Saturday, 9 May 2026

Delighting: a key to not withering...

Over the past week, I finished my personal meditations on the names of God. Since the end of January, I've reflected on around 100 different names of God, and blogged here on 86 of them. Today I returned to a different way of connecting with God: reading my way through specific books of the Bible. I decided to start with some Psalms. After three and a half months of meditating on who God is, it seemed appropriate to spend some time in this Old Testament book full of songs of praise to such an amazing, multi-faceted God.

Psalm 1 plunges right in with some insights into what it means to be godly, stable and fruitful in life; with some keys to knowing joy and blessing in all seasons of our lives. One of these keys, vs 2, is that we delight in the Word/Law of God and meditate on it regularly.

I've probably mentioned already in this blog that I was impacted by a Hebrew word study carried out by one of my youth ministry students in Africa. Looking closely at Psalm 37: 4 - "Delight yourself in the Lord and He will give you the desires of your heart"- she wanted to know what it actually means to take delight in the Lord. She discovered that the Hebrew word in that verse is ʿānaḡ, and she was puzzled to discover that it means, "to be soft and pliable." As she meditated on this understanding, it slowly dawned on her that "to delight in God" wasn't something to do with warm, fuzzy feelings; rather it was about being pliable, teachable and cooperative in His hands. When we cooperate with God in that way, our desires will grow closer to His desires and that's when we'll realise that the desires of our heart are being fulfilled.

So today, when I read that godly people delight in the Word of God, I wondered if I would discover something similar. Instead, I found out that the Hebrew verb used in Psalm 1:2 is ḥēp̄eṣ - meaning to long for something or to take pleasure in it. Every believer needs to reach a point in their life where they read God's Word from delight and not from duty. That's when these blessings of Psalm 1 kick in: being stable and fruitful, being like that deeply rooted tree planted on the riverbank.

Another promise in vs 3 is that, "their leaves will not wither." That's an interesting promise to consider at a time when my physical body is getting older and weaker. (Yesterday, the doctor gave me a very painful injection into my foot, an attempt to manage the pain and discomfort I'm experiencing from having a neuroma on the sole of my foot and finding it difficult to walk.) This is also a time when the poinsettia plant I was given for Christmas seems to be withering a little more every day and gradually coming to the end of its lifespan. I keep asking myself whether I should continue watering and caring for it or whether I should just throw it out. What does it mean, spiritually and emotionally speaking, to be someone who is not withering in hard times or in old age?

The verb in verse 3 is nāḇēl, so I looked it up in the Hebrew dictionary and, just as you'd expect, it means to fade, to droop, to wither and fail. But I was surprised to discover that it also means to be foolish... or to regard something as foolish and treat it with contempt - like when we say in English that we give someone a "withering look."

It's a sobering thought to realise that, "not withering" in the original Hebrew, staying fruitful in every season of life, is linked with not being foolish and not despising God's Word. If we can continue right to the end of our lives believing that God knows best and delighting in His Word, the promise is that we will be stable and fruitful, we will prosper in what we do, and we won't wither. What a promise to hold on to!

 

Friday, 1 May 2026

The Name

You might know that modern Jews most usually refer to God as Hashem  (השם). "Baruch Hashem" is a common exclamation if they want to say, "Thank God" or "Bless the Lord."  But I've meditated on almost a hundred biblical names of God over the past three months and that wasn't one of them. Where did it come from?

Hashem literally means, "the Name." Because one of the ten commandments warns us not to misuse God's name, Jews are wary of speaking out the name of Yahweh in a disrespectful way. So, although they might use Adonai (Lord) when they pray to Him, when they speak of God in everyday conversation they usually refer to Him as Hashem, the Name. 

It doesn't really appear in the Bible as a common name of God, except in Leviticus 24: 11, where we read of a man who, "blasphemed the Name." (ha shem) Most Bible say that he blasphemed the name of the Lord, but in fact the original Hebrew text simply says, "the Name."

