A Prayer for Learning to Be Merciful... and Loving It | Your Daily Prayer
Tammy Darling
Crosswalk.com Contributing WriterThere are moments when a familiar Scripture suddenly feels brand new—when a single phrase stands out and reshapes our understanding. Micah 6:8 is one of those verses. Many of us know it well: “act justly, love mercy, and walk humbly with your God.” But the phrase love mercy carries a depth that’s easy to overlook.
It’s one thing to show mercy. It’s another to love it.
Often, we extend mercy out of obligation. We forgive because we know we should. We let things go because it’s the “right” thing to do. But inwardly, our hearts may still be wrestling with hurt, resentment, or reluctance. True transformation happens when mercy is not just practiced—but embraced.
Loving mercy means allowing God to reshape our hearts so that compassion becomes our natural response.
This can feel especially difficult when we’ve been deeply hurt. Pain has a way of narrowing our perspective. We see the offense clearly, but it’s harder to see the person behind it. Yet Scripture reminds us that vengeance belongs to God (Romans 12:19). We are not called to carry the weight of justice—we are called to reflect the heart of God.
And God is merciful.
Psalm 103:8 describes Him as “merciful and gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in mercy.” Mercy isn’t just something God does—it’s part of who He is. As we grow closer to Him, His character begins to shape ours.
Through God’s eyes, we begin to see differently. Instead of only seeing the hurt, we start to recognize brokenness in others. Instead of withholding grace, we begin to extend it. Not because it’s easy, but because God empowers us to do what we cannot do on our own.
Loving mercy doesn’t mean ignoring pain or pretending it didn’t happen. It means choosing to release it to God and allowing His love to flow through us anyway.
And in that process, something beautiful happens: we experience more of God Himself.
Main Takeaways
- God calls us not just to show mercy, but to love it.
- Mercy rooted in obligation is different from mercy rooted in love.
- We are not responsible for justice—God is.
- Seeing others through God’s eyes helps us extend compassion.
- As we grow closer to God, His merciful character shapes our hearts.
Today’s Bible Verse
“He has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the LORD require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God.” Micah 6:8, NIV
Your Daily Prayer
Prayer excerpt for listeners:
“Lord, help me not only show mercy, but truly love it as You do.”
Listen to the full prayer here. To view the prayer in written format, visit the links below.
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