❤️Getting to Know God’s Heart
One of the most profound declarations God makes about His heart:
“I desire mercy, not sacrifice.” – Hosea 6:6
Quoted by Jesus in Matthew 9:13, and again in Matthew 12:7.
To understand the weight of this statement, we need to see it through the whole arc of Scripture, especially:
- Hosea’s prophetic message
- The writings of Moses, David, Asaph, and the Prophets
- And how Jesus reframes it for the religious leaders of His day
Let’s explore.
🌊 Context in Hosea 6:6
“For I desire mercy and not sacrifice, the knowledge of God rather than burnt offerings.”
📖 What’s Going On in Hosea?
- Israel’s devotion was surface-level.
- They offered rituals without relationship, worship without true repentance.
- Hosea compares their love to “morning mist”—beautiful for a moment, but gone by sunrise (v4).
God isn’t rejecting sacrifice as a concept. Sacrifices were His own design (see Leviticus).
But He’s saying: “You’ve missed the point.”
“You’re checking the box, but ignoring the heart behind it.”
💔 What Is “Sacrifice” Without Mercy?
Throughout Scripture, sacrifice can become a substitute for obedience, for justice, or even for genuine humility. Here’s how this plays out:
🚫 1. Sacrifice without Compassion = Hypocrisy
- Amos 5:21–24 “I hate your festivals… But let justice roll on like a river, righteousness like a never-failing stream!”
- Isaiah 1:11–17 “The multitude of your sacrifices—what are they to me?… Stop doing wrong. Learn to do right.”
😔 2. Sacrifice without Repentance = Rebellion
- Psalm 51:16–17 (David, after his sin) “You do not delight in sacrifice, or I would bring it… The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit.”
😶 3. Sacrifice without Knowledge of God = Religion Without Relationship
- Jeremiah 9:24 “Let him who boasts boast about this: that he understands and knows me…”
- Hosea 4:1 “There is no faithfulness, no love, no acknowledgment of God in the land.”
🧡 So What Does “Mercy” Mean Here?
The Hebrew word used in Hosea 6:6 is ḥesed (חֶסֶד) — a rich word that means:
- Steadfast love
- Covenant loyalty
- Kindness
- Mercy
- Faithful, loving commitment
It’s not just “feeling bad” for someone—it’s a love that acts, a love that keeps its word, a love that flows out of a deep relationship with God.
🕊️ Jesus and the Pharisees (Matthew 9:12–13)
Jesus says to the Pharisees:
“Go and learn what this means: ‘I desire mercy, not sacrifice.’”
Why?
Because they criticized Him for eating with sinners.
They were focused on purity laws, but had no love for broken people.
Jesus was saying:
“You know the Law, but you don’t know the heart of the One who gave it.”
Just like in Hosea’s day, they were:
- Keeping ritual boundaries
- But lacking compassion
- And failing to see that loving people IS loving God
🎵 The Heart of Moses, David, and Asaph
Moses (Deut 10:12–19)
“What does the Lord require of you? …To love Him… and love the foreigner, for you yourselves were foreigners.”
David (Psalm 51)
Brokenness and humility > external performance
Asaph (Psalm 50)
“I have no need of a bull from your stall… Offer to God a sacrifice of thanksgiving.”
✅ Summary: What God Desires
| God Does Not Desire | But He Does Desire |
|---|---|
| Empty rituals | Covenant love (ḥesed) |
| Legalistic obedience | Compassion and justice |
| External religion | Heart-level transformation |
| Sacrifice for show | A broken and humble spirit |
| Knowing the rules | Knowing Him |
🌱 How Can We Live This Out Today?
- Don’t substitute religious activity for spiritual intimacy.
Are you praying or giving to check a box—or to connect with God? - Show mercy in your relationships.
Ask: Am I extending the grace that I’ve received? - Prioritize people over systems.
Jesus often broke rules to love people rightly. Do we? - Know God, not just about Him.
Pursue personal knowledge of His heart through prayer, Word, and obedience.
🙏 A Prayer to End With
Lord, let my worship not be hollow. Break my heart for what breaks Yours. Fill me with ḥesed—the kind of love that flows from knowing You.