

The gap Aristotle worried about? Jesus crossed it. That's the whole point.


Five ways to deepen the friendship

Knowing friendship with God is possible is one thing. Cultivating it is another. Keller draws from the Psalms to outline five practices that grow this relationship.

1. Obedience

  • Jesus is direct: "You are my friends if you do what I command" (John 15:14). That sounds transactional at first — like friendship is something you earn. But Keller flips it. Obedience isn't how you qualify for friendship; it's how friendship actually works.
  • When you genuinely love someone, you take their reality seriously. You don't try to reshape them into what's convenient for you. Obedience is what it looks like to honor who God actually is, rather than who we'd prefer him to be. It's the path to becoming more like him — and Psalm 119:2 calls that the blessed life. (Blessed are those who keep his statutes, and seek him with all their heart)

2. Justification by faith alone

  • Here's where a lot of religious effort quietly breaks down. Without a firm grasp of grace, our relationship with God curdles into something transactional. We start performing. We keep score. We treat God like an employer whose approval we're constantly trying to secure.
  • But Keller argues that this is the opposite of friendship. A friend doesn't relate to you through a ledger. Friendship is a response to love already given — not a bid to earn it (Eph 2:8–9; Rom 5:1). Psalm 32 begins with the cry of someone who has been forgiven: "Blessed is the one whose transgressions are forgiven." That's not a person who worked their way to blessing. It's someone who received it.
  • Until we understand justification, our devotional life will always be tinged with anxiety. Grace alone makes friendship possible.

3. Dynamic two-way communication

  • A friendship without real conversation isn't much of a friendship. For Keller, this means prayer must be rooted in Scripture — not just our feelings, impressions, or internal monologue.
  • We read the Bible to hear God's voice (Heb 3:15). We let the Word shape and expose us (Heb 4:12). Then we respond — honestly, specifically, from the gut, the way the Psalms do (Ps 62:8). This is what makes prayer different from talking to yourself. Psalm 19 calls the Word of God soul-reviving (v. 7–8). Hebrews 4:12 calls it alive and active. When Scripture is the soil prayer grows in, the conversation has two real participants.

4. Seeking his face

  • This one is easy to skip over in more theologically-careful circles. But Keller doesn't skip it. He draws on Psalm 27:4 — David's famous declaration that the one thing he desires is to dwell in the house of the Lord and gaze upon his beauty — and Psalm 34:8 — "Taste and see that the Lord is good."
  • There's an experiential dimension to friendship with God. Not just intellectual assent, not just moral compliance, but an actual savoring of his presence. Keller calls this "seeking his face" — using the Word not just as information but as a guide for our hearts to move toward what is beautiful and good. Psalm 63 captures it: "My soul thirsts for you... in a dry and parched land." Not performing religion. Wanting God himself.

5. Meditating on the cross

  • The fifth practice is the one that sustains all the others. Keller calls Jesus's death the ultimate act of friendship — a demonstration of what he means by "candor and constancy." Jesus remained vulnerable to us, all the way to the end, even when we turned away. Psalm 22 — the psalm Jesus quotes from the cross — moves from "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?" to confident praise. Abandonment endured for friendship's sake.
  • Galatians 2:20 puts it in personal terms: "He loved me and gave himself for me." Romans 5:8 makes it even starker: "While we were still sinners, Christ died for us." This isn't the story of a God who waited until we got our act together. It's the story of a friend who moved toward us at the moment we had the least to offer.
  • Regular reflection on the cross keeps us from drifting back into the transactional posture. It anchors us in love that cost something.


The friend we've always been looking for

Keller ends the sermon with an observation that lands hard: every human being is searching for an ultimate friend. Someone whose knowledge of you is complete — who knows everything and loves anyway. Someone whose acceptance finally, definitively, answers the question of whether you matter.

We look for that person in romance, in achievement, in community, in online validation. None of it satisfies. Not for long.

John 15:15 records the moment Jesus told his disciples they were no longer servants but friends. And Psalm 73:25–26 — one of the most honest verses in the Psalter — captures what it looks like when someone finally finds that friend: "Whom have I in heaven but you? And earth has nothing I desire besides you. My flesh and my heart may fail, but God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever."

