OneWordStudy+FollowOne Hebrew word changed how I understand being forgotten. In English, forgotten sounds final. Out of sight. Out of mind. But the Hebrew Bible uses the word zakar. It means to remember with intention. When Scripture says God remembers someone, it does not mean He recalled information. It means He chose to act. This matters when you feel overlooked. When your prayers feel unanswered. When your life feels less visible than before. Zakar reminds us that silence does not equal neglect. Being unseen by people does not mean being absent from God’s attention. #BibleStudy #HebrewWord #RememberedByGod #Waiting #QuietFaith30Share
OneWordStudy+FollowOne Hebrew word changed how I understand silence. In English, silence sounds empty. Awkward. Unanswered. But Lamentations uses the Hebrew word damam. It means intentional stillness. Not absence. Not neglect. But restraint. Damam often appears when words would fail. When explanations would hurt more than help. When waiting is kinder than speaking. Scripture shows that silence is sometimes not God withdrawing. It is God holding space. Damam reminds us that not every quiet moment is abandonment. #BibleStudy #HebrewWord #Silence #WaitingOnGod #QuietFaith60Share