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Praying the Names of God: The Fountain of Living Water

By Ann Spangler

Ann SpanglerPeople’s names in the ancient world did more than simply distinguish one person from another. They often conveyed the essential nature and character of a person. This is especially true when it comes to the names of God recorded in the Bible. The book Praying the Names of God: A Daily Guide explores the primary names and titles of God in the Old Testament to reveal the deeper meanings behind them. El Shaddai, Elohim, Adonai, Abba, El Elyon—God Almighty, Mighty Creator, Lord, Father, God Most High—these are just a few of the names and titles of God that yield rich insights into his nature and character. Each day this week we’re focusing on one of the primary names or titles of God. By incorporating the divine names and titles into your own prayers—and learning about the biblical context in which the name was revealed—you’ll gain a more intimate understanding of who God is and how he can be relied on in every circumstance of your life. I pray these posts will lead you into fresh encounters with the living God.

Buy your copy of Praying the Names of God: A Daily Guide in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day[Read the Names of God Bible (NOG) on Bible Gateway]

Miqweh Yisrael—Hope of Israel: Praying the Name

A blessing on the man who puts his trust in the LORD,
with the LORD for his hope.
He is like a tree by the waterside
that thrusts its roots to the stream;
when the heat comes it feels no alarm,
its foliage stays green;
it has no worries in a year of drought,
and never ceases to bear fruit….

Hope of Israel, LORD!
Those who turn from you will be uprooted from the land,
Since they have abandoned the fountain of living water.” (Jeremiah 17:5-8, 13)

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Christian History Told Through 33 Objects: An Interview with Tim Challies

Tim ChalliesIf you had to select 33 objects throughout history to represent the birth, growth, and effectiveness of Christianity, what would you choose to best reflect God’s enduring grace through the centuries? And what narrative would you write that would weave them all together in telling the story of what God is accomplishing in the world? Tangible relics such as these offer rich links of understanding between Christians of the first and 21st centuries.

Bible Gateway interviewed Tim Challies (@challies) about his book, Epic: An Around-the-World Journey Through Christian History (Zondervan, 2020).

Buy your copy of Epic: An Around-the-World Journey Through Christian History in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day

Why did you have the need to experience Christian history in a tactile way?

Tim Challies: I wouldn’t say it was a need as much as a desire which gave birth to an opportunity. I had experienced history in the history books, but was eager to increase my access to it through the senses. Not only that, but I was eager to access it within its context. It’s one thing to read about George Muller’s Bible, but another thing to sit at his desk, hold it in my hands, and read the words of his handwritten marginalia. Similarly, there’s something about seeing the first known depiction of Jesus in Rome, on the Palatine Hill, right where it was first drawn and where it was discovered.

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Praying the Names of God: He Reveals His Name

By Ann Spangler

Ann SpanglerPeople’s names in the ancient world did more than simply distinguish one person from another. They often conveyed the essential nature and character of a person. This is especially true when it comes to the names of God recorded in the Bible. The book Praying the Names of God: A Daily Guide explores the primary names and titles of God in the Old Testament to reveal the deeper meanings behind them. El Shaddai, Elohim, Adonai, Abba, El Elyon—God Almighty, Mighty Creator, Lord, Father, God Most High—these are just a few of the names and titles of God that yield rich insights into his nature and character. Each day this week we’re focusing on one of the primary names or titles of God. By incorporating the divine names and titles into your own prayers—and learning about the biblical context in which the name was revealed—you’ll gain a more intimate understanding of who God is and how he can be relied on in every circumstance of your life. I pray these posts will lead you into fresh encounters with the living God.

Buy your copy of Praying the Names of God: A Daily Guide in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day[Read the Names of God Bible (NOG) on Bible Gateway]

Miqweh Yisrael—Hope of Israel: God Reveals His Name

“A curse on the man who puts his trust in man,
who relies on things of flesh,
whose heart turns from the LORD.
He is like dry scrub in the wastelands:
If good comes, he has no eyes for it,
He settles in the parched places of the wilderness,
A salt land, uninhabited.

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New Feature for Bible Gateway Plus Members: Reverse Interlinear

Learn more about becoming a member of Bible Gateway Plus

New to Bible Gateway Plus? Becoming a member puts a library of commentaries, study notes, and Greek & Hebrew language tools right in your pocket. It’s the easiest way for Bible Gateway lovers to simplify and deepen their personal or group study of the Bible!

And we’ve just added a new feature that will change the way you do word studies on Bible Gateway. Members now have the ability to apply the Reverse Interlinear Bible to passage pages in the New International Version (NIV)—putting the original-language words below the English Bible text.

This powerful feature is paired with the notes of the NIV Exhaustive Concordance Dictionary. You can select an original language word to open its entry in the right-hand sidebar. Here you’ll find information on that word, how it’s translated in the NIV, and how frequently each translated word appears.

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Praying the Names of God: Hope of Israel

By Ann Spangler

Ann SpanglerPeople’s names in the ancient world did more than simply distinguish one person from another. They often conveyed the essential nature and character of a person. This is especially true when it comes to the names of God recorded in the Bible. The book Praying the Names of God: A Daily Guide explores the primary names and titles of God in the Old Testament to reveal the deeper meanings behind them. El Shaddai, Elohim, Adonai, Abba, El Elyon—God Almighty, Mighty Creator, Lord, Father, God Most High—these are just a few of the names and titles of God that yield rich insights into his nature and character. Each day this week we’re focusing on one of the primary names or titles of God. By incorporating the divine names and titles into your own prayers—and learning about the biblical context in which the name was revealed—you’ll gain a more intimate understanding of who God is and how he can be relied on in every circumstance of your life. I pray these posts will lead you into fresh encounters with the living God.