That's not religion as duty. That's someone who found what they were looking for.


The friendship is possible. The path is real. And the One at the other end already moved toward you first.

...this is what was spoken by the prophet Joel:

“‘In the last days, God says,

    I will pour out my Spirit on all people.

Your sons and daughters will prophesy,

    your young men will see visions,

    your old men will dream dreams.

Even on my servants, both men and women,

    I will pour out my Spirit in those days,

    and they will prophesy.

I will show wonders in the heavens above

    and signs on the earth below,

    blood and fire and billows of smoke.

The sun will be turned to darkness

    and the moon to blood

    before the coming of the great and glorious day of the Lord. (Acts 2:16-21)

And everyone who calls

    on the name of the Lord will be saved.

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6/1/26

To be a bugler, using a lifeless instrument, to strengthen the whole church (Romans 10:14-17, 1 Cor 14:6-12)

 A dream more than 10 years old is giving birth. From Money, the power of God's word and dreams, I was reminded that some dreams matter and know when they occur. 

Meditating on 1 Cor 12-14, Ephesians 4, I'm seeing how beginning with the end in mind is better than just doing something. There is a thread I'm seeing throughout the scriptures:

But how can people call for help if they don’t know who to trust? And how can they know who to trust if they haven’t heard of the One who can be trusted? And how can they hear if nobody tells them? And how is anyone going to tell them, unless someone is sent to do it? That’s why Scripture exclaims, A sight to take your breath away! Grand processions of people telling all the good things of God! But not everybody is ready for this, ready to see and hear and act. Isaiah asked what we all ask at one time or another: “Does anyone care, God? Is anyone listening and believing a word of it?” The point is: Before you trust, you have to listen. But unless Christ’s Word is preached, there’s nothing to listen to. Romans 10:14-17 MSG (The Message)

Knowing if someone has not heard the Bible involves identifying a lack of familiarity with core biblical figures, stories, and teachings, often stemming from a lack of exposure to preaching or scripture. According to Romans 10:14, faith comes by hearing the gospel, meaning those who have not heard will not have believed or know the message of salvation, Romans 10:14-17

Dear brothers and sisters, if I should come to you speaking in an unknown language, how would that help you? But if I bring you a revelation or some special knowledge or prophecy or teaching, that will be helpful. Even lifeless instruments like the flute or the harp must play the notes clearly, or no one will recognize the melody. And if the bugler doesn’t sound a clear call, how will the soldiers know they are being called to battle?

It’s the same for you. If you speak to people in words they don’t understand, how will they know what you are saying? You might as well be talking into empty space.

There are many different languages in the world, and every language has meaning. But if I don’t understand a language, I will be a foreigner to someone who speaks it, and the one who speaks it will be a foreigner to me. And the same is true for you. Since you are so eager to have the special abilities the Spirit gives, seek those that will strengthen the whole church. 

So anyone who speaks in tongues should pray also for the ability to interpret what has been said. - 1 Cor 14:6-13

Here are ways to identify if someone has not heard the Bible:

  • Lack of Knowledge: They may be unfamiliar with key figures like Jesus Christ, Moses, or common bible stories.
  • Absence of Faith/Preaching: The primary marker is that they have not had the message of the Gospel preached or explained to them
  • Rhetorical Markers: As described in Romans 10:14-17, someone who has not heard is generally someone to whom no one has been sent to preach.
  • Cultural Context: In some cases, people may have heard snippets of stories but do not understand their origin or significance. 

While natural revelation (nature/conscience) exists, it is distinct from hearing the specific message of Christ.

https://www.bsfinternational.org/supporting-the-church/


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5/30/26

The Seven Eyes of the LORD: Omniscient Witness Over Creation (Zechariah 4:10, Rev 4:5,5:6)

 Zechariah 4:10 — The Seven Eyes

In the vision of the golden lampstand, the angel asks Zechariah, "Who has despised the day of small things? For these seven rejoice to see the plumb line in the hand of Zerubbabel — they are the eyes of the LORD which range to and fro throughout the whole earth."

The seven lamps on the lampstand are the seven eyes. They are not merely watching — they are rejoicing as God's purposes unfold in what looks like insignificant work (a small, struggling return from exile, a modest rebuilding project). God's omniscient gaze is active, engaged, and delighted in faithful obedience even when the world yawns.

