What Does 'Forever' Really Mean? Rediscovering Chessed in Jeremiah 33
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概要
In Jeremiah 33:10–11, God paints a breathtaking promise: the silence of devastation will be broken by voices—joy, gladness, weddings, and thanksgiving.
But at the center of those returning voices is a phrase repeated through generations:
"Give thanks to the Lord of Hosts, for the Lord is good, for His Chesed endures 'Olam.'"
What does that really mean?
In this episode of Voices From Zion, Robby and the Rabbi explore:
- Why "forever" (olam) may not just mean endless time—but something deeper, hidden, and eternal in a different dimension
- The rich, untranslatable depth of chesed—far beyond "lovingkindness" into covenant loyalty, pursuing mercy, and active love
- How Psalm 23 reframes goodness and mercy as something that chases us down like a shepherd's dog
- Why restoration in Jerusalem is not just physical—but audible—you can hear it when God moves
- The connection to the ancient Jewish wedding blessing and the prophetic picture of joy returning to Zion
- What it means to truly taste and see that the Lord is good—not intellectually, but experientially
And woven through it all: a personal testimony of tasting God's love in a way that changes everything.
Because maybe "His Chesed endures forever" isn't just a statement…
Maybe it's an invitation.
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