[Read the Names of God Bible (NOG) on Bible Gateway]

The Name: Miqweh Yisrael

Buy your copy of Praying the Names of God: A Daily Guide in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every dayHope is the great stabilizer. It steadies us in times of fear and difficulty, not because we know that everything will turn out as we want but because we know that God is trustworthy. Hope is what helps us stay on course regardless of circumstances.

Biblical hope finds its roots in God, in his goodness, mercy, and power. We exercise our hope when we endure patiently. We nurture our hope when we read God’s Word. Though we hope for earthly blessings, our greatest hope is aimed at the life to come, when God will not only wipe away our tears but invite us to share his joy forever.

When you pray to Miqweh Yisrael, the Hope of Israel, you’re praying to the One who saves all those who trust in him.

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Bible News Roundup – Week of March 29, 2020

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Record Low Number of Americans Hold Biblical Worldview, Survey Says
The Christian Post

Why Does God Allow Pandemics? Author Joel Rosenberg Says Scripture Has the Answer
CBN News
Christian Today: Does God Cause Pandemics?
PJMedia: The Bible Gives Buckets of Answers about COVID-19. You May Not Like Them.
CT: A Christian History of Pandemics
COVID-19: Bible Reading Plan of Assurance

How a Debt Jubilee Could Help the US Avert Economic Depression
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How to Live the Bible — Finding Purpose Beyond Suffering

howtostudythebible

This is the ninety-eighth lesson in author and pastor Mel Lawrenz’ How to Live the Bible series. If you know someone or a group who would like to follow along on this journey through Scripture, they can get more info and sign up to receive these essays via email here.

Mel Lawrenz will be offering daily online ministry during this health crisis. Sign up here.


One question people ask all the time is whether there is any purpose in our sufferings.

If we have to suffer, is it all for nothing? Must we pay such a high price for no apparent benefit? How can God expect us to lose—just lose?

Dying in bed illustration

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How to Intentionally Strengthen Your Faith: An Interview with Allen Jackson

Allen JacksonYou won’t lose weight unless you’re deliberate about it. You won’t gain muscle unless you intentionally exercise. You won’t earn a college degree unless you plan to achieve it. What does it mean to intentionally seek a deeper relationship of faith with God?

Bible Gateway interviewed Allen Jackson (@allenjacksonmin) about his book, Intentional Faith: Aligning Your Life with the Heart of God (Thomas Nelson, 2020).

Buy your copy of Intentional Faith in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day

What do you mean when you write, “Too often Christians confuse enthusiasm with preparation”?

Allen Jackson: Enthusiasm is a good thing! Preparation is a totally different response. If I’m scheduled for surgery, I want the person operating to be something more than enthusiastic. If outcomes are significant, preparation is imperative!

Preparation speaks to experience, understanding, and confidence. When we’re prepared, we’re able to respond to opportunities from which others will withdraw. Athletes use repetitive training to instill muscle memory so that in times of great stress they can perform at peak efficiency. They can sink a difficult putt under great stress or hit a curve ball at a crucial moment. As Christ followers we’re called to be prepared.

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Don’t Let Fear Hold You Back

Jennifer AllwoodBy Jennifer Allwood

Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid or terrified because of them, for the LORD your God goes with you; he will never leave you nor forsake you. —Deuteronomy 31:6

We all like safe. It’s human nature to avoid hard things, and our normal tendency is to drift toward the safe thing in order to protect ourselves. I mean, who honestly likes to be scared?

Women especially like “safe.”

Women who have gone through hard things will almost always choose safe, because for the love of all things holy, they don’t want to go back to going through hard things again.

A woman who feels stuck, overwhelmed, and scared will almost always choose safe, because choosing anything else makes her feel very vulnerable, and she will avoid vulnerable at all costs. She’s already got enough big feelings as someone who’s scared, stuck, and overwhelmed.

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Being Afraid Is the Best Time to Adore God: An Interview with Sara Hagerty

Sara HagertyDo you long to experience God in the thick of life’s demands? If you’re honest with yourself, do you admit, “I barely know you, God”? Do you consider God to be a familiar stranger?

Bible Gateway interviewed Sara Hagerty (@SaraHagerty), author of Adore: A Simple Practice for Experiencing God in the Middle Minutes of Your Day (Zondervan, 2020).

You write, “The best time to adore is when I don’t feel like it.” Why is that?

Buy your copy of Adore: A Simple Practice for Experiencing God in the Middle Minutes of Your Day in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day

Sara Hagerty: Given the current climate of our nation and world, many of us don’t feel like talking to God right now. It’s not that we don’t see the value of it or know its significance, but a last-minute grocery run, or a news scan for the 15th time to see what’s transpired, or time to plan the newly disrupted day for our families all at home seem to take precedent.

Yet, in this hour, our means for survival is our conversation with God. For example, I find myself pressing through towards the next thing, seemingly unthinking. But if I dig a bit below the surface of my mind, I see many thoughts that I’m not bringing to God. What will happen next week? How will my child handle the disappointment of another canceled activity? Will we have enough provision for our family? Those questions and thoughts are not small, but if I leave them undetected, they drive my day.

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