Revelation — The Seven Eyes of the Lamb

The Apocalypse picks up the Zechariah thread and makes the identification explicit and stunning.

Revelation 4:5 — Before the throne burn seven torches of fire, identified as "the seven spirits of God." The number seven signals completeness, fullness, perfection.

Revelation 5:6 — The slain-yet-standing Lamb has seven horns and seven eyes, which are "the seven spirits of God sent out into all the earth." The same seven spirits that illuminate the throne room are sent out as the Lamb's eyes — the Spirit's omniscient, active presence pervading all creation. The Lamb who was slain sees everything.

This is one of Scripture's most compressed theological statements:

  • Seven horns = complete sovereign power
  • Seven eyes = complete omniscient sight
  • Sent into all the earth = nothing is beyond His field of vision

The Lamb is not a passive victim. He is the all-seeing King.

The God Who Sees — Across All of Scripture

He Named Himself "The God Who Sees"

Genesis 16:13 — Hagar, alone and desperate in the wilderness, names God El Roi"You are the God who sees me." The first person in Scripture to name God did so because she was seen when no one else saw her. This name anchors everything else.

He Surveyed His Own Creation with Pleasure

Genesis 1 — Seven times in the creation account: "God saw that it was good." After man and woman: "God saw everything He had made, and behold, it was very good." The Creator looks at His work with delight. This is not neutral observation — it is pleasure, satisfaction, joy.

He Looks Down Continuously

Psalm 33:13-15"The LORD looks down from heaven; He sees all the children of man… He who fashions the hearts of them all and observes all their deeds." God is not an absentee landlord. He fashioned every heart and watches every deed — not as surveillance, but as the intimate knowledge of a Maker.

Psalm 14:2 / Psalm 53:2"The LORD looks down from heaven on the children of man to see if there are any who understand, who seek after God." God is actively searching for seekers.

His Eyes Run To and Fro

2 Chronicles 16:9"The eyes of the LORD run to and fro throughout the whole earth, to give strong support to those whose heart is fully committed to Him." This is the same phrase as Zechariah 4:10 — a dynamic, active, searching gaze — but here the purpose is stated: He is looking for whole-hearted faith so He can strengthen it. God is not looking to catch failures. He is scanning the earth for devotion.

Nothing Is Hidden

Hebrews 4:13"No creature is hidden from His sight, but all are naked and exposed to the eyes of Him to whom we must give account." Total exposure. The "seven eyes" of Revelation aren't metaphorical windows — they represent infinite perceptive penetration.

Job 34:21"His eyes are on the ways of man, and He sees all his steps."

Proverbs 15:3"The eyes of the LORD are in every place, keeping watch on the evil and the good." No partiality in His sight.

He Sees Into the Heart

1 Samuel 16:7"Man looks on the outward appearance, but the LORD looks on the heart." The seven eyes pierce beneath the surface. He does not observe behavior — He reads motive, will, and love.

Psalm 139:1-4"O LORD, you have searched me and known me… you understand my thoughts from afar… even before a word is on my tongue, you know it altogether." Total omniscience, expressed as intimacy, not invasion.


What He Sees and Does Not Like

The Seven Things He Hates

Proverbs 6:16-19 — Six things the LORD hates, seven are an abomination to Him:

  1. Haughty eyes — pride
  2. A lying tongue
  3. Hands that shed innocent blood
  4. A heart that devises wicked plans
  5. Feet that run to evil
  6. A false witness who lies
  7. One who sows discord among brothers

Note that haughty eyes is listed first — the corrupted capacity for seeing turned into contempt.

He Cannot Look at Evil

Habakkuk 1:13"Your eyes are too pure to look upon evil, and you cannot tolerate wrongdoing." The same seven eyes that search the earth for devotion cannot dwell upon iniquity. Holiness is not squeamishness — it is the nature of pure light in the presence of darkness.

Isaiah 59:2"Your iniquities have made a separation between you and your God, and your sins have hidden His face from you so that He does not hear." Sin obscures the view — from our side. God is not absent; we have pulled the shade.

