The Difference Between emet and emunah
emet (H571) means "assured" and emunah (H530) means "faith)" — both Hebrew words in the Bible, but they carry distinct meanings. Knowing which word the original author chose, and where each appears, reveals the precise shade of meaning that can get lost in translation.
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אֶמֶת vs אֱמוּנָה
emet and emunah
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See how emet (אֶמֶת) and emunah (אֱמוּנָה) compare → https://lemmalink.com/compare/H571/H530
אֶמֶת
stability; (figuratively) certainty, truth, trustworthiness
H571
Exegetical Meaning
The Hebrew word *emeth* captures something deeper than just "truth" in the abstract sense. At its heart, it means something solid, firm, and dependable—truth that you can actually stand on and build your life around. When the Bible uses this word, it's describing reality that holds steady, that won't fail you, that proves itself faithful over time. It's the difference between someone's empty promises and their actual, proven character. In Scripture, *emeth* appears in contexts where God's Word, His promises, and His very nature are being affirmed. When the psalmist declares that God's word is "true," he's saying it's rock-solid and reliable. The word also carries the sense of trustworthiness and faithfulness—not just factual accuracy, but something you can depend on completely. You'll find it describing God's mercy, His judgments, and His covenant promises. It's often paired with *hesed* (loving-kindness), suggesting that God's truth isn't cold and impersonal, but warm and relational. The word appears frequently in the Psalms and prophetic books, where writers celebrate God's dependable nature. In Psalm 25:5, the psalmist asks God to "lead me in your truth," using *emeth* to mean the reliable way of living that flows from God's character. This word reminds us that biblical truth isn't merely intellectual—it's something that sustains us, guides us, and proves itself worthy of our complete trust.
Origin
Root form
English Glosses
Canon Usage
No data
Context Themes
- God's Absolute Reliability
- Walking in Truth
אֱמוּנָה
literally firmness; figuratively security; morally fidelity
H530
Exegetical Meaning
literally firmness; figuratively security; morally fidelity | Etymology: or (shortened) אֱמֻנָה; feminine of H529 (אֵמוּן); | KJV: faith(-ful, -ly, -ness, (man)), set office, stability, steady, truly, truth, verily.
Origin
Root form
English Glosses
Canon Usage
No data
Context Themes
- The Righteous Shall Live by Faithfulness
- New Every Morning — God's Faithfulness
- Walking in Faithfulness
