Bible Theme
Mercy
Summary
Mercy is compassion in action — God withholding the judgment we deserve and giving help we have not earned. Where grace gives the good we don't merit, mercy spares us the punishment we do. Mercy is woven into God's very name. It moves him to pity the helpless, forgive the guilty, and stoop to the suffering — and it is the family likeness he calls his children to wear.
On This Thread
Follow this theme across the whole library — its people, stories, prayers, witnesses, and more.
Witnesses
In the Old Testament
God proclaimed his name to Moses as 'merciful and gracious, slow to anger.' The psalmist echoes it: 'The Lord is merciful and gracious.' Micah marvels that God 'delights in steadfast love' and treads our iniquities underfoot — mercy is God's settled disposition, not a mood.
In the New Testament
Jesus made mercy the punchline of the Good Samaritan: 'Go, and do likewise.' And Paul roots our salvation in it: 'God, being rich in mercy… made us alive together with Christ.' We are not first the merciful but the mercied — recipients before we are givers.
Common Misconception
Mercy is sometimes mistaken for weakness, or for ignoring wrong. But true mercy is strength under control — it sees the wrong clearly and chooses compassion anyway. Nor does mercy cancel justice; at the cross they meet, as God shows mercy without ever winking at sin.
Application
Having received mercy, become merciful. Be quick to pity rather than to condemn, generous to those who can't repay, gentle with the failing. 'Blessed are the merciful, for they shall receive mercy' — the cycle of compassion begins with you.
Key Passages
Exodus 34:6
God reveals himself as merciful and gracious, slow to anger, abounding in love.
Psalm 103:8
'The Lord is merciful and gracious' — the worshiper's confident refrain.
Micah 7:18
God delights in mercy and casts our sins into the depths of the sea.
Luke 10:37
The Samaritan's mercy becomes Jesus' command: 'Go, and do likewise.'
Ephesians 2:4
God, rich in mercy, made us alive with Christ even when we were dead in sin.