What He Sees in Worship

Isaiah 1:11-15 — God says He is sated with burnt offerings and has no delight in solemn assemblies paired with bloodshed and injustice. "I cannot endure iniquity and solemn assembly." He sees through the ritual to the heart behind it.

Amos 5:21-24"I hate, I despise your feasts… But let justice roll down like waters, and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream." He sees hollow worship.

What He Takes Note of That Others Overlook

Malachi 3:16"Then those who feared the LORD spoke with one another. The LORD paid attention and heard it, and a book of remembrance was written before Him of those who feared the LORD and esteemed His name." The quiet conversations of the faithful — He records them. What the world ignores, He treasures.


Summary: The Theology of God's Gaze

ThemeTextWhat It Means
Named "The God Who Sees"Gen 16:13He sees the unseen and forgotten
Surveyed creation with joyGen 1His sight includes delight
Seven eyes sent into all the earthZech 4:10; Rev 5:6Complete, Spirit-empowered omniscience
Running to find whole hearts2 Chr 16:9He looks to strengthen, not expose
Sees hearts, not outward appearance1 Sam 16:7No performance fools Him
Cannot look at evilHab 1:13Holiness governs His gaze
Records the faithful conversationsMal 3:16He notices what seems insignificant

The pastoral core: The same eyes that cannot tolerate iniquity are the eyes that scan the earth searching for whole hearts to strengthen. The seven eyes of the Lamb who was slain are not the eyes of a judge waiting to condemn — they are the eyes of the Redeemer who paid to restore sight on both sides of the relationship. He sees us fully, and He still ran to us.

This connects beautifully back to Zechariah: those seven eyes rejoice over Zerubbabel's plumb line. The all-seeing God delights in faithful, ordinary, small-things obedience.

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5/29/26

Precepts and revealed will of the LORD (Torah, Law, Instruction, To Aim, Direct) Psalm 119

Psalm 119 is a 176-verse acrostic poem arranged in 22 stanzas (one per Hebrew letter) with 8 stanzas of 8 verses each. Almost every verse references God's revealed will using one of eight Hebrew terms. Together they form a complete portrait of Scripture's authority, character, and effect on the believer.

Psalm 119 is best understood as a sustained, 176-verse act of worship addressed to God through his Word. The psalmist's genius is layering eight distinct Hebrew terms across 22 stanzas, each term illuminating a different facet of the same diamond.

  1. Torah (the broadest, foundational instruction) 
  2.  Edot (Testimonies / Statutes), God's testimonies are his self-witness — declarations of who he is and what he has done.
  3. Piqqudim (precepts) stands out as the most personal: God-appointed charges entrusted to you specifically, requiring diligent care. 
  4. Chuqqim (statutes) are the most sovereign: fixed decrees whose authority rests in God's character alone, not in our comprehension. 
  5. Mitzvot (Commandments) Direct commands from God's mouth — the most active, imperative form of divine will.
  6. Mishpatim (judgments) give confidence that history is not chaos — the divine Judge's verdicts govern everything.
  7. Dabar (Word / Promise) The active, spoken word of God — his communication that creates, sustains, and accomplishes. 
  8. Imrah (the most refined, intimate utterance of promise).

Three major theological threads across Scripture:

  • The Word is living, not inert. From Gen 1 (Dabar creates) to John 1 (the Word becomes flesh) to Heb 4:12 (the Word pierces), Scripture testifies that God's revealed will actively accomplishes what it says.
  • The new covenant (Jer 31:33, Ezek 36:27, Heb 10:16) does not abolish Psalm 119's categories — it relocates them. The statutes and precepts are now written by the Spirit on the heart, not carved in stone.
  • Christ is the fulfillment and embodiment of every term. Luke 24:44–45 makes clear: Torah, Prophets, and Psalms all speak of him. Rev 19:13 names him "the Word of God." Psalm 119 is not just a manual for obedience — it is a portrait of the Son.

תּוֹרָה — Torah (Law / Instruction)

The foundational teaching or instruction of God — the whole body of divine revelation, not merely legal code. Rooted in the verb 'to aim' or 'direct.' God's Torah shapes the entire orientation of life.

