Deep Well Audio
PrimaryHomeBibleStudiesSearch
MoreBrowseWorld WatchLibraryPricing
Sign InCreate Free Account
Deep Well Audio

Listen freely. View plans to save teachings, keep notes, and build a library that lasts.

© 2026

Browse·Studies·Bible·Library·Pricing·Sign in·Short updates. No spam.·Send feedback·About
  1. Home
  2. Studies
  3. Forgiveness
  4. Forgiveness and Mercy
Back to TopicBack to Studies

Forgiveness and Mercy

Study how God’s mercy toward sinners shapes the way believers approach forgiveness.

Key Scripture

  • Ephesians 4:31–32
  • Colossians 3:12–13
  • Psalm 103:10–12

Forgiveness begins with remembering mercy received

Paul’s commands to put away bitterness and forgive are not issued into a vacuum. They are spoken to people who have been shown mercy in Christ—chosen, beloved, and called to put on compassionate hearts. Forgiveness, in this light, is not a demand that the injured person pretend they are unaffected; it is a call to respond in a way that matches the mercy they themselves depend on every day.

Remembering mercy received reframes the inner conversation. Instead of rehearsing how much someone deserves retaliation, the believer rehearses how much they have been forgiven. That does not erase accountability or truth, but it weakens the grip of self-righteous anger—the kind of anger that treats mercy as something earned rather than received.

Bitterness grows where mercy is forgotten

Bitterness is not only an emotion; it is a habit of the heart that feeds on injury. When mercy is forgotten, the mind returns again and again to wrongs, re-litigating the past and nursing a sense of justified resentment. Scripture warns against this not because pain is unreal, but because bitterness does spiritual damage: it binds the soul to the wrong done and makes the heart a prisoner.

Forgiveness, understood biblically, is one of God’s means of protection. It does not mean the wound was insignificant; it means the believer refuses to let the wound become a throne. Mercy remembered starves bitterness by redirecting the heart toward God’s patience and toward a future shaped by grace rather than revenge.

Forgiveness is costly because mercy is costly

Mercy is never cheap. God’s mercy toward sinners was purchased at the highest cost—the cross of Christ. Human forgiveness, though different in kind, often carries real pain: the pain of releasing a claim to personal vengeance, the pain of accepting that justice may not look the way the flesh demands, and the pain of entrusting outcomes to God.

Costly forgiveness is not performed to earn God’s love; it flows from having received love. It may take time, repeated prayer, and help from the church. The point is direction: the heart is learning to walk in the pattern of mercy, not because injury is denied, but because Christ’s people are being remade to resemble Him.

Mercy does not make sin small, but it changes how believers respond

Mercy does not say evil is insignificant. The gospel insists that sin is serious enough to require the death of the Son of God. What mercy does is remove the believer’s final hope from personal payback and place it in God’s righteous judgment and reconciling grace.

This changes the posture of the Christian toward others: truth can still be spoken, boundaries can still exist, and wisdom can still be pursued—but the driving engine is no longer hatred. The believer seeks to reflect God’s heart: hating what is evil while refusing to be consumed by evil’s cycle.

Reflect and respond

  • Where am I tempted to hold tightly to bitterness?
  • How does God’s mercy toward me reshape my view of others?
  • What would it look like to respond with mercy without denying truth?

Keep studying

  • Forgiveness and Reconciliation
  • Repentance and Returning to God

Supporting audio

Related teaching for deeper study

Optional listening that overlaps these themes. The study above remains primary.

YouTubeMeaty 10

Grace Church Hot Springs

Apr 20, 2026 · 48 min

The Wildness of God (4/19/26)

What if the storms of life are actually invitations to find God in the wild places? Pastor Lamar shares a gripping survival story from the rugged San Juan National Forest, revealing that God is more wilderness than manicured…

Grace ChurchHot SpringsSermonsTeachingBible
WatchEpisode pageShow page
YouTubeMeaty 10

Grace Church Hot Springs

Apr 13, 2026 · 1h 5m

Don't Waste the Trial (4/12/26)

What if the very trial you're asking God to remove is where He's doing His deepest work? Pastor Joe, who watched his wife Kelly lose her hearing to rare brain tumors and discovered his son carried the same genetic condition, reveals how…

Grace ChurchHot SpringsSermonsTeachingBible
WatchEpisode pageShow page
RSSMeaty 9

Truth For Life Daily Program

Mar 23, 2026

“If the World Hates You…” (Part 2 of 2)

When considering the High Priestly Prayer, some may wonder why Jesus didn’t just pray that His followers would be taken out of the world and delivered from suffering and trials immediately. Hear the Bible’s response on Truth For Life with…

DailyExpositoryAlistair BeggSuffering
Episode pageEpisode pageShow page
RSSMeaty 9

Truth For Life with Alistair Begg Sermons

Mar 20, 2026

March 20, 2026: Proclaiming Boldly, Suffering Bravely

While an approach to Christianity that treats it as a soft option may sound attractive, it’s certainly not scriptural. Truly biblical discipleship is muscular, demanding, and thoughtful. The apostle Paul made this clear to Timothy as he…

SermonsExpositoryAlistair BeggSufferingSpiritual growth
Episode pageEpisode pageShow page
RSSMeaty 10

The Alisa Childers Podcast

Mar 15, 2026 · 1h 6m

#362 Disability Justice? The Hidden Branch of Critical Theory Infiltrating the Church | Ela “The Disapologist”

What happens when critical theory gets applied to disability? In this fascinating conversation, Alisa sits down with Christian apologist Ela, known online as The DisApologist, who herself lives with a physical disability, to talk about…

ApologeticsDiscernmentCultureTheologySuffering
Episode pageEpisode pageShow page
RSSMeaty 10

Wretched Radio with Todd Friel

Mar 12, 2026 · 54 min

The House Church Myth + Why Parenting Feels Harder Than Ever

Segment 1 • The push to abandon church buildings for “first-century house churches”: admirable or misguided? • Did the early church reject formal worship spaces, like church buildings? • Old Testament and synagogue patterns challenge the…

DiscernmentWorldviewTheologyGospelMarriage
Episode pageEpisode pageShow page

Prefer topical hubs? Browse the directory.