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Devotional

Amen Is Not the End

You've said amen a thousand times — but have you ever meant it?

"Surely I am coming soon." Amen. Come, Lord Jesus!Revelation 22:20 (CSB)
He who is the Amen, the faithful and true witness...Revelation 3:14 (CSB)

You say "amen" like it's a period at the end of a sentence. Prayer's over. Move on.

But that's not what the word means — and it's not what it's for.

Amen comes from the Hebrew root aman — faithful, trustworthy, firm. In Scripture, amen wasn't a way to close a conversation with God. It was a way to plant a flag. It meant: "That's true. I'm standing on it. I trust the One who said it."

So here's the question that should mess with you a little: how many prayers have you ended with "amen" when what you actually meant was "God, do this my way, and fast"?

That's not trust. That's a transaction with a religious word stapled to the end of it.

A man who actually believes God is faithful doesn't just ask — he plants his feet. He says amen and means: "Whatever You decide, I'm not moving off this. You're trustworthy even when the answer isn't what I wanted."

That's the posture of a son, not a customer.

Jesus himself is called "the Amen" — the faithful and true witness. When you say amen, you're not signing off. You're aligning yourself with a God who has never once broken His word.

When was the last time you actually paused after saying "amen" — instead of rushing to the next thing?

Be honest: how many of your prayers are really "amen, but only if it goes my way"?

What would change if "amen" became your declaration of trust instead of your exit line?

Where in your life right now do you need to plant your feet and say, "God, You're faithful — even here"?

The next time you pray — today, not someday — say amen on purpose. Pause for five seconds before you move on. Ask yourself: Do I actually trust the God I just prayed to?

If the honest answer is no, don't fake it. Tell Him that. Then ask Him to make it true.

King Jesus, You are the Amen — faithful and true, the One who has never broken a promise. Forgive me for treating "amen" like punctuation instead of a declaration. Teach me to trust You with the outcome, not just the request. Whatever You decide, I'm not moving off this: You are trustworthy. Surely You are coming soon. Amen. Come, Lord Jesus.