It Repented the Lord

Also known as: When God Changes Course: Understanding Divine Repentance | The Lord's Sigh: Why God Changes His Actions | Change Your Thinking: From God's Repentance to Ours
Length:386 wordsBook:Genesis
repentancedoctrinalencouragelead to_salvation
#repentance#Hebrew word study#God's nature#change of mind#biblical interpretation#Old Testament theology#New Testament repentance#nacham#thinking differently#salvation

Genesis 6:6Loading...

The Hebrew word "nacham" (naw-Kham) provides us with crucial insight into understanding God's character and actions. The primary definition is "to sigh," which by implication means "to be sorry." This word choice reveals the emotional depth of God's response to human sin and the grief it brings to His heart.

When we consider this in human terms, it's like calling an audible in football - changing from a run to a pass when you see that 300-pound linebacker move into position. The situation has changed, and wisdom demands a change in strategy. Similarly, God's "repentance" represents a divine response to changed circumstances, particularly human rebellion and sin.

“Buy the truth, and sell it not”
— Proverbs 23:23

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