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Where did mercy start in the Parable? What about Grace?
Where did mercy start in the Parable? What about Grace?
Where did mercy start in the Parable? What about Grace?
Hiya Rens !!! :flowers1:dont even know the difference, we only have one word for it.
Hiya Rens !!! :flowers1:
What do you mean, in Dutch there's one word for both grace and mercy?
Hmmm, that would streamline the bible a bit, I guess.
I've heard it said that:
Grace is God GIVING us what we dont deserve ....
Like salvation is a gift ... We're saved ... It's a gift ... by His grace ...
Mercy is God NOT giving us what we DO deserve ....
We have been saved from the wrath to come ... by His mercy ...
We deserve wrath, but we don't get His wrath because Jesus took it for us.
He GAVE US His Son, full of grace and truth .... Grace
He spared not His Son, but SPARED US instead .... Mercy
dont even know the difference, we only have one word for it.
hmn, I would think that mercy began with the father giving the prodigal his living inheritance and grace began in receiving him back from the world.
It's the other way around. Grace was giving the inheritance early. Mercy was receiving him back when his conduct deserved nothing but a harsh reprove.
Deuteronomy 21:15-17
15 If a man has two wives, and he loves one but not the other, and both bear him sons but the firstborn is the son of the wife he does not love, 16 when he wills his property to his sons, he must not give the rights of the firstborn to the son of the wife he loves in preference to his actual firstborn, the son of the wife he does not love. 17 He must acknowledge the son of his unloved wife as the firstborn by giving him a double share of all he has. That son is the first sign of his father’s strength. The right of the firstborn belongs to him.
The elder son had a 2/3 inheritance coming to him and the younger son had a 1/3 inheritance coming to him.
WHEN THE FATHER DIED!
Deuteronomy 21:18-21
18 If someone has a stubborn and rebellious son who does not obey his father and mother and will not listen to them when they discipline him, 19 his father and mother shall take hold of him and bring him to the elders at the gate of his town. 20 They shall say to the elders, “This son of ours is stubborn and rebellious. He will not obey us. He is a glutton and a drunkard.” 21 Then all the men of his town are to stone him to death. You must purge the evil from among you. All Israel will hear of it and be afraid.
The younger son, in saying "I really don't want to wait for you to die, old man, so give me what I have coming to me NOW, and I'll take it in cash!" may very well have been a rebellious son as defined in Deuteronomy 21.
As a rebellious son he deserved death and yet his father spared his life in spite of the unthinkable act of demanding an early inheritance and selling it off. That is MERCY (not getting the punishment he deserved).
By actually granting the unreasonable request of the rebellious son and giving him his inheritance early, the father showed GRACE (getting an unearned gift) towards the younger son.
Thus both GRACE and MERCY were shown by the father towards the son right in the beginning of the story (and continue through it).
Mercy = You break your mother's favorite vase and do not get a spanking.I still don't see the difference.
Mercy = You break your mother's favorite vase and do not get a spanking.
Grace = You get a present and it isn't even your birthday!
Not really the same thing, are they?
No in this example it's clear, but we're saved by grace, but mercy at the same time. You can't seperate them.
Yes, God CHOSE to do it that way (to our eternal benefit).No in this example it's clear, but we're saved by grace, but mercy at the same time. You can't separate them.
No in this example it's clear, but we're saved by grace, but mercy at the same time. You can't seperate them.
Well.... in our relationship with God they are inseparable, but I think Arthur's point was they they aren't the same thing and they OTHERWISE would not NECESSARILY go together..... but they certainly do vis-a-vis God and Christians.
Where did mercy start in the Parable? What about Grace?