Of course, when Jews call God Hashem, they're primarily thinking of it as a replacement for YHWH, the name that God Himself used when He revealed Himself to Moses... but as we've seen over the past three months, God is so vast and so indescribable, that no one name is enough. And that's why the Bible contains many different names of God, In recent weeks, I've reflected on:

  1. Elohim - the supreme God who created the universe
  2. El Qanna - the "jealous" God who deserves our all
  3. Ancient of Days - the ageless, timeless God
  4. El Olam - the Eternal God
  5. Shub Nephesh - the Restorer of Life
  6. El Haggadol - the Great God
  7. El Qadosh - the perfect, holy One
  8. Yahweh Yireh - God, our Provider
  9. El Roi - the God who sees me
  10. Yahweh Shama - the Lord who hears me
  11. El Hai - the Living God
  12. Sela - the Rock
  13. Tsur - the Rock
  14. El Shaddai - the Almighty, all-powerful God
  15. Kyrios Theos Pantokrator - the Lord God Omnipotent
  16. Yahweh Ezra - the Lord my Helper
  17. El Yasha/Yeshua - my Saviour, God of my Salvation
  18. El Hanne'eman - the Faithful God
  19. Georgos - the gifted Gardener
  20. Yatsar - the Potter
  21. Migdal Oz - my Strong Tower
  22. Yahweh Uzzi - the Lord my Strength 
  23. Elohim Qarob - the God who is near
  24. El Nasa - the Forgiving God
  25. Yahweh Rapha - the Lord who heals
  26. Yahweh Shalom / Theos Eirene - the God of Peace
  27. Sar Shalom - the Prince of Peace
  28. Immanuel - God with us
  29. Yahweh Nissi - the Lord my Banner
  30. Yahweh Gamal - the Redeeming Lord, the Redeemer
  31. Mā'ôn - Home
  32. Adonai - Sovereign Lord
  33. Adonai Tov, Yahweh Tov - the Good God
  34. Yaweh Tseva'ot - the Lord of heaven's armies
  35. Yahweh Tzidkenu/Tzedeki - the Lord our righteousness
  36. YHWH - the Great "I am"
  37. Ya - the pre-existent, all-sufficient One
  38. El - God
  39. El Elyon - God Most High
  40. Yahweh lo Shanah - the Unchanging God
  41. Yahweh Machsi/Misgab/Manos/Seter - the Lord my Refuge
  42. Yahweh Māgēn - the Lord my Shield
  43. Bara - Creator
  44. El Shamayim - the God of Heaven
  45. El Rachum - Compassionate, Merciful God
  46. Yahweh Hannûn - the Gracious Lord
  47. Māqôr Hai Mayim - Fountain of Living Water
  48. Yahweh Ra'a - the Lord, my Shepherd; the Good Shepherd 
  49. Ôr Olam - Everlasting Light
  50. Phos o cosmos - Light of the World
  51. El Gibbor - Strong and Mighty God
  52. Ba'al / Ishi - Husband
  53. Rûach / Pneuma  - Holy Spirit
  54. Hode - Majesty
  55. Melek Haggoyim - King of the nations
  56. Basileus Basileon - King of Kings
  57. Akal Ash - Consuming Fire
  58. Yahweh Ahava / Theos Agapē - Loving God
  59. Yahweh Qadash - Sanctifier, God who makes us Holy
  60. Abba - Dad
  61. Masûd - my Fortress
  62. Yahweh Palat - the Lord my Deliverer 
  63. El Mosha'ah - the God who saves
  64. Entunchano - Intercessor
  65. Mesitēs - Mediator
  66. Parakletos - Advocate, Lawyer
  67. El Yalad / El Hul - the God who gave you birth
  68. El De'ah - God of Knowledge
  69. Gelah Raz - Revealer of Mysteries.
  70. El Kavod - God of Glory
  71. Melek Kavod - King of Glory
  72. Elohim Mishpat / Theos Ekdikēsis - God of Justice
  73. El Neqamah - God who avenges me
  74. Shaphat - Judge/ Judge of all the Earth
  75. Logos - the Word
  76. My Anchor
  77. Theos pas Paraklesis - God of all comfort
  78. Pater Oiktirmos - Father of Mercies
  79. El Haiyai - God of my life
  80. Elohim Yare - Awesome God
  81. Rum Rosh - Lifter of my head
  82. Theos Monos Sophos - the only wise God
  83. Theos Alethinos - the True God
  84. Yahweh Tsaddik - the Righteous Lord
  85. Alpha - the First, the Beginning
  86. Omega - the Last, the Ending
Today we enter the month of May, which means my journey through the names of God has spanned three months. My goal was to discover a hundred names of God and I reached this goal if I count the names that are similar: 
  • sometimes there are several different Hebrew words that have the same meaning in English
  • sometimes there are names that are modified slightly to make a variation - The Light of Israel, the God of Jerusalem, the Mighty One of Jacob  
  • sometimes there are descriptions that are not really names: Mighty in Battle, Transcendent One
I'll reflect on some of these names over the coming weekend, but this will be my last blog post on the names of a God who is worthy to be called, The Name.