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A divine title for God (Hebrew: El Shaddai), emphasizing God's supreme, untouchable power; the most common name for God in the book of Job, used to stress that suffering happens under a sovereign, all-powerful deity
15 mentions across 9 books
A title for God translating the Hebrew 'El Shaddai' — emphasizing His supreme, unlimited power. Used 48 times in Job alone, highlighting God's sovereign authority even when His purposes seem mysterious.
The Almighty is invoked here as the force that made mountains skip and hills bounce — God's supreme, untouchable power is so overwhelming that even ancient geological formations responded like startled animals.
What Happens to the OppsPsalms 21:8-12The Almighty is referenced here as the one power no enemy strategy can outmaneuver — their plots are futile precisely because they're going up against supreme, unchecked divine authority.
The Women Announce the WPsalms 68:11-14The Almighty is the divine title used here in the women's victory announcement — it is El Shaddai, the supreme, untouchable God whose scattering of kings is likened to the sudden, total beauty of fresh snowfall.
God, Pull UpPsalms 70:1-3The Almighty is invoked here as the one David turns to when enemies are actively threatening him, emphasizing that supreme divine power — not human strategy — is his only viable rescue.
The Secret PlacePsalms 91:1-2The Almighty appears alongside Most High in verse 1 as a second divine title, doubling down on God's supreme power as the reason His shadow is the safest place to be.
The Almighty is used here to name the God whose presence lies beyond the veil — the title emphasizes that whoever approaches through this curtain is entering the domain of supreme divine power.
The Gold Interior2 Chronicles 4:19-22The Almighty is invoked here as the climactic title for God — the one in whose presence nothing cheap can survive, and whose power and holiness explain why the entire Temple was built with such relentless precision.