Prayer for mercy

You cry out with the Psalmist, surrounded by those who hate you, your heart exhausted by the world’s darkness. Do not interpret this trouble as God’s abandonment. He permits such trials precisely because He loves you, not to push you into dangers but to set you above them. If He merely removed every threat, you would never learn to despise death and fix your hope on the immortal life to come. This is a far greater gift than mere deliverance.

But attend carefully: when you plead, “Have mercy upon me, O Lord,” you must first have mercy upon yourself. And how do you show yourself mercy? By bearing the spiteful acts of those who hate you with meekness, refusing to let anger take root. Hating them back punishes your own soul and multiplies your wounds; loving them in patience brings you deliverance from sins, fortitude, mildness, and an unshakable peace. You are the arbiter of God’s mercy toward you, if you will not spare yourself from the poison of resentment, who will pity you? Have mercy on your neighbor, even your enemy, and you will find mercy from God Himself.

Remember, too, that our Master was not a stranger to this agony. His soul was troubled, and He even sought deliverance from death, feeling its full dread, yet He did not shrink back. This was permitted so that you might see how human frailty can, by grace, overcome. He endured the hatred of His enemies, and through His death He perfected salvation for all who are sanctified. The same Lord who lifted you from the gates of death now sits at the right hand of God, and every enemy, unbelievers, demons, all that hate His truth, shall be put under His feet. The delay is only for the sake of those yet to be born into faith.

Do not let this trial cause you to slacken in well-doing. Bind mercy and truth about your neck as a never-removed ornament, showing yourself a child of the compassionate God. Let your persistent kindness, even amid persecution, be a testimony that silences mockers and draws them toward belief. This present conflict is your wrestling school; if no open persecution rages, use the daily provocations as a sack of sand to train your strength. The gate of death may loom large, but Christ has passed through it and shattered its power. Stand firm, mourn your own sins more than the hatred of others, and keep your eyes on the judgment where every wrong will be righted. The One who pitied us when we were enemies will not forsake you now.
 
Your cry from Psalm 9 echoes a deep and ancient truth: when the hatred of others presses in and the shadow of death seems to loom, the only fitting turn is toward the Lord who lifts us from those very gates. You feel surrounded, beaten down, exhausted by the darkness of this world. That raw honesty is not a weakness; it is faith in its most desperate, beautiful form.

Mercy is not getting what we deserve. Justice would give us exactly that, and sometimes we contribute to our own troubles by wandering from God’s counsel, finding ourselves bound in affliction. Yet even when the distress is largely our own fault, His mercy endures forever. He hears those who call upon Him from their lowest state, He remembers us, breaks the chains, and brings us out of darkness and the shadow of death. That shadow is not merely physical danger but the spiritual death that sin brings, the separation of soul and spirit from God. All of us were once dead in trespasses, but He made us alive in Christ. At the cross, Jesus bore the full weight of our sin and entered the darkness we deserved, crying out in our place so that the sting of death would be swallowed up in victory.

Because of Him, the gates of death cannot hold you. He lifts you up, and surely goodness and mercy follow you all the days of your life, even through the valley. When your spirit is overwhelmed and enemies seem to press you into the ground, remember: with God there is no darkness. The night shines as the day. He hides you in the secret of His tabernacle, sets you upon a rock, and lifts your head above those who hate you. You are not beyond the reach of His hand. His ways toward you are mercy and truth, and He will perfect that which concerns you.

Cry to Him in your trouble, for in the day of trouble you can call upon the Lord and He will answer. He sends His word and heals, delivering from destruction. Ask Him: “Teach me to do thy will; bring my soul out of trouble.” The deliverance may not begin with the removal of enemies but with a renewed strength to sing aloud of His mercy in the morning. He remains your defense and refuge. The mercy of the Most High shall not be moved, and neither will you, as you trust in Him.
 

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