One of the most beautiful truths in Scripture is God’s compassion for sinners. Many people imagine God the Father as harsh, distant, angry, and reluctant to forgive, while they see Jesus as merciful, gentle, and willing to receive sinners. But the Bible never presents the Father and Son as divided in heart, will, or purpose. The Father is not trying to destroy sinners while the Son holds Him back. Rather, the Father Himself planned redemption, sent the Son, and receives repentant sinners with compassion.
Luke 15 gives us one of the clearest pictures of this truth. Jesus said of the prodigal son, “And he arose and came to his father. But while he was still a long way off, his father saw him and felt compassion, and ran and embraced him and kissed him” (Luke 15:20). Before the son could finish his confession, before he could offer his prepared speech, and before he could ask to be treated like a hired servant, the father saw him and felt compassion.
That father represents God the Father. And this means Luke 15 is not merely a touching story about a wayward son coming home. It is a revelation of God’s heart toward repentant sinners.
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Table of contentsGod’s Compassion and God’s Forgiveness Are Related, but Not IdenticalGod’s Compassion for Sinners Is Seen Throughout ScriptureGod’s Compassion Is Greater Than We ExpectGod’s Kindness Leads Us to RepentanceEven God’s Children Should Confess Their SinGod’s Compassion Allows Sinners to Escape the Law’s DemandsThe Prodigal Son Shows the Heart of God the FatherNo Sinner Is Beyond God’s CompassionConclusion
God’s Compassion and God’s Forgiveness Are Related, but Not Identical
God’s compassion and God’s forgiveness are closely connected, but they are not exactly the same. Compassion is what God feels toward sinners in their pitiful condition. Forgiveness is what God does because of His mercy and compassion.
In Scripture, compassion is often related to pity. We feel compassion when we see someone suffering, broken, humbled, or in need. We do not feel compassion for every situation. If a couple announces they are expecting a child, we rejoice with them. But if they share that they miscarried, we feel compassion. Compassion rises in our hearts when we see pain, sorrow, brokenness, and need.
That helps us understand the father’s response in Luke 15. When he saw his son returning, he knew what his son had done. He knew the shame, waste, rebellion, and misery that had marked his journey. The son had demanded his inheritance, left home, squandered everything, and ended up in humiliation. When the father saw him returning, he did not first feel disgust, suspicion, or hostility. He felt compassion.
Even more striking, the father felt compassion before the son confessed. The son had prepared to say, “Father, I have sinned against heaven and before you. I am no longer worthy to be called your son” (Luke 15:21). But before those words were spoken, the father ran, embraced him, and kissed him. This is one of the most moving pictures in Scripture of God’s compassion for sinners.
God’s Compassion for Sinners Is Seen Throughout Scripture
God's compassion is not only a New Testament truth. It is not something that appears only when Jesus comes in the flesh. God’s compassion for sinners is revealed throughout all of Scripture.
In Matthew 18, Jesus tells the parable of the unforgiving servant. A servant owed a debt so large he could never repay it, even with many lifetimes. That debt pictures our sin debt before God. We cannot pay it. We cannot work it off. We cannot make ourselves righteous.
When the servant pleaded for patience, the master’s response was astonishing: “And out of pity for him, the master of that servant released him and forgave him the debt” (Matthew 18:27). The master was moved with compassion and forgave the debt completely.
That is how God forgives repentant sinners. He does not forgive a little. He does not merely reduce the debt. He cancels it.
We also see God’s compassion in the book of Jonah. Jonah preached to Nineveh, and the Ninevites responded with one of the most dramatic examples of repentance in Scripture. But Jonah was angry because he hated the Ninevites and did not want them to receive mercy.
God said to Jonah, “Should not I pity Nineveh, that great city?” (Jonah 4:11). Humanly speaking, most people familiar with Nineveh’s wickedness would have expected the opposite. The Ninevites were violent, cruel, idolatrous people. Yet God had compassion on them when they humbled themselves.
What is especially revealing is that Jonah was not surprised by God’s compassion. He said, “I knew that you are a gracious God and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love” (Jonah 4:2). Jonah knew God’s character. He knew God was compassionate toward sinners, and that is exactly why he resisted preaching to Nineveh.
