Episodes

Jul 7, 2026
Meditate = Filler' up!
Jul 7, 2026
Jul 7, 2026
7 min
Garth Heckman
The David Alliance
To understand how to train your mind using these two approaches, we have to look at their fundamental mechanics. While modern secular mindfulness and Biblical meditation (Hagah) both aim to quiet a scattered mind, they achieve it through completely opposite movements: one focuses on emptying, while the other focuses on filling.
Here is how the ancient Hebrew concept of Hagah works and how it contrasts with today’s popular mindfulness practices for building cognitive focus.
The Root of Hagah: Active Rumination
In Western culture, the word "meditation" often conjures images of complete silence, stillness, and clearing the mind of all thoughts. The biblical Hebrew concept is entirely different.
- The Translation: The Hebrew word הָגָה (Hagah) literally translates to "to mutter," "to growl," "to chew," or "to ruminate."
- The Imagery: It is famously used in Isaiah 31:4 to describe a young lion growling over its prey. It is also the word-picture of a cow chewing its cud—swallowing food, bringing it back up, and chewing on it again to extract every ounce of nutrient.
- The Practice: In Joshua 1:8, when God commands Joshua to "meditate (Hagah) on this Book of the Law day and night," he isn't telling him to sit in silent contemplation. He is telling him to under-the-breath mutter, speak, and mentally chew on the text continuously throughout the day so that it shapes his immediate actions.
Hagah vs. Secular Mindfulness: The Core Differences
While both practices strengthen the prefrontal cortex and improve attention regulation, they navigate the internal world through different frameworks:


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