Key verses in Psalm 119

  • Ps 119:1Blessed are those whose way is blameless, who walk in the Torah of the LORD.
  • Ps 119:18 Open my eyes, that I may behold wondrous things out of your Torah.
  • Ps 119:97 Oh how I love your Torah! It is my meditation all the day.
  • Ps 119:165 Great peace have those who love your Torah; nothing can make them stumble.

Cross-references

  • Deut 6:4–9 The Shema: Torah inscribed on heart, taught to children, worn on the body.
  • Josh 1:8 Meditate on Torah day and night — the condition of prospering and success.
  • Isa 8:20 If they do not speak according to Torah, there is no light in them.
  • Matt 5:17–18 Jesus fulfills — not abolishes — the Torah; not a jot will pass away.
  • Rom 7:12 The Torah is holy, and the commandment holy, righteous, and good.
  • 2 Tim 3:16–17 All Scripture (graphe = Torah in the LXX sense) is God-breathed and profitable.

עֵדוֹת — Edot (Testimonies / Statutes)
God's testimonies are his self-witness — declarations of who he is and what he has done. They testify to his covenant faithfulness, righteousness, and redemptive acts. Related to the word for 'witness.'

Key verses in Psalm 119
  • Ps 119:2 Blessed are those who keep his testimonies, who seek him with their whole heart.
  • Ps 119:22 Take away scorn and contempt from me, for I have kept your testimonies.
  • Ps 119:119 All the wicked of the earth you discard like dross; therefore I love your testimonies.
  • Ps 119:144 Your testimonies are righteous forever; give me understanding that I may live.
Cross-references
  • Ps 19:7 The testimony of the LORD is sure, making wise the simple.
  • Deut 4:44–45 The Torah Moses set before Israel: the testimonies, statutes, and rules.
  • John 5:39 The Scriptures testify (martyreo) about Christ — the ultimate fulfillment of Edot.
  • Rev 1:2 John bore witness to the word of God and to the testimony (martyria) of Jesus.
  • Heb 3:5 Moses was faithful as a servant to testify to the things that were to be spoken.
פִּקּוּדִים — Piqqudim (Precepts)
God's specific, appointed charges — individual directives that require careful attention and carry personal accountability. The word implies oversight and visitation. These are not general principles but specific points of obedience entrusted to the believer.

Key verses in Psalm 119
  • Ps 119:4 You have commanded your precepts to be kept diligently.
  • Ps 119:15 I will meditate on your precepts and fix my eyes on your ways.
  • Ps 119:27 Make me understand the way of your precepts, and I will meditate on your wondrous works.
  • Ps 119:93 I will never forget your precepts, for by them you have given me life.
Cross-references
  • Ps 19:8 The precepts of the LORD are right, rejoicing the heart.
  • Ps 103:18 Those who keep his covenant and remember to do his precepts.
  • Luke 1:6 Zechariah and Elizabeth walked blamelessly in all the commandments and statutes (precepts) of the Lord.
  • John 14:21 Whoever has my commandments and keeps them — he loves me.
  • 1 John 2:3–4 By this we know him: if we keep his commandments.
חֻקִּים — Chuqqim (Statutes / Decrees)
Engraved, fixed, permanent decrees — from the verb 'to engrave' or 'inscribe.' These are God's unchangeable ordinances, often without stated rationale. Their authority rests solely in the character of the Lawgiver, not in their apparent logic. Doctrine of Election is God's irrevocable call for everyone (Genesis 25:23)

Key verses in Psalm 119
  • Ps 119:5 Oh that my ways may be steadfast in keeping your statutes!
  • Ps 119:8 I will keep your statutes; do not utterly forsake me!
  • Ps 119:33 Teach me, O LORD, the way of your statutes; and I will keep it to the end.
  • Ps 119:112 I incline my heart to perform your statutes forever, to the end.
Cross-references
  • Lev 18:4–5 Keep my statutes and my rules — the person who does them shall live by them.
  • Jer 31:33 New covenant: God writes his law (chuqqim) on the heart, not stone tablets.
  • Ezek 36:27 God's Spirit causes his people to walk in his statutes and keep his rules.
  • Heb 10:16 New covenant fulfillment: God puts his laws on their hearts and minds.
  • Rom 8:4 The righteous requirement of the law is fulfilled in us who walk by the Spirit.
מִצְוֹת — Mitzvot (Commandments)
Direct commands from God's mouth — the most active, imperative form of divine will. These carry the full authority of the Commander. To love the mitzvot is not mere compliance but delight in the One who commands.