This matters because Jonah is in the Old Testament. The Old Testament does not reveal a Father who lacks compassion. It reveals the same God who is gracious, merciful, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love.
God’s Compassion Is Greater Than We Expect
Another surprising example of God’s compassion is King Ahab. Scripture says, “There was none who sold himself to do what was evil in the sight of the Lord like Ahab” (1 Kings 21:25). Ahab was in a category by himself when it came to wickedness.
After Elijah pronounced judgment on him, Ahab humbled himself. His humility was not especially impressive. There is no indication he truly turned from idolatry to the Lord. He seemed more sorry about the consequences than the sin itself. And yet God said to Elijah, “Have you seen how Ahab has humbled himself before me?” (1 Kings 21:29). Because Ahab humbled himself, God delayed the disaster.
This does not mean Ahab became a believer. Scripture gives us no reason to think we will see him in heaven. But it does reveal something astonishing about God’s character: even toward a man as wicked as Ahab, God responded to humility with compassion.
Psalm 103:10-13 says it beautifully:
He does not deal with us according to our sins,nor repay us according to our iniquities.For as high as the heavens are above the earth,so great is his steadfast love toward those who fear him;as far as the east is from the west,so far does he remove our transgressions from us.As a father shows compassion to his children,so the Lord shows compassion to those who fear him.
That passage almost sounds like a preview of the prodigal son. As a father shows compassion to his children, so the Lord shows compassion to those who fear Him.
God’s Kindness Leads Us to Repentance
When we misunderstand God’s heart, repentance becomes terrifying. If we think God is only angry, hostile, and eager to punish us, we will run from Him instead of returning to Him. We will imagine Him like a cruel father waiting to crush us.
But Luke 15 shows us the truth. The repentant sinner does not return to a cruel Father. He returns to a compassionate Father.
This does not mean God is soft on sin. God’s wrath is real. His judgment is real. Hell is real. The danger is not that God is angry toward those who repent. The danger is that sinners refuse to repent and remain under His wrath.
Romans 2:4 says that God’s kindness is meant to lead us to repentance. This is not sentimental kindness that ignores sin. It is holy kindness. It is mercy that calls sinners to come home. Desiring God has a helpful resource on Romans 2:4 and God’s kindness leading to repentance. God’s compassion should never make us casual about sin. It should make us quick to repent.
Even God’s Children Should Confess Their Sin
After the father embraced and kissed the prodigal son, the son still confessed: “Father, I have sinned against heaven and before you. I am no longer worthy to be called your son” (Luke 15:21).
This is important. The son knew he had been received. He had already experienced the father’s compassion. But he still confessed his sin and acknowledged his unworthiness.
That teaches us something about the Christian life. Even after we become God’s children, we should still confess our sins. We should still recognize our unworthiness. We do not confess because we are trying to earn God’s love. We confess because we know we need His mercy and grace.
In Luke 17:10, Jesus said, “So you also, when you have done all that you were commanded, say, ‘We are unworthy servants; we have only done what was our duty.’”
The Christian life is not marked by pride, entitlement, or self-congratulation. We are sons and daughters by grace, but we are still unworthy servants. We obey God not to earn His favor, but because we have received His favor.
Ligonier has a helpful article on repentance that emphasizes how true repentance recognizes sin before God while also apprehending God’s mercy toward sinners in Christ.
God’s Compassion Allows Sinners to Escape the Law’s Demands
The prodigal son said he was no longer worthy to be called his father’s son. But according to the law, his situation was even worse than that.
Deuteronomy 21 describes a stubborn and rebellious son who refuses to obey his father and mother. Under the law, such a son could be brought before the elders and stoned. That is sobering, but it reveals an important truth: the law brings death. It exposes sin, condemns sinners, and demands justice.
The law could not look at the prodigal son while he was still a long way off and feel compassion. The law could not run, embrace, or kiss him. The law could only condemn him.
That is why the father’s response would have been so shocking to Jesus’s listeners. They knew what a stubborn and rebellious son deserved. The prodigal deserved death, but instead he received compassion. He deserved judgment, but instead there was a celebration.
The father said, “This my son was dead,...