A God of Mercy
A God of Mercy
By BYU Professor Rodney Turner
“Without the
idea of the existence of the attribute of mercy in Deity, the spirits of the
Saints would faint in the midst of tribulations, afflictions and persecutions
which they have to endure for righteousness’ sake.
God is a
merciful God: gracious, compassionate, slow to anger, patient and
longsuffering. If He were not, human nature, which is a relative compound of
ignorance, immaturity, instability and impotence, would render the hope of eternal
life an impossible dream.
The gulf
between divinity and humanity, holiness and unholiness, is so vast that any faith we might muster would eventually
be swallowed up in paralyzing doubt. How
could we ever become acceptable to a flawless God with his ‘all-searching eye
(Mosiah 27:31)?
How could we
be at ease, much less happy, in his presence?
But because of our faith in the redemptive power of Christ, we can ‘come boldly unto the throne of
grace, that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help (us) in time of need
(Heb 4:16). Without divine mercy, heaven would be hell (Mormon 9:4-5).
Paradoxically,
it is His very holiness which makes mercy essential if we are ‘to be received
into the kingdom of the Father and go no more out’ (3rd Nephi
28:40). For salvation depends far more upon what God is and does, than upon
what we, of ourselves, are or can do.
We are
hopelessly lost unless a higher nature overwhelms and transforms our fallen
natures. This higher nature, with its
attendant powers, is found in Jesus Christ.
Divine mercy is not limited to those
moral and spiritual issues which dictate our destiny in some future life; he is
merciful in the here and now. His
invisible hand is extended to us far more often than we realize.
Only at the
last judgment when the full account of God’s dealings with mankind,
collectively and individually, are revealed, will we learn the full extent of
his providential care. We are never
alone, even when we feel abandoned. God is not some remote, disinterested ‘force’
in the universe.
Human nature
being what it is, there is a danger that God’s mercy will be interpreted as
divine weakness or indifference (Rom 2:4-6).
This would be a fatal error. We must not be slothful simply because God is
merciful. The Almighty has infinite patience, but he will not extend it to us
infinitely.
We are given
adequate opportunity to reveal our true selves to ourselves, to establish what
we everlastingly are. God can do no more; He will not coerce us
into being what we do not choose to be.
The last judgment is the finish line. When we reach it, the race with ourselves is
over and ‘the night of darkness wherein there can be no labor performed’ (Alma
34:33) will descend upon mankind’s day of probation.”