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An Advent Journey for the Discerning Heart:
Prepare your heart for Christ through Scripture, the saints, and the gentle practice of daily listening.
Part Four: Welcoming Christ with a Heart Fully Awake
DAY 22 – Mercy
“His mercy is from generation to generation on those who fear Him.”
Luke 1.50 RSV
Mercy is the tenderness of God meeting the truth of who we are. It is not simply forgiveness, though it includes that. Mercy is God’s way of loving human weakness without hesitation. It is His readiness to stoop down, lift up, heal, restore, and draw us close.
Mercy flows from God’s heart because mercy is who God is. It is the love that sees our poverty and does not turn away. It is the compassion that enters our wounds with patience. It is the kindness that meets us where we are and leads us gently to where we are meant to be.
Mercy is also relational. It is the movement of God’s heart toward us and the movement of our heart toward others. A listening heart receives mercy and then becomes merciful. The more deeply we allow Christ to meet us in our weakness, the more naturally we become vessels of His mercy in the world.
Mercy does not excuse sin. It transforms the sinner. It returns dignity, restores hope, and rekindles love.
Advent invites the heart to welcome Christ as the face of the Father’s mercy, the One who comes not to condemn but to save, lift, heal, and renew.
Journey with the Saints –
St. Faustina Kowalska
“The greater the misery of a soul, the greater its right to My mercy.”
St. Faustina, Diary, 1182
Faustina was entrusted with a profound revelation of Christ’s merciful heart.
She understood mercy not as an abstract idea but as a living encounter with the God who longs for us. For Faustina, mercy is the place where God’s love meets our human limits.
She teaches that we do not have to be worthy of mercy. We only have to open our hearts to receive it.
Christ does not recoil from our sin or weakness. He draws nearer.
Faustina reminds us that the one who has tasted mercy must become merciful. The heart that knows mercy becomes capable of patience, forgiveness, and compassion.
Reflection for the Listening Heart
Today invites you to let Christ meet you exactly where you are. Not where you think you should be. Not where you pretend to be. Where you truly are.
Mercy is God bending toward your need with love. Let Him come close. Open the places of failure, discouragement, or regret. Let Him touch the wounds that still ache.
Mercy does not shame the heart. Mercy restores it.
And as you receive this mercy, ask the Lord: Who needs mercy from me today? Where can I reflect the patience, gentleness, or forgiveness that God has shown to me? A heart that receives mercy becomes a heart that gives mercy.
A Simple Practice for Today
Choose one person today who stirs irritation, frustration, or judgment in you.
Offer them a silent act of mercy:
a prayer, a kind word, a gentle response, or the choice not to speak a criticism.
Let it be your offering to the One who has been merciful to you.
Prayer
Jesus, full of mercy,
open my heart to receive the love You long to give.
Heal what is wounded.
Lift what is burdened.
Forgive what is sinful.
Let Your mercy flow through me to others,
so that my life may reflect the compassion of Your heart.
Amen.
For more of the episodes of
An Advent Journey for the Discerning Heart with Kris McGregor visit here
Citations for Day 22
Luke 1.50 RSV
St. Faustina Kowalska, Diary, 1182
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