2026-06-18

Loving as We Are Loved: Mercy, Grace, and Restoration — John 15:12

Loving as We Are Loved: Mercy, Grace, and Restoration 

Scripture Focus:

"My command is this: Love each other as I have loved you." — John 15:12 (NIV)

Devotion:

We are comfortable with the word "love." We love coffee, sunsets, and our families. But when Jesus gives this as a command, He is not talking about a feeling; He is talking about a radical, costly decision.

Look at the standard He sets: "as I have loved you."

How did Jesus love you? He loved you with mercy—withholding the punishment you actually deserved, absorbing it fully into His own body on the cross. He loves you with grace—showing unexpected kindness to you when you were completely undeserving, rebellious, and indifferent (Romans 5:8). But He also loves you with discipline—because to leave a wandering child completely alone is not love, it is abandonment.

Notice, however, the nature of His discipline. It is never punitive wrath. A judge punishes to exact a debt; a Father disciplines to restore a child. When you go astray, He does not punish you for your sin (that debt was paid at Calvary). Instead, He corrects you from your sin—firmly, sometimes painfully, but always with the tender goal of pulling you back from the cliff and setting your feet on solid ground. His discipline is mercy and grace in their most active, rescuing form.

Here is the shift for us: Human love flows toward the lovely and the grateful. It punishes those who wrong us, reserves kindness only for those who earn it, and avoids the messy work of correction.

But Jesus commands a divine love—a love that flows from your identity in Christ, not from the worthiness of the recipient.

  • Mercy means you do not punish the spouse, friend, or coworker who has hurt you. You release their debt, just as Jesus released yours.

  • Grace means you extend unexpected kindness to those who haven't earned it, pouring out goodness freely, just as Jesus pours out His Spirit on you daily.

  • Restorative discipline means you do not look away when a brother or sister is straying. You speak the hard, tear-filled truth—not to condemn them, but to rescue them. Correction without condemnation is one of the highest forms of love.

This is impossible in our own strength. We simply cannot manufacture mercy, grace, or loving correction. But notice the context: In John 15, Jesus calls Himself the Vine and us the branches. The only way to love like Jesus is to stay connected to Him. When we abide in Him, His supernatural love flows through us—without bitterness, without stinginess, and without self-righteousness.

Today's Challenge:
Think of the one person who is hardest for you to love right now. Ask yourself: Do they need my mercy (release from a debt)? Do they need my grace (unexpected kindness)? Or, in love, do they need a hard, restorative conversation to pull them back to safety? Ask the Holy Spirit to let you see them through Jesus' eyes. Then, take one small step to lay down your life for them today—whether that is forgiving, serving, or gently correcting—without expecting anything in return.

Prayer:
Lord Jesus, Your love is staggering. Thank You that You do not punish me for what I deserve, because You took that punishment upon Yourself. Thank You for Your unearned kindness that meets me daily. And thank You for Your faithful, restorative discipline that refuses to let me wander into destruction. Fill me with Your Holy Spirit today. Let Your mercy flow through my hands, Your grace through my words, and Your loving correction through my actions—so that I may love others exactly as You have loved me. Help me to abide in You, so that Your love becomes my natural response. Amen.





2026-06-16

Devotion: The Lord's Simple, Sacred Expectation - Micah 6:8

Devotion: The Lord's Simple, Sacred Expectation

Scripture: Micah 6:8 – "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." (NIV)

Sometimes we make faith exhausting. We wonder, Am I praying enough? Serving enough? Does God expect more rituals, more offerings, more religious activity?

The people of Micah's day felt the same way. They asked if God wanted burnt offerings, rivers of oil, even their firstborn children (Micah 6:6-7). God's reply, through the prophet, is stunning in its simplicity: I've already shown you what's good. Here's what I really require.

But notice the order. Before God ever requires, He reveals. He doesn't leave us to guess about right and wrong. Through His Word, His law, His prophets, and ultimately His Son, He first teaches us the standards of true goodness. That foundation is crucial—without it, our "justice" becomes human opinion, our "mercy" becomes selective kindness, and our "humility" becomes self-improvement.

Then, from that foundation, He calls us to act. Not a checklist of religious performance, but a portrait of a transformed heart:

Act justly – Do what's right. Defend the weak. Speak truth where there's corruption. Justice isn't a suggestion; it's the visible proof that God's character lives in you.

Love mercy – Notice it doesn't say "show mercy" but love it. Mercy should be your delight, not your duty. That means forgiving the undeserving, giving grace before it's earned, and choosing kindness even when justice alone would condemn.

Walk humbly with your God – This is the posture that makes the first two possible. Without humility, justice becomes prideful activism. Without dependence on God, mercy becomes exhausting performance. Walking with Him means you're not the source of goodness; He is. You simply abide, receive, and then reflect.

These three belong together. Justice without mercy is harsh. Mercy without justice is spineless. And without humble walking with God, both become about us—our causes, our goodness.

So here is the beautiful rhythm of Micah 6:8:

God teaches the standard → God calls for action → God invites humble dependence

Revelation. Response. Relationship.

Today, stop asking, "What more does God want from me?" He's already shown you. Start small: one just act, one merciful choice, one moment of quiet walking with Him—not in your own strength, but with your God.

Prayer: Lord, thank You for not leaving me to guess what is good. You have shown me. Forgive me for overcomplicating my faith. Teach me to act justly when it's costly, to love mercy when it feels undeserved, and to walk humbly—not ahead of You or behind You, but with You. Amen.