Key verses in Psalm 119
  • Ps 119:6 Then I shall not be put to shame, having my eyes fixed on all your commandments.
  • Ps 119:10 With my whole heart I seek you; let me not wander from your commandments!
  • Ps 119:47 ...for I find my delight in your commandments, which I love.
  • Ps 119:98 Your commandment makes me wiser than my enemies, for it is ever with me.
Cross-references
  • Deut 6:6–7 These commandments shall be on your heart — teach them diligently to your children.
  • Matt 22:37–40 All the Law and Prophets hang on two great commandments: love God, love neighbor.
  • John 13:34 A new commandment: love one another as I have loved you.
  • 1 John 5:3 This is the love of God: that we keep his commandments. They are not burdensome.
  • Rev 14:12 The endurance of the saints who keep the commandments of God and faith in Jesus.
מִשְׁפָּטִים — Mishpatim (Judgments / Ordinances)
God's authoritative legal decisions — verdicts rendered by the divine Judge. Mishpatim reveal what is right and just in every circumstance. They establish the moral order of creation and give the believer confidence in God's governance of history. Lord longs to be gracious to you (Isaiah 30:18)

Key verses in Psalm 119
  • Ps 119:7 I will praise you with an upright heart, when I learn your righteous judgments.
  • Ps 119:39 Turn away the reproach that I dread, for your judgments are good.
  • Ps 119:75 I know, O LORD, that your judgments are right, and that in faithfulness you have afflicted me.
  • Ps 119:160 The sum of your word is truth, and every one of your righteous judgments endures forever.
Cross-references
  • Ps 19:9 The judgments of the LORD are true and righteous altogether.
  • Isa 30:18 The LORD is a God of justice (mishpat); blessed are all who wait for him.
  • Micah 6:8 What does God require? Do justice (mishpat), love kindness, walk humbly.
  • Rev 16:7 Your judgments are true and just, O Lord God the Almighty.
  • Rom 11:33 How unsearchable are his judgments — the depth of the riches of God.
דָּבָר — Dabar (Word / Promise)
The active, spoken word of God — his communication that creates, sustains, and accomplishes. Dabar is both the content of the message and the event of its speaking. Nothing in creation falls outside the scope of his Dabar.

Key verses in Psalm 119
  • Ps 119:9 How can a young man keep his way pure? By guarding it according to your word.
  • Ps 119:25 My soul clings to the dust; give me life according to your word!
  • Ps 119:89 Forever, O LORD, your word is firmly fixed in the heavens.
  • Ps 119:105 Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.
Cross-references
  • Gen 1:3 God spoke (dabar) — and it was. Creation is the product of his active Word.
  • Isa 40:8 The grass withers, the flower fades, but the word of our God will stand forever.
  • Isa 55:10–11 God's word does not return empty; it accomplishes his purpose and prospers.
  • John 1:1,14 The Word (Logos) was God, and became flesh — ultimate fulfillment of Dabar.
  • Heb 4:12 The word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword.
  • 1 Pet 1:23–25 Born again through the living and abiding word of God, which endures forever.
אִמְרָה — Imrah (Word / Promise (poetic))
The refined, pure utterance of God — used especially in poetic and wisdom literature to emphasize the absolute purity and tested quality of God's speech. Every promise carries the weight of the God who speaks it.

Key verses in Psalm 119
  • Ps 119:11 I have stored up your word (imrah) in my heart, that I might not sin against you.
  • Ps 119:38 Confirm to your servant your promise (imrah), that you may be feared.
  • Ps 119:82 My eyes long for your promise; I ask, 'When will you comfort me?'
  • Ps 119:140 Your promise is well tried (refined), and your servant loves it.
Cross-references
  • Ps 12:6 The words (imrah) of the LORD are pure words, silver refined seven times.
  • Prov 30:5 Every word (imrah) of God proves true; he is a shield to those who take refuge.
  • 2 Sam 22:31 God's way is perfect; his word (imrah) is tried — a shield for all who trust.
  • 2 Cor 1:20 All the promises (imrah-character) of God find their Yes in Christ.
  • 2 Pet 1:4 His divine power granted precious and very great promises — we become partakers.
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5/28/26

God's promises in three words

I came across this interesting teaching about waiting on the Lord God's promises being like rope making. Waiting is passive in our language, but Hebrew it is twisting together, making a rope. 

Three seasons, three Hebrew words, one trajectory toward intimacy

The most natural Hebrew triad here moves from qavah (tethered waiting) → yachal (confident expectation, Ps. 130:7; Lam. 3:24) → yada (intimate knowing, Jer. 9:23–24; John 17:3), tracking a soul moving from crisis to trust to union.

  • Psalm 130:5–7 — qavah and yachal in sequence
  • Jeremiah 9:23–24 — let him who boasts, boast in knowing Me
  • John 17:3 — eternal life is knowing the Father and the Son
  • Song of Solomon 2:16 — my beloved is mine and I am his (the destination)

Best part of the video shows how Psalms go from talking about God, to talking with God.  The Promises of God: What the Original Hebrew Actually Reveals

Here are verse anchors for each concept, with primary and supporting references:


Why Hebrew has no standalone word for 'promise'

  • Numbers 23:19 — God is not a man that He should lie; what He speaks, He does
  • 2 Corinthians 1:20 — all the promises of God find their Yes in Christ
  • Isaiah 46:10–11 — declaring the end from the beginning; what He purposes, He performs

Davar — God's word as substance, not intention

  • Isaiah 55:10–11 — the word goes out and does not return empty
  • Psalm 33:6 — by the word of the LORD the heavens were made
  • John 1:1–3, 14 — the Word was God; the Word became flesh
  • Hebrews 11:3 — the universe was formed by God's word

Qavah — waiting as active rope-making with God

  • Isaiah 40:31 — those who wait (qavah) on the LORD shall renew their strength
  • Psalm 27:14 — wait for the LORD; be strong
  • Psalm 130:5 — I wait for the LORD; my soul waits; in His word I hope
  • Lamentations 3:25 — the LORD is good to those who wait for Him

Chalaph — the exchange of your exhaustion for His energy

  • Isaiah 40:29–31 — He gives power to the faint; they shall renew (chalaph) strength
  • 2 Corinthians 12:9–10 — my strength is made perfect in weakness
  • Philippians 4:13 — I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me

The eagle and the thermal — what real faith looks like

  • Isaiah 40:31 — they shall mount up with wings like eagles
  • Deuteronomy 32:11–12 — as an eagle stirs its nest, spreads its wings, bears its young
  • Exodus 19:4 — I bore you on eagles' wings and brought you to Myself

Shamar in Psalm 121 — the thornbush hedge around your life

  • Psalm 121:3–8 — shamar appears six times; He who keeps you will not slumber
  • Job 1:10 — have You not put a hedge around him and all he has?
  • Zechariah 2:5 — I will be a wall of fire around her
  • John 10:28–29 — no one can snatch them out of My hand

Nacham — grief, breath, and God sitting beside you

  • Psalm 23:4 — Your rod and Your staff, they comfort (nacham) me
  • Isaiah 40:1 — Comfort, comfort My people, says your God
  • Isaiah 66:13 — as one whom his mother comforts, so I will comfort you
  • Genesis 6:6 — the LORD was grieved (nacham) that He had made man
  • Matthew 5:4 — blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted

Genesis 15 — the covenant God walked alone

  • Genesis 15:7–21 — the smoking firepot and flaming torch pass between the pieces
  • Jeremiah 34:18–20 — the covenant cut by passing between two halves
  • Genesis 15:6 — Abraham believed God, and it was counted as righteousness

How Calvary fulfills the Genesis 15 blood covenant

  • Hebrews 9:15–22 — without the shedding of blood there is no forgiveness
  • Galatians 3:15–17 — God's covenant with Abraham; Christ is the offspring
  • Luke 22:20 — this cup is the new covenant in My blood
  • Romans 5:8 — while we were still sinners, Christ died for us
  • 2 Corinthians 5:21 — He became sin so we might become the righteousness of God
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